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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
+
+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: The Talleyrand Maxim
+
+Author: J. S. Fletcher
+
+Posting Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #9834]
+Release Date: February, 2006
+First Posted: October 22, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sandra Brown and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+BY J. S. FLETCHER
+
+
+1920
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER
+
+I DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+II IN TRUST
+
+III THE SHOP-BOY
+
+IV THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+V POINT-BLANK
+
+VI THE UNEXPECTED
+
+VII THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+VIII TERMS
+
+IX UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+X THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+XI THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+XII THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+XIII THE FIRST TRICK
+
+XIV CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+XV PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+XVI A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+XVII ADVERTISEMENT
+
+XVIII THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+XIX THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+XX THE _Green Man_
+
+XXI THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+XXII THE CAT'SPAW
+
+XXIII SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+XXIV THE BETTER HALF
+
+XXV DRY SHERRY
+
+XXVI THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+XXVII RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+XXVIII THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+
+Linford Pratt, senior clerk to Eldrick & Pascoe, solicitors, of Barford,
+a young man who earnestly desired to get on in life, by hook or by
+crook, with no objection whatever to crookedness, so long as it could be
+performed in safety and secrecy, had once during one of his periodical
+visits to the town Reference Library, lighted on a maxim of that other
+unscrupulous person, Prince Talleyrand, which had pleased him greatly.
+"With time and patience," said Talleyrand, "the mulberry leaf is turned
+into satin." This seemed to Linford Pratt one of the finest and soundest
+pieces of wisdom which he had ever known put into words.
+
+A mulberry leaf is a very insignificant thing, but a piece of satin is a
+highly marketable commodity, with money in it. Henceforth, he regarded
+himself as a mulberry leaf which his own wit and skill must transform
+into satin: at the same time he knew that there is another thing, in
+addition to time and patience, which is valuable to young men of his
+peculiar qualities, a thing also much beloved by Talleyrand--opportunity.
+He could find the patience, and he had the time--but it would give him
+great happiness if opportunity came along to help in the work. In
+everyday language, Linford Pratt wanted a chance--he waited the arrival
+of the tide in his affairs which would lead him on to fortune.
+
+Leave him alone--he said to himself--to be sure to take it at the flood.
+If Pratt had only known it, as he stood in the outer office of Eldrick &
+Pascoe at the end of a certain winter afternoon, opportunity was slowly
+climbing the staircase outside--not only opportunity, but temptation,
+both assisted by the Devil. They came at the right moment, for Pratt was
+alone; the partners had gone: the other clerks had gone: the office-boy
+had gone: in another minute Pratt would have gone, too: he was only
+looking round before locking up for the night. Then these things
+came--combined in the person of an old man, Antony Bartle, who opened
+the door, pushed in a queer, wrinkled face, and asked in a quavering
+voice if anybody was in.
+
+"I'm in, Mr. Bartle," answered Pratt, turning up a gas jet which he had
+just lowered. "Come in, sir. What can I do for you?"
+
+Antony Bartle came in, wheezing and coughing. He was a very, very old
+man, feeble and bent, with little that looked alive about him but his
+light, alert eyes. Everybody knew him--he was one of the institutions of
+Barford--as well known as the Town Hall or the Parish Church. For fifty
+years he had kept a second-hand bookshop in Quagg Alley, the narrow
+passage-way which connected Market Street with Beck Street. It was not
+by any means a common or ordinary second-hand bookshop: its proprietor
+styled himself an "antiquarian bookseller"; and he had a reputation in
+two Continents, and dealt with millionaire buyers and virtuosos in both.
+
+Barford people sometimes marvelled at the news that Mr. Antony Bartle
+had given two thousand guineas for a Book of Hours, and had sold a
+Missal for twice that amount to some American collector; and they got a
+hazy notion that the old man must be well-to-do--despite his snuffiness
+and shabbiness, and that his queer old shop, in the window of which
+there was rarely anything to be seen but a few ancient tomes, and two or
+three rare engravings, contained much that he could turn at an hour's
+notice into gold. All that was surmise--but Eldrick & Pascoe--which term
+included Linford Pratt--knew all about Antony Bartle, being his
+solicitors: his will was safely deposited in their keeping, and Pratt
+had been one of the attesting witnesses.
+
+The old man, having slowly walked into the outer office, leaned against
+a table, panting a little. Pratt hastened to open an inner door.
+
+"Come into Mr. Eldrick's room, Mr. Bartle," he said. "There's a nice
+easy chair there--come and sit down in it. Those stairs are a bit
+trying, aren't they? I often wish we were on the ground floor."
+
+He lighted the gas in the senior partner's room, and turning back, took
+hold of the visitor's arm, and helped him to the easy chair. Then,
+having closed the doors, he sat down at Eldrick's desk, put his fingers
+together and waited. Pratt knew from experience that old Antony Bartle
+would not have come there except on business: he knew also, having been
+at Eldrick & Pascoe's for many years, that the old man would confide in
+him as readily as in either of his principals.
+
+"There's a nasty fog coming on outside," said Bartle, after a fit of
+coughing. "It gets on my lungs, and then it makes my heart bad. Mr.
+Eldrick in?"
+
+"Gone," replied Pratt. "All gone, Mr. Bartle--only me here."
+
+"You'll do," answered the old bookseller. "You're as good as they are."
+He leaned forward from the easy chair, and tapped the clerk's arm with a
+long, claw-like finger. "I say," he continued, with a smile that was
+something between a wink and a leer, and suggestive of a pleased
+satisfaction. "I've had a find!"
+
+"Oh!" responded Pratt. "One of your rare books, Mr. Bartle? Got
+something for twopence that you'll sell for ten guineas? You're one of
+the lucky ones, you know, you are!"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" chuckled Bartle. "And I had to pay for my
+knowledge, young man, before I got it--we all have. No--but I've found
+something: not half an hour ago. Came straight here with it. Matters for
+lawyers, of course."
+
+"Yes?" said Pratt inquiringly. "And--what may it be?" He was expecting
+the visitor to produce something, but the old man again leaned forward,
+and dug his finger once more into the clerk's sleeve.
+
+"I say!" he whispered. "You remember John Mallathorpe and the affair
+of--how long is it since?"
+
+"Two years," answered Pratt promptly. "Of course I do. Couldn't very
+well forget it, or him."
+
+He let his mind go back for the moment to an affair which had provided
+Barford and the neighbourhood with a nine days' sensation. One winter
+morning, just two years previously, Mr. John Mallathorpe, one of the
+best-known manufacturers and richest men of the town, had been killed by
+the falling of his own mill-chimney. The condition of the chimney had
+been doubtful for some little time; experts had been examining it for
+several days: at the moment of the catastrophe, Mallathorpe himself,
+some of his principal managers, and a couple of professional
+steeple-jacks, were gathered at its base, consulting on a report. The
+great hundred-foot structure above them had collapsed without the
+slightest warning: Mallathorpe, his principal manager, and his cashier,
+had been killed on the spot: two other bystanders had subsequently died
+from injuries received. No such accident had occurred in Barford, nor in
+the surrounding manufacturing district, for many years, and there had
+been much interest in it, for according to the expert's conclusions the
+chimney was in no immediate danger.
+
+Other mill-owners then began to examine their chimneys, and for many
+weeks Barford folk had talked of little else than the danger of living
+in the shadows of these great masses of masonry.
+
+But there had soon been something else to talk of. It sprang out of the
+accident--and it was of particular interest to persons who, like Linford
+Pratt, were of the legal profession. John Mallathorpe, so far as anybody
+knew or could ascertain, had died intestate. No solicitor in the town
+had ever made a will for him. No solicitor elsewhere had ever made a
+will for him. No one had ever heard that he had made a will for himself.
+There was no will. Drastic search of his safes, his desks, his drawers
+revealed nothing--not even a memorandum. No friend of his had ever heard
+him mention a will. He had always been something of a queer man. He was
+a confirmed bachelor. The only relation he had in the world was his
+sister-in-law, the widow of his deceased younger brother, and her two
+children--a son and a daughter. And as soon as he was dead, and it was
+plain that he had died intestate, they put in their claim to his
+property.
+
+John Mallathorpe had left a handsome property. He had been making money
+all his life. His business was a considerable one--he employed two
+thousand workpeople. His average annual profit from his mills was
+reckoned in thousands--four or five thousands at least. And some years
+before his death, he had bought one of the finest estates in the
+neighbourhood, Normandale Grange, a beautiful old house, set amidst
+charming and romantic scenery in a valley, which, though within twelve
+miles of Barford, might have been in the heart of the Highlands.
+Therefore, it was no small thing that Mrs. Richard Mallathorpe and her
+two children laid claim to. Up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death,
+they had lived in very humble fashion--lived, indeed, on an allowance
+from their well-to-do kinsman--for Richard Mallathorpe had been as much
+of a waster as his brother had been of a money-getter. And there was no
+withstanding their claim when it was finally decided that John
+Mallathorpe had died intestate--no withstanding that, at any rate, of
+the nephew and niece. The nephew had taken all the real estate: he and
+his sister had shared the personal property. And for some months they
+and their mother had been safely installed at Normandale Grange, and in
+full possession of the dead man's wealth and business.
+
+All this flashed through Linford Pratt's mind in a few seconds--he knew
+all the story: he had often thought of the extraordinary good fortune of
+those young people. To be living on charity one week--and the next to be
+legal possessors of thousands a year!--oh, if only such luck would come
+his way!
+
+"Of course!" he repeated, looking thoughtfully at the old bookseller.
+"Not the sort of thing one does forget in a hurry, Mr. Bartle. What of
+it?"
+
+Antony Bartle leaned back in his easy chair and chuckled--something,
+some idea, seemed to be affording him amusement.
+
+"I'm eighty years old," he remarked. "No, I'm more, to be exact. I shall
+be eighty-two come February. When you've lived as long as that, young
+Mr. Pratt, you'll know that this life is a game of topsy-turvy--to some
+folks, at any rate. Just so!"
+
+"You didn't come here to tell me that, Mr. Bartle," said Pratt. He was
+an essentially practical young man who dined at half-past six every
+evening, having lunched on no more than bread-and-cheese and a glass of
+ale, and he also had his evenings well mapped out. "I know that already,
+sir."
+
+"Aye, aye, but you'll know more of it later on," replied Bartle.
+"Well--you know, too, no doubt, that the late John Mallathorpe was a
+bit--only a bit--of a book-collector; collected books and pamphlets
+relating to this district?"
+
+"I've heard of it," answered the clerk.
+
+"He had that collection in his private room at the mill," continued the
+old bookseller, "and when the new folks took hold, I persuaded them to
+sell it to me. There wasn't such a lot--maybe a hundred volumes
+altogether--but I wanted what there was. And as they were of no interest
+to them, they sold 'em. That's some months ago. I put all the books in a
+corner--and I never really examined them until this very afternoon.
+Then--by this afternoon's post--I got a letter from a Barford man who's
+now out in America. He wanted to know if I could supply him with a nice
+copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_. I knew there was one in that
+Mallathorpe collection, so I got it out, and examined it. And in the
+pocket inside, in which there's a map, I found--what d'ye think?"
+
+"Couldn't say," replied Pratt. He was still thinking of his dinner, and
+of an important engagement to follow it, and he had not the least idea
+that old Antony Bartle was going to tell him anything very important.
+"Letters? Bank-notes? Something of that sort?"
+
+The old bookseller leaned nearer, across the corner of the desk, until
+his queer, wrinkled face was almost close to Pratt's sharp, youthful
+one. Again he lifted the claw-like finger: again he tapped the clerk's
+arm.
+
+"I found John Mallathorpe's will!" he whispered. "His--will!"
+
+Linford Pratt jumped out of his chair. For a second he stared in
+speechless amazement at the old man; then he plunged his hands deep into
+his trousers' pockets, opened his mouth, and let out a sudden
+exclamation.
+
+"No!" he said. "No! John Mallathorpe's--will? His--will!"
+
+"Made the very day on which he died," answered Bartle, nodding
+emphatically.
+
+"Queer, wasn't it? He might have had some--premonition, eh?"
+
+Pratt sat down again.
+
+"Where is it?" he asked.
+
+"Here in my pocket," replied the old bookseller, tapping his rusty coat.
+"Oh, it's all right, I assure you. All duly made out, signed, and
+witnessed. Everything in order, I know!--because a long, a very long
+time ago, I was like you, an attorney's clerk. I've drafted many a will,
+and witnessed many a will, in my time. I've read this, every word of
+it--it's all right. Nothing can upset it."
+
+"Let's see it," said Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Well--I've no objection--I know you, of course," answered Bartle, "but
+I'd rather show it first to Mr. Eldrick. Couldn't you telephone up to
+his house and ask him to run back here?"
+
+"Certainly," replied Pratt. "He mayn't be there, though. But I can try.
+You haven't shown it to anybody else?"
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," said Bartle.
+"I tell you it's not much more than half an hour since I found it. It's
+not a long document. Do you know how it is that it's never come out?" he
+went on, turning eagerly to Pratt, who had risen again. "It's easily
+explained. The will's witnessed by those two men who were killed at the
+same time as John Mallathorpe! So, of course, there was nobody to say
+that it was in evidence. My notion is that he and those two
+men--Gaukrodger and Marshall, his manager and cashier--had signed it not
+long before the accident, and that Mallathorpe had popped it into the
+pocket of that book before going out into the yard. Eh? But see if you
+can get Mr. Eldrick down here, and we'll read it together. And I
+say--this office seems uncommonly stuffy--can you open the window a bit
+or something?--I feel oppressed, like."
+
+Pratt opened a window which looked out on the street. He glanced at the
+old man for a moment and saw that his face, always pallid, was even
+paler than usual.
+
+"You've been talking too much," he said. "Rest yourself, Mr. Bartle,
+while I ring up Mr. Eldrick's house. If he isn't there, I'll try his
+club--he often turns in there for an hour before going home."
+
+He went out by a private door to the telephone box, which stood in a
+lobby used by various occupants of the building. And when he had rung up
+Eldrick's private house and was waiting for the answer, he asked himself
+what this discovery would mean to the present holders of the Mallathorpe
+property, and his curiosity--a strongly developed quality in him--became
+more and more excited. If Eldrick was not at home, if he could not get
+in touch with him, he would persuade old Bartle to let him see his
+find--he would cheerfully go late to his dinner if he could only get a
+peep at this strangely discovered document. Romance! Why, this indeed
+was romance; and it might be--what else? Old Bartle had already chuckled
+about topsy-turvydom: did that mean that--
+
+The telephone bell rang: Eldrick had not yet reached his house. Pratt
+got on to the club: Eldrick had not been there. He rang off, and went
+back to the private room.
+
+"Can't get hold of him, Mr. Bartle," he began, as he closed the door.
+"He's not at home, and he's not at the club. I say!--you might as well
+let me have a look at----"
+
+Pratt suddenly stopped. There was a strange silence in the room: the old
+man's wheezy breathing was no longer heard. And the clerk moved forward
+quickly and looked round the high back of the easy chair....
+
+He knew at once what had happened--knew that old Bartle was dead before
+he laid a finger on the wasted hand which had dropped helplessly at his
+side. He had evidently died without a sound or a movement--died as
+quietly as he would have gone to sleep. Indeed, he looked as if he had
+just laid his old head against the padding of the chair and dropped
+asleep, and Pratt, who had seen death before, knew that he would never
+wake again. He waited a moment, listening in the silence. Once he
+touched the old man's hand; once, he bent nearer, still listening. And
+then, without hesitation, and with fingers that remained as steady as if
+nothing had happened, he unbuttoned Antony Bartle's coat, and drew a
+folded paper from the inner pocket.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+IN TRUST
+
+
+As quietly and composedly as if he were discharging the most ordinary of
+his daily duties, Pratt unfolded the document, and went close to the
+solitary gas jet above Eldrick's desk. What he held in his hand was a
+half-sheet of ruled foolscap paper, closely covered with writing, which
+he at once recognized as that of the late John Mallathorpe. He was
+familiar with that writing--he had often seen it. It was an
+old-fashioned writing--clear, distinct, with every letter well and fully
+formed.
+
+"Made it himself!" muttered Pratt. "Um!--looks as if he wanted to keep
+the terms secret. Well----"
+
+He read the will through--rapidly, but with care, murmuring the
+phraseology half aloud.
+
+"This is the last will of me, John Mallathorpe, of Normandale Grange, in
+the parish of Normandale, in the West Riding of the County of York. I
+appoint Martin William Charlesworth, manufacturer, of Holly Lodge,
+Barford, and Arthur James Wyatt, chartered accountant, of 65, Beck
+Street, Barford, executors and trustees of this my will. I give and
+devise all my estate and effects real and personal of which I may die
+possessed or entitled to unto the said Martin William Charlesworth and
+Arthur James Wyatt upon trust for the following purposes to be carried
+out by them under the following instructions, namely:--As soon after my
+death as is conveniently possible they will sell all my real estate,
+either by private treaty or by public auction; they shall sell all my
+personal property of any nature whatsoever; they shall sell my business
+at Mallathorpe's mill in Barford as a going concern to any private
+purchaser or to any company already in existence or formed for the
+purpose of acquiring it; and they shall collect all debts and moneys due
+to me. And having sold and disposed of all my property, real and
+personal, and brought all the proceeds of such sales and of such
+collection of debts and moneys into one common fund they shall first pay
+all debts owing by me and all legal duties and expenses arising out of
+my death and this disposition of my property and shall then distribute
+my estate as follows, namely: to each of themselves, Martin William
+Charlesworth and Arthur James Wyatt, they shall pay the sum of five
+thousand pounds; to my sister-in-law, Ann Mallathorpe, they shall pay
+the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my nephew, Harper John Mallathorpe,
+they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my niece, Nesta
+Mallathorpe, they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds. And as to
+the whole of the remaining residue they shall pay it in one sum to the
+Mayor and Corporation of the borough of Barford in the County of York to
+be applied by the said Mayor and Corporation at their own absolute
+discretion and in any manner which seems good to them to the
+establishment, furtherance and development of technical and commercial
+education in the said borough of Barford. Dated this sixteenth day of
+November, 1906.
+
+ Signed by the testator in
+ the presence of us both
+ present at the same
+ time who in his presence } JOHN MALLATHORPE
+ and in the presence
+ of each other
+ have hereunto set our
+ names as witnesses.
+
+ HENRY GAUKRODGER, 16, Florence Street,
+ Barford, Mill Manager.
+
+ CHARLES WATSON MARSHALL, 56, Laburnum Terrace,
+ Barford, Cashier."
+
+As the last word left his lips Pratt carefully folded up the will,
+slipped it into an inner pocket of his coat, and firmly buttoned the
+coat across his chest. Then, without as much as a glance at the dead
+man, he left the room, and again visited the telephone box. He was
+engaged in it for a few minutes. When he came out he heard steps coming
+up the staircase, and looking over the banisters he saw the senior
+partner, Eldrick, a middle-aged man. Eldrick looked up, and saw Pratt.
+
+"I hear you've been ringing me up at the club, Pratt," he said. "What is
+it?"
+
+Pratt waited until Eldrick had come up to the landing. Then he pointed
+to the door of the private room, and shook his head.
+
+"It's old Mr. Bartle, sir," he whispered. "He's in your room
+there--dead!"
+
+"Dead?" exclaimed Eldrick. "Dead!"
+
+Pratt shook his head again.
+
+"He came up not so long after you'd gone, sir," he said. "Everybody had
+gone but me--I was just going. Wanted to see you about something I don't
+know what. He was very tottery when he came in--complained of the stairs
+and the fog. I took him into your room, to sit down in the easy chair.
+And--he died straight off. Just," concluded Pratt, "just as if he was
+going quietly to sleep!"
+
+"You're sure he is dead?--not fainting?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"He's dead, sir--quite dead," replied Pratt. "I've rung up Dr.
+Melrose--he'll be here in a minute or two--and the Town Hall--the
+police--as well. Will you look at him, sir?"
+
+Eldrick silently motioned his clerk to open the door; together they
+walked into the room. And Eldrick looked at his quiet figure and wan
+face, and knew that Pratt was right.
+
+"Poor old chap!" he murmured, touching one of the thin hands. "He was a
+fine man in his time, Pratt; clever man! And he was very, very old--one
+of the oldest men in Barford. Well, we must wire to his grandson, Mr.
+Bartle Collingwood. You'll find his address in the book. He's the only
+relation the old fellow had."
+
+"Come in for everything, doesn't he, sir?" asked Pratt, as he took an
+address book from the desk, and picked up a sheaf of telegram forms.
+
+"Every penny!" murmured Eldrick. "Nice little fortune, too--a fine thing
+for a young fellow who's just been called to the Bar. As a matter of
+fact, he'll be fairly well independent, even if he never sees a brief in
+his life."
+
+"He has been called, has he, sir?" asked Pratt, laying a telegram form
+on Eldrick's writing pad and handing him a pen. "I wasn't aware of
+that."
+
+"Called this term--quite recently--at Gray's Inn," replied Eldrick, as
+he sat down. "Very promising, clever young man. Look here!--we'd better
+send two wires, one to his private address, and one to his chambers.
+They're both in that book. It's six o'clock, isn't it?--he might be at
+his chambers yet, but he may have gone home. I'll write both
+messages--you put the addresses on, and get the wire off--we must have
+him down here as soon as possible."
+
+"One address is 53x, Pump Court; the other's 96, Cloburn Square,"
+remarked Pratt consulting the book. "There's an express from King's
+Cross at 8.15 which gets here midnight."
+
+"Oh, it would do if he came down first thing in the morning--leave it to
+him," said Eldrick. "I say, Pratt, do you think an inquest will be
+necessary?"
+
+Pratt had not thought of that--he began to think. And while he was
+thinking, the doctor whom he had summoned came in. He looked at the dead
+man, asked the clerk a few questions, and was apparently satisfied. "I
+don't think there's any need for an inquest," he said in reply to
+Eldrick. "I knew the old man very well--he was much feebler than he
+would admit. The exertion of coming up these stairs of yours, and the
+coughing brought on by the fog outside--that was quite enough. Of
+course, the death will have to be reported in the usual way, but I have
+no hesitation in giving a certificate. You've let the Town Hall people
+know? Well, the body had better be removed to his rooms--we must send
+over and tell his housekeeper. He'd no relations in the town, had he?"
+
+"Only one in the world that he ever mentioned--his grandson--a young
+barrister in London," answered Eldrick. "We've just been wiring to him.
+Here, Pratt, you take these messages now, and get them off. Then we'll
+see about making all arrangements. By-the-by," he added, as Pratt moved
+towards the door, "you don't know what--what he came to see me about?"
+
+"Haven't the remotest idea, sir," answered Pratt, readily and glibly.
+"He died--just as I've told you--before he could tell me anything."
+
+He went downstairs, and out into the street, and away to the General
+Post Office, only conscious of one thing, only concerned about one
+thing--that he was now the sole possessor of a great secret. The
+opportunity which he had so often longed for had come. And as he hurried
+along through the gathering fog he repeated and repeated a fragment of
+the recent conversation between the man who was now dead, and
+himself--who remained very much alive.
+
+"You haven't shown it to anybody else?" Pratt had asked.
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," Antony Bartle
+had answered. So, in all that great town of Barford, he, Linford Pratt,
+he, alone out of a quarter of a million people, knew--what? The
+magnitude of what he knew not only amazed but exhilarated him. There
+were such possibilities for himself in that knowledge. He wanted to be
+alone, to think out those possibilities; to reckon up what they came to.
+Of one thing he was already certain--they should be, must be, turned to
+his own advantage.
+
+It was past eight o'clock before Pratt was able to go home to his
+lodgings. His landlady, meeting him in the hall, hoped that his dinner
+would not be spoiled: Pratt, who relied greatly on his dinner as his one
+great meal of the day, replied that he fervently hoped it wasn't, but
+that if it was it couldn't be helped, this time. For once he was
+thinking of something else than his dinner--as for his engagement for
+that evening, he had already thrown it over: he wanted to give all his
+energies and thoughts and time to his secret. Nevertheless, it was
+characteristic of him that he washed, changed his clothes, ate his
+dinner, and even glanced over the evening newspaper before he turned to
+the real business which was already deep in his brain. But at last, when
+the maid had cleared away the dinner things, and he was alone in his
+sitting-room, and had lighted his pipe, and mixed himself a drop of
+whisky-and-water--the only indulgence in such things that he allowed
+himself within the twenty-four hours--he drew John Mallathorpe's will
+from his pocket, and read it carefully three times. And then he began to
+think, closely and steadily.
+
+First of all, the will was a good will. Nothing could upset it. It was
+absolutely valid. It was not couched in the terms which a solicitor
+would have employed, but it clearly and plainly expressed John
+Mallathorpe's intentions and meanings in respect to the disposal of his
+property. Nothing could be clearer. The properly appointed trustees were
+to realize his estate. They were to distribute it according to his
+specified instructions. It was all as plain as a pikestaff. Pratt, who
+was a good lawyer, knew what the Probate Court would say to that will if
+it were ever brought up before it, as he did, a quite satisfactory will.
+And it was validly executed. Hundreds of people, competent to do so,
+could swear to John Mallathorpe's signature; hundreds to Gaukrodger's;
+thousands to Marshall's--who as cashier was always sending his signature
+broadcast. No, there was nothing to do but to put that into the hands of
+the trustees named in it, and then....
+
+Pratt thought next of the two trustees. They were well-known men in the
+town. They were comparatively young men--about forty. They were men of
+great energy. Their chief interests were in educational matters--that,
+no doubt, was why John Mallathorpe had appointed them trustees. Wyatt
+had been plaguing the town for two years to start commercial schools:
+Charlesworth was a devoted champion of technical schools. Pratt knew how
+the hearts of both would leap, if he suddenly told them that enormous
+funds were at their disposal for the furtherance of their schemes. And
+he also knew something else--that neither Charlesworth nor Wyatt had the
+faintest, remotest notion or suspicion that John Mallathorpe had ever
+made such a will, or they would have moved heaven and earth, pulled down
+Normandale Grange and Mallathorpe's Mill, in their efforts to find it.
+
+But the effect--the effect of producing the will--now? Pratt, like
+everybody else, had been deeply interested in the Mallathorpe affair.
+There was so little doubt that John Mallathorpe had died intestate, such
+absolute certainty that his only living relations were his deceased
+brother's two children and their mother, that the necessary proceedings
+for putting Harper Mallathorpe and his sister Nesta in possession of the
+property, real and personal, had been comparatively simple and speedy.
+But--what was it worth? What would the two trustees have been able to
+hand over to the Mayor and Corporation of Barford, if the will had been
+found as soon as John Mallathorpe died? Pratt, from what he remembered
+of the bulk and calculations at the time, made a rapid estimate. As near
+as he could reckon, the Mayor and Corporation would have got about
+£300,000.
+
+That, then--and this was what he wanted to get at--was what these young
+people would lose if he produced the will. Nay!--on second thoughts, it
+would be much more, very much more in some time; for the manufacturing
+business was being carried on by them, and was apparently doing as well
+as ever. It was really an enormous amount which they would lose--and
+they would get--what? Ten thousand apiece and their mother a like sum.
+Thirty thousand pounds in all--in comparison with hundreds of thousands.
+But they would have no choice in the matter. Nothing could upset that
+will.
+
+He began to think of the three people whom the production of this will
+would dispossess. He knew little of them beyond what common gossip had
+related at the time of John Mallathorpe's sudden death. They had lived
+in very quiet fashion, somewhere on the outskirts of the town, until
+this change in their fortunes. Once or twice Pratt had seen Mrs.
+Mallathorpe in her carriage in the Barford streets--somebody had pointed
+her out to him, and had observed sneeringly that folk can soon adapt
+themselves to circumstances, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe now gave herself
+all the airs of a duchess, though she had been no more than a hospital
+nurse before she married Richard Mallathorpe. And Pratt had also seen
+young Harper Mallathorpe now and then in the town--since the good
+fortune arrived--and had envied him: he had also thought what a strange
+thing it was that money went to young fellows who seemed to have no
+particular endowments of brain or energy. Harper was a very ordinary
+young man, not over intelligent in appearance, who, Pratt had heard, was
+often seen lounging about the one or two fashionable hotels of the
+place. As for the daughter, Pratt did not remember having ever set eyes
+on her--but he had heard that up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death
+she had earned her own living as a governess, or a nurse, or something
+of that sort.
+
+He turned from thinking of these three people to thoughts about himself.
+Pratt often thought about himself, and always in one direction--the
+direction of self-advancement. He was always wanting to get on. He had
+nobody to help him. He had kept himself since he was seventeen. His
+father and mother were dead; he had no brothers or sisters--the only
+relations he had, uncles and aunts, lived--some in London, some in
+Canada. He was now twenty-eight, and earning four pounds a week. He had
+immense confidence in himself, but he had never seen much chance of
+escaping from drudgery. He had often thought of asking Eldrick & Pascoe
+to give him his articles--but he had a shrewd idea that his request
+would be refused. No--it was difficult to get out of a rut. And yet--he
+was a clever fellow, a good-looking fellow, a sharp, shrewd, able--and
+here was a chance, such a chance as scarcely ever comes to a man. He
+would be a fool if he did not take it, and use it to his own best and
+lasting advantage.
+
+And so he locked up the will in a safe place, and went to bed, resolved
+to take a bold step towards fortune on the morrow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+THE SHOP-BOY
+
+
+When Pratt arrived at Eldrick & Pascoe's office at his usual hour of
+nine next morning, he found the senior partner already there. And with
+him was a young man whom the clerk at once set down as Mr. Bartle
+Collingwood, and looked at with considerable interest and curiosity. He
+had often heard of Mr. Bartle Collingwood, but had never seen him. He
+knew that he was the only son of old Antony Bartle's only child--a
+daughter who had married a London man; he knew, too, that Collingwood's
+parents were both dead, and that the old bookseller had left their son
+everything he possessed--a very nice little fortune, as Eldrick had
+observed last night. And since last night he had known that Collingwood
+had just been called to the Bar, and was on the threshold of what
+Eldrick, who evidently knew all about it, believed to be a promising
+career. Well, there he was in the flesh; and Pratt, who was a born
+observer of men and events, took a good look at him as he stood just
+within the private room, talking to Eldrick.
+
+A good-looking fellow; what most folk would call handsome; dark,
+clean-shaven, tall, with a certain air of reserve about his well-cut
+features, firm lips, and steady eyes that suggested strength and
+determination. He would look very well in wig and gown, decided Pratt,
+viewing matters from a professional standpoint; he was just the sort
+that clients would feel a natural confidence in, and that juries would
+listen to. Another of the lucky ones, too; for Pratt knew the contents
+of Antony Bartle's will, and that the young man at whom he was looking
+had succeeded to a cool five-and-twenty thousand pounds, at least,
+through his grandfather's death.
+
+"Here is Pratt," said Eldrick, glancing into the outer office as the
+clerk entered it. "Pratt, come in here--here is Mr. Bartle Collingwood,
+He would like you to tell him the facts about Mr. Bartle's death."
+
+Pratt walked in--armed and prepared. He was a clever hand at foreseeing
+things, and he had known all along that he would have to answer
+questions about the event of the previous night.
+
+"There's very little to tell, sir," he said, with a polite
+acknowledgment of Collingwood's greeting. "Mr. Bartle came up here just
+as I was leaving--everybody else had left. He wanted to see Mr. Eldrick.
+Why, he didn't say. He was coughing a good deal when he came in, and he
+complained of the fog outside, and of the stairs. He said
+something--just a mere mention--about his heart being bad. I lighted the
+gas in here, and helped him into the chair. He just sat down, laid his
+head back, and died."
+
+"Without saying anything further?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Not a word more, Mr. Collingwood," answered Pratt. "He--well, it was
+just as if he had dropped off to sleep. Of course, at first I thought
+he'd fainted, but I soon saw what it was--it so happens that I've seen a
+death just as sudden as that, once before--my landlady's husband died in
+a very similar fashion, in my presence. There was nothing I could do,
+Mr. Collingwood--except ring up Mr. Eldrick, and the doctor, and the
+police."
+
+"Mr. Pratt made himself very useful last night in making arrangements,"
+remarked Eldrick, looking at Collingwood. "As it is, there is very
+little to do. There will be no need for any inquest; Melrose has given
+his certificate. So--there are only the funeral arrangements. We can
+help you with that matter, of course. But first you'd no doubt like to
+go to your grandfather's place and look through his papers? We have his
+will here, you know--and I've already told you its effect."
+
+"I'm much obliged to you, Mr. Pratt," said Collingwood, turning to the
+clerk. He turned again to Eldrick. "All right," he went on. "I'll go
+over to Quagg Alley. Bye-the-bye, Mr. Pratt--my grandfather didn't tell
+you anything of the reason of his call here?"
+
+"Not a word, sir," replied Pratt. "Merely said he wanted Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Had he any legal business in process?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick and his clerk both shook their heads. No, Mr. Bartle had no
+business of that sort that they knew of. Nothing--but there again Pratt
+was prepared.
+
+"It might have been about the lease of that property in Horsebridge
+Land, sir," he said, glancing at his principal. "He did mention that,
+you know, when he was in here a few weeks ago."
+
+"Just so," agreed Eldrick. "Well, you'll let me know if we can be of
+use," he went on, as Collingwood turned away. "Pratt can be at your
+disposal, any time."
+
+Collingwood thanked him and went off. He had travelled down from London
+by the earliest morning train, and leaving his portmanteau at the hotel
+of the Barford terminus, had gone straight to Eldrick & Pascoe's office;
+accordingly this was his first visit to the shop in Quagg Alley. But he
+knew the shop and its surroundings well enough, though he had not been
+in Barford for some time; he also knew Antony Bartle's old housekeeper,
+Mrs. Clough, a rough and ready Yorkshirewoman, who had looked after the
+old man as long as he, Collingwood, could remember. She received him as
+calmly as if he had merely stepped across the street to inquire after
+his grandfather's health.
+
+"I thowt ye'd be down here first thing, Mestur Collingwood," she said,
+as he walked into the parlor at the back of the shop. "Of course,
+there's naught to be done except to see after yer grandfather's burying.
+I don't know if ye were surprised or no when t' lawyers tellygraphed to
+yer last night? I weren't surprised to hear what had happened. I'd been
+expecting summat o' that sort this last month or two."
+
+"You mean--he was failing?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"He were gettin' feebler and feebler every day," said the housekeeper.
+"But nobody dare say so to him, and he wouldn't admit it his-self. He
+were that theer high-spirited 'at he did things same as if he were a
+young man. But I knew how it 'ud be in the end--and so it has been--I
+knew he'd go off all of a sudden. And of course I had all in
+readiness--when they brought him back last night there was naught to do
+but lay him out. Me and Mrs. Thompson next door, did it, i' no time.
+Wheer will you be for buryin' him, Mestur Collingwood?"
+
+"We must think that over," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Well, an' theer's all ready for that, too," responded Mrs. Clough.
+"He's had his grave all ready i' the cemetery this three year--I
+remember when he bowt it--it's under a yew-tree, and he told me 'at he'd
+ordered his monnyment an' all. So yer an' t' lawyers'll have no great
+trouble about them matters. Mestur Eldrick, he gev' orders for t' coffin
+last night."
+
+Collingwood left these gruesome details--highly pleasing to their
+narrator--and went up to look at his dead grandfather. He had never seen
+much of him, but they had kept up a regular correspondence, and always
+been on terms of affection, and he was sorry that he had not been with
+the old man at the last. He remained looking at the queer, quiet, old
+face for a while; when he went down again, Mrs. Clough was talking to a
+sharp-looking lad, of apparently sixteen or seventeen years, who stood
+at the door leading into the shop, and who glanced at Collingwood with
+keen interest and speculation.
+
+"Here's Jabey Naylor wants to know if he's to do aught, Mestur," said
+the housekeeper. "Of course, I've telled him 'at we can't have the shop
+open till the burying's over--so I don't know what theer is that he can
+do."
+
+"Oh, well, let him come into the shop with me," answered Collingwood. He
+motioned the lad to follow him out of the parlour. "So you were Mr.
+Bartle's assistant, eh?" he asked. "Had he anybody else?"
+
+"Nobody but me, sir," replied the lad. "I've been with him a year."
+
+"And your name's what?" inquired Collingwood.
+
+"Jabez Naylor, sir, but everybody call me Jabey."
+
+"I see--Jabey for short, eh?" said Collingwood good-humouredly. He
+walked into the shop, followed by the boy, and closed the door. The
+outer door into Quagg Alley was locked: a light blind was drawn over the
+one window; the books and engravings on the shelves and in the presses
+were veiled in a half-gloom. "Well, as Mrs. Clough says, we can't do any
+business for a few days, Jabey--after that we must see what can be done.
+You shall have your wages just the same, of course, and you may look in
+every day to see if there's anything you can do. You were here
+yesterday, of course? Were you in the shop when Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the lad. "I'd been in with him all the afternoon. I
+was here when he went out--and here when they came to say he'd died at
+Mr. Eldrick's."
+
+Collingwood sat down in his grandfather's chair, at a big table, piled
+high with books and papers, which stood in the middle of the floor.
+
+"Did my grandfather seem at all unwell when he went out?" he asked.
+
+"No, sir. He had been coughing a bit more than usual--that was all.
+There was a fog came on about five o'clock, and he said it bothered
+him."
+
+"What had he been doing during the afternoon? Anything particular?"
+
+"Nothing at all particular before half-past four or so, sir."
+
+Collingwood took a closer look at Jabez Naylor. He saw that he was an
+observant lad, evidently of superior intelligence--a good specimen of
+the sharp town lad, well trained in a modern elementary school.
+
+"Oh?" he said. "Nothing particular before half-past four, eh? Did he do
+something particular after half-past four?"
+
+"There was a post came in just about then, sir," answered Jabey. "There
+was an American letter--that's it, sir--just in front of you. Mr. Bartle
+read it, and asked me if we'd got a good clear copy of Hopkinson's
+_History of Barford_. I reminded him that there was a copy amongst the
+books that had been bought from Mallathorpe's Mill some time ago."
+
+"Books that had belonged to Mr. John Mallathorpe, who was killed?" asked
+Collingwood, who was fully acquainted with the chimney accident.
+
+"Yes, sir, Mr. Bartle bought a lot of books that Mr. Mallathorpe had at
+the Mill--local books. They're there in that corner: they were put there
+when I fetched them, and he'd never looked over them since,
+particularly."
+
+"Well--and this _History of Barford_? You reminded him of it?"
+
+"I got it out for him, sir. He sat down--where you're sitting--and began
+to examine it. He said something about it being a nice copy, and he'd
+get it off that night--that's it, sir: I didn't read it, of course. And
+then he took some papers out of a pocket that's inside it, and I heard
+him say 'Bless my soul--who'd have thought it!'"
+
+Collingwood picked up the book which the boy indicated--a thick,
+substantially bound volume, inside one cover of which was a linen
+pocket, wherein were some loose maps and plans of Barford.
+
+"These what he took out?" he asked, holding them up.
+
+"Yes, sir, but there was another paper, with writing on it--a biggish
+sheet of paper--written all over."
+
+"Did you see what the writing was? Did you see any of it?"
+
+"No, sir--only that it was writing, I was dusting those shelves out,
+over there; when I heard Mr. Bartle say what he did. I just looked
+round, over my shoulder--that was all."
+
+"Was he reading this paper that you speak of?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he was holding it up to the gas, reading it."
+
+"Do you know what he did with it?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he folded it up and put it in his pocket."
+
+"Did he say any more--make any remark?"
+
+"No, sir. He wrote a letter then."
+
+"At once?"
+
+"Yes, sir--straight off. But he wasn't more than a minute writing it.
+Then he sent me to post it at the pillar-box, at the end of the Alley."
+
+"Did you read the address?"
+
+The lad turned to a book which stood with others in a rack over the
+chimney-piece, and tapped it with his finger.
+
+"Yes, sir--because Mr. Bartle gave orders when I first came here that a
+register of every letter sent out was to be kept--I've always entered
+them in this book."
+
+"And this letter you're talking about--to whom was it addressed?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe, Normandale Grange, sir."
+
+"You went and posted it at once?"
+
+"That very minute, sir."
+
+"Was it soon afterwards that Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"He went out as soon as I came back, sir."
+
+"And you never saw him again?"
+
+Jabey shook his head.
+
+"Not alive, sir," he answered. "I saw him when they brought him back."
+
+"How long had he been out when you heard he was dead?"
+
+"About an hour, sir--just after six it was when they told Mrs. Clough
+and me. He went out at ten minutes past five."
+
+Collingwood got up. He gave the lad's shoulder a friendly squeeze.
+
+"All right!" he said. "Now you seem a smart, intelligent lad--don't
+mention a word to any one of what we've been talking about. You have not
+mentioned it before, I suppose? Not a word? That's right--don't. Come in
+again tomorrow morning to see if I want you to be here as usual. I'm
+going to put a manager into this shop."
+
+When the boy had gone Collingwood locked up the shop from the house
+side, put the key in his pocket, and went into the kitchen.
+
+"Mrs. Clough," he said. "I want to see the clothes which my grandfather
+was wearing when he was brought home last night. Where are they?"
+
+"They're in that little room aside of his bed-chamber, Mestur
+Collingwood," replied the housekeeper. "I laid 'em all there, on the
+clothes-press, just as they were taken off of him, by Lawyer Eldrick's
+orders--he said they hadn't been examined, and wasn't to be, till you
+came. Nobody whatever's touched 'em since."
+
+Collingwood went upstairs and into the little room--a sort of box-room
+opening out of that in which the old man lay. There were the clothes; he
+went through the pockets of every garment. He found such things as keys,
+a purse, loose money, a memorandum book, a bookseller's catalogue or
+two, two or three letters of a business sort--but there was no big
+folded paper, covered with writing, such as Jabey Naylor had described.
+
+The mention of that paper had excited Collingwood's curiosity. He
+rapidly summed up what he had learned. His grandfather had found a
+paper, closely written upon, in a book which had been the property of
+John Mallathorpe, deceased. The discovery had surprised him, for he had
+given voice to an exclamation of what was evidently astonishment. He had
+put the paper in his pocket. Then he had written a letter--to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe of Normandale Grange. When his shop-boy had posted that
+letter, he himself had gone out--to his solicitor. What, asked
+Collingwood, was the reasonable presumption? The old man had gone to
+Eldrick to show him the paper which he had found.
+
+He lingered in the little room for a few minutes, thinking. No one but
+Pratt had been with Antony Bartle at the time of his seizure and sudden
+death. What sort of a fellow was Pratt? Was he honest? Was his word to
+be trusted? Had he told the precise truth about the old man's death? He
+was evidently a suave, polite, obliging sort of fellow, this clerk, but
+it was a curious thing that if Antony Bartle had that paper, whatever it
+was--in his pocket when he went to Eldrick's office it should not be in
+his pocket still--if his clothing had really remained untouched. Already
+suspicion was in Collingwood's mind--vague and indefinable, but there.
+
+He was half inclined to go straight back to Eldrick & Pascoe's and tell
+Eldrick what Jabey Naylor had just told him. But he reflected that while
+Naylor went out to post the letter, the old bookseller might have put
+the paper elsewhere; locked it up in his safe, perhaps. One thing,
+however, he, Collingwood, could do at once--he could ask Mrs.
+Mallathorpe if the letter referred to the paper. He was fully acquainted
+with all the facts of the Mallathorpe history; old Bartle, knowing they
+would interest his grandson, had sent him the local newspaper accounts
+of its various episodes. It was only twelve miles to Normandale
+Grange--a motor-car would carry him there within the hour. He glanced at
+his watch--just ten o 'clock.
+
+An hour later, Collingwood found himself standing in a fine oak-panelled
+room, the windows of which looked out on a romantic valley whose thickly
+wooded sides were still bright with the red and yellow tints of autumn.
+A door opened--he turned, expecting to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. Instead, he
+found himself looking at a girl, who glanced inquiringly at him, and
+from him to the card which he had sent in on his arrival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+
+Collingwood at once realized that he was in the presence of one of the
+two fortunate young people who had succeeded so suddenly--and, according
+to popular opinion, so unexpectedly--to John Mallathorpe's wealth. This
+was evidently Miss Nesta Mallathorpe, of whom he had heard, but whom he
+had never seen. She, however, was looking at him as if she knew him, and
+she smiled a little as she acknowledged his bow.
+
+"My mother is out in the grounds, with my brother," she said, motioning
+Collingwood towards a chair. "Won't you sit down, please?--I've sent for
+her; she will be here in a few minutes."
+
+Collingwood sat down; Nesta Mallathorpe sat down, too, and as they
+looked at each other she smiled again.
+
+"I have seen you before, Mr. Collingwood," she said. "I knew it must be
+you when they brought up your card."
+
+Collingwood used his glance of polite inquiry to make a closer
+inspection of his hostess. He decided that Nesta Mallathorpe was not so
+much pretty as eminently attractive--a tall, well-developed,
+warm-coloured young woman, whose clear grey eyes and red lips and
+general bearing indicated the possession of good health and spirits. And
+he was quite certain that if he had ever seen her before he would not
+have forgotten it.
+
+"Where have you seen me?" he asked, smiling back at her.
+
+"Have you forgotten the mock-trial--year before last?" she asked.
+
+Collingwood remembered what she was alluding to. He had taken part, in
+company with various other law students, in a mock-trial, a breach of
+promise case, for the benefit of a certain London hospital, to him had
+fallen one of the principal parts, that of counsel for the plaintiff.
+"When I saw your name, I remembered it at once," she went on. "I was
+there--I was a probationer at St. Chad's Hospital at that time."
+
+"Dear me!" said Collingwood, "I should have thought our histrionic
+efforts would have been forgotten. I'm afraid I don't remember much
+about them, except that we had a lot of fun out of the affair. So you
+were at St. Chad's?" he continued, with a reminiscence of the
+surroundings of the institution they were talking of. "Very different to
+Normandale!"
+
+"Yes," she replied. "Very--very different to Normandale. But when I was
+at St. Chad's, I didn't know that I--that we should ever come to
+Normandale."
+
+"And now that you are here?" he asked.
+
+The girl looked out through the big window on the valley which lay in
+front of the old house, and she shook her head a little.
+
+"It's very beautiful," she answered, "but I sometimes wish I was back at
+St. Chad's--with something to do. Here--there's nothing to do but to do
+nothing." Collingwood realized that this was not the complaint of the
+well-to-do young woman who finds time hang heavy--it was rather
+indicative of a desire for action.
+
+"I understand!" he said. "I think I should feel like that. One wants--I
+suppose--is it action, movement, what is it?"
+
+"Better call it occupation--that's a plain term," she answered. "We're
+both suffering from lack of occupation here, my brother and I. And it's
+bad for us--especially for him."
+
+Before Collingwood could think of any suitable reply to this remarkably
+fresh and candid statement, the door opened, and Mrs. Mallathorpe came
+in, followed by her son. And the visitor suddenly and immediately
+noticed the force and meaning of Nesta Mallathorpe's last remark. Harper
+Mallathorpe, a good-looking, but not remarkably intelligent appearing
+young man, of about Collingwood's own age, gave him the instant
+impression of being bored to death; the lack-lustre eye, the aimless
+lounge, the hands thrust into the pockets of his Norfolk jacket as if
+they took refuge there from sheer idleness--all these things told their
+tale. Here, thought Collingwood, was a fine example of how riches can be
+a curse--relieved of the necessity of having to earn his daily bread by
+labour, Harper Mallathorpe was finding life itself laborious.
+
+But there was nothing of aimlessness, idleness, or lack of vigour in
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. She was a woman of character, energy, of
+brains--Collingwood saw all that at one glance. A little, neat-figured,
+compact sort of woman, still very good-looking, still on the right side
+of fifty, with quick movements and sharp glances out of a pair of shrewd
+eyes: this, he thought, was one of those women who will readily
+undertake the control and management of big affairs. He felt, as Mrs.
+Mallathorpe turned inquiring looks on him, that as long as she was in
+charge of them the Mallathorpe family fortunes would be safe.
+
+"Mother," said Nesta, handing Collingwood's card to Mrs. Mallathorpe,
+"this gentleman is Mr. Bartle Collingwood. He's--aren't you?--yes, a
+barrister. He wants to see you. Why, I don't know. I have seen Mr.
+Collingwood before--but he didn't remember me. Now he'll tell you what
+he wants to see you about."
+
+"If you'll allow me to explain why I called on you, Mrs. Mallathorpe,"
+said Collingwood, "I don't suppose you ever heard of me--but you know,
+at any rate, the name of my grandfather, Mr. Antony Bartle, the
+bookseller, of Barford? My grandfather is dead--he died very suddenly
+last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe and Nesta murmured words of polite sympathy. Harper
+suddenly spoke--as if mere words were some relief to his obvious
+boredom.
+
+"I heard that, this morning," he said, turning to his mother. "Hopkins
+told me--he was in town last night. I meant to tell you."
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe, glancing at some letters which
+stood on a rack above the mantelpiece. "Why--I had a letter from Mr.
+Bartle this very morning!"
+
+"It is that letter that I have come to see you about," said Collingwood.
+"I only got down here from London at half-past eight this morning, and
+of course, I have made some inquiries about the circumstances of my
+grandfather's sudden death. He died very suddenly indeed at Mr.
+Eldrick's office. He had gone there on some business about which nobody
+knows nothing--he died before he could mention it. And according to his
+shop-boy, Jabey Naylor, the last thing he did was to write a letter to
+you. Now--I have reason for asking--would you mind telling me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe, what that letter was about?" Mrs. Mallathorpe moved over to
+the hearth, and took an envelope from the rack. She handed it to
+Collingwood, indicating that he could open it. And Collingwood drew out
+one of old Bartle's memorandum forms, and saw a couple of lines in the
+familiar crabbed handwriting:
+
+ "MRS. MALLATHORPE, Normandale Grange.
+
+ "Madam,--If you should drive into town tomorrow, will you kindly
+ give me a call? I want to see you particularly.
+
+ "Respectfully, A. BARTLE."
+
+Collingwood handed back the letter.
+
+"Have you any idea to what that refers?" he asked.
+
+"Well, I think I have--perhaps," answered Mrs. Mallathorpe. "Mr. Bartle
+persuaded us to sell him some books--local books--which my late
+brother-in-law had at his office in the mill. And since then he has been
+very anxious to buy more local books and pamphlets about this
+neighbourhood, and he had some which Mr. Bartle was very anxious indeed
+to get hold of. I suppose he wanted to see me about that." Collingwood
+made no remarks for the moment. He was wondering whether or not to tell
+what Jabey Naylor had told him about this paper taken from the linen
+pocket inside the _History of Barford_. But Mrs. Mallathorpe's ready
+explanation had given him a new idea, and he rose from his chair.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "I suppose that's it. You may think it odd that I
+wanted to know what he'd written about, but as it was certainly the last
+letter he wrote----"
+
+"Oh, I'm quite sure it must have been that!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+"And as I am going into Barford this afternoon, in any case, I meant to
+call at Mr. Bartle's. I'm sorry to hear of his death, poor old
+gentleman! But he was very old indeed, wasn't he?"
+
+"He was well over eighty," replied Collingwood. "Well, thank you
+again--and good-bye--I have a motorcar waiting outside there, and I have
+much to do in Barford when I get back."
+
+The two young people accompanied Collingwood into the hall. And Harper
+suddenly brightened.
+
+"I say!" he said. "Have a drink before you go. It's a long way in and
+out. Come into the dining-room."
+
+But Collingwood caught Nesta's eye, and he was quick to read a signal in
+it.
+
+"No, thanks awfully!" he answered. "I won't really--I must get
+back--I've such a lot of things to attend to. This is a very beautiful
+place of yours," he went on, as Harper, whose face had fallen at the
+visitor's refusal, followed with his sister to where the motor-car
+waited. "It might be a hundred miles from anywhere."
+
+"It's a thousand miles from anywhere!" muttered Harper. "Nothing to do
+here!"
+
+"No hunting, shooting, fishing?" asked Collingwood. "Get tired of 'em?
+Well, why not make a private golf-links in your park? You'd get a fine
+sporting course round there."
+
+"That's a good notion, Harper," observed Nesta, with some eagerness.
+"You could have it laid out this winter."
+
+Harper suddenly looked at Collingwood.
+
+"Going to stop in Barford?" he asked.
+
+"Till I settle my grandfather's affairs--yes," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Come and see us again," said Harper. "Come for the night--we've got a
+jolly good billiard table."
+
+"Do!" added Nesta heartily.
+
+"Since you're so kind, I will, then," replied Collingwood. "But not for
+a few days."
+
+He drove off--to wonder why he had visited Normandale Grange at all. For
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's explanation of the letter was doubtless the right
+one: Collingwood, little as he had seen of Antony Bartle, knew what a
+veritable sleuth-hound the old man was where rare books or engravings
+were concerned. Yet--why the sudden exclamation on finding that paper?
+Why the immediate writing of the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe? Why the
+setting off to Eldrick & Pascoe's office as soon as the letter was
+written? It all looked as if the old man had found some document, the
+contents of which related to the Mallathorpe family, and was anxious to
+communicate its nature to Mrs. Mallathorpe, and to his own solicitor, as
+soon as possible.
+
+"But that's probably only my fancy," he mused, as he sped back to
+Barford; "the real explanation is doubtless that suggested by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. Something made the old man think of the collection of local
+books at Normandale Grange--and he immediately wrote off to ask her to
+see him, with the idea of persuading her to let him have them. That's
+all there is in it--what a suspicious sort of party I must be getting!
+And suspicious of whom--and of what? Anyhow, I'm glad I went out
+there--and I'll certainly go again."
+
+On his way back to Barford he thought a good deal of the two young
+people he had just left. There was something of the irony of fate about
+their situation. There they were, in possession of money and luxury and
+youth--and already bored because they had nothing to do. He felt what
+closely approached a contemptuous pity for Harper--why didn't he turn to
+some occupation? There was their own business--why didn't he put in so
+many hours a day there, instead of leaving it to managers? Why didn't he
+interest himself in local affairs?--work at something? Already he had
+all the appearance of a man who is inclined to slackness--and in that
+case, mused Collingwood, his money would do him positive harm. But he
+had no thoughts of that sort about Nesta Mallathorpe: he had seen that
+she was of a different temperament.
+
+"She'll not stick there--idling," he said. "She'll break out and do
+something or other. What did she say? 'Suffering from lack of
+occupation'? A bad thing to suffer from, too--glad I'm not similarly
+afflicted!"
+
+There was immediate occupation for Collingwood himself when he reached
+the town. He had already made up his mind as to his future plans. He
+would sell his grandfather's business as soon as he could find a
+buyer--the old man had left a provision in his will, the gist of which
+Eldrick had already communicated to Collingwood, to the effect that his
+grandson could either carry on the business with the help of a competent
+manager until the stock was sold out, or could dispose of it as a going
+concern--Collingwood decided to sell it outright, and at once. But first
+it was necessary for him to look round the collection of valuable books
+and prints, and get an idea of what it was that he was about to sell.
+And when he had reached Barford again, and had lunched at his hotel, he
+went to Quagg Alley, and shut himself in the shop, and made a careful
+inspection of the treasures which old Bartle had raked up from many
+quarters.
+
+Within ten minutes of beginning his task Collingwood knew that he had
+gone out to Normandale Grange about a mere nothing. Picking up the
+_History of Barford_ which Jabey Naylor had spoken of, and turning over
+its leaves, two papers dropped out; one a half sheet of foolscap,
+folded; the other, a letter from some correspondent in the United
+States. Collingwood read the letter first--it was evidently that which
+Naylor had referred to as having been delivered the previous afternoon.
+It asked for a good, clear copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_--and
+then it went on, "If you should come across a copy of what is, I
+believe, a very rare tract or pamphlet, _Customs of the Court Leet of
+the Manor of Barford_, published, I think, about 1720, I should be glad
+to pay you any price you like to ask for it--in reason." So much for the
+letter--Collingwood turned from it to the folded paper. It was headed
+"List of Barford Tracts and Pamphlets in my box marked B.P. in the
+library at N Grange," and it was initialled at the foot J.M. Then
+followed the titles of some twenty-five or thirty works--amongst them
+was the very tract for which the American correspondent had inquired.
+And now Collingwood had what he believed to be a clear vision of what
+had puzzled him--his grandfather having just read the American buyer's
+request had found the list of these pamphlets inside the _History of
+Barford_, and in it the entry of the particular one he wanted, and at
+once he had written to Mrs. Mallathorpe in the hope of persuading her to
+sell what his American correspondent desired to buy. It was all quite
+plain--and the old man's visit to Eldrick & Pascoe's had nothing to do
+with the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Nor had he carried the folded paper
+in his pocket to Eldrick's--when Jabey Naylor went out to post the
+letter, Antony had placed the folded paper and the American letter
+together in the book and left them there. Quite, quite simple!--he had
+had his run to Normandale Grange and back all about nothing, and for
+nothing--except that he had met Nesta Mallathorpe, whom he was already
+sufficiently interested in to desire to see again. But having arrived at
+an explanation of what had puzzled him and made him suspicious, he
+dismissed that matter from his mind and thought no more of it.
+
+But across the street, all unknown to Collingwood, Linford Pratt was
+thinking a good deal. Collingwood had taken his car from a rank
+immediately opposite Eldrick & Pascoe's windows; Pratt, whose desk
+looked on to the street, had seen him drive away soon after ten o'clock
+and return about half-past twelve. Pratt, who knew everybody in the
+business centre of the town, knew the man who had driven Collingwood,
+and when he went out to his lunch he asked him where he had been that
+morning. The man, who knew no reason for secrecy, told him--and Pratt
+went off to eat his bread and cheese and drink his one glass of ale and
+to wonder why young Collingwood had been to Normandale Grange. He became
+slightly anxious and uneasy. He knew that Collingwood must have made
+some slight examination of old Bartle's papers. Was it--could it be
+possible that the old man, before going to Eldrick's, had left some
+memorandum of his discovery in his desk--or in a diary? He had said that
+he had not shown the will, nor mentioned the will, to a soul--but he
+might;--old men were so fussy about things--he might have set down in
+his diary that he had found it on such a day, and under such-and-such
+circumstances.
+
+However, there was one person who could definitely inform him of the
+reason of Collingwood's visit to Normandale Grange--Mrs. Mallathorpe. He
+would see her at once, and learn if he had any grounds for fear. And so
+it came about that at nine o'clock that evening, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for
+the second time that day, found herself asked to see a limb of the law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+POINT-BLANK
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was alone when Pratt's card was taken to her. Harper
+and Nesta were playing billiards in a distant part of the big house.
+Dinner had been over for an hour; Mrs. Mallathorpe, who had known what
+hard work and plenty of it was, in her time, was trifling over the
+newspapers--rest, comfort, and luxury were by no means boring to her.
+She looked at the card doubtfully--Pratt had pencilled a word or two on
+it: "Private and important business." Then she glanced at the butler--an
+elderly man who had been with John Mallathorpe many years before the
+catastrophe occurred.
+
+"Who is he, Dickenson?" she asked. "Do you know him?"
+
+"Clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's, in the town, ma'am," replied the butler.
+"I know the young man by sight."
+
+"Where is he?" inquired Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+
+"In the little morning room, at present, ma'am," said Dickenson.
+
+"Take him into the study," commanded Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I'll come to him
+presently." She was utterly at a loss to understand Pratt's presence
+there. Eldrick & Pascoe were not her solicitors, and she had no business
+of a legal nature in which they could be in any way concerned. But it
+suddenly struck her that that was the second time she had heard
+Eldrick's name mentioned that day--young Mr. Collingwood had said that
+his grandfather's death had taken place at Eldrick & Pascoe's office.
+Had this clerk come to see her about that?--and if so, what had she to
+do with it? Before she reached the room in which Pratt was waiting for
+her, Mrs. Mallathorpe was filled with curiosity. But in that curiosity
+there was not a trace of apprehension; nothing suggested to her that her
+visitor had called on any matter actually relating to herself or her
+family.
+
+The room into which Pratt had been taken was a small apartment opening
+out of the library--John Mallathorpe, when he bought Normandale Grange,
+had it altered and fitted to suit his own tastes, and Pratt, as soon as
+he entered it, saw that it was a place in which privacy and silence
+could be ensured. He noticed that it had double doors, and that there
+were heavy curtains before the window. And during the few minutes which
+elapsed between his entrance and Mrs. Mallathorpe's, he took the
+precaution to look behind those curtains, and to survey his
+surroundings--what he had to say was not to be overheard, if he could
+help it.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked her curiosity as soon as she came in. She did
+not remember that she had ever seen this young man before, but she
+recognized at once that he was a shrewd and sharp person, and she knew
+from his manner that he had news of importance to give her. She quietly
+acknowledged Pratt's somewhat elaborate bow, and motioned him to take a
+chair at the side of the big desk which stood before the fireplace--she
+herself sat down at the desk itself, in John Mallathorpe's old
+elbow-chair. And Pratt thought to himself that however much young Harper
+John Mallathorpe might be nominal master of Normandale Grange, the real
+master was there, in the self-evident, quiet-looking woman who turned to
+him in business-like fashion.
+
+"You want to see me?" said Mrs. Mallathorpe. "What is it?"
+
+"Business, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt. "As I said on my card--of a
+private and important sort."
+
+"To do with me?" she asked.
+
+"With you--and with your family," said Pratt. "And before we go any
+further, not a soul knows of it but--me."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe took another searching look at her visitor. Pratt was
+leaning over the corner of the desk, towards her; already he had lowered
+his tones to the mysterious and confidential note.
+
+"I don't know what you're talking about," she said. "Go on."
+
+Pratt bent a little nearer.
+
+"A question or two first, if you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe. And--answer
+them! They're for your own good. Young Mr. Collingwood called on you
+today."
+
+"Well--and what of it?"
+
+"What did he want?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated and frowned a little. And Pratt hastened to
+reassure her. "I'm using no idle words, Mrs. Mallathorpe, when I say
+it's for your own good. It is! What did he come for?"
+
+"He came to ask what there was in a letter which his grandfather wrote
+to me yesterday afternoon."
+
+"Antony Bartle had written to you, had he? And what did he say, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? For that is important!"
+
+"No more than that he wanted me to call on him today, if I happened to
+be in Barford."
+
+"Nothing more?"
+
+"Nothing more--not a word."
+
+"Nothing as to--why he wanted to see you?"
+
+"No! I thought that he probably wanted to see me about buying some books
+of the late Mr. Mallathorpe's."
+
+"Did you tell Collingwood that?" asked Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Yes--of course."
+
+"Did it satisfy him?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe frowned again.
+
+"Why shouldn't I?" she demanded. "It was the only explanation I could
+possibly give him. How do I know what the old man really wanted?"
+
+Pratt drew his chair still nearer to the desk. His voice dropped to a
+whisper and his eyes were full of meaning.
+
+"I'll tell you what he wanted!" he said speaking very slowly. "It's what
+I've come for. Listen! Antony Bartle came to our office soon after five
+yesterday afternoon. I was alone--everybody else had gone. I took him
+into Eldrick's room. He told me that in turning over one of the books
+which he had bought from Mallathorpe Mill, some short time ago, he had
+found--what do you think?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's cheek had flushed at the mention of the books from
+the Mill. Now, at Pratt's question, and under his searching eye, she
+turned very pale, and the clerk saw her fingers tighten on the arms of
+her chair.
+
+"What?" she asked. "What?"
+
+"John Mallathorpe's will!" he answered. "Do you understand? His--will!"
+
+The woman glanced quickly about her--at the doors, the uncurtained
+window.
+
+"Safe enough here," whispered Pratt. "I made sure of that. Don't be
+afraid--no one knows--but me."
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe seemed to find some difficulty in speaking, and
+when she at last got out a word her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Impossible!"
+
+"It's a fact!" said Pratt. "Nothing was ever more a fact as you'll see.
+But let me finish my story. The old man told me how he'd found the
+will--only half an hour before--and he asked me to ring up Eldrick, so
+that we might all read it together. I went to the telephone--when I came
+back, Bartle was dead--just dead. And--I took the will out of his
+pocket."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe made an involuntary gesture with her right hand. And
+Pratt smiled, craftily, and shook his head.
+
+"Much too valuable to carry about, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said. "I've got
+it--all safe--under lock and key. But as I've said--nobody knows of it
+but myself. Not a living soul. No one has any idea! No one can have any
+idea. I was a bit alarmed when I heard that young Collingwood had been
+to you, for I thought that the old man, though he didn't tell me of any
+such thing, might have dropped you a line saying what he'd found. But as
+he didn't--well, not one living soul knows that the will's in
+existence, except me--and you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was regaining her self-possession. She had had a great
+shock, but the worst of it was over. Already she knew, from Pratt's
+manner, insidious and suggesting, that the will was of a nature that
+would dispossess her and hers of this recently acquired wealth--the
+clerk had made that evident by look and tone. So--there was nothing but
+to face things.
+
+"What--what does it--say?" she asked, with an effort.
+
+Pratt unbuttoned his overcoat, plunged a hand into the inner pocket,
+drew out a sheet of paper, unfolded it and laid it on the desk.
+
+"An exact copy," he said tersely. "Read it for yourself."
+
+In spite of the determined effort which she made to be calm, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's fingers still trembled as she took up the sheet on which
+Pratt had made a fair copy of the will. The clerk watched her narrowly
+as she read. He knew that presently there would be a tussle between
+them: he knew, too, that she was a woman who would fight hard in defence
+of her own interest, and for the interests of her children.
+
+Always keeping his ears open to local gossip, especially where money was
+concerned, Pratt had long since heard that Mrs. Mallathorpe was a keen
+and sharp business woman. And now he was not surprised when, having
+slowly and carefully read the copy of the will from beginning to end,
+she laid it down, and turned to him with a business-like question.
+
+"The effect of that?" she asked. "What would it be--curtly?"
+
+"Precisely what it says," answered Pratt. "Couldn't be clearer!"
+
+"We--should lose all?" she demanded, almost angrily. "All?"
+
+"All--except what he says--there," agreed Pratt.
+
+"And that," she went on, drumming her fingers on the paper, "that--would
+stand?"
+
+"What it's a copy of would stand," said Pratt. "Oh, yes, don't you make
+any mistake about it, Mrs. Mallathorpe! Nothing can upset that will. It
+is plain as a pikestaff how it came to be made. Your late brother-in-law
+evidently wrote his will out--it's all in his own handwriting--and took
+it down to the Mill with him the very day of the chimney accident. Just
+as evidently he signed it in the presence of his manager, Gaukrodger,
+and his cashier, Marshall--they signed at the same time, as it says,
+there. Now I take it that very soon after that, Mr. Mallathorpe went out
+into his mill yard to have a look at the chimney--Gaukrodger and
+Marshall went with him. Before he went, he popped the will into the
+book, where old Bartle found it yesterday--such things are easily done.
+Perhaps he was reading the book--perhaps it lay handy--he slipped the
+will inside, anyway. And then--he was killed--and, what's more the two
+witnesses were killed with him. So there wasn't a man left who could
+tell of that will! But--there's half Barford could testify to these
+three signatures! Mrs. Mallathorpe, there's not a chance for you if I
+put that will into the hands of the two trustees!"
+
+He leaned back in his chair after that--nodding confidently, watching
+keenly. And now he saw that the trembling fingers were interlacing each
+other, twisting the rings on each other, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+thinking as she had most likely never thought in her life. After a
+moment's pause Pratt went on. "Perhaps you didn't understand," he said.
+"I mean, you don't know the effect. Those two trustees--Charlesworth &
+Wyatt--could turn you all clean out of this--tomorrow, in a way of
+speaking. Everything's theirs! They can demand an account of every penny
+that you've all had out of the estate and the business--from the time
+you all took hold. If anything's been saved, put aside, they can demand
+that. You're entitled to nothing but the three amounts of ten thousand
+each. Of course, thirty thousand is thirty thousand--it means, at five
+per cent., fifteen hundred a year--if you could get five per cent.
+safely. But--I should say your son and daughter are getting a few
+thousand a year each, aren't they, Mrs. Mallathorpe? It would be a nice
+come-down! Five hundred a year apiece--at the outside. A small house
+instead of Normandale Grange. Genteel poverty--comparatively
+speaking--instead of riches. That is--if I hand over the will to
+Charlesworth & Wyatt."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe slowly turned her eyes on Pratt. And Pratt suddenly
+felt a little afraid--there was anger in those eyes; anger of a curious
+sort. It might be against fate--against circumstance: it might not--why
+should it?--be against him personally, but it was there, and it was
+malign and almost evil, and it made him uncomfortable.
+
+"Where is the will!" she asked.
+
+"Safe! In my keeping," answered Pratt.
+
+She looked him all over--surmisingly.
+
+"You'll sell it to me?" she suggested. "You'll hand it over--and let me
+burn it--destroy it?"
+
+"No!" answered Pratt. "I shall not!"
+
+He saw that his answer produced personal anger at last. Mrs. Mallathorpe
+gave him a look which would have warned a much less observant man than
+Pratt. But he gave her back a look that was just as resolute.
+
+"I say no--and I mean no!" he continued. "I won't sell--but I'll
+bargain. Let's be plain with each other. You don't want that will to be
+handed over to the trustees named in it, Charlesworth & Wyatt?"
+
+"Do you think I'm a fool--man!" she flashed out.
+
+"I should be a fool myself if I did," replied Pratt calmly. "And I'm not
+a fool. Very well--then you'll square me. You'll buy me. Come to terms
+with me, and nobody shall ever know. I repeat to you what I've said
+before--not a soul knows now, no nor suspects! It's utterly impossible
+for anybody to find out. The testator's dead. The attesting witnesses
+are dead. The man who found this will is dead. No one but you and myself
+ever need know a word about all this. If--you make terms with me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe."
+
+"What do you want?" she asked sullenly. "You forget--I've nothing of my
+own. I didn't come into anything."
+
+"I've a pretty good notion who's real master here--and at Mallathorpe
+Mill, too," retorted Pratt. "I should say you're still in full control
+of your children, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and that you can do pretty well what
+you like with them."
+
+"With one of them perhaps," she said, still angry and sullen. "But--I
+tell you, for you may as well know--if my daughter knew of what you've
+told me, she'd go straight to these trustees and tell! That's a fact
+that you'd better realize. I can't control her."
+
+"Oh!" remarked Pratt. "Um!--then we must take care that she doesn't
+know. But we don't intend that anybody should know but you and me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. You needn't tell a soul--not even your son. You mustn't
+tell! Listen, now--I've thought out a good scheme which'll profit me,
+and make you safe. Do you know what you want on this estate?"
+
+She stared at him as if wondering what this question had to do with the
+matter which was of such infinite importance. And Pratt smiled, and
+hastened to enlighten her.
+
+"You want--a steward," he said. "A steward and estate agent. John
+Mallathorpe managed everything for himself, but your son can't, and
+pardon me if I say that you can't--properly. You need a man--you need
+me. You can persuade your son to that effect. Give me the job of steward
+here. I'll suggest to you how to do it in such a fashion that it'll
+arouse no suspicion, and look just like an ordinary--very
+ordinary--business job--at a salary and on conditions to be arranged,
+and--you're safe! Safe, Mrs. Mallathorpe--you know what that means!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly rose from her chair.
+
+"I know this!" she said. "I'll discuss nothing, and do nothing, till
+I've seen that will!"
+
+Pratt rose, too, nodding his head as if quite satisfied. He took up the
+copy, tore it in two pieces, and carefully dropped them into the glowing
+fire.
+
+"I shall be at my lodgings at any time after five-thirty tomorrow
+evening," he answered quietly. "Call there. You have the address. And
+you can then read the will with your own eyes. I shan't bring it here.
+The game's in my hands, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Within a few minutes he was out in the park again, and making his way to
+the little railway station in the valley below. He felt triumphant--he
+knew that the woman he had just left was at his mercy and would accede
+to his terms. And all the way back to town, and through the town to his
+lodgings, he considered and perfected the scheme he was going to suggest
+to Mrs. Mallathorpe on the morrow.
+
+Pratt lived in a little hamlet of old houses on the very outskirts of
+Barford--on the edge of a stretch of Country honeycombed by
+stone-quarries, some in use, some already worked out. It was a lonely
+neighbourhood, approached from the nearest tramway route by a narrow,
+high-walled lane. He was half-way along that lane when a stealthy foot
+stole to his side, and a hand was laid on his arm--just as stealthily
+came the voice of one of his fellow-clerks at Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"A moment, Pratt! I've been waiting for you. I want--a word or two--in
+private!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+THE UNEXPECTED
+
+
+Pratt started when he heard that voice and felt the arresting hand. He
+knew well enough to whom they belonged--they were those of one James
+Parrawhite, a little, weedy, dissolute chap who had been in Eldrick &
+Pascoe's employ for about a year. It had always been a mystery to him
+and the other clerks that Parrawhite had been there at all, and that
+being there he was allowed to stop. He was not a Barford man. Nobody
+knew anything whatever about him, though his occasional references to it
+seemed to indicate that he knew London pretty thoroughly. Pratt shrewdly
+suspected that he was a man whom Eldrick had known in other days,
+possibly a solicitor who had been struck off the rolls, and to whom
+Eldrick, for old times' sake, was disposed to extend a helping hand.
+
+All that any of them knew was that one morning some fifteen months
+previously, Parrawhite, a complete stranger, had walked into the office,
+asked to see Eldrick, had remained closeted with him half an hour, and
+had been given a job at two pounds a week, there and then. That he was a
+clever and useful clerk no one denied, but no one liked him.
+
+He was always borrowing half-crowns. He smelt of rum. He was altogether
+undesirable. It was plain to the clerks that Pascoe disliked him. But he
+was evidently under Eldrick's protection, and he did his work and did it
+well, and there was no doubt that he knew more law than either of the
+partners, and was better up in practice than Pratt himself. But--he was
+not desirable ... and Pratt never desired him less than on this
+occasion.
+
+"What are you after--coming on a man like that!" growled Pratt.
+
+"You," replied Parrawhite. "I knew you'd got to come up this lane, so I
+waited for you. I've something to say."
+
+"Get it said, then!" retorted Pratt.
+
+"Not here," answered Parrawhite. "Come down by the quarry--nobody about
+there."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Then you'll be very sorry for yourself--tomorrow," replied Parrawhite.
+"That's all!"
+
+Pratt had already realized that this fellow knew something. Parrawhite's
+manner was not only threatening but confident. He spoke as a man speaks
+who has got the whip hand. And so, still growling, and inwardly raging
+and anxious, he turned off with his companion into a track which lay
+amongst the stone quarries. It was a desolate, lonely place; no house
+was near; they were as much alone as if they had been in the middle of
+one of the great moors outside the town, the lights of which they could
+see in the valley below them. In the grey sky above, a waning moon gave
+them just sufficient light to see their immediate surroundings--a
+grass-covered track, no longer used, and the yawning mouths of the old
+quarries, no longer worked, the edges of which were thick with gorse and
+bramble. It was the very place for secret work, and Pratt was certain
+that secret work was at hand.
+
+"Now then!" he said, when they had walked well into the wilderness.
+"What is it? And no nonsense!"
+
+"You'll get no nonsense from me," sneered Parrawhite. "I'm not that
+sort. This is what I want to say. I was in Eldrick's office last night
+all the time you were there with old Bartle."
+
+This swift answer went straight through Pratt's defences. He was
+prepared to hear something unpleasant and disconcerting, but not that.
+And he voiced the first thought that occurred to him.
+
+"That's a lie!" he exclaimed. "There was nobody there!"
+
+"No lie," replied Parrawhite. "I was there. I was behind the curtain of
+that recess--you know. And since I know what you did, I don't mind
+telling you--we're in the same boat, my lad!--what I was going to do.
+You thought I'd gone--with the others. But I hadn't. I'd merely done
+what I've done several times without being found out--slipped in
+there--to wait until you'd gone. Why? Because friend Eldrick, as you
+know, is culpably careless about leaving loose cash in the unlocked
+drawer of his desk, culpably careless, too, about never counting it.
+And--a stray sovereign or half-sovereign is useful to a man who only
+gets two quid a week. Understand?"
+
+"So you're a thief?" said Pratt bitterly.
+
+"I'm precisely what you are--a thief!" retorted Parrawhite. "You stole
+John Mallathorpe's will last night. I heard everything, I tell you!--and
+saw everything. I heard the whole business--what the old man said--what
+you, later, said to Eldrick. I saw old Bartle die--I saw you take the
+will from his pocket, read it, and put it in your pocket. I know
+all!--except the terms of the will. But--I've a pretty good idea of what
+those terms are. Do you know why? Because I watched you set off to
+Normandale by the eight-twenty train tonight!"
+
+"Hang you for a dirty sneak!" growled Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite laughed, and flourished a heavy stick which he carried.
+
+"Not a bit of it!" he said, almost pleasantly. "I thought you were more
+of a philosopher--I fancied I'd seen gleams--mere gleams--of philosophy
+in you at times. Fortunes of war, my boy! Come now--you've seen enough
+of me to know I'm an adventurer. This is an adventure of the sort I
+love. Go into it heart and soul, man! Own up!--you've found out that the
+will leaves the property away from the present holders, and you've been
+to Normandale to--bargain? Come, now!"
+
+"What then!" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Then, of course, I come in at the bargaining," answered Parrawhite.
+"I'm going to have my share. That's a certainty. You'd better take my
+advice. Because you're absolutely in my power. I've nothing to do but to
+tell Eldrick tomorrow morning."
+
+"Suppose I tell Eldrick tomorrow morning of what you've told me?"
+interjected Pratt.
+
+"Eldrick will believe me before you," retorted Parrawhite,
+imperturbably. "I'm a much cleverer, more plausible man than you are, my
+friend--I've had an experience of the world which you haven't, I can
+easily invent a fine excuse for being in that room. For two pins I'll
+incriminate you! See? Be reasonable--for if it comes to a contest of
+brains, you haven't a rabbit's chance against a fox. Tell me all about
+the will--and what you've done. You've got to--for, by the Lord
+Harry!--I'm going to have my share. Come, now!"
+
+Pratt stood, in a little hollow wherein they had paused, and thought,
+rapidly and angrily. There was no doubt about it--he was trapped. This
+fearful scoundrel at his side, who boasted of his cleverness, would
+stick to him like a leach--he would have to share. All his own smart
+schemes for exploiting Mrs. Mallathorpe, for ensuring himself a
+competence for life, were knocked on the head. There was no helping
+it--he would have to tell--and to share. And so, sullenly, resentfully,
+he told.
+
+Parrawhite listened in silence, taking in every point. Pratt, knowing
+that concealment was useless, told the truth about everything,
+concisely, but omitting nothing.
+
+"All right!" remarked Parrawhite at the end, "Now, then, what terms do
+you mean to insist on?"
+
+"What's the good of going into that?" growled Pratt. "Now that you've
+stuck your foot in it, what do my terms matter?"
+
+"Quite right," agreed Parrawhite, "They don't. What matter is--our
+terms. Now let me suggest--no, insist on--what they must be. Cash! Do
+you know why I insist on that? No? Then I'll tell you. Because this
+young barrister chap, Collingwood, has evidently got some suspicion
+of--something."
+
+"I can't see it," said Pratt uneasily. "He was only curious to know what
+that letter was about."
+
+"Never mind," continued Parrawhite. "He had some suspicion--or he
+wouldn't have gone out there almost as soon as he reached Barford after
+his grandfather's death. And even if suspicion is put to sleep for
+awhile, it can easily be reawakened, so--cash! We must profit at
+once--before any future risk arises. But--what terms were you thinking
+of?"
+
+"Stewardship of this estate for life," muttered Pratt gloomily.
+
+"With the risk of some discovery being made, some time, any time!"
+sneered Parrawhite. "Where are your brains, man? The old fellow, John
+Mallathorpe, probably made a draft or two of that will before he did his
+fair copy--he may have left those drafts among his papers."
+
+"If he did, Mrs. Mallathorpe 'ud find 'em," said Pratt slowly. "I don't
+believe there's the slightest risk. I've figured everything out. I don't
+believe there's any danger from Collingwood or from anybody--it's
+impossible! And if we take cash now--we're selling for a penny what we
+ought to get pounds for."
+
+"The present is much more important than the future, my friend,"
+answered Parrawhite. "To me, at any rate. Now, then, this is my
+proposal. I'll be with you when this lady calls at your place tomorrow
+evening. We'll offer her the will, to do what she likes with, for ten
+thousand pounds. She can find that--quickly. When she pays--as she
+will!--we share, equally, and then--well, you can go to the devil! I
+shall go--somewhere else. So that's settled."
+
+"No!" said Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite turned sharply, and Pratt saw a sinister gleam in his eyes.
+
+"Did you say no?" he asked.
+
+"I said--no!" replied Pratt. "I'm not going to take five thousand pounds
+for a chance that's worth fifty thousand. Hang you!--if you hadn't been
+a black sneak-thief, as you are, I'd have had the whole thing to myself!
+And I don't know that I will give way to you. If it comes to it, my
+word's as good as yours--and I don't believe Eldrick would believe you
+before me. Pascoe wouldn't anyway. You've got a past!--in quod, I should
+think--my past's all right. I've a jolly good mind to let you do your
+worst--after all, I've got the will. And by george! now I come to think
+of it, you can do your worst! Tell what you like tomorrow morning. I
+shall tell 'em what you are--a scoundrel."
+
+He turned away at that--and as he turned, Parrawhite, with a queer cry
+of rage that might have come from some animal which saw its prey
+escaping, struck out at him with the heavy stick. The blow missed
+Pratt's head, but it grazed the tip of his ear, and fell slantingly on
+his left shoulder. And then the anger that had been boiling in Pratt
+ever since the touch on his arm in the dark lane, burst out in activity,
+and he turned on his assailant, gripped him by the throat before
+Parrawhite could move, and after choking and shaking him until his teeth
+rattled and his breath came in jerking sobs, flung him violently against
+the masses of stone by which they had been standing.
+
+Pratt was of considerable physical strength. He played cricket and
+football; he visited a gymnasium thrice a week. His hands had the grip
+of a blacksmith; his muscles were those of a prize-fighter. He had put
+more strength than he was aware of into his fierce grip on Parrawhite's
+throat; he had exerted far more force than he knew he was exerting, when
+he flung him away. He heard a queer cracking sound as the man struck
+something, and for the moment he took no notice of it--the pain of that
+glancing blow on his shoulder was growing acute, and he began to rub it
+with his free hand and to curse its giver.
+
+"Get up, you fool, and I'll give you some more!" he growled. "I'll teach
+you to----"
+
+He suddenly noticed the curiously still fashion in which Parrawhite was
+lying where he had flung him--noticed, too, as a cloud passed the moon
+and left it unveiled, how strangely white the man's face was. And just
+as suddenly Pratt forgot his own injury, and dropped on his knees beside
+his assailant. An instant later, and he knew that he was once more
+confronting death. For Parrawhite was as dead as Antony Bartle--violent
+contact of his head with a rock had finished what Pratt had nearly
+completed with that vicious grip. There was no questioning it, no
+denying it--Pratt was there in that lonely place, staring half
+consciously, half in terror, at a dead man.
+
+He stood up at last, cursing Parrawhite with the anger of despair. He
+had not one scrap of pity for him. All his pity was for himself. That he
+should have been brought into this!--that this vile little beast,
+perfect scum that he was, should have led him to what might be the utter
+ruin of his career!--it was shameful, it was abominable, it was cruel!
+He felt as if he could cheerfully tear Parrawhite's dead body to pieces.
+But even as these thoughts came, others of a more important nature
+crowded on them. For--there lay a dead man, who was not to be put in
+one's pocket, like a will. It was necessary to hide that thing from the
+light--ever that light. Within a few hours, morning would break, and
+lonely and deserted as that place was nowadays, some one might pass that
+way. Out of sight with him, then!--and quickly.
+
+Pratt was very well acquainted with the spot at which he stood. Those
+old quarries had a certain picturesqueness. They had become grass-grown;
+ivy, shrubs, trees had clustered about them--the people who lived in the
+few houses half a mile away, sometimes walked around them; the children
+made a playground of the place: Pratt himself had often gone into some
+quiet corner to read and smoke. And now his quick mind immediately
+suggested a safe hiding place for this thing that he could not carry
+away with him, and dare not leave to the morning sun--close by was a
+pit, formerly used for some quarrying purpose, which was filled, always
+filled, with water. It was evidently of considerable depth; the water
+was black in it; the mouth was partly obscured by a maze of shrub and
+bramble. It had been like that ever since Pratt came to lodge in that
+part of the district--ten or twelve years before; it would probably
+remain like that for many a long year to come. That bit of land was
+absolutely useless and therefore neglected, and as long as rain fell and
+water drained, that pit would always be filled to its brim.
+
+He remembered something else: also close by where he stood--a heap of
+old iron things--broken and disused picks, smashed rails, fragments
+thrown aside when the last of the limestone had been torn out of the
+quarries. Once more luck was playing into his hands--those odds and ends
+might have been put there for the very purpose to which he now meant to
+turn them. And being certain that he was alone, and secure, Pratt
+proceeded to go about his unpleasant task skilfully and methodically. He
+fetched a quantity of the iron, fastened it to the dead man's clothing,
+drew the body, thus weighted, to the edge of the pit, and prepared to
+slide it into the black water. But there an idea struck him. While he
+made these preparations he had had hosts of ideas as to his operations
+next morning--this idea was supplementary to them. Quickly and
+methodically he removed the contents of Parrawhite's pockets to his
+own--everything: money, watch and chain, even a ring which the dead man
+had been evidently vain of. Then he let Parrawhite glide into the
+water--and after him he sent the heavy stick, carefully fastened to a
+bar of iron.
+
+Five minutes later, the surface of the water in that pit was as calm and
+unruffled as ever--not a ripple showed that it had been disturbed. And
+Pratt made his way out of the wilderness, swearing that he would never
+enter it again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+
+Pratt was in Eldrick & Pascoe's office soon after half-past eight next
+morning, and for nearly forty minutes he had the place entirely to
+himself. But it took only a few of those minutes for him to do what he
+had carefully planned before he went to bed the previous night. Shutting
+himself into Eldrick's private room, and making sure that he was alone
+that time, he immediately opened the drawer in the senior partner's
+desk, wherein Eldrick, culpably enough, as Parrawhite had sneeringly
+remarked, was accustomed to put loose money. Eldrick was strangely
+careless in that way: he would throw money into that drawer in presence
+of his clerks--notes, gold, silver. If it happened to occur to him, he
+would take the money out at the end of the afternoon and hand it to
+Pratt to lock up in the safe; but as often as not, it did not occur.
+Pratt had more than once ventured on a hint which was almost a
+remonstrance, and Eldrick had paid no attention to him. He was a
+careless, easy-going man in many respects, Eldrick, and liked to do
+things in his own way. And after all, as Pratt had decided, when he
+found that his hints were not listened to, it was Eldrick's own affair
+if he liked to leave the money lying about.
+
+There was money lying about in that drawer when Pratt drew it open; it
+was never locked, day or night, or, if it was, the key was left in it.
+As soon as he opened it, he saw gold--two or three sovereigns--and
+silver--a little pile of it. And, under a letter weight, four banknotes
+of ten pounds each. But this was precisely what Pratt had expected to
+see; he himself had handed banknotes, gold, and silver to Eldrick the
+previous evening, just after receiving them from a client who had called
+to pay his bill. And he had seen Eldrick place them in the drawer, as
+usual, and soon afterwards Eldrick had walked out, saying he was going
+to the club, and he had never returned.
+
+What Pratt now did was done as the result of careful thought and
+deliberation. There was a cheque-book lying on top of some papers in the
+drawer; he took it up and tore three cheques out of it. Then he picked
+up the bank-notes, tore them and the abstracted blank cheques into
+pieces, and dropped the pieces in the fire recently lighted by the
+caretaker. He watched these fragments burn, and then he put the gold and
+silver in his hip-pocket, where he already carried a good deal of his
+own, and walked out.
+
+Nine o'clock brought the office-boy; a quarter-past nine brought the
+clerks; at ten o'clock Eldrick walked in. According to custom, Pratt
+went into Eldrick's room with the letters, and went through them with
+him. One of them contained a legal document over which the solicitor
+frowned a little.
+
+"Ask Parrawhite's opinion about that," he said presently, indicating a
+marked paragraph.
+
+"Parrawhite has not come in this morning, sir," observed Pratt,
+gathering up letters and papers. "I'll draw his attention to it when he
+arrives."
+
+He went into the outer office, only to be summoned back to Eldrick a few
+minutes later. The senior partner was standing by his desk, looking a
+little concerned, and, thought Pratt, decidedly uncomfortable. He
+motioned the clerk to close the door.
+
+"Has Parrawhite come?" he asked.
+
+"No," replied Pratt, "Not yet, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Is--is he usually late?" inquired Eldrick.
+
+"Usually quite punctual--half-past nine," said Pratt.
+
+Eldrick glanced at his watch; then at his clerk.
+
+"Didn't you give me some cash last night?" he asked.
+
+"Forty-three pounds nine," answered Pratt. "Thompson's bill of costs--he
+paid it yesterday afternoon."
+
+Eldrick looked more uncomfortable than ever.
+
+"Well--the fact is," he said, "I--I meant to hand it to you to put in
+the safe, Pratt, but I didn't come back from the club. And--it's gone!"
+
+Pratt simulated concern--but not astonishment. And Eldrick pulled open
+the drawer, and waved a hand over it.
+
+"I put it down there," he said. "Very careless of me, no doubt--but
+nothing of this sort has ever happened before, and--however, there's the
+unpleasant fact, Pratt. The money's gone!"
+
+Pratt, who had hastily turned over the papers and other contents of the
+drawer, shook his head and used his privilege as an old and confidential
+servant. "I've always said, sir, that it was a great mistake to leave
+loose money lying about," he remarked mournfully. "If there'd only been
+a practice of letting me lock anything of that sort up in the safe every
+night--and this chequebook, too, sir--then----"
+
+"I know--I know!" said Eldrick. "Very reprehensible on my part--I'm
+afraid I am careless--no doubt of it. But----"
+
+He in his turn was interrupted by Pratt, who was turning over the
+cheque-book.
+
+"Some cheque forms have been taken out of this," he said. "Three! at the
+end. Look there, sir!"
+
+Eldrick uttered an exclamation of intense annoyance and disgust. He
+looked at the despoiled cheque-book, and flung it into the drawer.
+
+"Pratt!" he said, turning half appealingly, half confidentially to the
+clerk. "Don't say a word of this--above all, don't mention it to Mr.
+Pascoe. It's my fault and I must make the forty-three pounds good.
+Pratt, I'm afraid this is Parrawhite's work. I--well, I may as well tell
+you--he'd been in trouble before he came here. I gave him another
+chance--I'd known him, years ago. I thought he'd go straight. But--I
+fear he's been tempted. He may have seen me leave money about. Was he in
+here last night?"
+
+Pratt pointed to a document which lay on Eldrick's desk.
+
+"He came in here to leave that for your perusal," he answered. "He was
+in here--alone--a minute or two before he left."
+
+All these lies came readily and naturally--and Eldrick swallowed each.
+He shook his head.
+
+"My fault--all my fault!" he said. "Look here--keep it quiet. But--do
+you know where Parrawhite has lived--lodged?"
+
+"No!" replied Pratt. "Some of the others may, though!"
+
+"Try to find out--quickly," continued Eldrick; "Then, make some excuse
+to go out--take papers somewhere, or something--and find if he's left
+his lodgings! I--I don't want to set the police on him. He was a decent
+fellow, once. See what you can make out, Pratt. In strict secrecy, you
+know---I do not want this to go further."
+
+Pratt could have danced for joy when he presently went out into the
+town. There would be no hue-and-cry after Parrawhite--none! Eldrick
+would accept the fact that Parrawhite had robbed him and flown--and
+Parrawhite would never be heard of--never mentioned again. It was the
+height of good luck for him. Already he had got rid of any small scraps
+of regret or remorse about the killing of his fellow-clerk. Why should
+he be sorry? The scoundrel had tried to murder him, thinking no doubt
+that he had the will on him. And he had not meant to kill him--what he
+had done, he had done in self-defence. No--everything was working most
+admirably--Parrawhite's previous bad record, Eldrick's carelessness and
+his desire to shut things up: it was all good. From that day forward,
+Parrawhite would be as if he had never been. Pratt was not even afraid
+of the body being discovered--though he believed that it would remain
+where it was for ever--for the probability was that the authorities
+would fill up that pit with earth and stones. But if it was brought to
+light? Why, the explanation was simple.
+
+Parrawhite, having robbed his employer, had been robbed himself,
+possibly by men with whom he had been drinking, and had been murdered in
+the bargain. No suspicion could attach to him, Pratt--he had nothing to
+fear--nothing!
+
+For the form of the thing, he called at the place whereat Parrawhite had
+lodged--they had seen nothing of him since the previous morning. They
+were poor, cheap lodgings in a mean street. The woman of the house said
+that Parrawhite had gone out as usual the morning before, and had never
+been in again. In order to find out all he could, Pratt asked if he had
+left much behind him in the way of belongings, and--just as he had
+expected--he learned that Parrawhite's personal property was remarkably
+limited: he possessed only one suit of clothes and not over much
+besides, said the landlady.
+
+"Is there aught wrong?" she asked, when Pratt had finished his
+questions. "Are you from where he worked?"
+
+"That's it," answered Pratt, "And he hasn't turned up this morning, and
+we think he's left the town. Owe you anything, missis?"
+
+"Nay, nothing much," she replied. "Ten shillings 'ud cover it, mister."
+
+Pratt gave her half a sovereign. It was not out of consideration for
+her, nor as a concession to Parrawhite's memory: it was simply to stop
+her from coming down to Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"Well, I don't think you'll see him again," he remarked. "And I dare say
+you won't care if you don't."
+
+He turned away then, but before he had gone far, the woman called him
+back.
+
+"What am I to do with his bits of things, mister, if he doesn't come
+back?" she asked.
+
+"Aught you please," answered Pratt, indifferently. "Throw 'em on the
+dust-heap."
+
+As he went back to the centre of the town, he occupied himself in
+considering his attitude to Mrs. Mallathorpe when she called on him that
+evening. In spite of his own previous notion, and of his
+carefully-worked-out scheme about the stewardship, he had been impressed
+by what Parrawhite has said as to the wisdom of selling the will for
+cash. Pratt did not believe that there was anything in the Collingwood
+suggestion--no doubt whatever, he had decided, that old Bartle had meant
+to tell Mrs. Mallathorpe of his discovery when she called in answer to
+his note, but as he had died before she could call, and as he had told
+nobody but him, Pratt, what possible danger could there be from
+Collingwood? And a stewardship for life appealed to him. He knew, from
+observation of the world, what a fine thing it is to have a certainty.
+
+Once he became steward and agent of the Normandale Grange estate, he
+would stick there, until he had saved a tidy heap of money. Then he
+would retire--with a pension and a handsome present--and enjoy himself.
+To be provided for, for life!--what more could a wise man want? And
+yet--there was something in what that devil Parrawhite had urged.
+
+For there was a risk--however small--of discovery, and if discovery were
+made, there would be a nice penalty to pay. It might, after all, be
+better to sell the will outright--for as much ready money as ever he
+could get, and to take his gains far away, and start out on a career
+elsewhere. After all, there was much to be said for the old proverb. The
+only question was--was the bird in hand worth the two; or the money,
+which he believed he would net in the bush?
+
+Pratt's doubts on this point were settled in a curious fashion. He had
+reached the centre of the town in his return to Eldrick's, and there, in
+the fashionable shopping street, he ran up against an acquaintance. He
+and the acquaintance stopped and chatted--about nothing. And as they
+lounged on the curb, a smart victoria drew up close by, and out of it,
+alone, stepped a girl who immediately attracted Pratt's eyes. He watched
+her across the pavement; he watched her into the shop. And his companion
+laughed.
+
+"That's the sort!" he remarked flippantly. "If you and I had one each,
+old man--what?"
+
+"Who is she?" demanded Pratt.
+
+The acquaintance stared at him in surprise.
+
+"What!" he exclaimed. "You don't know. That's Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I didn't know," said Pratt. "Fact!"
+
+He waited until Nesta Mallathorpe came out and drove away--so that he
+could get another and a closer look at her. And when she was gone, he
+went slowly back to the office, his mind made up. Risk or no risk, he
+would carry out his original notion. Whatever Mrs. Mallathorpe might
+offer, he would stick to his idea of close and intimate connection with
+Normandale Grange.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+TERMS
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, left to face the situation which Pratt had revealed to
+her in such sudden and startling fashion, had been quick to realize its
+seriousness. It had not taken much to convince her that the clerk knew
+what he was talking about. She had no doubt whatever that he was right
+when he said that the production of John Mallathorpe's will would mean
+dispossession to her children, and through them to herself. Nor had she
+any doubt, either, of Pratt's intention to profit by his discovery. She
+saw that he was a young man of determination, not at all scrupulous,
+eager to seize on anything likely to turn to his own advantage. She was,
+in short, at his mercy. And she had no one to turn to. Her son was weak,
+purposeless, almost devoid of character; he cared for nothing beyond
+ease and comfort, and left everything to her so long as he was allowed
+to do what he liked. She dared not confide in him--he was not fit to be
+entrusted with such a secret, nor endowed with the courage to carry it
+boldly and unflinchingly. Nor dare she confide it to her daughter--Nesta
+was as strong as her brother was weak: Mrs. Mallathorpe had only told
+the plain truth when she said to Pratt that if her daughter knew of the
+will she would go straight to the two trustees. No--she would have to do
+everything herself. And she could do nothing save under Pratt's
+dictation. So long as he had that will in his possession, he could make
+her agree to whatever terms he liked to insist upon.
+
+She spent a sleepless night, resolving all sorts of plans; she resolved
+more plans and schemes during the day which followed. But they all ended
+at the same point--Pratt. All the future depended upon--Pratt. And by
+the end of the day it had come to this--she must make a determined
+effort to buy Pratt clean out, so that she could get the will into her
+own possession and destroy it. She knew that she could easily find the
+necessary money--Harper Mallathorpe had such a natural dislike of all
+business matters and was so little fitted to attend to them that he was
+only too well content to leave everything relating to the estate and the
+mill at Barford to his mother. Up to that time Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+managed the affairs of both, and she had large sums at her disposal, out
+of which she could pay Pratt without even Harper being aware that she
+was paying him anything. And surely no young man in Pratt's position--a
+mere clerk, earning a few pounds a week--would refuse a big sum of ready
+money! It seemed incredible to her--and she went into Barford towards
+evening hoping that by the time she returned the will would have been
+burned to grey ashes.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe used some ingenuity in making her visit to Pratt.
+Giving out that she was going to see a friend in Barford, of whose
+illness she had just heard, she drove into the town, and on arriving
+near the Town Hall dismissed her carriage, with orders to the coachman
+to put up his horses at a certain livery stable, and to meet her at the
+same place at a specified time. Then she went away on foot, and drew a
+thick veil over her face before hiring a cab in which she drove up to
+the outskirt on which Pratt had his lodging. She was still veiled when
+Pratt's landlady showed her into the clerk's sitting-room.
+
+"Is it safe here?" she asked at once. "Is there no fear of anybody
+hearing what we may say?"
+
+"None!" answered Pratt reassuringly. "I know these folks--I've lived
+here several years. And nobody could hear however much they put their
+ears to the keyhole. Good thick old walls, these, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and
+a solid door. We're as safe here as we were in your study last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat down in the chair which Pratt politely drew near
+his fire. She raised her veil and looked at him, and the clerk saw at
+once how curious and eager she was.
+
+"That--will!" she said, in a low voice. "Let me see it--first."
+
+"One moment," answered Pratt. "First--you understand that I'm not going
+to let you handle it. I'll hold it before you, so you can read it.
+Second--you give me your promise--I'm trusting you--that you'll make no
+attempt to seize it. It's not going out of my hands."
+
+"I'm only a woman--and you're a strong man," she retorted sullenly.
+
+"Quite so," said Pratt. "But women have a trick of snatching at things.
+And--if you please--you'll do exactly what I tell you to do. Put your
+hands behind you! If I see you make the least movement with them--back
+goes the will into my pocket!"
+
+If Pratt had looked more closely at her just then, he would have taken
+warning from the sudden flash of hatred and resentment which swept
+across Mrs. Mallathorpe's face--it would have told him that he was
+dealing with a dangerous woman who would use her wits to circumvent and
+beat him--if not now, then later. But he was moving the gas bracket over
+the mantelpiece, and he did not see.
+
+"Very well--but I had no intention of touching it," said Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. "All I want is to see it--and read it."
+
+She obediently followed out Pratt's instructions, and standing in front
+of her he produced the will, unfolded it, and held it at a convenient
+distance before her eyes. He watched her closely, as she read it, and he
+saw her grow very pale.
+
+"Take your time--read it over two or three times," he said quietly. "Get
+it well into your mind, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+She nodded her head at last, and Pratt stepped back, folded up the will,
+and turning to a heavy box which lay open on the table, placed it
+within, under lock and key. And that done, he turned back and took a
+chair, close to his visitor.
+
+"Safe there, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said with a glance that was both
+reassuring and cunning. "But only for the night. I keep a few securities
+of my own at one of the banks in the town--never mind which--and that
+will shall be deposited with them tomorrow morning."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe shook her head.
+
+"No!" she said. "Because--you'll come to terms with me."
+
+Pratt shook his head, too, and he laughed.
+
+"Of course I shall come to terms with you," he answered. "But they'll be
+my terms--and they don't include any giving up of that document. That's
+flat, Mrs. Mallathorpe!"
+
+"Not if I make it worth your while?" she asked. "Listen!--you don't know
+what ready money I can command. Ready money, I tell you--cash down, on
+the spot!"
+
+"I've a pretty good notion," responded Pratt. "It's generally understood
+in the town that your son's a mere figure-head, and that you're the real
+boss of the whole show. I know that you're at the mill four times a
+week, and that the managers are under your thumb. I know that you manage
+everything connected with the estate. So, of course, I know you've lots
+of ready money at your disposal."
+
+"And I know that you don't earn more than four or five pounds a week, at
+the outside," said Mrs. Mallathorpe quietly. "Come, now--just think what
+a nice, convenient thing it would be to a young man of your age to
+have--a capital. Capital! It would be the making of you. You could go
+right away--to London, say, and start out on whatever you liked. Be
+sensible--sell me that paper--and be done with the whole thing."
+
+"No!" replied Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at him for a full moment. She was a shrewd judge
+of character, and she felt that Pratt was one of those men who are hard
+to stir from a position once adopted. But she had to make her
+effort--and she made it in what she thought the most effective way.
+
+"I'll give you five thousand pounds--cash--for it," she said. "Meet me
+with it tomorrow--anywhere you like in the town--any time you like--and
+I'll hand you the money--in notes."
+
+"No!" said Pratt. "No!"
+
+Once more she looked at him. And Pratt looked back--and smiled.
+
+"When I say no, I mean no," he went on. "And I never meant 'No' more
+firmly than I do now."
+
+"I don't believe you," she answered, affecting a doubt which she
+certainly did not feel. "You're only holding out for more money."
+
+"If I were holding out for more money, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt,
+"if I meant to sell you that will for cash payment, I should have stated
+my terms to you last night. I should have said precisely how much I
+wanted--and I shouldn't have budged from the amount. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe!--it's no good. I've got my own schemes, and my own
+ideas--and I'm going to carry 'em out. I want you to appoint me steward
+to your property, your affairs, for life."
+
+"Life!" she exclaimed. "Life!"
+
+"My life," answered Pratt. "And let me tell you--you'll find me a
+first-class man--a good, faithful, honest servant. I'll do well by you
+and yours. You'll never regret it as long as you live. It'll be the best
+day's work you've ever done. I'll look after your son's
+interests--everybody's interests--as if they were my own. As indeed," he
+added, with a sly glance, "they will be."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe realized the finality, the resolve, in all this--but
+she made one more attempt.
+
+"Ten thousand!" she said. "Come, now!--think what ten thousand pounds in
+cash would mean to you!"
+
+"No--nor twenty thousand," replied Pratt. "I've made up my mind. I'll
+have my own terms. It's no use--not one bit of use--haggling or
+discussing matters further. I'm in possession of the will--and therefore
+of the situation, Mrs. Mallathorpe, you've just got to do what I tell
+you!"
+
+He got up from his chair, and going over to a side-table took from it a
+blotting-pad, some writing paper and a pencil. For the moment his back
+was turned--and again he did not see the look of almost murderous hatred
+which came into his visitor's eyes; had he seen and understood it, he
+might even then have reconsidered matters and taken Mrs. Mallathorpe's
+last offer. But the look had gone when he turned again, and he noticed
+nothing as he handed over the writing materials.
+
+"What are these for?" she asked.
+
+"You'll see in a moment," replied Pratt, reseating himself, and drawing
+his chair a little nearer her own. "Now listen--because it's no good
+arguing any more. You're going to give me that stewardship and agency.
+You'll simply tell your son that it's absolutely necessary to have a
+steward. He'll agree. If he doesn't, no matter--you'll convince him.
+Now, then, we must do it in a fashion that won't excite any suspicion.
+Thus--in a few days--say next week--you'll insert in the Barford
+papers--all three of them--the advertisement I'm going to dictate to
+you. We'll put it in the usual, formal phraseology. Write this down, if
+you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+He dictated an advertisement, setting forth the requirements of which he
+had spoken, and Mrs. Mallathorpe obeyed him and wrote. She hated Pratt
+more than ever at that moment--there was a quiet, steadfast
+implacability about him that made her feel helpless. But she restrained
+all sign of it, and when she had done his bidding she looked at him as
+calmly as he looked at her.
+
+"I am to insert this in the Barford papers next week," she said.
+"And--what then?"
+
+"Then you'll get a lot of applications for the job," chuckled Pratt.
+"There'll be mine amongst them. You can throw most of 'em in the fire.
+Keep a few for form's sake. Profess to discuss them with Mr. Harper--but
+let the discussion be all on your side. I'll send two or three good
+testimonials--you'll incline to me from the first. You'll send for me.
+Your interview with me will be highly satisfactory. And you'll give me
+the appointment."
+
+"And--your terms?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. Now that her own scheme had
+failed, she seemed quite placable to all Pratt's proposals--a sure sign
+of danger to him if he had only known it. "Better let me know them
+now--and have done with it."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Pratt. "But first of all--can you keep this secret to
+yourself and me? The money part, any way?"
+
+"I can--and shall," she answered.
+
+"Good!" said Pratt. "Very well. I want a thousand a year. Also I want
+two rooms--and a business room--at the Grange. I shall not interfere
+with you or your family, or your domestic arrangements, but I shall
+expect to have all my meals served to me from your kitchen, and to have
+one of your servants at my disposal. I know the Grange--I've been over
+it more than once. There's much more room there than you can make use
+of. Give me the rooms I want in one of the wings. I shan't disturb any
+of you. You'll never see me except on business--and if you want to."
+
+Again the calm acquiescence which would have surprised some men. Why
+Pratt failed to be surprised by it was because he was just then feeling
+exceedingly triumphant--he believed that Mrs. Mallathorpe was,
+metaphorically, at his feet. He had more than a little vanity in him,
+and it pleased him greatly, that dictating of terms: he saw himself a
+conqueror, with his foot on the neck of his victim.
+
+"Is that all, then?" asked the visitor.
+
+"All!" answered Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe calmly folded up the draft advertisement and placed it
+in her purse. Then she rose and adjusted her veil.
+
+"Then--there is nothing to be done until I get your answer to this--your
+application?" she asked. "Very well."
+
+Pratt showed her out, and walked to the cab with her. He went back to
+his rooms highly satisfied--and utterly ignorant of what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was thinking as she drove away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+
+Within a week of his sudden death in Eldrick's private office, old
+Antony Bartle was safely laid in the tomb under the yew-tree of which
+Mrs. Clough had spoken with such appreciation, and his grandson had
+entered into virtual possession of all that he had left. Collingwood
+found little difficulty in settling his grandfather's affairs.
+Everything had been left to him: he was sole executor as well as sole
+residuary legatee. He found his various tasks made uncommonly easy.
+Another bookseller in the town hurried to buy the entire stock and
+business, goodwill, book debts, everything--Collingwood was free of all
+responsibility of the shop in Quagg Alley within a few days of the old
+man's funeral. And when he had made a handsome present to the
+housekeeper, a suitable one to the shop-boy, and paid his grandfather's
+last debts, he was free to depart--a richer man by some five-and-twenty
+thousand pounds than when he hurried down to Barford in response to
+Eldrick's telegram.
+
+He sat in Eldrick's office one afternoon, winding up his affairs with
+him. There were certain things that Eldrick & Pascoe would have to do;
+as for himself it was necessary for him to get back to London.
+
+"There's something I want to propose to you," said Eldrick, when they
+had finished the immediate business. "You're going to practise, of
+course?"
+
+"Of course!" replied Collingwood, with a laugh. "If I get the chance!"
+
+"You'll get the chance," said Eldrick. "What were you going in for?"
+
+"Commercial law--company law--as a special thing," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I'll tell you what it is," continued Eldrick eagerly. "There's a career
+for you if you'll take my advice. Leave London--come down here and take
+chambers in the town, and go the North-Eastern Circuit. I'll promise
+you--for our firm alone--plenty of work. You'll get more--there's lots
+of work waiting here for a good, smart young barrister. Ah!--you smile,
+but I know what I'm talking about. You don't know Barford men. They
+believe in the old adage that one should look at home before going
+abroad. They're terribly litigious, too, and if you were here, on the
+spot, they'd give you work. What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"That sounds very tempting. But I was thinking of sticking to London."
+
+"Not one hundredth part of the chance in London that there is here!"
+affirmed Eldrick. "We badly want two or three barristers in this place. A
+man who's really well up in commercial and company law would soon have
+his hands full. There's work, I tell you. Take my advice, and come!"
+
+"I couldn't come--in any case--for a few months," said Collingwood,
+musingly. "Of course, if you really think there's an opening----"
+
+"I know there is!" asserted Eldrick. "I'll guarantee you lots of
+work--our work. I'm sick of fetching men down all the way from town, or
+getting them from Leeds. Come!--and you'll see."
+
+"I might come in a few months' time, and try things for a year or two,"
+replied Collingwood. "But I'm off to India, you know, next week, and I
+shall be away until the end of spring--four months or so."
+
+"To India!" exclaimed Eldrick. "What are you going to do there?"
+
+"Sir John Standridge," said Collingwood, mentioning a famous legal
+luminary of the day, "is going out to Hyderabad to take certain
+evidence, and hold a sort of inquiry, in a big case, and I'm going with
+him as his secretary and assistant--I was in his chambers for two years,
+you know. We leave next week, and we shall not be back until the end of
+April."
+
+"Lucky man!" remarked the solicitor. "Well, when you return, don't
+forget what I've said. Come back!--you'll not regret it. Come and settle
+down. Bye-the-bye, you're not engaged, are you?"
+
+"Engaged?" said Collingwood. "To what--to whom--what do you mean?"
+
+"Engaged to be married," answered Eldrick coolly. "You're not? Good! If
+you want a wife, there's Miss Mallathorpe. Nice, clever girl, my
+boy--and no end of what Barford folk call brass. The very woman for
+you."
+
+"Do you Barford people ever think of anything else but what you call
+brass?" asked Collingwood, laughing.
+
+"Sometimes," replied Eldrick. "But it's generally of something that
+nothing but brass can bring or produce. After all, a rich wife isn't a
+despicable thing, nowadays. You've seen this young lady?"
+
+"I've been there once," asserted Collingwood.
+
+"Go again--before you leave," counselled Eldrick. "You're just the right
+man. Listen to the counsels of the wise! And while you're in India,
+think well over my other advice. I tell you there's a career for you,
+here in the North, that you'd never get in town."
+
+Collingwood left him and went out--to find a motorcar and drive off to
+Normandale Grange, not because Eldrick had advised him to go, but
+because of his promise to Harper and Nesta Mallathorpe. And once more he
+found Nesta alone, and though he had no spice of vanity in his
+composition it seemed to him that she was glad when he walked into the
+room in which they had first met.
+
+"My mother is out--gone to town--to the mill," she said. "And Harper is
+knocking around the park with a gun--killing rabbits--and time. He'll be
+in presently to tea--and he'll be delighted to see you. Are you going to
+stay in Barford much longer?"
+
+"I'm going up to town this evening--seven o'clock train," answered
+Collingwood, watching her keenly. "All my business is finished now--for
+the present."
+
+"But--you'll be coming back?" she asked.
+
+"Perhaps," he said. "I may come back--after a while."
+
+"When you do come back," she went on, a little hurriedly, "will you come
+and see us again? I--it's difficult to explain--but I do wish Harper
+knew more men--the right sort of men. Do you understand?"
+
+"You mean--he needs more company?"
+
+"More company of the right kind. He doesn't know many nice men. And he
+has so little to occupy him. He's no head for business--my mother
+attends to all that--and he doesn't care much about sport--and when he
+goes into Barford he only hangs about the club, and, I'm afraid, at two
+or three of the hotels there, and--it's not good for him."
+
+"Can't you get him interested in anything?" suggested Collingwood. "Is
+there nothing that he cares about?"
+
+"He never did care about anything," replied Nesta with a sigh. "He's
+apathetic! He just moves along. Sometimes I think he was born half
+asleep, and he's never been really awakened. Pity, isn't it?"
+
+"Considering everything--a great pity," agreed Collingwood. "But--he's
+provided for."
+
+Nesta gave him a swift glance.
+
+"It might have been a good deal better for him if he hadn't been
+provided for!" she said. "He'd have just had to do something, then.
+But--if you come back, you'll come here sometimes?"
+
+"Of course!" answered Collingwood. "And if I come back, it will probably
+be to stop here. Mr. Eldrick says there's a lot of work going begging in
+Barford--for a smart young barrister well up in commercial law. Perhaps
+I may try to come up to his standard--I'm certainly young, but I don't
+know whether I'm smart."
+
+"Better come and try," she said, smiling. "Don't forget that I've seen
+you look the part, anyway--your wig and gown suited you very well."
+
+"Theatrical properties," he replied, laughing. "The wig was too small,
+and the gown too long. Well--we'll see. But in the meantime, I'm going
+away for four months--to India."
+
+"To India--four months!" she exclaimed. "That sounds nice."
+
+"Legal business," said Collingwood. "I shall be back about the end of
+April--and then I shall probably come down here again, and seriously
+consider Eldrick's suggestion. I'm very much inclined to take it."
+
+"Then--you'd leave London?" she asked.
+
+"I've little to leave there," replied Collingwood. "My father and mother
+are dead, and I've no brothers, no sisters--no very near relations.
+Sounds lonely, doesn't it?"
+
+"One can feel lonely when one has relations," said Nesta.
+
+"Are you saying that from--experience?" he asked.
+
+"I often wish I had more to do," she answered frankly. "What's the use
+of denying it? I've next to nothing to do, here. I liked my work at the
+hospital--I was busy all day. Here----"
+
+"If I were you," interrupted Collingwood, "I'd set to work nursing in
+another fashion. Look after your brother! Get him going at
+something--even if it's playing golf. Play with him! It would do
+him--and you--all the good in the world if you got thoroughly infatuated
+with even a game. Don't you see?"
+
+"You mean--anything is better than nothing," she replied. "All
+right--I'll try that, anyway. For--I'm anxious about Harper. All this
+money!--and no occupation!"
+
+Collingwood, who was sitting near the windows, looked out across the
+park and into the valley beyond.
+
+"I should have thought that a man who had come into an estate like this
+would have found plenty of occupation," he remarked. "What is there,
+beside the house and this park?"
+
+Nesta, who had busied herself with some fancy-work since Collingwood's
+entrance, laid it down and came to the windows. She pointed to certain
+roofs and gables in the valley.
+
+"There's the whole village of Normandale," she said. "A busy place, no
+doubt, but it's all Harper's--he's lord of the manor. He's patron of the
+living, too. It's all his--farms, cottages, everything. And the woods,
+and the park, and this house, and a stretch of the moors, as well. Of
+course, he ought to find a lot to do--but he doesn't. Perhaps because my
+mother does everything. She really is a business woman."
+
+Collingwood looked out over the area which Nesta had indicated. Harper
+Mallathorpe, he calculated, must be possessed of some three or four
+thousand acres.
+
+"A fine property!" he said. "He's a very fortunate fellow!"
+
+Just then this very fortunate fellow came in. His face, dull enough as
+he entered, lighted up at sight of a visitor, and fell again when
+Collingwood explained that his visit was a mere flying one, and that he
+was returning to London that night. Collingwood led him on to the
+project which he had mentioned at his previous visit--the making of golf
+links in the park, and pointed out, as a devotee of the sport, what a
+fine course could be made. Before he left he had succeeded in arousing
+like interest in Harper--he promised to go into the matter, and to
+employ a man whom Collingwood recommended as an expert in laying out
+golf courses.
+
+"You'll have got your greens in something like order by this time next
+year, if you start operations soon," said Collingwood. "And then, if I
+settle down at Barford, I'll come out now and then, if you'll let me."
+
+"Let you!" exclaimed Harper. "By Jove!--we're only too glad to have
+anybody out here--aren't we, Nesta?"
+
+"We shall always be glad to see Mr. Collingwood," said Nesta.
+
+Collingwood went away with that last intimation warm in his memory. He
+had an idea that the girl meant what she said--and for a moment he was
+sorry that he was going to India. He might have settled down at Barford
+there and then, and--but at that he laughed at himself.
+
+"A young woman with several thousands a year of her own!" he said. "Of
+course, she'll marry some big pot in the county. They feel a little
+lonely, those two, just now, because everything's new to them, and
+they're new to their changed circumstances. But when I get back--ah!--I
+guess they'll have got plenty of people around them."
+
+And he determined, being a young man of sense, not to think any
+more--for already he had thought a good deal of Nesta Mallathorpe, until
+he returned from his Indian travels. Let him attend to his business, and
+leave possibilities until they came nearer.
+
+"All the same." he mused, as he drew near the town again, "I'm pretty
+sure I shall come back here next spring--I feel like it."
+
+He called in at Eldrick's office on his way to the hotel, to take some
+documents which had been preparing for him. It was then late in the
+afternoon, and no one but Pratt was there--Pratt, indeed, had been
+waiting until Collingwood called.
+
+"Going back to town, Mr. Collingwood?" asked Pratt as he handed over a
+big envelope. "When shall we have the pleasure of seeing you again,
+sir?"
+
+Something in the clerk's tone made Collingwood think--he could not tell
+why--that Pratt was fishing for information. And--also for reasons which
+he could not explain--Collingwood had taken a curious dislike to Pratt,
+and was not inclined to give him any confidence.
+
+"I don't know," he answered, a little icily. "I am leaving for India
+next week."
+
+He bade the clerk a formal farewell and went off, and Pratt locked the
+office door and slowly followed him downstairs.
+
+"To India!" he said to himself, watching the young barrister's
+retreating figure. "To India, eh? For a time--or for--what?"
+
+Anyway, that was good news, Pratt had seen in Collingwood a possible
+rival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+
+Collingwood's return to London was made on a Friday evening: next day he
+began the final preparations for his departure to India on the following
+Thursday. He was looking forward to his journey and his stay in India
+with keen expectation. He would have the society of a particularly
+clever and brilliant man; they were to break their journey in Italy and
+in Egypt; he would enjoy exceptional facilities for seeing the native
+life of India; he would gain valuable experience. It was a chance at
+which any young man would have jumped, and Collingwood had been greatly
+envied when it was known that Sir John Standridge had offered it to him.
+And yet he was conscious that if he could have done precisely what he
+desired, he would have stayed longer at Barford, in order to see more of
+Nesta Mallathorpe. Already it seemed a long time to the coming spring,
+when he would be back--and free to go North again.
+
+But Collingwood was fated to go North once more much sooner than he had
+dreamed of. As he sat at breakfast in his rooms on the Monday morning
+after his departure from Barford, turning over his newspaper with no
+particular aim or interest, his attention was suddenly and sharply
+arrested by a headline. Even that headline might not have led him to
+read what lay beneath. But in the same instant in which he saw it he
+also saw a name--Mallathorpe. In the next he knew that heavy trouble had
+fallen on Normandale Grange, the very day after he had left it.
+
+This is what Collingwood read as he sat, coffee-cup in one hand,
+newspaper in the other--staring at the lines of unleaded type:
+
+ TRAGIC FATE OF YOUNG YORKSHIRE SQUIRE
+
+ "A fatal accident, of a particularly sad and disturbing nature,
+ occurred near Barford, Yorkshire, on Saturday. About four
+ o'clock on Saturday afternoon, Mr. Linford Pratt, managing clerk
+ to Messrs. Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, of Barford, who was
+ crossing the grounds of Normandale Grange on his way to a
+ business appointment, discovered the dead body of Mr. H. J.
+ Mallathorpe, the owner of the Normandale Estate, lying in a
+ roadway which at that point is spanned, forty feet above, by a
+ narrow foot-bridge. The latter is an ancient construction of
+ wood, and there is no doubt that it was in extremely bad repair,
+ and had given way when the unfortunate young gentleman, who was
+ out shooting in his park, stepped upon it. Mr. Mallathorpe, who
+ was only twenty-four years of age, succeeded to the Normandale
+ estates, one of the finest properties in the neighbourhood of
+ Barford, about two years ago, under somewhat romantic--and also
+ tragic--circumstances, their previous owner, his uncle, Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe, a well-known Barford manufacturer, meeting a sudden
+ death by the falling of his mill chimney--a catastrophe which
+ also caused the deaths of several of his employees. Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe died intestate, and the estate at Normandale passed
+ to the young gentleman who met such a sad fate on Saturday
+ afternoon. Mr. H.J. Mallathorpe was unmarried, and it is
+ understood that Normandale (which includes the village of that
+ name, the advowson of the living, and about four thousand acres
+ of land) now becomes the property of his sister, Miss Nesta
+ Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood set down his cup, and dropped the newspaper. He was but half
+way through his breakfast, but all his appetite had vanished. All that
+he was conscious of was that here was trouble and grief for a girl in
+whom--it was useless to deny it--he had already begun to take a warm
+interest. And suddenly he started from his chair and snatched up a
+railway guide. As he turned over its pages, he thought rapidly. The
+preparations for his journey to India were almost finished--what was not
+done he could do in a few hours. He had no further appointment with Sir
+John Standridge until nine o'clock on Thursday morning, when he was to
+meet him at the train for Dover and Paris. Monday--Tuesday--Wednesday--he
+had three days--ample time to hurry down to Normandale, to do what he
+could to help there, and to get back in time to make his own last
+arrangements. He glanced at his watch--he had forty minutes in which to
+catch an express from King's Cross to Barford. Without further delay he
+picked up a suit-case which was already packed and set out for the
+station.
+
+He was in Barford soon after two o'clock--in Eldrick's office by
+half-past two. Eldrick shook his head at sight of him.
+
+"I can guess what's brought you down, Collingwood," he said. "Good of
+you, of course--I don't think they've many friends out there."
+
+"I can scarcely call myself that--yet," answered Collingwood. "But--I
+thought I might be of some use. I'll drive out there presently. But
+first--how was it?"
+
+Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"Don't know much more than what the papers say," he answered. "There's
+an old foot-bridge there that spans a road in the park--road cut through
+a ravine. They say it was absolutely rotten, and the poor chap's weight
+was evidently too much for it. And there was a drop of forty feet into a
+hard road. Extraordinary thing that nobody on the estate seems to have
+known of the dangerous condition of that bridge!--but they say it was
+little used--simply a link between one plantation and another.
+However;--it's done, now. Our clerk--Pratt, you know--found the body.
+Hadn't been dead five minutes, Pratt says."
+
+"What was Pratt doing there?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Oh, business of his own," replied Eldrick. "Not ours. There was an
+advertisement in Saturday's papers which set out that a steward was
+wanted for the Normandale estate, and Pratt mentioned it to me in the
+morning that he thought of applying for the job if we'd give him a good
+testimonial. I suppose he'd gone out there to see about the
+preliminaries. Anyway, he was walking through the park when he found
+young Mallathorpe's body. I understand he made himself very useful, too,
+and I've sent him out there again today, to do anything he can--smart
+chap, Pratt!"
+
+"Possibly, then, there is nothing I can do," remarked Collingwood.
+
+"I should say you'll do a lot by merely going there," answered Eldrick.
+"As I said just now, they've few friends, and no relations, and I hear
+that Mrs. Mallathorpe is absolutely knocked over. Go, by all means--a
+bit of sympathy goes a long way on these occasions. I say!--what a
+regular transformation an affair of this sort produces. Do you know,
+that young fellow, just like his uncle, had not made any will! Fact!--I
+had it from Robson, their solicitor, this very morning. The whole of the
+estate comes to the sister, of course--she and the mother will share the
+personal property. By that lad's death, Nesta Mallathorpe becomes one of
+the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!"
+
+Collingwood made no reply to this communication. But as he drove off to
+Normandale Grange, it was fresh in his mind. And it was not very
+pleasant to him. One of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!--and he
+was already realizing that he would like to make Nesta Mallathorpe his
+wife: it was because he felt what he did for her that he had rushed down
+to do anything he could that would be of help. Supposing--only
+supposing--that people--anybody--said that he was fortune-hunting!
+Somewhat unduly sensitive, proud, almost to a fault, he felt his cheek
+redden at the thought, and for a moment he wished that old John
+Mallathorpe's wealth had never passed to his niece. But then he sneered
+at himself for his presumption.
+
+"Ass!" he said. "She's never even thought of me--in that way, most
+likely! Anyway, I'm a stupid fool for thinking of these things at
+present."
+
+But he knew, within a few minutes of entering the big, desolate-looking
+house, that Nesta had been thinking of him. She came to him in the room
+where they had first met, and quietly gave him her hand.
+
+"I was not surprised when they told me you were here," she said. "I was
+thinking about you--or, rather, expecting to hear from you."
+
+"I came at once," answered Collingwood, who had kept her hand in his.
+"I--well, I couldn't stop away. I thought, perhaps, I could do
+something--be of some use."
+
+"It's a great deal of use to have just--come," she said. "Thank you!
+But--I suppose you'll have to go?"
+
+"Not for two days, anyway," he replied. "What can I do?"
+
+"I don't know that you can actually do anything," she answered.
+"Everything is being done. Mr. Eldrick sent his clerk, Mr. Pratt--who
+found Harper--he's been most kind and useful. He--and our own
+solicitor--are making all arrangements. There's got to be an inquest.
+No--I don't know that you can do actual things. But--while you're
+here--you can look in when you like. My mother is very ill--she has
+scarcely spoken since Saturday."
+
+"I'll tell you what I will do," said Collingwood determinedly. "I
+noticed in coming through the village just now that there's quite a
+decent inn there. I'll go down and arrange to stay there until Wednesday
+evening--then I shall be close by--if you should need me."
+
+He saw by her look of quick appreciation and relief that this suggestion
+pleased her. She pressed his hand and withdrew her own. "Thank you
+again!" she said. "Do you know--I can't quite explain--I should be glad
+if you were close at hand? Everybody has been very kind--but I do feel
+that there is nobody I can talk to. If you arrange this, will you come
+in again this evening?"
+
+"I shall arrange it," answered Collingwood. "I'll see to it now. Tell
+your people I am to be brought in whenever I call. And--I'll be close by
+whenever you want me."
+
+It seemed little to say, little to do, but he left her feeling that he
+was being of some use. And as he went off to make his arrangements at
+the inn he encountered Pratt, who was talking to the butler in the outer
+hall.
+
+The clerk looked at Collingwood with an unconcern and a composure which
+he was able to assume because he had already heard of his presence in
+the house. Inwardly, he was malignantly angry that the young barrister
+was there, but his voice was suave, and polite enough when he spoke.
+
+"Good afternoon, Mr. Collingwood," he said quietly. "Very sad occasion
+on which we meet again, sir. Come to offer your sympathy, Mr.
+Collingwood, of course--very kind of you."
+
+"I came," answered Collingwood, who was not inclined to bandy phrases
+with Pratt, "to see if I could be of any practical use."
+
+"Just so, sir," said Pratt. "Mr. Eldrick sent me here for the same
+purpose. There's really not much to do--beyond the necessary
+arrangements, which are already pretty forward. Going back to town,
+sir?" he went on, following Collingwood out to his motor-car, which
+stood waiting in the drive.
+
+"No!" replied Collingwood. "I'm going to send this man to Barford to
+fetch my bag to the inn down there in the village, where I'm going to
+stay for a few days. Did you hear that?" he continued, turning to the
+driver. "Go back to Barford--get my bag from the _Station Hotel_
+there--bring it to the _Normandale Arms_--I'll meet you there on your
+return."
+
+The car went off, and Collingwood, with a nod to Pratt, was about to
+turn down a side path towards the village. But Pratt stopped him.
+
+"Would you care to see the place where the accident happened, Mr.
+Collingwood?" he said. "It's close by--won't take five minutes."
+
+Collingwood hesitated a moment; then he turned back. It might be well,
+he reflected, if he made himself acquainted with all the circumstances
+of this case, simple as they seemed.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "If it's so near."
+
+"This way, sir," responded Pratt. He led his companion along the front
+of the house, through the shrubberies at the end of a wing, and into a
+plantation by a path thickly covered with pine needles. Presently they
+emerged upon a similar track, at right angles to that by which they had
+come, and leading into a denser part of the woods. And at the end of a
+hundred yards of it they came to a barricade, evidently of recent
+construction, over which Pratt stretched a hand. "There!" he said.
+"That's the bridge, sir." Collingwood looked over the barricade. He saw
+that he and Pratt were standing at the edge of one thick plantation of
+fir and pine; the edge of a similar plantation stretched before them
+some ten yards away. But between the two lay a deep, dark ravine, which,
+immediately in front of the temporary barricade, was spanned by a narrow
+rustic bridge--a fragile-looking thing of planks, railed in by boughs of
+trees. And in the middle was a jagged gap in both floor and side-rails,
+showing where the rotten wood had given way.
+
+"I'll explain, Mr. Collingwood," said the clerk presently. "I knew this
+park, sir--I knew it well, before the late Mr. John Mallathorpe bought
+the property. That path at the other end of the bridge makes a short cut
+down to the station in the valley--through the woods and the lower part
+of the park. I came up that path, from the station, on Saturday
+afternoon, intending to cross this bridge and go on to the house, where
+I had private business. When I got to the other end of the bridge,
+there, I saw the gap in the middle. And then I looked down into the
+cut--there's a road--a paved road--down there, and I saw--him! And so I
+made shift to scramble down--stiff job it was!--to get to him. But he
+was dead, Mr. Collingwood--stone dead, sir!--though I'm certain he
+hadn't been dead five minutes. And----"
+
+"Aye, an' he'd never ha' been dead at all, wouldn't young Squire, if
+only his ma had listened to what I telled her!" interrupted a voice
+behind them. "He'd ha' been alive at this minute, he would, if his ma
+had done what I said owt to be done--now then!"
+
+Collingwood turned sharply--to confront an old man, evidently one of the
+woodmen on the estate who had come up behind them unheard on the thick
+carpeting of pine needles. And Pratt turned, too--with a keen look and a
+direct question.
+
+"What do you mean?" he asked. "What are you talking about?"
+
+"I know what I'm talking about, young gentleman," said the man doggedly.
+"I ain't worked, lad and man, on this one estate nine-and-forty
+years--and happen more--wi'out knowin' all about it. I tell'd Mrs.
+Mallathorpe on Friday noon 'at that there owd brig 'ud fall in afore
+long if it worn't mended. I met her here, at this very place where we're
+standin', and I showed her 'at it worn't safe to cross it. I tell'd her
+'t she owt to have it fastened up theer an' then. It's been rottin' for
+many a year, has this owd brig--why, I mind when it wor last repaired,
+and that wor years afore owd Mestur Mallathorpe bowt this estate!"
+
+"When do you say you told Mrs. Mallathorpe all that?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Friday noon it were, sir," answered the woodman. "When I were on my way
+home--dinner time. 'Cause I met the missis here, and I made bold to tell
+her what I'd noticed. That there owd brig!--lor' bless yer, gentlemen!
+it were black rotten i' the middle, theer where poor young maister he
+fell through it. 'Ye mun hev' that seen to at once, missis,' I says.
+'Sartin sure, 'tain't often as it's used,' I says, 'but surely sartin
+'at if it ain't mended, or closed altogether,' I says, 'summun 'll be
+going through and brekkin' their necks,' I says. An' reight, too,
+gentlemen--forty feet it is down to that road. An' a mortal hard road,
+an' all, paved wi' granite stone all t' way to t' stable-yard."
+
+"You're sure it was Friday noon?" repeated Pratt.
+
+"As sure as that I see you," answered the woodman. "An' Mrs. Mallathorpe
+she said she'd hev it seen to. Dear-a-me!--it should ha' been closed!"
+
+The old man shook his head and went off amongst the trees, and Pratt,
+giving his vanishing figure a queer look, turned silently back along the
+path, followed by Collingwood. At the point where the other path led to
+the house, he glanced over his shoulder at the young barrister.
+
+"If you keep straight on, Mr. Collingwood," he said, "you'll get
+straight down to the village and the inn. I must go this way."
+
+He went off rapidly, and Collingwood walked on through the plantation
+towards the _Normandale Arms_--wondering, all the way, why Pratt was so
+anxious to know exactly when it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe had been
+warned about the old bridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+
+Until that afternoon Collingwood had never been in the village to which
+he was now bending his steps; on that and his previous visits to the
+Grange he had only passed the end of its one street. Now, descending
+into it from the slopes of the park, he found it to be little more than
+a hamlet--a church, a farmstead or two, a few cottages in their gardens,
+all clustering about a narrow stream spanned by a high-arched bridge of
+stone. The _Normandale Arms_, a roomy, old-fashioned place, stood at one
+end of the bridge, and from the windows of the room into which
+Collingwood was presently shown he could look out on the stream itself
+and on the meadows beyond it. A peaceful, pretty, quiet place--but the
+gloom which was heavy at the big house or the hill seemed to have spread
+to everybody that he encountered.
+
+"Bad job, this, sir!" said the landlord, an elderly, serious-faced man,
+to whom Collingwood had made known his wants, and who had quickly formed
+the opinion that his guest was of the legal profession. "And a queer
+one, too! Odd thing, sir, that our old squire, and now the young one,
+should both have met their deaths in what you might term violent
+fashion."
+
+"Accident--in both cases," remarked Collingwood.
+
+The landlord nodded his head--and then shook it in a manner which seemed
+to indicate that while he agreed with this proposition in one respect he
+entertained some sort of doubt about it in others.
+
+"Ay, well!" he answered. "Of course, a mill chimney falling, without
+notice, as it were, and a bridge giving way--them's accidents, to be
+sure. But it's a very strange thing about this foot-bridge, up yonder at
+the Grange--very strange indeed! There's queer talk about it, already."
+
+"What sort of talk?" asked Collingwood. Ever since the old woodman had
+come up to him and Pratt, as they stood looking at the foot-bridge, he
+had been aware of a curious sense of mystery, and the landlord's remark
+tended to deepen it. "What are people talking about?"
+
+"Nay--it's only one or two," replied the landlord. "There's been two men
+in here since the affair happened that crossed that bridge Friday
+afternoon--and both of 'em big, heavy men. According to what one can
+learn that there bridge wasn't used much by the Grange people--it led to
+nowhere in particular for them. But there is a right of way across that
+part of the park, and these two men as I'm speaking of--they made use of
+it on Friday--getting towards dark. I know 'em well--they'd both of 'em
+weigh four times as much--together--as young Squire Mallathorpe, and yet
+it didn't give way under them. And then--only a few hours later, as you
+might say, down it goes with him!"
+
+"I don't think you can form any opinion from that!" said Collingwood.
+"These things, these old structures, often give way quite suddenly and
+unexpectedly."
+
+"Ay, well, they did admit, these men too, that it seemed a bit tottery,
+like," remarked the landlord. "Talking it over, between themselves, in
+here, they agreed, to be sure, that it felt to give a bit. All the same,
+there's them as says that it's a queer thing it should ha' given
+altogether when young squire walked on it."
+
+Collingwood clinched matters with a straight question.
+
+"You don't mean to say that people are suggesting that the foot-bridge
+had been tampered with?" he asked.
+
+"There is them about as wouldn't be slow to say as much," answered the
+landlord. "Folks will talk! You see, sir--nobody saw what happened. And
+when country folk doesn't see what takes place, with their own eyes,
+then they----"
+
+"Make mysteries out of it," interrupted Collingwood, a little
+impatiently. "I don't think there's any mystery here, landlord--I
+understood that this foot-bridge was in a very unsafe condition. No! I'm
+afraid the whole affair was only too simple."
+
+But he was conscious, as he said this, that he was not precisely voicing
+his own sentiments. He himself was mystified. He was still wondering why
+Pratt had been so pertinacious in asking the old woodman when,
+precisely, he had told Mrs. Mallathorpe about the unsafe condition of
+the bridge--still wondering about a certain expression which had come
+into Pratt's face when the old man told them what he did--still
+wondering at the queer look which Pratt had given the information as he
+went off into the plantation. Was there, then, something--some secret
+which was being kept back by--somebody?
+
+He was still pondering over these things when he went back to the
+Grange, later in the evening--but he was resolved not to say anything
+about them to Nesta. And he saw Nesta only for a few minutes. Her
+mother, she said, was very ill indeed--the doctor was with her then, and
+she must go back to them. Since her son's death, Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+scarcely spoken, and the doctor, knowing that her heart was not strong,
+was somewhat afraid of a collapse.
+
+"If there is anything that I can do,--or if you should want me, during
+the night," said Collingwood, earnestly, "promise me that you'll send at
+once to the inn!"
+
+"Yes," answered Nesta. "I will. But--I don't think there will be any
+need. We have two nurses here, and the doctor will stop. There is
+something I should be glad if you would do tomorrow," she went on,
+looking at him a little wistfully, "You know about--the inquest?"
+
+"Yes," said Collingwood.
+
+"They say we--that is I, because, of course, my mother couldn't--that I
+need not be present," she continued. "Mr. Robson--our solicitor--says it
+will be a very short, formal affair. He will be there, of
+course,--but--would you mind being there, too!--so that you
+can--afterwards--tell me all about it?"
+
+"Will you tell me something--straight out?" answered Collingwood,
+looking intently at her. "Have you any doubt of any description about
+the accepted story of your brother's death? Be plain with me!"
+
+Nesta hesitated for awhile before answering.
+
+"Not of the actual circumstances," she replied at last,--"none at all of
+what you call the accepted story. The fact is, I'm not a good hand at
+explaining anything, and perhaps I can't convey to you what I mean. But
+I've a feeling--an impression--that there is--or was some mystery on
+Saturday which might have--and might not have--oh, I can't make it
+clear, even to myself.
+
+"If you would be at the inquest tomorrow, and listen carefully to
+everything--and then tell me afterwards--do you understand?"
+
+"I understand," answered Collingwood. "Leave it to me."
+
+Whether he expected to hear anything unusual at the inquest, whether he
+thought any stray word, hint, or suggestion would come up during the
+proceedings, Collingwood was no more aware than Nesta was certain of her
+vague ideas. But he was very soon assured that there was going to be
+nothing beyond brevity and formality. He had never previously been
+present at an inquest--his legal mind was somewhat astonished at the way
+in which things were done. It was quickly evident to him that the twelve
+good men and true of the jury--most of them cottagers and labourers
+living on the estate--were quite content to abide by the directions of
+the coroner, a Barford solicitor, whose one idea seemed to be to get
+through the proceedings as rapidly and smoothly as possible. And
+Collingwood felt bound to admit that, taking the evidence as it was
+brought forward, no simpler or more straightforward cause of
+investigation could be adduced. It was all very simple indeed--as it
+appeared there and then.
+
+The butler, a solemn-faced, respectable type of the old family
+serving-man, spoke as to his identification of the dead master's body,
+and gave his evidence in a few sentences. Mr. Mallathorpe, he said, had
+gone out of the front door of the Grange at half-past two on Saturday
+afternoon, carrying a gun, and had turned into the road leading towards
+the South Shrubbery. At about three o'clock Mr. Pratt had come running
+up the drive to the house, and told him and Miss Mallathorpe that he had
+just found Mr. Mallathorpe lying dead in the sunken cut between the
+South and North Shrubbery. Nobody had any question to ask the butler.
+Nor were any questions asked of Pratt--the one really important witness.
+
+Pratt gave his evidence tersely and admirably. On Saturday morning he
+had seen an advertisement in the Barford newspapers which stated that a
+steward and agent was wanted for the Normandale Estate, and all
+applications were to be made to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Desirous of applying
+for the post, he had written out a formal letter during Saturday
+morning, had obtained a testimonial from his present employers, Messrs.
+Eldrick & Pascoe, and, anxious to present his application as soon as
+possible, had decided to take it to Normandale Grange himself, that
+afternoon. He had left Barford by the two o'clock train, which arrived
+at Normandale at two-thirty-five. Knowing the district well, he had
+taken the path through the plantations. Arrived at the foot-bridge, he
+had at once noticed that part of it had fallen in. Looking into the
+cutting, he had seen a man lying in the roadway beneath--motionless. He
+had scrambled down the side of the cutting, discovered that the man was
+Mr. Harper Mallathorpe, and that he was dead, and had immediately
+hurried up the road to the house, where he had informed the last witness
+and Miss Mallathorpe.
+
+A quite plain story, evidently thought everybody--no questions needed.
+Nor were there any questions needed in the case of the only other
+witnesses--the estate carpenter who said that the foot-bridge was very
+old, but that he had not been aware that it was in quite so bad a
+condition, and who gave it as his opinion that the recent heavy rains
+had had something to do with the matter; and the doctor who testified
+that the victim had suffered injuries which would produce absolutely
+instantaneous death. A clear case--nothing could be clearer, said the
+coroner to his obedient jury, who presently returned the only
+verdict--one of accidental death--which, on the evidence, was possible.
+
+Collingwood heard no comments on the inquest from those who were
+present. But that evening, as he sat in his parlour at the _Normandale
+Arms_, the landlord, coming in on pretence of attending to the fire,
+approached him with an air of mystery and jerked his thumb in the
+direction of the regions which he had just quitted.
+
+"You remember what we were talking of this afternoon when you come in,
+sir?" he whispered. "There's some of 'em--regular nightly customers,
+village folk, you understand--talking of the same thing now, and of this
+here inquest. And if you'd like to hear a bit of what you may call local
+opinion--and especially one man's--I'll put you where you can hear it,
+without being seen. It's worth hearing, anyway."
+
+Collingwood, curious to know what the village wiseacres had to say,
+rose, and followed the landlord into a small room at the back of the
+bar-parlour.
+
+An open hatchment in the wall, covered by a thin curtain, allowed him to
+hear every word which came from what appeared to be a full company. But
+it was quickly evident that in that company there was one man who either
+was, or wished to be dictator and artifex--a man of loud voice and
+domineering tone, who was laying down the law to the accompaniment of
+vigorous thumpings of the table at which he sat. "What I say is--and I
+say it agen---I reckon nowt at all o' crowners' quests!" he was
+affirming, as Collingwood and his guide drew near the curtained opening.
+"What is a crowner's quest, anyway? It's nowt but formality--all form
+and show--it means nowt. All them 'at sits on t' jury does and says just
+what t' crowner tells 'em to say and do. They nivver ax no questions out
+o' their own mouths--they're as dumb as sheep--that's what yon jury wor
+this mornin'--now then!"
+
+"That's James Stringer, the blacksmith," whispered the landlord, coming
+close to Collingwood's elbow. "He thinks he knows everything!"
+
+"And pray, what would you ha' done, Mestur Stringer, if you'd been on
+yon jury?" inquired a milder voice. "I suppose ye'd ha' wanted to know a
+bit more, what?" "Mestur Stringer 'ud ha' wanted to know a deal more,"
+observed another voice. "He would do!"
+
+"There's a many things I want to know," continued the blacksmith, with a
+stout thump of the table. "They all tak' it for granted 'at young squire
+walked on to yon bridge, an' 'at it theer and then fell to pieces. Who
+see'd it fall to pieces? Who was theer to see what did happen?"
+
+"What else did happen or could happen nor what were testified to?" asked
+a new voice. "Theer wor what they call circumstantial evidence to show
+how all t' affair happened!"
+
+"Circumstantial evidence be blowed!" sneered the blacksmith heartily. "I
+reckon nowt o' circumstantial evidence! Look ye here! How do you
+know--how does anybody know 'at t' young squire worn't thrown off that
+bridge, and 'at t' bridge collapsed when he wor thrown? He might ha' met
+somebody on t' bridge, and quarrelled wi' 'em, and whoivver it wor might
+ha' been t' strongest man, and flung him into t' road beneath!"
+
+"Aye, but i' that case t' other feller--t' assailant--'ud ha' fallen wi'
+him," objected somebody.
+
+"Nowt o' t' sort!" retorted the blacksmith. "He'd be safe on t' sound
+part o' t' bridge--it's only a piece on 't that gave way. I say that
+theer idea wants in-quirin' into. An' theer's another thing--what wor
+that lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What
+reight had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and
+at that time? Come, now!--theer's a tickler for somebody."
+
+"He telled that," exclaimed several voices. "He had business i' t'
+place. He had some papers to 'liver."
+
+"Then why didn't he go t' nearest way to t' house t' 'liver 'em?"
+demanded Stringer. "T' shortest way to t' house fro' t' railway station
+is straight up t' carriage drive--not through them plantations. I ax
+agen--what wor that feller doin' theer? It's important."
+
+"Why, ye don't suspect him of owt, do yer, Mestur Stringer?" asked
+somebody. "A respectable young feller like that theer--come!"
+
+"I'm sayin' nowt about suspectin' nobody!" vociferated the blacksmith.
+"I'm doin' nowt but puttin' a case, as t' lawyers 'ud term it. I say 'at
+theer's a lot o' things 'at owt to ha' comed out. I'll tell ye one on
+'em--how is it 'at nowt--not a single word--wor said at yon inquest
+about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t' affair? Not one word!"
+
+A sudden silence fell on the company, and the landlord tapped
+Collingwood's arm and took the liberty of winking at him.
+
+"Why," inquired somebody, at last, "what about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t'
+affair? What had she to do wi' t' affair?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice became judicial in its solemnity.
+
+"Ye listen to me!" he said with emphasis. "I know what I'm talking
+about. Ye know what came out at t' inquest. When this here Pratt ran to
+tell t' news at t' house he returned to what they term t' fatal spot i'
+company wi' t' butler, and a couple of footmen, and Dan Scholes, one o'
+t' grooms. Now theer worn't a word said at t' inquest about what that
+lot--five on em, mind yer--found when they reached t' dead corpse--not
+one word! But I know--Dan Scholes tell'd me!"
+
+"What did they find, then, Mestur Stringer?" asked an eager member of
+the assemblage. "What wor it?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice sank to a mysterious whisper.
+
+"I'll tell yer!" he replied. "They found Mrs. Mallathorpe, lyin' i' a
+dead faint--close by! And they say 'at she's nivver done nowt but go out
+o' one faint into another, ivver since. So, of course, she's nivver been
+able to tell if she saw owt or knew owt! And what I say is," he
+concluded, with a heavy thump of the table, "that theer crowner's quest
+owt to ha' been what they term adjourned, until Mrs. Mallathorpe could
+tell if she did see owt, or if she knew owt, or heer'd owt! She mun ha'
+been close by--or else they wo'dn't ha' found her lyin' theer aside o'
+t' corpse. What did she see? What did she hear? Does she know owt? I
+tell ye 'at theer's questions 'at wants answerin'--and theer's trouble
+ahead for somebody if they aren't answered--now then!"
+
+Collingwood went away from his retreat, beckoning the landlord to
+follow. In the parlour he turned to him.
+
+"Have you heard anything of what Stringer said just now?" he asked. "I
+mean--about Mrs. Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Heard just the same--and from the same chap, Scholes, the groom, sir,"
+replied the landlord. "Oh, yes! Of course, people will wonder why they
+didn't get some evidence from Mrs. Mallathorpe--just as Stringer says."
+
+Collingwood sat a long time that night, thinking over the things he had
+heard. He came to the conclusion that the domineering blacksmith was
+right in one of his dogmatic assertions--there was trouble ahead. And
+next morning, before going up to the Grange, he went to the nearest
+telegraph office, and sent Sir John Standridge a lengthy message in
+which he resigned the appointment that would have taken him to India.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+
+Collingwood had many things to think over as he walked across Normandale
+Park that morning. He had deliberately given up his Indian appointment
+for Nesta's sake, so that he might be near her in case the trouble which
+he feared arose suddenly. But it was too soon yet to let her know that
+she was the cause of his altered arrangements--in any case, that was not
+the time to tell her that it was on her account that he had altered
+them.
+
+He must make some plausible excuse: then he must settle down in Barford,
+according to Eldrick's suggestion. He would then be near at hand--and if
+the trouble, whatever it might be, took tangible form, he would be able
+to help. But he was still utterly in the dark as to what that possible
+trouble might be--yet, of one thing he felt convinced--it would have
+some connection with Pratt.
+
+He remembered, as he walked along, that he had formed some queer, uneasy
+suspicion about Pratt when he first hurried down to Barford on hearing
+of Antony Bartle's death: that feeling, subsequently allayed to some
+extent, had been revived. There might be nothing in it, he said to
+himself, over and over again; everything that seemed strange might be
+easily explained; the evidence of Pratt at the inquest had appeared
+absolutely truthful and straightforward, and yet the blunt, rough,
+downright question of the blacksmith, crudely voiced as it was, found a
+ready agreement in Collingwood's mind. As he drew near the house he
+found himself repeating Stringer's broad Yorkshire--"What wor that
+lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What reight
+had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and at that
+time? Come, now--theer's a tickler for somebody!" And even as he smiled
+at the remembrance of the whole rustic conversation of the previous
+evening, and thought that the blacksmith's question certainly might be a
+ticklish one--for somebody--he looked up from the frosted grass at his
+feet, and saw Pratt.
+
+Pratt, a professional-looking bag in his hand, a morning newspaper under
+the other arm, was standing at the gate of one of the numerous
+shrubberies which flanked the Grange, talking to a woman who leaned over
+it. Collingwood recognized her as a person whom he had twice seen in the
+house during his visits on the day before---a middle-aged, slightly
+built woman, neatly dressed in black, and wearing a sort of nurse's cap
+which seemed to denote some degree of domestic servitude. She was a
+woman who had once been pretty, and who still retained much of her good
+looks; she was also evidently of considerable shrewdness and
+intelligence and possessed a pair of remarkably quick eyes--the sort of
+eyes, thought Collingwood, that see everything that happens within their
+range of vision. And she had a firm chin and a mouth which expressed
+determination; he had seen all that as she exchanged some conversation
+with the old butler in Collingwood's presence--a noticeable woman
+altogether. She was evidently in close conference with Pratt at that
+moment--but as Collingwood drew near she turned and went slowly in the
+direction of the house, while Pratt, always outwardly polite, stepped
+towards the interrupter of this meeting, and lifted his hat.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Collingwood," he said. "A fine, sharp morning, sir! I
+was just asking Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid how her mistress is this
+morning--she was very ill when I left last night. Better, sir, I'm glad
+to say--Mrs. Mallathorpe has had a much better night."
+
+"I'm very pleased to hear it," replied Collingwood. He was going towards
+the front of the Grange, and Pratt walked at his side, evidently in the
+same direction. "I am afraid she has had a great shock. You are still
+here, then?" he went on, feeling bound to make some remark, and saying
+the first obvious thing. "Still busy?"
+
+"Mr. Eldrick has lent me--so to speak--until the funeral's over,
+tomorrow," answered Pratt. "There are a lot of little things in which I
+can be useful, you know, Mr. Collingwood. I suppose your
+arrangements--you said you were sailing for India--won't permit of your
+being present tomorrow, sir?"
+
+Collingwood was not sure if the clerk was fishing for information.
+Pratt's manner was always polite, his questions so innocently put, that
+it was difficult to know what he was actually after. But he was not
+going to give him any information--either then, or at any time.
+
+"I don't quite know what my arrangements may be," he answered. And just
+then they came to the front entrance, and Collingwood was taken off in
+one direction by a footman, while Pratt, who already seemed to be fully
+acquainted with the house and its arrangements, took himself and his bag
+away in another.
+
+Nesta came to Collingwood looking less anxious than when he had left her
+at his last call the night before. He had already told her what his
+impressions of the inquest were, and he was now wondering whether to
+tell her of the things he had heard said at the village inn. But
+remembering that he was now going to stay in the neighbourhood, he
+decided to say nothing at that time--if there was anything in these
+vague feelings and suspicions it would come out, and could be dealt with
+when it arose. At present he had need of a little diplomacy.
+
+"Oh!--I wanted to tell you," he said, after talking to her awhile about
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I--there's a change in my arrangements, I'm not going
+to India, after all."
+
+He was not prepared for the sudden flush that came over the girl's face.
+It took him aback. It also told him a good deal that he was glad to
+know--and it was only by a strong effort of will that he kept himself
+from taking her hands and telling her the truth. But he affected not to
+see anything, and he went on talking rapidly. "Complete change in the
+arrangements at the last minute," he said. "I've just been writing about
+it. So--as that's off, I think I shall follow Eldrick's advice, and take
+chambers in Barford for a time, and see how things turn out. I'm going
+into Barford now, to see Eldrick about all that."
+
+Nesta, who was conscious of her betrayal of more than she cared to show
+just then, tried to speak calmly.
+
+"But--isn't it an awful disappointment?" she said. "You were looking
+forward so to going there, weren't you?"
+
+"Can't be helped," replied Collingwood. "All these affairs
+are--provisional. I thought I'd tell you at once, however--so that
+you'll know--if you ever want me--that I shall be somewhere round about.
+In fact, as it's quite comfortable there, I shall stop at the inn until
+I've got rooms in the town."
+
+Then, not trusting himself to remain longer, he went off to Barford,
+certain that he was now definitely pledged in his own mind to Nesta
+Mallathorpe, and not much less that when the right time came she would
+not be irresponsive to him. And on that, like a cold douche, came the
+remembrance of her actual circumstances--she was what Eldrick had said,
+one of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire. The thought of her
+riches made Collingwood melancholy for a while--he possessed a curious
+sort of pride which made him hate and loathe the notion of being taken
+for a fortune-hunter. But suddenly, and with a laugh, he remembered that
+he had certain possessions of his own--ability, knowledge, and
+perseverance. Before he reached Eldrick's office, he had had a vision of
+the Woolsack.
+
+Eldrick received Collingwood's news with evident gratification. He
+immediately suggested certain chambers in an adjacent building; he
+volunteered information as to where the best rooms in the town were to
+be had. And in proof of his practical interest in Collingwood's career,
+he there and then engaged his professional services for two cases which
+were to be heard at a local court within the following week.
+
+"Pratt shall deliver the papers to you at once," he said. "That is, as
+soon as he's back from Normandale this afternoon. I sent him there again
+to make himself useful."
+
+"I saw him this morning," remarked Collingwood. "He appears to be a very
+useful person."
+
+"Clever chap," asserted Eldrick, carelessly. "I don't know what'll be
+done about that stewardship that he was going to apply for. Everything
+will be altered now that young Mallathorpe's dead. Of course, I,
+personally, shouldn't have thought that Pratt would have done for a job
+like that, but Pratt has enough self-assurance and self-confidence for a
+dozen men, and he thought he would do, and I couldn't refuse him a
+testimonial. And as he's made himself very useful out there, it may be
+that if this steward business goes forward, Pratt will get the
+appointment. As I say, he's a smart chap."
+
+Collingwood offered no comment. But he was conscious that it would not
+be at all pleasing to him to know that Linford Pratt held any official
+position at Normandale. Foolish as it might be, mere inspiration though
+it probably was, he could not get over his impression that Eldrick's
+clerk was not precisely trustworthy. And yet, he reflected, he himself
+could do nothing--it would be utter presumption on his part to offer any
+gratuitous advice to Nesta Mallathorpe in business matters. He was very
+certain of what he eventually meant to say to her about his own personal
+hopes, some time hence, when all the present trouble was over, but in
+the meantime, as regarded anything else, he could only wait and watch,
+and be of service to her if she asked him to render any.
+
+Some time went by before Collingwood was asked to render service of any
+sort. At Normandale Grange, events progressed in apparently ordinary and
+normal fashion. Harper Mallathorpe was buried; his mother began to make
+some recovery from the shock of his death; the legal folk were busied in
+putting Nesta in possession of the estate, and herself and her mother in
+proprietorship of the mill and the personal property. In Barford, things
+went on as usual, too. Pratt continued his round of duties at Eldrick &
+Pascoe's; no more was heard--by outsiders, at any rate--of the
+stewardship at Normandale. As for Collingwood, he settled down in
+chambers and lodgings and, as Eldrick had predicted, found plenty of
+work. And he constantly went out to Normandale Grange, and often met
+Nesta elsewhere, and their knowledge of each other increased, and as the
+winter passed away and spring began to show on the Normandale woods and
+moors, Collingwood felt that the time was coming when he might speak. He
+was professionally engaged in London for nearly three weeks in the early
+part of that spring--when he returned, he had made up his mind to tell
+Nesta the truth, at once. He had faced it for himself--he was by that
+time so much in love with her that he was not going to let monetary
+considerations prevent him from telling her so.
+
+But Collingwood found something else than love to talk about when he
+presented himself at Normandale Grange on the morning after his arrival
+from his three weeks' absence in town. As soon as he met her, he saw
+that Nesta was not only upset and troubled, but angry.
+
+"I am glad you have come," she said, when they were alone. "I want some
+advice. Something has happened--something that bothers--and puzzles--me
+very, very much! I'm dreadfully bothered."
+
+"Tell me," suggested Collingwood.
+
+Nesta frowned--at some recollection or thought.
+
+"Yesterday afternoon," she answered, "I was obliged to go into Barford,
+on business. I left my mother fairly well---she has been recovering fast
+lately, and she only has one nurse now. Unfortunately, she, too, was out
+for the afternoon. I came back to find my mother ill and much
+upset---and there's no use denying it--she'd all the symptoms of having
+been--well, frightened. I can't think of any other term than
+that--frightened. And then I learned that, in my absence, Mr. Eldrick's
+clerk, Mr. Pratt--you know him--had been here, and had been with her for
+quite an hour. I am furiously angry!"
+
+Collingwood had expected this announcement as soon as she began to
+explain. So--the trouble was beginning!
+
+"How came Pratt to be admitted to your mother?" he asked.
+
+"That makes me angry, too," answered Nesta. "Though I confess I ought to
+be angry with myself for not giving stricter orders. I left the house
+about two--he came about three, and asked to see my mother's maid,
+Esther Mawson. He told her that it was absolutely necessary for him to
+see my mother on business, and she told my mother he was there. My
+mother consented to see him--and he was taken up. And as I say, I found
+her ill--and frightened--and that's not the worst of it!"
+
+"What is the worst of it?" asked Collingwood, anxiously. "Better tell
+me!--I may be able to do something."
+
+"The worst of it," she said, "is just this--my mother won't tell me what
+that man came about! She flatly refuses to tell me anything! She will
+only say that it was business of her own. She won't trust me with it,
+you see!--her own daughter! What business can that man have with
+her?--or she with him? Eldrick & Pascoe are not our solicitors! There's
+some secret and----"
+
+"Will you answer one or two questions?" said Collingwood quietly. He had
+never seen Nesta angry before, and he now realized that she had certain
+possibilities of temper and determination which would be formidable when
+roused. "First of all, is that maid you speak of, Esther Mawson,
+reliable?"
+
+"I don't know!" answered Nesta. "My mother has had her two years--she's
+a Barford woman. Sometimes I think she's sly and cunning. But I've given
+her such strict orders now that she'll never dare to let any one see my
+mother again without my consent."
+
+"The other question's this," said Collingwood. "Have you any idea, any
+suspicion of why Pratt wanted to see your mother?"
+
+"Not unless it was about that stewardship," replied Nesta. "But--how
+could that frighten her? Besides, all that's over. Normandale is
+mine!--and if I have a steward, or an estate agent, I shall see to the
+appointment myself. No!--I do not know why he should have come here!
+But--there's some mystery. The curious thing is----"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood, as she paused.
+
+"Why," she said, shaking her head wonderingly, "that I'm absolutely
+certain that my mother never even knew this man Pratt--I don't I think
+she even knew his name--until quite recently. I know when she got to
+know him, too. It was just about the time that you first called here--at
+the time of Mr. Bartle's death. Our butler told me this morning that
+Pratt came here late one evening--just about that time!--and asked to
+see my mother, and was with her for some time in the study. Oh! what is
+it all about?--and why doesn't she tell me?"
+
+Collingwood stood silently staring out of the window. At the time of
+Antony Bartle's death? An evening visit?--evidently of a secret nature.
+And why paid to Mrs. Mallathorpe at that particular time? He suddenly
+turned to Nesta.
+
+"What do you wish me to do?" he asked.
+
+"Will you speak to Mr. Eldrick?" she said. "Tell him that his clerk must
+not call upon, or attempt to see, my mother. I will not have it!"
+
+Collingwood went off to Barford, and straight to Eldrick's office. He
+noticed as he passed through the outer rooms that Pratt was not in his
+accustomed place--as a rule, it was impossible to get at either Eldrick
+or Pascoe without first seeing Pratt.
+
+"Hullo!" said Eldrick. "Just got in from town? That's lucky--I've got a
+big case for you."
+
+"I got in last night," replied Collingwood. "But I went out to
+Normandale first thing this morning: I've just come back from there. I
+say, Eldrick, here's an unpleasant matter to tell you of"; and he told
+the solicitor all that Nesta had just told him, and also of Pratt's
+visit to Mrs. Mallathorpe about the time of Antony Bartle's death.
+"Whatever it is," he concluded sternly, "it's got to stop! If you've any
+influence over your clerk----"
+
+Eldrick made a grimace and waved his hand.
+
+"He's our clerk no longer!" he said. "He left us the week after you went
+up to town, Collingwood. He was only a weekly servant, and he took
+advantage of that to give me a week's notice. Now, what game is Master
+Pratt playing? He's smart, and he's deep, too. He----"
+
+Just then an office-boy announced Mr. Robson, the Mallathorpe family
+solicitor, a bustling, rather rough-and-ready type of man, who came into
+Eldrick's room looking not only angry but astonished. He nodded to
+Collingwood, and flung himself into a chair at the side of Eldrick's
+desk.
+
+"Look here, Eldrick!" he exclaimed. "What on earth has that clerk of
+yours, Pratt, got to do with Mrs. Mallathorpe? Do you know what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has done? Hang it, she must be out of her senses,--or--or
+there's something I can't fathom. She's given your clerk, Linford Pratt,
+a power of attorney to deal with all her affairs and all her property!
+Oh, it's all right, I tell you! Pratt's been to my office, and exhibited
+it to me as if--as if he were the Lord Chancellor!"
+
+Eldrick turned to Collingwood, and Collingwood to Eldrick--and then both
+turned to Robson.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE FIRST TRICK
+
+
+The Mallathorpe family solicitor shook his head impatiently under those
+questioning glances.
+
+"It's not a bit of use appealing to me to know what it means!" he
+exclaimed. "I know no more than what I've told you. That chap walked
+into my office as bold as brass, half an hour ago, and exhibited to me a
+power of attorney, all duly drawn up and stamped, executed in his favour
+by Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday. And as Mrs. Mallathorpe is, as far as I
+know, in her senses,--why--there you are!"
+
+"What is it?" asked Eldrick. "A general power? Or a special?"
+
+"General!" answered Robson, with an air of disgust. "Authorizes him to
+act for her in all business matters. It means, of course, that that
+fellow now has full control over--why, a tremendous amount of money! The
+estate, of course, is Miss Mallathorpe's--he can't interfere with that.
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shares equally with her daughter as regards the
+personal property of Harper Mallathorpe--his share in the business, and
+all that he left, and what's more, Mrs. Mallathorpe is administratrix of
+the personal property. She's simply placed in Pratt's hands an enormous
+power! And--for what reason? Who on earth is Pratt--what right, title,
+age, or qualification, has he to be entrusted with such a big affair? I
+never knew of such a business in the whole course of my professional
+experiences!"
+
+"Nor I!" agreed Eldrick. "But there's one thing in which you're
+mistaken, Robson. You ask what qualification Pratt has for a post of
+that sort? Pratt's a very smart, clever, managing chap!"
+
+"Oh, of course! He's your clerk!" retorted Robson, a little sneeringly.
+"Naturally, you've a big idea of his abilities. But----"
+
+"He's not our clerk any longer," said Eldrick. "He left us about a week
+ago. I heard this morning that he's set up an office in Market
+Street--in the Atlas Building--and I wondered for what purpose."
+
+"Purpose of fleecing Mrs. Mallathorpe, I should say!" grumbled Robson.
+"Of course, everything of hers must pass through his hands. What on
+earth can her daughter have been thinking of to allow----"
+
+"Stop a bit!" interrupted Eldrick. "Collingwood came in to tell me about
+that--he's just come from Normandale Grange. Miss Mallathorpe complains
+that Pratt called there yesterday in her absence. That's probably when
+this power of attorney was signed. But Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know
+anything of it--she insists that Pratt shall not visit her mother."
+
+Robson stirred impatiently in his chair.
+
+"That's all bosh!" he said. "She can't prevent it. I saw Mrs.
+Mallathorpe myself three days ago--she's recovering very well, and she's
+in her right senses, and she's capable of doing business. Her daughter
+can't prevent her from doing anything she likes! And if she did what she
+liked yesterday when she signed that document--why, everybody's
+powerless--except Pratt."
+
+"There's the question of how the document was obtained," remarked
+Collingwood. "There may have been undue influence."
+
+The two solicitors looked at each other. Then Eldrick rose from his
+chair. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he said. "It's no affair of mine,
+but we employed Pratt for years, and he'll confide in me. I'll go and
+see him, and ask him what it's all about. Wait here a while, you two."
+
+He went out of his office and across into Market Street, where the Atlas
+Building, a modern range of offices and chambers, towered above the
+older structures at its foot. In the entrance hall a man was gilding the
+name of a new tenant on the address board--that name was Pratt's, and
+Eldrick presently found himself ascending in the lift to Pratt's
+quarters on the fifth floor. Within five minutes of leaving Collingwood
+and Robson, he was closeted with Pratt in a well-furnished and appointed
+little office of two rooms, the inner one of which was almost luxurious
+in its fittings. And Pratt himself looked extremely well satisfied, and
+confident--and quite at his ease. He wheeled forward an easy chair for
+his visitor, and pushed a box of cigarettes towards him.
+
+"Glad to see you, Mr. Eldrick," he said, with a cordial politeness which
+suggested, however, somehow, that he and the solicitor were no longer
+master and servant. "How do you like my little place of business?"
+
+"You're making a comfortable nest of it, anyhow, Pratt," answered
+Eldrick, looking round. "And--what sort of business are you going to do,
+pray?"
+
+"Agency," replied Pratt, promptly. "It struck me some little time ago
+that a smart man,--like myself, eh?--could do well here in Barford as an
+agent in a new sort of fashion--attending to things for people who
+aren't fitted or inclined to do 'em for themselves--or are rich enough
+to employ somebody to look after their affairs. Of course, that
+Normandale stewardship dropped out when young Harper died, and I don't
+suppose the notion 'll be revived now that his sister's come in. But
+I've got one good job to go on with---Mrs. Mallathorpe's given me her
+affairs to look after."
+
+Eldrick took one of the cigarettes and lighted it--as a sign of his
+peaceable and amicable intentions.
+
+"Pratt!" he said. "That's just what I've come to see you about.
+Unofficially, mind--in quite a friendly way. It's like this"; and he
+went on to tell Pratt of what had just occurred at his own office.
+"So--there you are," he concluded. "I'm saying nothing, you know, it's
+no affair of mine--but if these people begin to say that you've used any
+undue influence----"
+
+"Mr. Collingwood, and Mr. Robson, and Miss Mallathorpe--and anybody,"
+answered Pratt, slowly and firmly, "had better mind what they are
+saying, Mr. Eldrick. There's such a thing as slander, as you're well
+aware. I'm not the man to be slandered, or libelled, or to have my
+character defamed--without fighting for my rights. There has been no
+undue influence! I went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday at her own
+request. The arrangement between me and her is made with her approval
+and free will. If her daughter found her a bit upset, it's because she'd
+such a shock at the time of her son's death. I did nothing to frighten
+her, not I! The fact is, Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know that her mother
+and I have had a bit of business together of late. And all that Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has entrusted to me is the power to look after her affairs
+for her. And why not? You know that I'm a good man of business, a really
+good hand at commercial accountancy, and well acquainted with the trade
+of this town. You know too, Mr. Eldrick, that I'm scrupulously
+honest--I've had many and many a thousand pounds of yours and your
+partner's through my hands! Who's got anything to say against me? I'm
+only trying to earn an honest living."
+
+"Well, well!" said Eldrick, who, being an easy-going and
+kindly-dispositioned man, was somewhat inclined to side with his old
+clerk. "I suppose Mr. Robson thinks that if Mrs. Mallathorpe wished to
+put her affairs in anybody's hands, she should have put them in his.
+He's their family solicitor, you know, Pratt, while you're a young man
+with no claim on Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Pratt smiled--a queer, knowing smile--and reached out his hand to some
+papers which lay on his desk.
+
+"You're wrong there, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "But of course, you don't
+know. I didn't know myself, nor did Mrs. Mallathorpe, until lately. But
+I have a claim--and a good one--to get a business lift from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. I'm a relation."
+
+"What--of the Mallathorpe family?" exclaimed Eldrick, whose legal mind
+was at once bitten by notion of kinship and succession, and who knew
+that Harper Mallathorpe was supposed to have no male relatives at all,
+of any degree. "You don't mean it?"
+
+"No!--but of hers, Mrs. Mallathorpe," answered Pratt. "My mother was her
+cousin. I found that out by mere chance, and when I'd found it, I worked
+out the facts from our parish church register. They're all here--fairly
+copied--Mrs. Mallathorpe has seen them. So I have some claim--even if
+it's only that of a poor relation."
+
+Eldrick took the sheets of foolscap which Pratt handed to him, and
+looked them over with interest and curiosity. He was something of an
+expert in such matters, and had helped to edit a print more than once of
+the local parish registers. He soon saw from a hasty examination of the
+various entries of marriages and births that Pratt was quite right in
+what he said.
+
+"I call it a poor--and a mean--game," remarked Pratt, while his old
+master was thus occupied, "a very mean game indeed, of well-to-do folk
+like Mr. Collingwood and Mr. Robson to want to injure me in a matter
+which is no business of theirs. I shall do my duty by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe--you yourself know I'm fully competent to do it--and I shall
+fully earn the percentage that she'll pay me. What right have these
+people--what right has her daughter--to come between me and my living?"
+
+"Oh, well, well!" said Eldrick, as he handed back the papers and rose.
+"It's one of those matters that hasn't been understood. You made a
+mistake, you know, Pratt, when you went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday
+in her daughter's absence. You shouldn't have done that."
+
+Pratt pulled open a drawer and, after turning over some loose papers,
+picked out a letter.
+
+"Do you know Mrs. Mallathorpe's handwriting?" he asked. "Very
+well--there it is! Isn't that a request from her that I should call on
+her yesterday afternoon? Very well then!"
+
+Eldrick looked at the letter with some surprise. He had a good memory,
+and he remembered that Collingwood had told him that Nesta had said that
+Pratt had gone to Normandale Grange, seen Esther Mawson, and told her
+that it was absolutely necessary for him to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. And
+though Eldrick was naturally unsuspicious, an idea flashed across his
+mind--had Pratt got Mrs. Mallathorpe to write that letter while he was
+there--yesterday--and brought it away with him?
+
+"I think there's a good deal of misunderstanding," he said. "Mr.
+Collingwood says that you went there and told her maid that it was
+absolutely necessary for you to see her mistress--sort of forced
+yourself in, you see, Pratt."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" retorted Pratt. He flourished the letter in his
+hand. "Doesn't it say there, in Mrs. Mallathorpe's own handwriting, that
+she particularly desires to see me at three o'clock? It does! Then it
+was absolutely necessary for me to see her. Come, now! And Mr.
+Collingwood had best attend to his own business. What's he got to do
+with all this? After Miss Mallathorpe and her money, I should
+think!--that's about it!"
+
+Eldrick said another soothing word or two, and went back to his own
+office. He was considerably mystified by certain things, but inclined to
+be satisfied about others, and in giving an account of what had just
+taken place he unconsciously seemed to take Pratt's side--much to
+Robson's disgust, and to Collingwood's astonishment.
+
+"You can't get over this, you know, Robson," said Eldrick. "Pratt went
+there yesterday by appointment--went at Mrs. Mallathorpe's own express
+desire, made in her own handwriting. And it's quite certain that what he
+says about the relationship is true---I examined the proof myself. It's
+not unnatural that Mrs. Mallathorpe should desire to do something for
+her own cousin's son."
+
+"To that extent?" sneered Robson. "Bless me, you talk as if it were no
+more than presenting him with a twenty pound note, instead of its being
+what it is--giving him the practical control of many a thousand pounds
+every year. There'll be more heard of this--yet!"
+
+He went away angrier than when he came, and Eldrick looked at
+Collingwood and shook his head.
+
+"I don't see what more there is to do," he said. "So far as I can make
+out, or see, Pratt is within his rights. If Mrs. Mallathorpe liked to
+entrust her business to him, what is to prevent it? I see nothing at all
+strange in that. But there is a fact which does seem uncommonly strange
+to me! It's this--how is it that Mrs. Mallathorpe doesn't consult,
+hasn't consulted--doesn't inform, hasn't informed--her daughter about
+all this?"
+
+"That," answered Collingwood, "is precisely what strikes me--and I can't
+give any explanation. Nor, I believe, can Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+He felt obliged to go back to Normandale, and tell Nesta the result of
+the afternoon's proceedings. And having seen during his previous visit
+how angry she could be, he was not surprised to see her become angrier
+and more determined than ever.
+
+"I will not have Mr. Pratt coming here!" she exclaimed. "He shall not
+see my mother--under my roof, at any rate. I don't believe she sent for
+him."
+
+"Mr. Eldrick saw her letter!" interrupted Collingwood quietly.
+
+"Then that man made her write it while he was here!" exclaimed Nesta.
+"As to the relationship--it may be so. I never heard of it. But I don't
+care what relation he is to my mother--he is not going to interfere with
+her affairs!"
+
+"The strange thing," said Collingwood, as pointedly as was consistent
+with kindness, "is that your mother--just now, at any rate--doesn't seem
+to be taking you into her confidence."
+
+Nesta looked steadily at him for a moment, without speaking. When she
+did speak it was with decision.
+
+"Quite so!" she said. "She is keeping something from me! And if she
+won't tell me things--well, I must find them out for myself."
+
+She would say no more than that, and Collingwood left her. And as he
+went back to Barford he cursed Linford Pratt soundly for a deep and
+underhand rogue who was most certainly playing some fine game.
+
+But Pratt himself was quite satisfied--up to that point. He had won his
+first trick and he had splendid cards still left in his hand. And he was
+reckoning his chances on them one morning a little later when a ring at
+his bell summoned him to his office door--whereat stood Nesta
+Mallathorpe, alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+
+Had any third person been present, closely to observe the meeting of
+these two young people, he would have seen that the one to whom it was
+unexpected and a surprise was outwardly as calm and self-possessed as if
+the other had come there to keep an ordinary business appointment.
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, looking very dignified and almost stately in her
+mourning, was obviously angry, indignant, and agitated. But Pratt was as
+cool and as fully at his ease as if he were back in Eldrick's office,
+receiving the everyday ordinary client. He swept his door open and
+executed his politest bow--and was clever enough to pretend that he saw
+nothing of his visitor's agitation. Yet deep within himself he felt more
+tremors than one, and it needed all his powers of dissimulation to act
+and speak as if this were the most usual of occurrences.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "You wish to see me? Come
+into my private office, if you please. I haven't fixed on a clerk yet,"
+he went on, as he led his visitor through the outer room, and to the
+easy chair by his desk. "I have several applications from promising
+aspirants, but I have to be careful, you know, Miss Mallathorpe--it's a
+position of confidence. And now," he concluded, as he closed the door
+upon Nesta and himself, "how is Mrs. Mallathorpe today? Improving, I
+hope?"
+
+Nesta made no reply to these remarks, or to the question. And instead of
+taking the easy chair which Eldrick had found so comfortable, she went
+to one which stood against the wall opposite Pratt's desk and seated
+herself in it in as upright a position as the wall behind her.
+
+"I wish to speak to you--plainly!" she said, as Pratt, who now regarded
+her somewhat doubtfully, realizing that he was in for business of a
+serious nature, sat down at his desk. "I want to ask you a plain
+question--and I expect a plain answer. Why are you blackmailing my
+mother?"
+
+Pratt shook his head--as if he felt more sorrow than anger. He glanced
+deprecatingly at his visitor.
+
+"I think you'll be sorry--on reflection--that you said that, Miss
+Mallathorpe," he answered. "You're a little--shall we say--upset? A
+little--shall we say--angry? If you were calmer, you wouldn't say such
+things--you wouldn't use such a term as--blackmailing. It's--dear me, I
+dare say you don't know it!--it's actionable. If I were that sort of
+man, Miss Mallathorpe, and you said that of me before witnesses--ah! I
+don't know what mightn't happen. However--I'm not that sort of man.
+But--don't say it again, if you please!"
+
+"If you don't answer my question--and at once," said Nesta, whose cheeks
+were pale with angry determination, "I shall say it again in a fashion
+you won't like--not to you, but to the police!"
+
+Pratt smiled--a quiet, strange smile which made his visitor feel a
+sudden sense of fear. And again he shook his head, slowly and
+deprecatingly.
+
+"Oh, no!" he said gently. "That's a bigger mistake than the other, Miss
+Mallathorpe! The police! Oh, not the police, I think, Miss Mallathorpe.
+You see--other people than you might go to the police--about something
+else."
+
+Nesta's anger cooled down under that scarcely veiled threat. The sight
+of Pratt, of his self-assurance, his comfortable offices, his general
+atmosphere of almost sleek satisfaction, had roused her temper, already
+strained to breaking point. But that smile, and the quiet look which
+accompanied his last words, warned her that anger was mere foolishness,
+and that she was in the presence of a man who would have to be dealt
+with calmly if the dealings were to be successful. Yet--she repeated her
+words, but this time in a different tone.
+
+"I shall certainly go to the police authorities," she said, "unless I
+get some proper explanation from you. I shall have no option. You are
+forcing--or have forced--my mother to enter into some strange
+arrangements with you, and I can't think it is for anything but what I
+say--blackmail. You've got--or you think you've got--some hold on her.
+Now what is it? I mean to know, one way or another!"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," said Pratt. "You're taking a wrong course--with me.
+Now who advised you to come here and speak to me like this, as if I were
+a common criminal? Mr. Collingwood, no doubt? Or perhaps Mr. Robson? Now
+if either----"
+
+"Neither Mr. Robson nor Mr. Collingwood know anything whatever about my
+coming here!" retorted Nesta. "No one knows! I am quite competent to
+manage my own affairs--of this sort. I want to know why my mother has
+been forced into that arrangement with you--for I am sure you have
+forced her! If you will not tell me why--then I shall do what I said."
+
+"You'll go to the police authorities?" asked Pratt. "Ah!--but let us
+consider things a little, Miss Mallathorpe. Now, to start with, who says
+there has been any forcing? I know one person who won't say so--and
+that's your mother herself!"
+
+Nesta felt unable to answer that assertion. And Pratt smiled
+triumphantly and went on.
+
+"She'll tell you--Mrs. Mallathorpe'll tell you--that she's very pleased
+indeed to have my poor services," he said. "She knows that I shall serve
+her well. She's glad to do a kind service to a poor relation. And since
+I am your mother's relation, Miss Mallathorpe, I'm yours, too. I'm some
+degree of cousin to you. You might think rather better, rather more
+kindly, of me!"
+
+"Are you going to tell me anything more than that?" asked Nesta
+steadily. Pratt shrugged his shoulders and waved his hands.
+
+"What more can I tell?" he asked. "The fact is, there's a business
+arrangement between me and your mother--and you object to it. Well--I'm
+sorry, but I've my own interests to consider."
+
+"Are you going to tell me what it was that induced my mother to sign
+that paper you got from her the other day?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Can I say more than that it was--a business arrangement?" pleaded
+Pratt. "There's nothing unusual in one party in a business arrangement
+giving a power of attorney to another party. Nothing!"
+
+"Very well!" said Nesta, rising from the straight-backed chair, and
+looking very rigid herself as she stood up. "You won't tell me anything!
+So--I am now going to the police. I don't know what they'll do. I don't
+know what they can do. But--I can tell them what I think and feel about
+this, at any rate. For as sure as I am that I see you, there's something
+wrong! And I'll know what it is."
+
+Pratt recognized that she had passed beyond the stage of mere anger to
+one of calm determination. And as she marched towards the door he called
+her back--as the result of a second's swift thought on his part.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," he said. "Oblige me by sitting down again. I'm not
+in the least afraid of your going to the police. But my experience is
+that if one goes to them on errands of this sort, it sets all sorts of
+things going--scandal, and suspicion, and I don't know what! You don't
+want any scandal. Sit down, if you please, and let us think for a
+moment. And I'll see if I can tell you--what you want to know."
+
+Nesta already had a hand on the door. But after looking at him for a
+second or two, she turned back, and sat down in her old position. And
+Pratt, still seated at his desk, plunged his hands in his trousers
+pockets, tilted back his chair, and for five minutes stared with knitted
+brows at his blotting pad. A queer silence fell on the room. The windows
+were double-sashed; no sound came up from the busy street below. But on
+the mantelpiece a cheap Geneva clock ticked and ticked, and Nesta felt
+at last that if it went on much longer, without the accompaniment of a
+human voice, she should suddenly snatch it up, and hurl it--anywhere.
+
+Pratt was in the position of the card-player, who, confronted by a
+certain turn in the course of a game which he himself feels sure he is
+bound to win, wonders whether he had better not expedite matters by
+laying his cards on the table, and asking his opponent if he can
+possibly beat their values and combination. He had carefully reckoned up
+his own position more than once during the progress of recent events,
+and the more carefully he calculated it the more he felt convinced that
+he had nothing to fear. He had had to alter his ground in consequence of
+the death of Harper Mallathorpe, and he had known that he would have to
+fight Nesta. But he had not anticipated that hostilities would come so
+soon, or begin with such evident determination on her part. How would it
+be, then, at this first stage to make such a demonstration in force that
+she would recognize his strength?
+
+He looked up at last and saw Nesta regarding him sternly. But Pratt
+smiled--the quiet smile which made her uneasy.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "I was thinking of two things just then--a
+game at cards--and the science of warfare. In both it's a good thing
+sometimes to let your adversary see what a strong hand you've got. Now,
+then, a question, if you please--are you and I adversaries?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Nesta unflinchingly. "You're acting like an enemy--you
+are an enemy!"
+
+"I've hoped that you and I would be friends--good friends," said Pratt,
+with something like a sigh. "And if I may say so, I've no feeling of
+enmity towards you. When I speak of us being adversaries, I mean it
+in--well, let's say a sort of legal sense. But now I'll show you my
+hand--that is, as far as I please. Will you listen quietly to me?"
+
+"I've no choice," replied Nesta bluntly. "And I came here to know what
+you've got to say for yourself. Say it!"
+
+Pratt moved his chair a little nearer to his visitor.
+
+"Now," he said, speaking very quietly and deliberately, "I'll go through
+what I have to say to you carefully, point by point. I shall ask you to
+go back a little way. It is now some time since I discovered a secret
+about your mother, Mrs. Mallathorpe. Ah, you start!--it may be with
+indignation, but I assure you I'm telling you, and am going to tell you,
+the absolute truth. I say--a secret! No one knows it but myself--not one
+living soul! Except, of course, your mother. I shall not reveal it to
+you--under any consideration, or in any circumstances--but I can tell
+you this--if that secret were revealed, your mother would be ruined for
+life--and you yourself would suffer in more ways than one."
+
+Nesta looked at him incredulously--and yet she began to feel he was
+telling some truth. And Pratt shook his head at the incredulous
+expression.
+
+"It's quite so!" he said. "You'll begin to believe it---from other
+things. Now, it was in connection with this that I paid a visit to
+Normandale Grange one evening some months ago. Perhaps you never heard
+of that? I was alone with your mother for some time in the study."
+
+"I have heard of it," she answered.
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "But you haven't heard that your mother came to
+see me at my rooms here in Barford--my lodgings--the very next night! On
+the same business, of course. But she did--I know how she came, too.
+Secretly--heavily veiled--naturally, she didn't want anybody to know.
+Are you beginning to see something in it, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Go on with your--story," answered Nesta.
+
+"I go on, then, to the day before your brother's death," continued
+Pratt. "Namely, a certain Friday. Now, if you please, I'll invite you to
+listen carefully to certain facts--which are indisputable, which I can
+prove, easily. On that Friday, the day before your brother's death, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was in the shrubbery at Normandale Grange which is near the
+north end of the old foot-bridge. She was approached by Hoskins, an old
+woodman, who has been on the estate a great many years--you know him
+well enough. Hoskins told Mrs. Mallathorpe that the foot-bridge between
+the north and south shrubberies, spanning the cut which was made there a
+long time since so that a nearer road could be made to the stables, was
+in an extremely dangerous condition--so dangerous, in fact, that in his
+opinion, it would collapse under even a moderate weight. I impress this
+fact upon you strongly."
+
+"Well?" said Nesta.
+
+"Hoskins," Pratt went on, "urged upon Mrs. Mallathorpe the necessity of
+having the bridge closed at once, or barricaded. He pointed out to her
+from where they stood certain places in the bridge, and in the railing
+on one side of it, which already sagged in such a fashion, that he, as a
+man of experience, knew that planks and railings were literally rotten
+with damp. Now what did Mrs. Mallathorpe do? She said nothing to
+Hoskins, except that she'd have the thing seen to. But she immediately
+went to the estate carpenter's shop, and there she procured two short
+lengths of chain, and two padlocks, and she herself went back to the
+foot-bridge and secured its wicket gates at both ends. I beg you will
+bear that in mind, too, Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I am bearing everything in mind," said Nesta resolutely. "Don't be
+afraid that I shall forget one word that you say."
+
+"I hear that sneer in your voice," answered Pratt, as he turned,
+unlocked a drawer, and drew out some papers. "But I think you will soon
+learn that the sneer at what I'm telling you is foolish. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe had a set purpose in locking up those gates--as you will see
+presently. You will see it from what I am now going to tell you. Oblige
+me, if you please, by looking at that letter. Do you recognize your
+mother's handwriting?"
+
+"Yes!" admitted Nesta, with a sudden feeling of apprehension. "That is
+her writing."
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "Then before I read it to you, I'll just tell
+you what this letter is. It formed, when it was written, an invitation
+from Mrs. Mallathorpe to me--an invitation to walk, innocently, into
+what she knew--knew, mind you!--to be a death-trap! She meant _me_ to
+fall through the bridge!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+
+For a full moment of tense silence Nesta and Pratt looked at each other
+across the letter which he held in his outstretched hand--looked
+steadily and with a certain amount of stern inquiry. And it was Nesta's
+eyes which first gave way--beaten by the certainty in Pratt's. She
+looked aside; her cheeks flamed; she felt as if something were rising in
+her throat--to choke her.
+
+"I can't believe that!" she muttered. "You're--mistaken! Oh--utterly
+mistaken!"
+
+"No mistake!" said Pratt confidently. "I tell you your mother meant
+me--me!--to meet my death at that bridge. Here's the proof in this
+letter! I'll tell you, first, when I received it: then I'll read you
+what's in it, and if you doubt my reading of it, you shall read it
+yourself--but it won't go out of my hands! And first as to my getting
+it, for that's important. It reached me, by registered post, mind you,
+on the Saturday morning on which your brother met his death. It was
+handed in at Normandale village post-office for registration late on the
+Friday afternoon. And--by whom do you think?"
+
+"I--don't know!" replied Nesta faintly. This merciless piling up of
+details was beginning to frighten her--already she felt as if she
+herself were some criminal, forced to listen from the dock to the
+opening address of a prosecuting counsel. "How should I know?--how can I
+think?"
+
+"It was handed in for registration by your mother's maid, Esther
+Mawson," said Pratt with a dark look. "I've got her evidence, anyway!
+And that was all part of a plan--just as a certain something that was
+enclosed was a part of the same plan--a plot. And now I'll read you the
+letter--and you'll bear it in mind that I got it by first post that
+Saturday morning. This is what it--what your mother--says:--
+
+ "I particularly wish to see you again, at once, about the matter
+ between us and to have another look at _that document_. Can you
+ come here, bringing it with you, tomorrow, Saturday afternoon,
+ by the train which leaves soon after two o'clock? As I am most
+ anxious that your visit should be private and unknown to any one
+ here, do not come to the house. Take the path across the park to
+ the shrubberies near the house, so that if you are met people
+ would think you were taking a near cut to the village. I will
+ meet you in the shrubbery on the house side of the little
+ foot-bridge. The gates--'"
+
+Pratt suddenly paused, and before proceeding looked hard at his visitor.
+
+"Now listen to what follows--and bear in mind what your mother knew, and
+had done, at the time she wrote this letter. This is how the letter goes
+on---let every word fix itself in your mind, Miss Mallathorpe!"
+
+ "'The gates of the foot-bridge are locked, but the enclosed keys
+ will open them. I will meet you amongst the trees on the further
+ side. Be sure to come and to bring _that document_--I have
+ something to say about it on seeing it again.'"
+
+Pratt turned to the drawer from which he had taken the letter and took
+out two small keys, evidently belonging to patent padlocks. He held them
+up before Nesta.
+
+"There they are!" he said triumphantly. "Been in my possession ever
+since--and will remain there. Now--do you wish to read the letter? I've
+read it to you word for word. You don't? Very good--back it goes in
+there, with these keys. And now then," he continued, having replaced
+letter and keys in his drawer, and turned to her again, "now then, you
+see what a diabolical scheme it was that was in your mother's mind
+against me. She meant me to meet with the fate which overtook her own
+son! She meant me to fall through that bridge. Why? She hoped that I
+should break my neck--as he did! She wanted to silence me--but she also
+wanted more--she wanted to take from my dead body, or my unconscious
+body, the certain something which she was so anxious I should bring with
+me, which she referred to as _that document_. She was willing to risk
+anything--even to murder!--to get hold of that. And now you know why I
+went to Normandale Grange that Saturday--you know, now, the real reason.
+I told a deliberate lie at the inquest, for your mother's sake--for your
+sake, if you know it. I did not go there to hand in my application for
+the stewardship--I went in response to the letter I've just read. Is all
+this clear to you?"
+
+Nesta could only move her head in silent acquiescence. She was already
+convinced, that whether all this was entirely true or not, there was
+truth of some degree in what Pratt had told her. And she was thinking of
+her mother--and of the trap which she certainly appeared to have
+laid--and of her brother's fate--and for the moment she felt sick and
+beaten. But Pratt went on in that cold, calculating voice, telling his
+story point by point.
+
+"Now I come to what happened that Saturday afternoon," he said. "I may
+as well tell you that in my own interest I have carefully collected
+certain evidence which never came out at the inquest--which, indeed, has
+nothing to do with the exact matter of the inquest. Now, that Saturday,
+your mother and you had lunch together--your brother, as we shall see in
+a moment, being away--at your lunch time--a quarter to two. About twenty
+minutes past two your mother left the house. She went out into the
+gardens. She left the gardens for the shrubberies. And at twenty-five
+minutes to three, she was seen by one of your gardeners, Featherstone,
+in what was, of course, hiding, amongst the trees at the end of the
+north shrubbery. What was she doing there, Miss Mallathorpe? She was
+waiting!--waiting until a certain hoped-for accident happened--to me.
+Then she would come out of her hiding-place in the hope of getting that
+document from my pocket! Do you see how cleverly she'd laid her
+plans--murderous plans?"
+
+Nesta was making a great effort to be calm. She knew now that she was
+face to face with some awful mystery which could only be solved by
+patience and strenuous endeavour. She knew, too, that she must show no
+sign of fear before this man!
+
+"Will you finish your story, if you please?" she asked.
+
+"In my own way--in my own time," answered Pratt. "I now come to--your
+mother. On the Friday noon, the late Mr. Harper Mallathorpe went to
+Barford to visit a friend--young Stemthwaite, at the Hollies. He was to
+stay the night there, and was not expected home until Saturday evening.
+He did stay the night, and remained in Barford until noon on Saturday;
+but he--unexpectedly--returned to the house at half past two. And almost
+as soon as he'd got in, he picked up a gun and strolled out--into the
+gardens and the north shrubbery. And, as you know, he went to the
+foot-bridge. You see, Miss Mallathorpe, your mother, clever as she was,
+had forgotten one detail--the gates of that footbridge were merely low,
+four-barred things, and there was nothing to prevent an active young man
+from climbing them. She forgot another thing, too--that warning had not
+been given at the house that the bridge was dangerous. And, of course,
+she'd never, never calculated that your brother would return sooner than
+he was expected, or that, on his return, he'd go where he did. And
+so--but I'll spare you any reference to what happened. Only--you know
+now how it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe was found by her son's body. She'd
+been waiting about--for me! But--the fate she'd meant for me was dealt
+out to--him!"
+
+In spite of herself Nesta gave way to a slight cry.
+
+"I can't bear any more of that!" she said. "Have you finished?"
+
+"There's not much more to say--now at any rate," replied Pratt. "And
+what I have to say shall be to the point. I'm sorry enough to have been
+obliged to say all that I have said. But, you know, you forced me to it!
+You threatened me. The real truth, Miss Mallathorpe, is just this--you
+don't understand me at all. You come here--excuse my plain
+speech--hectoring and bullying me with talk about the police, and
+blackmail, and I don't know what! It's I who ought to go to the police!
+I could have your mother arrested, and put in the dock, on a charge of
+attempted murder, this very day! I've got all the proofs."
+
+"I suppose you held that out as a threat to her when you forced her to
+sign that power of attorney?" observed Nesta.
+
+For the first time since her arrival Pratt looked at his visitor in an
+unfriendly fashion. His expression changed and his face flushed a
+little.
+
+"You think that, do you?" he said. "Well, you're wrong. I'm not a fool.
+I held out no such threat. I didn't even tell your mother what I'd found
+out. I wasn't going to show her my hand all at once--though I've shown
+you a good deal of it."
+
+"Not all?" she asked quickly.
+
+"Not all," answered Pratt with a meaning glance. "To use more
+metaphors--I've several cards up my sleeve, Miss Mallathorpe. But you're
+utterly wrong about the threats. I'll tell you--I don't mind that--how I
+got the authority you're speaking about. Your mother had promised me
+that stewardship--for life. I'd have been a good steward. But we
+recognized that your brother's death had altered things--that you,
+being, as she said, a self-willed young woman--you see how plain I
+am--would insist on looking after your own affairs. So she gave
+me--another post. I'll discharge its duties honestly."
+
+"Yes," said Nesta, "but you've already told me that you'd a hold on my
+mother before any of these recent events happened, and that you possess
+some document which she was anxious to get into her hands. So it comes
+to this--you've a double hold on her, according to your story."
+
+"Just so," agreed Pratt. "You're right, I have--a double hold."
+
+Nesta looked at him silently for a while: Pratt looked at her.
+
+"Very well," she said at last. "How much do you want--to be bought out?"
+
+Pratt laughed.
+
+"I thought that would be the end of it!" he remarked. "Yes--I thought
+so!"
+
+"Name your price!" said Nesta.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" answered Pratt, bending forward and speaking with a
+new earnestness. "Just listen to me. It's no good. I'm not to be bought
+out. Your mother tried that game with me before. She offered me first
+five, then ten thousand pounds--cash down--for that document, when she
+came to see me at my rooms. I dare say she'd have gone to twenty
+thousand--and found the money there and then. But I said no then--and I
+say no to you! I'm not to be purchased in that way. I've my own ideas,
+my own plans, my own ambitions, my own--hopes. It's not any use at all
+for you to dangle your money before me. But--I'll suggest something
+else--that you can do."
+
+Nesta made no answer. She continued to look steadily at the man who
+evidently had her mother in his power, and Pratt, who was watching her
+intently, went on speaking quietly but with some intensity of tone.
+
+"You can do this," he said. "To start with--and it'll go a long
+way--just try and think better of me. I told you, you don't understand
+me. Try to! I'm not a bad lot. I've great abilities. I'm a hard worker.
+Eldrick & Pascoe could tell you that I'm scrupulously honest in money
+matters. You'll see that I'll look after your mother's affairs in a
+fashion that'll commend itself to any firm of auditors and accountants
+who may look into my accounts every year. I'm only taking the salary
+from her that I was to have had for the stewardship. So--why not leave
+it at that? Let things be! Perhaps--in time you'll come to see that--I'm
+to be trusted."
+
+"How can I trust a man who deliberately tells me that he holds a secret
+and a document over a woman's head?" demanded Nesta. "You've admitted a
+previous hold on my mother. You say you're in possession of a secret
+that would ruin her--quite apart from recent events. Is that honest?"
+
+"It was none of my seeking," retorted Pratt. "I gained the knowledge by
+accident."
+
+"You're giving yourself away," said Nesta. "Or you've some mental twist
+or defect which prevents you from seeing things straight. It's not how
+you got your knowledge, but the use you're making of it that's the
+important thing! You're using it to force my mother to----"
+
+"Excuse me!" interrupted Pratt with a queer smile. "It's you who don't
+see things straight. I'm using my knowledge to protect--all of you. Let
+your mind go back to what was said at first--to what I said at first. I
+said that I'd discovered a secret which, if revealed, would ruin your
+mother and injure--you! So it would--more than ever, now. So, you see,
+in keeping it, I'm taking care, not only of her interests, but
+of--yours!"
+
+Nesta rose. She realized that there was no more to be said--or done. And
+Pratt rose, too, and looked at her almost appealingly.
+
+"I wish you'd try to see things as I've put them, Miss Mallathorpe," he
+said. "I don't bear malice against your mother for that scheme she
+contrived--I'm willing to put it clear out of my head. Why not accept
+things as they are? I'll keep that secret for ever--no one shall ever
+know about it. Why not be friends, now--why not shake hands?"
+
+He held out his hand as he spoke. But Nesta drew back.
+
+"No!" she said. "My opinion is just what it was when I came here."
+
+Before Pratt could move she had turned swiftly to the door and let
+herself out, and in another minute she was amongst the crowds in the
+street below. For a few minutes she walked in the direction of Robson's
+offices, but when she had nearly reached them, she turned, and went
+deliberately to those of Eldrick & Pascoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+
+By the time she had been admitted to Eldrick's private room, Nesta had
+regained her composure; she had also had time to think, and her present
+action was the result of at any rate a part of her thoughts. She was
+calm and collected enough when she took the chair which the solicitor
+drew forward.
+
+"I called on you for two reasons, Mr. Eldrick," she said. "First, to
+thank you for your kindness and thoughtfulness at the time of my
+brother's death, in sending your clerk to help in making the
+arrangements."
+
+"Very glad he was of any assistance, Miss Mallathorpe," answered
+Eldrick. "I thought, of course, that as he had been on the spot, as it
+were, when the accident happened, he could do a few little things----"
+
+"He was very useful in that way," said Nesta. "And I was very much
+obliged to him. But the second reason for my call is--I want to speak to
+you about him."
+
+"Yes?" responded Eldrick. He had already formed some idea as to what was
+in his visitor's mind, and he was secretly glad of the opportunity of
+talking to her. "About Pratt, eh? What about him, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"He was with you for some years, I believe?" she asked.
+
+"A good many years," answered Eldrick. "He came to us as office-boy, and
+was head-clerk when he left us."
+
+"Then you ought to know him--well," she suggested.
+
+"As to that," replied Eldrick, "there are some people in this world whom
+other people never could know well--that's to say, really well. I know
+Pratt well enough for what he was--our clerk. Privately, I know little
+about him. He's clever--he's ability--he's a chap who reads a good
+deal--he's got ambitions. And I should say he is a bit--subtle."
+
+"Deceitful?" she asked.
+
+"I couldn't say that," replied Eldrick. "It wouldn't be true if I said
+so. I think he's possibilities of strategy in him. But so far as we're
+concerned, we found him hardworking, energetic, truthful, dependable and
+honest, and absolutely to be trusted in money matters. He's had many and
+many a thousand pounds of ours through his hands."
+
+"I believe you're unaware that my mother, for some reason or other,
+unknown to me, has put him in charge of her affairs?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Yes--Mr. Collingwood told me so," answered Eldrick. "So, too, did your
+own solicitor, Mr. Robson--who's very angry about it."
+
+"And you?" she said, putting a direct question. "What do you think? Do
+please, tell me!"
+
+"It's difficult to say, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, with a smile
+and a shake of the head. "If your mother--who, of course, is quite
+competent to decide for herself--wishes to have somebody to look after
+her affairs, I don't see what objection can be taken to her procedure.
+And if she chooses to put Linford Pratt in that position--why not? As I
+tell you, I, as his last--and only--employer, am quite convinced of his
+abilities and probity. I suppose that as your mother's agent, he'll
+supervise her property, collect money due to her, advise her in
+investments, and so on. Well, I should say--personally, mind--he's quite
+competent to do all that, and that he'll do it honestly, I should
+certainly say so."
+
+"But--why should he do it at all?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick waved his hands.
+
+"Ah!" he exclaimed. "Now you ask me a very different question! But--I
+understand--in fact, I know--that Pratt turns out to be a relation of
+yours--distant, but it's there. Perhaps your mother--who, of course, is
+much better off since your brother's sad death--is desirous of
+benefiting Pratt--as a relation."
+
+"Do you advise anything?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Well, you know, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, smiling. "I'm not
+your legal adviser. What about Mr. Robson?"
+
+"Mr. Robson is so very angry about all this--with my mother," said
+Nesta, "that I don't even want to ask his advice. What I really do want
+is the advice, counsel, of somebody--perhaps more as a friend than as a
+solicitor."
+
+"Delighted to give you any help I can--either professionally or as a
+friend," exclaimed Eldrick. "But--let me suggest something. And first of
+all--is there anything--something--in all this that you haven't told to
+anybody yet?"
+
+"Yes--much!" she answered. "A great deal!"
+
+"Then," said Eldrick, "let me advise a certain counsel. Two heads are
+better than one. Let me ask Mr. Collingwood to come here."
+
+He was watching his visitor narrowly as he said this, and he saw a faint
+rise of colour in her cheeks. But for the moment she did not answer, and
+Eldrick saw that she was thinking.
+
+"I can get him across from his chambers in a few minutes," he said.
+"He's sure to be in just now."
+
+"Can I have a few minutes to decide?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick jumped up.
+
+"Of course!" he said. "I'll leave you a while. It so happens I want to
+see my partner, I'll go up to his room, and return to you presently."
+
+Nesta, left alone, gave herself up to deep thought, and to a careful
+reckoning of her position. She was longing to confide in some
+trustworthy person or persons, for Pratt's revelations had plunged her
+into a maze of perplexity. But her difficulties were many. First of all,
+she would have to tell all about the terrible charge brought by Pratt
+against her mother. Then about the second which he professed to--or
+probably did--hold. What sort of a secret could it be? And supposing her
+advisers suggested strong measures against Pratt--what then, about the
+danger to her mother, in a twofold direction?
+
+Would it be better, wiser, if she kept all this to herself at present,
+and waited for events to develop? But at the mere thought of that, she
+shrank, feeling mentally and physically afraid--to keep all that
+knowledge to herself, to brood over it in secret, to wonder what it all
+meant, what lay beneath, what might develop, that was more than she felt
+able to bear. And when Eldrick came back she looked at him and nodded.
+
+"I should like to talk to you and Mr. Collingwood," she said quietly.
+
+Collingwood came across to Eldrick's office at once. And to these two
+Nesta unbosomed herself of every detail that she could remember of her
+interview with Pratt--and as she went on, from one thing to another, she
+saw the men's faces grow graver and graver, and realized that this was a
+more anxious matter than she had thought.
+
+"That's all," she said in the end. "I don't think I've forgotten
+anything. And even now, I don't know if I've done right to tell you all
+this. But--I don't think I could have faced it--alone!"
+
+"My dear Miss Mallathorpe!" said Eldrick earnestly. "You've done the
+wisest thing you probably ever did in your life! Now," he went on,
+looking at Collingwood, "just let us all three realize what is to me a
+more important fact. Nobody would be more astonished than Pratt to know
+that you have taken the wise step you have. You agree, Collingwood?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Collingwood, after a moment's reflection. "I think so."
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe doesn't quite see what we mean," said Eldrick, turning
+to Nesta. "We mean that Pratt firmly believed, when he told you what he
+did, that for your mother's sake and your own, you would keep his
+communication a dead secret. He firmly believed that you would never
+dare to tell anybody what he told you. Most people--in your
+position--wouldn't have told. They'd have let the secret eat their lives
+out. You're a wise and a sensible young woman! And the thing is--we
+must let Pratt remain under the impression that you are keeping your
+knowledge to yourself. Let him continue to believe that you'll remain
+silent under fear. And let us meet his secret policy with a secret
+strategy of our own!"
+
+Again he glanced at Collingwood, and again Collingwood nodded assent.
+
+"Now," continued Eldrick, "just let us consider matters for a few
+minutes from the position which has newly arisen. To begin with. Pratt's
+account of your mother's dealings about the foot-bridge is a very clever
+and plausible one. I can see quite well that it has caused you great
+pain; so before I go any further, just let me say this to you--don't you
+attach one word of importance to it!"
+
+Nesta uttered a heartfelt cry of relief.
+
+"Oh!" she exclaimed. "If you knew how thankful I should be to know that
+it's all lies--that he was lying! Can I really think that--after what I
+saw?"
+
+"I won't ask you to think that he's telling lies--just now," answered
+Eldrick, with a glance at Collingwood, "but I'll ask you to believe that
+your mother could put a totally different aspect and complexion on all
+her actions and words in connection with the entire affair. My
+impression, of course," he went on, with something very like a wink at
+Collingwood, "is that Mrs. Mallathorpe, when she wrote that letter to
+Pratt, intended to have the bridge mended first thing next morning, and
+that something prevented that being done, and that when she was seen
+about the shrubberies in the afternoon, she was on her way to meet Pratt
+before he could reach the dangerous point, so that she could warn him.
+What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"I should say," answered Collingwood, regarding the solicitor earnestly,
+and speaking with great gravity of manner, "that that would make an
+admirable line of defence to any charge which Pratt was wicked enough to
+prefer."
+
+"You don't think my mother meant--meant to----" exclaimed Nesta, eagerly
+turning from one man to the other. "You--don't?"
+
+"There is no evidence worth twopence against your mother!" replied
+Eldrick soothingly. "Put everything that Pratt has said against her
+clear out of your mind. Put all recent events out of your mind! Don't
+interfere with Pratt--just now. The thing to be done about Pratt is
+this--and it's the only thing. We must find out--exactly, as secretly as
+possible--what this secret is of which he speaks. What is this hold on
+Mrs. Mallathorpe? What is this document to which he refers? In other
+words, we must work back to some point which at present we can't see. At
+least, I can't see it. But--we may discover it. What do you say,
+Collingwood?"
+
+"I agree entirely," answered Collingwood. "Let Pratt rest in his fancied
+security. The thing is, certainly, to go back. But--to what point?"
+
+"That we must consider later," said Eldrick. "Now--for the present, Miss
+Mallathorpe,--you are, I suppose, going back home?"
+
+"Yes, at once," answered Nesta. "I have my car at the _Crown Hotel_."
+
+"I should just like to know something," continued Eldrick again, looking
+at Collingwood as if for approval. "That is--Mrs. Mallathorpe's present
+disposition towards affairs in general and Pratt in particular. Miss
+Mallathorpe!--just do something which I will now suggest to you. When
+you reach home, see your mother--she is still, I understand, an invalid,
+though evidently able to transact business. Just approach her gently and
+kindly, and tell her that you are a little--should we say
+uncomfortable?--about certain business arrangements which you hear she
+has made with Mr. Pratt, and ask her, if she won't talk them over with
+you, and give you her full confidence. It's now half-past twelve,"
+continued Eldrick, looking at his watch. "You'll be home before lunch.
+See your mother early in the afternoon, and then telephone, briefly, the
+result to me, here, at four o'clock. Then--Mr. Collingwood and I will
+have a consultation."
+
+He motioned Collingwood to remain where he was, and himself saw Nesta
+down to the street. When he came back to his room he shook his head at
+the young barrister.
+
+"Collingwood!" he said. "There's some dreadful business afloat in all
+this! And it's all the worse because of the fashion in which Pratt
+talked to that girl. She's evidently a very good memory--she narrated
+that conversation clearly and fully. Pratt must be very sure of his hand
+if he showed her his cards in that way--his very confidence in himself
+shows what a subtle network he's either made or is making. I question if
+he'd very much care if he knew that we know. But he mustn't know
+that--yet. We must reply to his mine with a counter-mine!"
+
+"What do you think of Pratt's charge against Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick made a wry face.
+
+"Looks bad!--very, very bad, Collingwood!" he answered. "Art and scheme
+of a desperate woman, of course. But--we mustn't let her daughter think
+we believe it. Let her stick to the suggestion I made--which, as you
+remarked, would certainly make a very good line of defence, supposing
+Pratt even did accuse her. But now--what on earth is this document
+that's been mentioned--this paper of which Pratt has possession? Has
+Mrs. Mallathorpe at some time committed forgery--or bigamy--or--what is
+it? One thing's sure, however--we've got to work quietly. We mustn't let
+Pratt know that we're working. I hope he doesn't know that Miss
+Mallathorpe came here. Will you come back about four and hear what
+message she sends me? After that, we could consult."
+
+Collingwood went away to his chambers. He was much occupied just then,
+and had little time to think of anything but the work in hand. But as he
+ate his lunch at the club which he had joined on settling in Barford, he
+tried to get at some notion of the state of things, and once more his
+mind reverted to the time of his grandfather's death, and his own
+suspicions about Pratt at that period. Clearly that was a point to which
+they must hark back--he himself must make more inquiries about the
+circumstances of Antony Bartle's last hours. For this affair would not
+have to rest where it was--it was intolerable that Nesta Mallathorpe
+should in any way be under Pratt's power. He went back to Eldrick at
+four o'clock with a suggestion or two in his mind. And at the sight of
+him Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"I've had that telephone message from Normandale," he said, "five
+minutes ago. Pretty much what I expected--at this juncture, anyway. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe absolutely declines to talk business with even her daughter
+at present--and earnestly desires that Mr. Linford Pratt may be left
+alone."
+
+"Well?" asked Collingwood after a pause. "What now?"
+
+"We must do what we can--secretly, privately, for the daughter's sake,"
+said Eldrick. "I confess I don't quite see a beginning, but----"
+
+Just then the private door opened, and Pascoe, a somewhat
+lackadaisical-mannered man, who always looked half-asleep, and was in
+reality remarkably wide-awake, lounged in, nodded to Collingwood, and
+threw a newspaper in front of his partner.
+
+"I say, Eldrick," he drawled, as he removed a newly-lighted cigar from
+his lips. "There's an advertisement here which seems to refer to that
+precious protégé of yours, who left you with such scant ceremony. Same
+name, anyhow!"
+
+Eldrick snatched up the paper, glanced at it and read a few words aloud.
+
+"INFORMATION WANTED about James Parrawhite, at one time in practice as a
+solicitor."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT
+
+
+Eldrick looked up at his partner with a sharp, confirmatory glance.
+
+"That's our Parrawhite, of course!" he said. "Who's after him, now?" And
+he went on to read the rest of the advertisement, murmuring its
+phraseology half-aloud: "'in practice as a solicitor at Nottingham and
+who left that town six years ago. If the said James Parrawhite will
+communicate with the undersigned he will hear something greatly to his
+advantage. Any person able to give information as to his whereabouts
+will be suitably rewarded. Apply to Halstead & Byner, 56B, St. Martin's
+Chambers, London, W.C.' Um!--Pascoe, hand over that Law List."
+
+Collingwood looked on in silence while Eldrick turned over the pages of
+the big book which his partner took down from a shelf. He wondered at
+Eldrick's apparent and almost eager interest.
+
+"Halstead & Byner are not solicitors," announced Eldrick presently.
+"They must be inquiry agents or something of that sort. Anyway, I'll
+write to them, Pascoe, at once."
+
+"You don't know where the fellow is," said Pascoe. "What's the good?"
+
+"No--but we know where he last was," retorted Eldrick. He turned to
+Collingwood as the junior partner sauntered out of the room. "Rather odd
+that Pascoe should draw my attention to that just now," he remarked.
+"This man Parrawhite was, in a certain sense, mixed up with Pratt--at
+least, Pratt and I are the only two people who know the secret of
+Parrawhite's disappearance from these offices. That was just about the
+time of your grandfather's death."
+
+Collingwood immediately became attentive. His first suspicions of Pratt
+were formed at the time of which Eldrick spoke, and any reference to
+events contemporary excited his interest.
+
+"Who was or is--this man you're talking of?" he asked.
+
+"Bad lot--very!" answered Eldrick, shaking his head. "He and I were
+articled together, at the same time, to the same people: we saw a lot of
+each other as fellow articled clerks. He afterwards practised in
+Nottingham, and he held some good appointments. But he'd a perfect mania
+for gambling--the turf--and he went utterly wrong, and misappropriated
+clients' money, and in the end he got into prison, and was, of course,
+struck off the rolls. I never heard anything of him for years, and then
+one day, some time ago, he turned up here and begged me to give him a
+job. I did--and I'll do him the credit to say that he earned his money.
+But--in the end, his natural badness broke out. One afternoon--I'm
+careless about some things--I left some money lying in this
+drawer--about forty pounds in notes and gold--and next morning
+Parrawhite never came to business. We've never seen or heard of him
+since."
+
+"You mentioned Pratt," said Collingwood.
+
+"Only Pratt and I know--about the money," replied Eldrick. "We kept it
+secret--I didn't want Pascoe to know I'd been so careless. Pascoe didn't
+like Parrawhite--and he doesn't know his record. I only told him that
+Parrawhite was a chap I'd known in better circumstances and wanted to
+give a hand to."
+
+"You said it was about the time of my grandfather's death?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+"It was just about then--between his death and his funeral I should
+say," answered Eldrick, "The two events are associated in my mind.
+Anyway, I'd like to know what it is that these people want Parrawhite
+for. If it's money that's come to him, it'll be of no advantage--it'll
+only go where all the rest's gone."
+
+Collingwood lost interest in Parrawhite. Parrawhite appeared to have
+nothing to do with the affairs in which he was interested. He sat down
+and began to tell Eldrick about his own suspicions of Pratt at the time
+of Antony Bartle's death; of what Jabey Naylor had told him about the
+paper taken from the _History of Barford_; of the lad's account of the
+old man's doings immediately afterwards; and of his own proceedings
+which had led him to believe for the time being that his suspicions were
+groundless.
+
+"But now," he went on, "a new idea occurs to me. Suppose that that
+paper, found by my grandfather in a book which had certainly belonged to
+the late John Mallathorpe, was something important relating to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? Suppose that my grandfather brought it across here to you?
+Suppose that finding you out, he showed it to Pratt? As my grandfather
+died suddenly, with nobody but Pratt there, what was there to prevent
+Pratt from appropriating that paper if he saw that it would give him a
+hold over Mrs. Mallathorpe? We know now that he has some document in his
+possession which does give him a hold--may it not be that of which the
+boy Naylor told me?"
+
+"Might be," agreed Eldrick. "But--my opinion is, taking things all
+together, that the paper which Antony Bartle found was the one you
+yourself discovered later--the list of books. No--I'll tell you what I
+think. I believe that the document which Pratt told Miss Mallathorpe he
+holds, and to which her mother referred in the letter asking Pratt to
+meet her, is probably--most probably!--one which he discovered in
+searching out his relationship to Mrs. Mallathorpe. He's a cute
+chap--and he may have found some document which--well, I'll tell you
+what it might be--something which would upset the rights of Harper
+Mallathorpe to his uncle's estates. No other relatives came forward, or
+were heard of, or were discoverable when John Mallathorpe was killed in
+that chimney accident; but there may be some--there may be one in
+particular. That's my notion!--and I intend, in the first place, to make
+a personal search of the parish registers from which Pratt got his
+information. He may have discovered something there which he's keeping
+to himself."
+
+"You think that is the course to adopt?" asked Collingwood, after a
+moment's reflection.
+
+"At present--yes," replied Eldrick. "And while I'm making it--I'll do it
+myself--we'll just go on outwardly--as if nothing had happened. If I
+meet Pratt--as I shall--I shall not let him see that I know anything. Do
+you go on in just the usual way. Go out to Normandale Grange now and
+then--and tell Miss Mallathorpe to think no more of her interview with
+Pratt until we've something to talk to her about. You talk to her
+about--something else."
+
+When Collingwood had left him Eldrick laid a telegram form on his
+plotting pad, and after a brief interval of thought wrote out a message
+addressed to the people whose advertisement had attracted Pascoe's
+attention.
+
+ "HALSTEAD & BYNER, 56B, St. Martin's Chambers, London, W.C.
+
+ "I can give you definite information concerning James Parrawhite
+ if you will send representative to see me personally.
+
+ "CHARLES ELDRICK, Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford."
+
+After Eldrick had sent off a clerk with this message to the nearest
+telegraph office, he sat thinking for some time. And at the close of his
+meditations, and after some turning over of a diary which lay on his
+desk, he picked up pen and paper, and drafted an advertisement of his
+own.
+
+ "TEN POUNDS REWARD will be paid to any person who can give
+ reliable and useful information as to James Parrawhite, who
+ until November last was a clerk in the employ of Messrs. Eldrick
+ & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford, and who is believed to have left
+ the town on the evening of November 23.--Apply to Mr. CHARLES
+ ELDRICK, of the above firm."
+
+"Worth risking ten pounds on--anyway," muttered Eldrick. "Whether these
+London people will cover it or not. Here!" he went on, turning to a
+clerk who had just entered the room. "Make three copies of this
+advertisement, and take one to each of the three newspaper offices, and
+tell 'em to put it in their personal column tonight."
+
+He sat musing for some time after he was left alone again, and when he
+at last rose, it was with a shake of the head.
+
+"I wonder if Pratt told me the truth that morning?" he said to himself.
+"Anyway, he's now being proved to be even deeper than I'd ever
+considered him. Well--other folk than Pratt are possessed of pretty good
+wits."
+
+Before he left the office that evening Eldrick was handed a telegram
+from Messrs. Halstead & Byner, of St. Martin's Chambers, informing him
+that their Mr. Byner would travel to Barford by the first express next
+morning, and would call upon him at eleven o'clock.
+
+"Then they have some important news for Parrawhite," mused Eldrick, as
+he put the message in his pocket and went off to his club. "Inquiry
+agents don't set off on long journeys at a moment's notice for a matter
+of a trifling agency. But--where is Parrawhite?"
+
+He awaited the arrival of Mr. Byner next morning with considerable
+curiosity. And soon after eleven there was shown in to him, a smart,
+well-dressed, alert-looking young man, who, having introduced himself as
+Mr. Gerald Byner, immediately plunged into business.
+
+"You can tell me something of James Parrawhite, Mr. Eldrick?" he began.
+"We shall be glad--we've been endeavouring to trace him for some months.
+It's odd that you didn't see our advertisement before."
+
+"I don't look at that sort of advertisement," replied Eldrick. "I
+believe it was by mere accident that my partner saw yours yesterday
+afternoon. But now, a question or two first. What are you--inquiry
+agents?"
+
+"Just so, sir--inquiry agents--with a touch of private detective
+business," answered Mr. Gerald Byner with a smile. "We undertake to find
+people, to watch people, to recover lost property, and so on. In this
+case we're acting for Messrs. Vickers, Marshall & Hebbleton, Solicitors,
+of Cannon Street. They want James Parrawhite badly."
+
+"Why?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," replied Byner with a dry laugh, "there's about twenty
+thousand pounds waiting for him, in their hands."
+
+Eldrick whistled with astonishment.
+
+"Whew!" he said. "Twenty thousand--for Parrawhite! My good sir--if
+that's so, and if, as you say, you've been advertising----"
+
+"Advertising in several papers," interrupted Byner. "Dailies, weeklies,
+provincials. Never had one reply, till your wire."
+
+"Then--Parrawhite must be dead!" said Eldrick. "Or--in gaol, under
+another name. Twenty thousand pounds--waiting for Parrawhite! If
+Parrawhite was alive, man, or at liberty, he wouldn't let twenty
+thousand pence wait five minutes! I know him!"
+
+"What can you tell me, Mr. Eldrick?" asked the inquiry agent.
+
+Eldrick told all he knew--concealing nothing. And Byner listened
+silently and eagerly.
+
+"There's something strikes me at once," he said. "You say that with him
+disappeared three or four ten-pound notes of yours. Have you the numbers
+of those notes?"
+
+"I can't say," replied Eldrick, doubtfully. "I haven't, certainly.
+But--they were paid in to our head-clerk, Pratt, and I think he used to
+enter such things in a sort of day-ledger. I'll get it."
+
+He went into the clerks' office and presently returned with an oblong,
+marble-backed book which he began to turn over.
+
+"This may be what you ask about," he said at last. "Here, under date
+November 23, are some letters and figures which obviously refer to
+bank-notes. You can copy them if you like."
+
+"Another question, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner as he made a note of the
+entries. "You say some cheque forms were abstracted from a book of yours
+at the same time. Have you ever heard of any of these cheque forms being
+made use of?"
+
+"Never!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"No forgery of your name or anything?" suggested the caller.
+
+"No," said Eldrick. "There's been nothing of that sort."
+
+"I can soon ascertain if these bank-notes have reached the Bank of
+England," said Byner. "That's a simple matter. Now suppose they
+haven't!"
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"You know, of course," continued Byner, "that it doesn't take long for a
+Bank of England note, once issued, to get back to the Bank? You know,
+too, that it's never issued again. Now if those notes haven't been
+presented at the Bank--where are they? And if no use has been made of
+your stolen cheques--where are they?"
+
+"Good!" agreed Eldrick. "I see that you ought to do well in your special
+line of business. Now--are you going to pursue inquiries for Parrawhite
+here in Barford, after what I've told you?"
+
+"Certainly!" said Byner. "I came down prepared to stop awhile. It's
+highly important that this man should be found--highly important," he
+added smiling, "to other people than Parrawhite himself."
+
+"In what way?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Why," replied Byner, "if he's dead--as he may be--this money goes to
+somebody else--a relative. The relative would be very glad to hear he is
+dead! But--definite news will be welcome, in any case. Oh, yes, now that
+I've got down here, I shall do my best to trace him. You have the
+address of the woman he lodged with, you say. I shall go there first, of
+course. Then I must try to find out what he did with himself in his
+spare time. But, from all you tell me, it's my impression he's
+dead--unless, as you say, he's got into prison again--possibly under
+another name. It seems impossible that he should not have seen our
+advertisements."
+
+"You never advertised in any Yorkshire newspapers?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"No," said Byner. "Because we'd no knowledge of his having come so far
+North. We advertised in the Midland papers. But then, all the London
+papers, daily and weekly, that we used come down to Yorkshire."
+
+"Parrawhite," said Eldrick reflectively, "was a big newspaper reader. He
+used to go to the Free Library reading-room a great deal. I begin to
+think he must certainly be dead--or locked up. However, in supplement of
+your endeavours, I did a little work of my own last night. There you
+are!" he went on, picking up the local papers and handing them over. "I
+put that in--we'll see if any response comes. But now a word, Mr. Byner,
+since you've come to me. You have heard me mention my late
+clerk--Pratt?"
+
+"Yes," answered Byner.
+
+"Pratt has left us, and is in business as a sort of estate agent in the
+next street," continued Eldrick. "Now I have particular reasons--most
+particular reasons!--why Pratt should remain in absolute ignorance of
+your presence in the town. If you should happen to come across him--as
+you may, for though there are a quarter of a million of us here, it's a
+small place, compared with London--don't let him know your business."
+
+"I'm not very likely to do that, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner quietly.
+
+"Aye, but you don't take my meaning," said Eldrick eagerly. "I mean
+this--it's just possible that Pratt may see that advertisement of yours,
+and that he may write to your firm. In that case, as he's here, and
+you're here, your partner would send his letter to you. Don't deal with
+it--here. Don't--if you should come across Pratt, even let him know your
+name!"
+
+"When I've a job of this sort," replied Byner, "I don't let anybody know
+my name--except people like you. When I register at one of your hotels
+presently, I shall be Mr. Black of London. But--if this Pratt wanted to
+give any information about Parrawhite, he'd give it to you, surely, now
+that you've advertised."
+
+"No, he wouldn't!" asserted Eldrick. "Why? Because he's told me all he
+knows--or says he knows--already!"
+
+The inquiry agent looked keenly at the solicitor for a moment during
+which they both kept silence. Then Byner smiled.
+
+"You said--'or says he knows,'" he remarked. "Do you think he didn't
+tell the truth about Parrawhite?"
+
+"I should say--now--it's quite likely he didn't," answered Eldrick. "The
+truth is, I'm making some inquiry myself about Pratt--and I don't want
+this to interfere with it. You keep me informed of what you find out,
+and I'll help you all I can while you're here. It may be----"
+
+A clerk came into the room and looked at his master.
+
+"Mr. George Pickard, of the _Green Man_ at Whitcliffe, sir," he said.
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Wants to see you about that advertisement in the paper this morning,
+sir," continued the clerk.
+
+Eldrick looked at Byner and smiled significantly. Then he turned towards
+the door.
+
+"Bring Mr. Pickard in," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+
+The clerk presently ushered in a short, thick-set, round-faced man,
+apparently of thirty to thirty-five years of age, whose chief personal
+characteristics lay in a pair of the smallest eyes ever set in a human
+countenance and a mere apology for a nose. But both nose and eyes
+combined somehow to communicate an idea of profound inquiry as the round
+face in which they were placed turned from the solicitor to the man from
+London, and a podgy forefinger was lifted to a red forehead.
+
+"Servant, gentlemen," said the visitor. "Fine morning for the time of
+year!"
+
+"Take a chair, Mr. Pickard," replied Eldrick. "Let me see--from the
+_Green Man_, at Whitcliffe, I believe?"
+
+"Landlord, sir--had that house a many years," answered Pickard, as he
+took a seat near the wall. "Seven year come next Michaelmas, any road."
+
+"Just so--and you want to see me about the advertisement in this
+morning's paper?" continued Eldrick. "What about it--now?"
+
+The landlord looked at Eldrick and then at Eldrick's companion. The
+solicitor understood that look: it meant that what his caller had to say
+was of a private nature.
+
+"It's all right, Mr. Pickard," he remarked reassuringly. "This gentleman
+is here on just the same business--whatever you say will be treated as
+confidential--it'll go no further. You've something to tell about my
+late clerk, James Parrawhite."
+
+Pickard, who had been nervously fingering a white billycock hat, now put
+it down on the floor and thrust his hands into the pockets of his
+trousers as if to keep them safe while he talked.
+
+"It's like this here," he answered. "When I saw that there advertisement
+in the paper this mornin', says I to my missus, 'I'll away,' I says,
+'an' see Lawyer Eldrick about that there, this very day!' 'Cause you
+see, Mr. Eldrick, there is summat as I can tell about yon man 'at you
+mention--James Parrawhite. I've said nowt about it to nobody, up to now,
+'cause it were private business atween him and me, as it were, but I
+lost money over it, and of course, ten pound is ten pound, gentlemen."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Eldrick, "And you shall have your ten pounds if you
+can tell anything useful."
+
+"I don't know owt about it's being useful, sir, nor what use is to be
+made on it," said Pickard, "but I can tell you a bit o' truth, and you
+can do what you like wi' what I tell. But," he went on, lowering his
+voice and glancing at the door by which he had just entered, "there's
+another name 'at 'll have to be browt in--private, like. Name, as it so
+happens, o' one o' your clerks--t' head clerk, I'm given to
+understand--Mr. Pratt."
+
+Eldrick showed no sign of surprise. But he continued to look
+significantly at Byner as he turned to the landlord.
+
+"Mr. Pratt has left me," he said. "Left me three weeks ago. So you
+needn't be afraid, Mr. Pickard--say anything you like."
+
+"Oh, I didn't know," remarked Pickard. "It's not oft that I come down in
+t' town, and we don't hear much Barford news up our way. Well, it's this
+here, Mr. Eldrick--you know where my place is, of course?"
+
+Eldrick nodded, and turned to Byner.
+
+"I'd better explain to you," he said. "Whitcliffe is an outlying part of
+the town, well up the hills--a sort of wayside hamlet with a lot of our
+famous stone quarries in its vicinity. The _Green Man_, of which our
+friend here is the landlord, is an old-fashioned tavern by the
+roadside--where people are rather fond of dropping in on a Sunday, I
+fancy, eh, Mr. Pickard?"
+
+"You're right, sir," replied the landlord. "It makes a nice walk out on
+a Sunday. And it were on a Sunday, too, 'at I got to know this here
+James Parrawhite as you want to know summat about. He began coming to my
+place of a Sunday evenin', d'ye see, gentlemen?--he'd walk across t'
+valley up there to Whitcliffe and stop an hour or two, enjoyin' hisself.
+Well, now, as you're no doubt well aweer, Mr. Eldrick, he were a reight
+hand at talkin', were yon Parrawhite--he'd t' gift o' t' gab reight
+enough, and talked well an' all. And of course him an' me, we hed bits
+o' conversation at times, 'cause he come to t' house reg'lar and
+sometimes o' week-nights an' all. An' he tell'd me 'at he'd had a deal
+o' experience i' racin' matters--whether it were true or not, I couldn't
+say, but----"
+
+"True enough!" said Eldrick. "He had."
+
+"Well, so he said," continued Pickard, "and he was allus tellin' me 'at
+he could make a pile o' brass on t' turf if he only had capital. An' i'
+t' end, he persuaded me to start what he called investin' money with him
+i' that way--i' plain language, it meant givin' him brass to put on
+horses 'at he said was goin' to win, d'ye understand?"
+
+"Perfectly," replied Eldrick. "You gave him various amounts which he was
+to stake for you."
+
+"Just so, sir! And at first," said Pickard, with a shake of the head,
+"at first I'd no great reason to grumble. He cert'ny wor a good hand at
+spottin' a winner. But as time went on, I' t' greatest difficulty in
+gettin' a settlement wi' him, d'ye see? He wor just as good a hand at
+makin' excuses as he wor at pickin' out winners--better, I think! I
+nivver knew wheer I was wi' him--he'd pay up, and then he'd persuade me
+to go in for another do wi' t' brass I'd won, and happen we should lose
+that time, and then of course we had to hev another investment to get
+back what we'd dropped, and so it went on. But t' end wor this
+here--last November theer wor about fifty to sixty pound o' mine i' his
+hands, and I wanted it. I'd a spirit merchant's bill to settle, and I
+wanted t' brass badly for that. I knew Parrawhite had been paid, d'ye
+see, by t' turf agent, 'at he betted wi', and I plagued him to hand t'
+brass over to me. He made one excuse and then another--howsumivver, it
+come to that very day you're talkin' about i' your advertisement, Mr.
+Eldrick--the twenty-third o' November----"
+
+"Stop a minute, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Eldrick. "Now, how do you
+know--for a certainty--that this day you're going to talk about was the
+twenty-third of November?"
+
+The landlord, who had removed his hands from his pockets, and was now
+twiddling a pair of fat thumbs as he talked, chuckled slyly.
+
+"For a very good reason," he answered. "I had to pay that spirit bill I
+tell'd about just now on t' twenty-fourth, and that I'm going to tell
+you happened t' night afore t' twenty-fourth, so of course it were t'
+twenty-third. D'ye see?"
+
+"I see," asserted Eldrick. "That'll do! And now--what did happen?"
+
+"This here," replied Pickard. "On that night--t' twenty-third
+November--Parrawhite came into t' _Green Man_ at about, happen,
+half-past eight. He come into t' little private parlour to me, bold as
+brass--as indeed, he allers wor. 'Ye're a nice un!' I says. 'I've
+written yer three letters durin' t' last week, and ye've nivver answered
+one o' 'em!' 'I've come to answer i' person,' he says. 'There's nobbut
+one answer I want,' says I. 'Wheer's my money?' 'Now then, be quiet a
+bit,' he says. 'You shall have your money before the evening's over,' he
+says. 'Or, if not, as soon as t' banks is open tomorrow mornin',' he
+says. 'Wheer's it coomin' from?' says I. 'Now, never you mind,' he says.
+'It's safe!' 'I don't believe a word you're sayin',' says I. 'Ye're
+havin' me for t' mug!--that's about it.' An' I went on so at him, 'at i'
+t' end he tell'd me 'at he wor presently goin' to meet Pratt, and 'at he
+could get t' brass out o' Pratt an' as much more as iwer he liked to ax
+for. Well, I don't believe that theer, and I said so. 'What brass has
+Pratt?' says I. 'Pratt's nowt but a clerk, wi' happen three or four
+pound a week!' 'That's all you know,' he says. 'Pratt's become a gold
+mine, and I'm going to dig in it a bit. What's it matter to you,' he
+says, 'so long as you get your brass?' Well, of course, that wor true
+enough--all 'at I wanted just then were to handle my brass. And I tell'd
+him so. 'I'll brek thy neck, Parrawhite,' I says, 'if thou doesn't bring
+me that theer money eyther to-night or t' first thing tomorrow--so now!'
+'Don't talk rot!' he says. 'I've told you!' And he had money wi' him
+then--'nough to pay for drinks and cigars, any road, and we had a drink
+or two, and a smoke or two, and then he went out, sayin' he wor goin' to
+meet Pratt, and he'd be back at my place before closin' time wi' either
+t' cash or what 'ud be as good. An' I waited--and waited after closin'
+time, an' all. But I've nivver seen Parrawhite from that day to
+this---nor heerd tell on him neither!"
+
+Eldrick and Byner looked at each other for a moment. Then the solicitor
+spoke--quietly and with a significance which the agent understood.
+
+"Do you want to ask Mr. Pickard any questions?" he said.
+
+Byner nodded and turned to the landlord.
+
+"Did Parrawhite tell you where he was going to meet Pratt?" he asked.
+
+"He did," replied Pickard. "Near Pratt's lodgin' place."
+
+"Did--or does--Pratt live near you, then?"
+
+"Closish by--happen ten minutes' walk. There's few o' houses--a sort o'
+terrace, like, on t' edge o' what they call Whitcliffe Moor. Pratt
+lodged--lodges now for all I know to t' contrary--i' one o' them."
+
+"Did Parrawhite give you any idea that he was going to the house in
+which Pratt lodged?"
+
+"No! He were not goin' to t' house. I know he worn't. He tell'd me 'at
+he'd a good idea what time Pratt 'ud be home, 'cause he knew where he
+was that evening and he were goin' to meet him just afore Pratt got to
+his place. I know where he'd meet him."
+
+"Where?" asked Byner. "Tell me exactly. It's important."
+
+"Pratt 'ud come up fro' t' town i' t' tram," answered Pickard. "He'd
+approach this here terrace I tell'd you about by a narrow lane that runs
+off t' high road. He'd meet him there, would Parrawhite."
+
+"Did you ever ask any question of Pratt about Parrawhite?"
+
+"No--never! I'd no wish that Pratt should know owt about my dealin's
+with Parrawhite. When Parrawhite never come back--why, I kep' it all to
+myself, till now."
+
+"What do you think happened to Parrawhite, Mr. Pickard?" asked Byner.
+
+"Gow, I know what I think!" replied Pickard disgustedly. "I think 'at if
+he did get any brass out o' Pratt--which is what I know nowt about, and
+hewn't much belief in--he went straight away fro' t' town--vanished! I
+do know this--he nivver went back to his lodgin's that neet, 'cause I
+went theer mysen next day to inquire."
+
+Eldrick pricked up his ears at that. He remembered that he had sent
+Pratt to make inquiry at Parrawhite's lodgings on the morning whereon
+the money was missing.
+
+"What time of the day--on the twenty-fourth--was that, Mr. Pickard?" he
+asked.
+
+"Evenin', sir," replied the landlord. "They'd nivver seen naught of him
+since he went out the day before. Oh, he did me, did Parrawhite! Of
+course, I lost mi brass--fifty odd pounds!"
+
+Byner gave Eldrick a glance.
+
+"I think Mr. Pickard has earned the ten pounds you offered," he said.
+
+Eldrick took the hint and pulled out his cheque-book.
+
+"Of course, you're to keep all this private--strictly private, Mr.
+Pickard," he said as he wrote. "Not a word to a soul!"
+
+"Just as you order, sir," agreed Pickard. "I'll say nowt--to nobody."
+
+"And--perhaps tomorrow--perhaps this afternoon--you'll see me at the
+_Green Man_," remarked Byner. "I shall just drop in, you know. You
+needn't know me--if there's anybody about."
+
+"All right, sir--I understand," said Pickard.
+
+"Quiet's the word--what? Very good--much obliged to you, gentlemen."
+
+When the landlord had gone Eldrick motioned Byner to pick up his hat.
+"Come across the street with me," he said. "I want us to have a
+consultation with a friend of mine, a barrister, Mr. Collingwood. For
+this matter is assuming a very queer aspect, and we can't move too
+warily, nor consider all the features too thoroughly."
+
+Collingwood listened with deep interest to Eldrick's account of the
+morning's events. And once again he was struck by the fact that all
+these various happenings in connection with Pratt, and now with
+Parrawhite, took place at the time of Antony Bartle's death, and he said
+so.
+
+"True enough!" agreed Eldrick.
+
+"And once more," pointed out Collingwood. "We're hearing of a hold!
+Pratt claims to have a hold on Mrs. Mallathorpe--now it turns out that
+Parrawhite boasted of a hold on Pratt. Suppose all these things have a
+common origin? Suppose the hold which Parrawhite had--or has--on Pratt
+is part and parcel of the hold which Pratt has on Mrs. Mallathorpe? In
+that case--or cases--what is the best thing to do?"
+
+"Will you gentlemen allow me to suggest something?" said Byner. "Very
+well--find Parrawhite! Of all the people concerned in this, Parrawhite,
+from your account of him, anyway, Mr. Eldrick, is the likeliest person
+to extract the truth from."
+
+"There's a great deal in that suggestion," said Eldrick. "Do you know
+what I think?" he went on, turning to Collingwood, "Mr. Byner tells me
+he means to stay here until he has come across some satisfactory news of
+Parrawhite or solved the mystery of his disappearance. Well, now that
+we've found that there is some ground for believing that Parrawhite was
+in some fashion mixed up with Pratt about that time, why not place the
+whole thing in Mr. Byner's hands--let him in any case see what he can do
+about the Parrawhite-Pratt business of November twenty-third, eh?"
+
+"I take it," answered Collingwood, looking at the inquiry agent, "that
+Mr. Byner having heard what he has, would do that quite apart from us?"
+
+"Yes," said Byner. "Now that I've heard what Pickard had to say, I
+certainly shall follow that up."
+
+"I am following out something of my own," said Collingwood, turning to
+Eldrick. "I shall know more by this time tomorrow. Let us have a
+conference here--at noon."
+
+They separated on that understanding, and Byner went his own ways. His
+first proceeding was to visit, one after another, the Barford newspaper
+offices, and to order the insertion in large type, and immediately, of
+the Halstead-Byner advertisement for news of Parrawhite. His second was
+to seek the General Post Office, where he wrote out and dispatched a
+message to his partner in London. That message was in cypher--translated
+into English, it read as follows:--
+
+ "If person named Pratt sends any communication to us _re_
+ Parrawhite, on no account let him know I am in Barford, but
+ forward whatever he sends to me at once, addressed to H.D.
+ Black, Central Station Hotel."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+
+When Collingwood said that he was following out something of his own, he
+was thinking of an interesting discovery which he had made. It was one
+which might have no significance in relation to the present
+perplexities--on the other hand, out of it might come a good deal of
+illumination. Briefly, it was that on the evening before this
+consultation with Eldrick & Byner, he had found out that he was living
+in the house of a man who had actually witnessed the famous catastrophe
+at Mallathorpe's Mill, whereby John Mallathorpe, his manager, and his
+cashier, together with some other bystanders, had lost their lives.
+
+On settling down in Barford, Collingwood had spent a couple of weeks in
+looking about him for comfortable rooms of a sort that appealed to his
+love of quiet and retirement. He had found them at last in an old house
+on the outskirts of the town--a fine old stone house, once a farmstead,
+set in a large garden, and tenanted by a middle-aged couple, who having
+far more room than they needed for themselves, had no objection to
+letting part of it to a business gentleman. Collingwood fell in love
+with this place as soon as he saw it. The rooms were large and full of
+delightful nooks and corners; the garden was rich in old trees; from it
+there were fine views of the valley beneath, and the heather-clad hills
+in the distance; within two miles of the town and easily approached by a
+convenient tram-route, it was yet quite out in the country.
+
+He was just as much set up by his landlady--a comfortable, middle-aged
+woman, who fostered true Yorkshire notions about breakfast, and knew how
+to cook a good dinner at night. With her Collingwood had soon come to
+terms, and to his new abode had transferred a quantity of books and
+pictures from London. He soon became acquainted with the domestic
+menage. There was the landlady herself, Mrs. Cobcroft, who, having no
+children of her own, had adopted a niece, now grown up, and a teacher in
+an adjacent elementary school: there was a strapping, rosy-cheeked
+servant-maid, whose dialect was too broad for the lodger to understand
+more than a few words of it; finally there was Mr. Cobcroft, a
+mild-mannered, quiet man who disappeared early in the morning, and was
+sometimes seen by Collingwood returning home in the evening.
+
+Lately, with the advancing spring, this unobtrusive individual was seen
+about the garden at the end of the day: Collingwood had so seen him on
+the evening before the talk with Eldrick and Byner, busied in setting
+seeds in the flower-beds. And he had asked Mrs. Cobcroft, just then in
+his sitting-room, if her husband was fond of gardening.
+
+"It's a nice change for him, sir," answered the landlady. "He's kept
+pretty close at it all day in the office yonder at Mallathorpe's Mill,
+and it does him good to get a bit o' fresh air at nights, now that the
+fine weather's coming on. That was one reason why we took this old
+place--it's a deal better air here nor what it is in the town."
+
+"So your husband is at Mallathorpe's Mill, eh?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Been there--in the counting-house--boy and man, over thirty years,
+sir," replied Mrs. Cobcroft.
+
+"Did he see that terrible affair then--was it two years ago?"
+
+The landlady shook her head and let out a weighty sigh.
+
+"Aye, I should think he did!" she answered. "And a nice shock it gave
+him, too!--he actually saw that chimney fall--him and another clerk were
+looking out o' the counting-house window when it gave way."
+
+Collingwood said no more then--except to remark that such a sight must
+indeed have been trying to the nerves. But for purposes of his own he
+determined to have a talk with Cobcroft, and the next evening, seeing
+him in his garden again, he went out to him and got into conversation,
+and eventually led up to the subject of Mallathorpe's Mill, the new
+chimney of which could be seen from a corner of the garden.
+
+"Your wife tells me," observed Collingwood, "that you were present when
+the old chimney fell at the mill yonder?"
+
+Cobcroft, a quiet, unassuming man, usually of few words, looked along
+the hillside at the new chimney, and nodded his head. A curious,
+far-away look came into his eyes.
+
+"I was, sir!" he said. "And I hope I may never see aught o' that sort
+again, as long as ever I live. It was one o' those things a man can
+never forget!"
+
+"Don't talk about it if you don't want to," remarked Collingwood. "But
+I've heard so much about that affair that----"
+
+"Oh, I don't mind talking about it," replied Cobcroft. He leaned over
+the fence of his garden, still gazing at the mill in the distance.
+"There were others that saw it, of course: lots of 'em. But I was close
+at hand--our office was filled with the dust in a few seconds."
+
+"It was a sudden affair?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It was one of those affairs," answered Cobcroft slowly, "that some folk
+had been expecting for a long time--only nobody had the sense to see
+that it might happen at some unexpected minute. It was a very old
+chimney. It looked all right--stood plumb, and all that. But Mr.
+Mallathorpe--my old master, Mr. John Mallathorpe, I'm talking of--he got
+an idea from two or three little things, d'ye see, that it wasn't as
+safe as it ought to be. And he got a couple of these professional
+steeplejacks to examine it. They made a thorough examination, too--so
+far as one could tell by what they did. They'd been at the job several
+days when the accident happened. One of 'em had only just come down when
+the chimney fell. Mr. Mallathorpe, himself, and his manager, and his
+cashier, had just stepped out of the counting-house and crossed the yard
+to hear what this man had got to say when--down it came! Not the
+slightest warning at the time. It just--collapsed!"
+
+"You saw the actual collapse?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--didn't I?" exclaimed Cobcroft. "Another man and myself were
+looking out of the office window, right opposite. It fell in the
+queerest way--like this," he went on, holding up his garden-rake.
+"Supposing this shaft was the chimney--standing straight up. As we
+looked we saw it suddenly bulge out, on all sides--it was a square
+chimney, same size all the way up till you got to the cornice at the
+top--bulge out, d'ye see, just about half-way up--simultaneous, like.
+Then--down it came with a roar that they heard over half the town! O'
+course, there were some two or three thousands of tons of stuff in that
+chimney--and when the dust was cleared a bit there it was in one great
+heap, right across the yard. And it was a good job," concluded Cobcroft,
+reflectively, "that it fell straight--collapsed in itself, as you might
+say--for if it had fallen slanting either way, it 'ud ha' smashed right
+through some of the sheds, and there'd ha' been a terrible loss of
+life."
+
+"Mr. John Mallathorpe was killed on the spot, I believe?" suggested
+Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--and Gaukrodger, and Marshall, and the steeplejack that had just
+come down, and another or two," said Cobcroft. "They'd no chance--they
+were standing in a group at the very foot, talking. They were all killed
+there and then--instantaneous. Some others were struck and injured--one
+or two died. Yes, sir,--I'm not very like to forget that!"
+
+"A terrible experience!" agreed Collingwood. "It would naturally fix
+itself on your memory."
+
+"Aye--my memory's very keen about it," said Cobcroft. "I remember every
+detail of that morning. And," he continued, showing a desire to become
+reminiscent, "there was something happened that morning, before the
+accident, that I've oft thought over and has oft puzzled me. I've never
+said aught to anybody about it, because we Yorkshiremen we're not given
+to talking about affairs that don't concern us, and after all, it was
+none o' mine! But you're a law gentleman, and I dare say you get things
+told to you in confidence now and then, and, of course, this is between
+you and me. I'll not deny that I have oft thought that I would like to
+tell it to a lawyer of some sort, and find out how it struck him."
+
+"Anything that you like to tell me, Mr. Cobcroft, I shall treat as a
+matter of confidence--until you tell me it's no longer a secret,"
+answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why," continued Cobcroft, "it isn't what you rightly would call a
+secret--though I don't think anybody knows aught about it but myself! It
+was just this--and it may be there's naught in it but a mere fancy o'
+mine. That morning, before the accident happened, I was in and out of
+the private office a good deal--carrying in and out letters, and account
+books, and so on. Mr. John Mallathorpe's private office, ye'll
+understand, sir, opened out of our counting-house--as it does still--the
+present manager, Mr. Horsfall, has it, just as it was. Well, now, on one
+occasion, when I went in there, to take a ledger back to the safe, Mr.
+Mallathorpe had his manager and cashier, Gaukrodger and Marshall in with
+him. Mr. Mallathorpe, he always used a stand-up desk to write at--never
+wrote sitting down, though he had a big desk in the middle of the room
+that he used to sit at to look over accounts or talk to people. Now when
+I went in, he and Gaukrodger and Marshall were all at this stand-up
+desk--in the window-place--and they were signing some papers. At least
+Gaukrodger had just signed a paper, and Marshall was taking the pen from
+him. 'Sign there, Marshall,' says Mr. Mallathorpe. And then he went on,
+'Now we'll sign this other--it's well to have these things in duplicate,
+in case one gets lost.' And then--well, then, I went out, and--why, that
+was all."
+
+"You've some idea in your mind about that," said Collingwood, who had
+watched Cobcroft closely as he talked. "What is it?"
+
+Cobcroft smiled--and looked round as if to ascertain that they were
+alone. "Why!" he answered in a low voice. "I'll tell you what I did
+wonder--some time afterwards. I dare say you're aware--it was all in the
+papers--that Mr. John Mallathorpe died intestate?"
+
+"Yes," asserted Collingwood. "I know that."
+
+"I've oft wondered," continued Cobcroft, "if that could ha' been his
+will that they were signing! But then I reflected a bit on matters. And
+there were two or three things that made me say naught at all--not a
+word. First of all, I considered it a very unlikely thing that a rich
+man like Mr. John Mallathorpe would make a will for himself. Second--I
+remembered that very soon after I'd been in his private office Marshall
+came out into the counting-house and gave the office lad a lot of
+letters and documents to take to the post--some of 'em big
+envelopes--and I thought that what I'd seen signed was some agreement or
+other that was in one of them. And third--and most important--no will
+was ever found in any of Mr. John Mallathorpe's drawers or safes or
+anywhere, though they turned things upside down at the office, and, I
+heard, at his house as well. Of course, you see, sir, supposing that to
+have been a will--why, the only two men who could possibly have proved
+it was were dead and gone! They were killed with him. And of course, the
+young people, the nephew and niece, they came in for everything--so
+there was an end of it. But--I've oft wondered what those papers were.
+One thing is certain, anyway!" concluded Cobcroft, with a grim laugh,
+"when those three signed 'em, they were picking up their pens for the
+last time!"
+
+"How long was it--after you saw the signing of those papers--that the
+accident occurred?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It 'ud be twelve or fifteen minutes, as near as I can recollect,"
+replied Cobcroft. "A few minutes after I'd left the private office,
+Gaukrodger came out of it, alone, and stood at the door leading into the
+yard, looking up at the chimney. The steeple-jack was just coming down,
+and his mate was waiting for him at the bottom. Gaukrodger turned back
+to the private office and called Mr. Mallathorpe out. All three of 'em,
+Mallathorpe, Gaukrodger, Marshall, went out and walked across the yard
+to the chimney foot. They stood there talking a bit--and then--down it
+came!"
+
+Collingwood thought matters over. Supposing that the document which
+Cobcroft spoke of as being in process of execution before him were
+indeed duplicate copies of a will. What could have been done with them,
+in the few minutes which elapsed between the signing and the catastrophe
+to the chimney? It was scarcely likely that John Mallathorpe would have
+sent them away by post. If they had been deposited in his own pocket,
+they would have been found when his clothing was removed and examined.
+If they were in the private office when the three men left it----
+
+"You're sure the drawers, safe and so on in Mr. Mallathorpe's room were
+thoroughly searched--after his death?" he asked.
+
+"I should think they were!" answered Cobcroft laconically. "I helped at
+that, myself. There wasn't as much as an old invoice that was not well
+fingered and turned over. No!--I came to the conclusion that what I'd
+seen signed was some contract or something--sent off there and then by
+the lad to post."
+
+Collingwood made no further remark and asked no more questions. But he
+thought long and seriously that night, and he came to certain
+conclusions. First: what Cobcroft had seen signed was John Mallathorpe's
+will. Second: John Mallathorpe had made it himself and had taken the
+unusual course of making a duplicate copy. Third: John Mallathorpe had
+probably slipped the copy into the _History of Barford_ which was in his
+private office when he went out to speak to the steeple-jack. Fourth:
+that copy had come into Linford Pratt's hands through Antony Bartle.
+
+And now arose two big questions. What were the terms of that will?
+And--where was the duplicate copy? He was still putting these to himself
+when noon of the next day came and brought Eldrick and Byner for the
+promised serious consultation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE _GREEN MAN_
+
+
+Byner, in taking his firm's advertisement for Parrawhite to the three
+Barford newspaper offices, had done so with a special design--he wanted
+Pratt to see that a serious wish to discover Parrawhite was alive in
+more quarters than one. He knew that Pratt was almost certain to see
+Eldrick's advertisement in his own name; now he wanted Pratt to see
+another advertisement of the same nature in another name. Already he had
+some suspicion that Pratt had not told Eldrick the truth about
+Parrawhite, and that nothing would suit him so well as that Parrawhite
+should never be heard of or mentioned again: now he wished Pratt to
+learn that Parrawhite was much wanted, and was likely to be much
+mentioned--wherefore the supplementary advertisements with Halstead &
+Byner's name attached. It was extremely unlikely that Pratt could fail
+to see those advertisements.
+
+There were three newspapers in Barford: one a morning journal of large
+circulation throughout the county; the other two, evening journals,
+which usually appeared in three or four editions. As Byner stipulated
+for large type, and a prominent position, in the personal column of
+each, it was scarcely within the bounds of probability that a townsman
+like Pratt would miss seeing the advertisement. Most likely he would see
+it in all three newspapers. And if he had also seen Eldrick's similar
+advertisement, he would begin to think, and then----
+
+"Why, then," mused Byner, ruminating on his design, "then we will see
+what he will do!"
+
+Meanwhile, there was something he himself wanted to do, and on the
+morning following his arrival in the town, he set out to do it. Byner
+had been much struck by Pickard's account of his dealings with James
+Parrawhite on the evening which appeared to be the very last wherein
+Parrawhite was ever seen. He had watched the landlord of the _Green Man_
+closely as he told his story, and had set him down for an honest, if
+somewhat sly and lumpish soul, who was telling a plain tale to the best
+of his ability. Byner believed all the details of that story--he even
+believed that when Parrawhite told Pickard that he would find him fifty
+pounds that evening, or early next day, he meant to keep his word. In
+the circumstances--as far as Byner could reckon them up from what he had
+gathered--it would not have paid Parrawhite to do otherwise. Byner put
+the situation to himself in this fashion--Pratt had got hold of some
+secret which was being, or could be made to be, highly profitable to
+him. Parrawhite had discovered this, and was in a position to blackmail
+Pratt. Therefore Parrawhite would not wish to leave Pratt's
+neighbourhood--so long as there was money to be got out of Pratt,
+Parrawhite would stick to him like a leech. But if Parrawhite was to
+abide peaceably in Barford, he must pay Pickard that little matter of
+between fifty and sixty pounds. Accordingly, in Byner's opinion,
+Parrawhite had every honest intention of returning to the _Green Man_ on
+the evening of the twenty-third of November after having seen Pratt.
+And, in Byner's further--and very seriously considered--opinion, the
+whole problem for solution--possibly involving the solution of other and
+more important problems--was this: Did Parrawhite meet Pratt that night,
+and if he did what took place between them which prevented Parrawhite
+from returning to Pickard?
+
+It was in an endeavour to get at some first stage of a solution of this
+problem that Byner, having breakfasted at the _Central Hotel_ on his
+second day in the town, went out immediately afterwards, asked his way
+to Whitcliffe, and was directed to an electric tram which started from
+the Town Hall Square, and after running through a district of tall
+warehouses and squat weaving-sheds, began a long and steady climb to the
+heights along the town. When he left it, he found himself in a district
+eminently characteristic of that part of the country. The tram set him
+down at a cross-roads on a high ridge of land. Beneath him lay Barford,
+its towers and spires and the gables of its tall buildings showing
+amongst the smoke of its many chimneys. All about him lay open ground,
+broken by the numerous stone quarries of which Eldrick had spoken, and
+at a little distance along one of the four roads at the intersection of
+which he stood, he saw a few houses and cottages, one of which, taller
+and bigger than the rest, was distinguished by a pole, planted in front
+of its stone porch and bearing a swinging sign whereon was rudely
+painted the figure of a man in Lincoln green. Byner walked on to this,
+entered a flagged hall, and found himself confronting Pickard, who at
+sight of him, motioned him into a little parlour behind the bar.
+
+"Mornin', mister," said he. "You'll be all right in here--there's nobody
+about just now, and if my missis or any o' t' servant lasses sees yer,
+they'll tak' yer for a brewer's traveller, or summat o' that sort. Come
+to hev a look round, like--what?"
+
+"I want to have a look at the place where you told us Parrawhite was to
+meet Pratt that night," replied Byner. "I thought you would perhaps be
+kind enough to show me where it is."
+
+"I will, an' all--wi' pleasure," said the landlord, "but ye mun hev a
+drop o' summat first--try a glass o' our ale," he went on, with true
+Yorkshire hospitality. "I hev some bitter beer i' my cellar such as I'll
+lay owt ye couldn't get t' likes on down yonder i' Barford--no, nor i'
+London neyther!--I'll just draw a jug."
+
+Byner submitted to this evidence of friendliness, and Pickard, after
+disappearing into a dark archway and down some deeply worn stone steps,
+came back with a foaming jug, the sight of which seemed to give him
+great delight. He gazed admiringly at the liquor which he presently
+poured into two tumblers, and drew his visitor's attention to its
+colour.
+
+"Reight stuff that, mister--what?" he said. "I nobbut tapped that barril
+two days since, and I'd been keepin' it twelve month, so you've come in
+for it at what they call t' opportune moment. I say!" he went on, after
+pledging Byner and smacking his lips over the ale. "I heard summat last
+night 'at might be useful to you and Lawyer Eldrick--about this here
+Parrawhite affair."
+
+"Oh!" said Byner, at once interested. "What now?"
+
+"You'll ha' noticed, as you come along t' road just now, 'at there's a
+deal o' stone quarries i' this neighbourhood?" replied Pickard. "Well,
+now, of course, some o' t' quarry men comes in here. Last night theer
+wor sev'ral on 'em i' t' bar theer, talkin', and one on 'em wor readin'
+t' evenin' newspaper--t' _Barford Dispatch_. An' he read out that theer
+advertisement about Parrawhite--wi' your address i' London at t' foot on
+it. Well, theer wor nowt said, except summat about advertisin' for
+disappeared folk, but later on, one o' t' men, a young man, come to me,
+private like. 'I say, Pickard,' he says, 'between you an' me, worrn't t'
+name o' that man 'at used to come in here on a Sunday sometimes,
+Parrawhite? It runs a' my mind,' he says, ''at I've heerd you call him
+by that name.' 'Well, an' what if it wor?' I says. 'Nay, nowt much,' he
+says, 'but I see fro' t' _Dispatch_ 'at he's wanted, and I could tell a
+bit about him,' he says. 'What could ye tell?' says I--just like that
+theer. 'Why,' he says, 'this much--one night t' last back-end----'"
+
+"Stop a bit, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Byner. "What does that mean--that
+term 'back-end'?"
+
+"Why, it means t' end o' t' year!" answered the landlord. "What some
+folks call autumn, d'ye understand? 'One night t' last back-end,' says
+this young fellow, 'I wor hengin' about on t' quiet at t' end o' Stubbs'
+Lane,' he says: 'T' truth wor,' he says, 'I wor waitin' for a word wi' a
+young woman 'at lives i' that terrace at t' top o' Stubbs' Lane--she wor
+goin' to come out and meet me for half an hour or so. An,' he says, 'I
+see'd that theer feller 'at I think I've heerd you call Parrawhite, come
+out o' Stubbs' Lane wi' that lawyer chap 'at lives i' t' Terrace--Pratt.
+I know Pratt,' he says, ''cause them 'at he works for--Eldricks--once
+did a bit o' law business for me.' 'Where did you see 'em go to, then?'
+says I. 'I see'd 'em cross t' road into t' owd quarry ground,' he says.
+'I see'd 'em plain enough, tho' they didn't see me--I wor keepin' snug
+agen 't wall--it wor a moonlit night, that,' he says. 'Well,' I says,
+'an' what now?' 'Why,' he says, 'd'yer think I could get owt o' this
+reward for tellin that theer?' So I thowt pretty sharp then, d'ye see,
+mister. 'I'll tell yer what, mi lad,' I says. 'Say nowt to nobody--keep
+your tongue still--and I'll tell ye tomorrow night what ye can do--I
+shall see a man 'at's on that job 'tween now and then,' I says. So theer
+it is," concluded Pickard, looking hard at Byner. "D'yer think this
+chap's evidence 'ud be i' your line?"
+
+"Decidedly I do!" replied Byner. "Where is he to be found?"
+
+"I couldn't say wheer he lives," answered the landlord. "But it'll be
+somewhere close about; anyway, he'll be in here tonight. Bill Thomson t'
+feller's name is--decent young feller enough."
+
+"I must contrive to see him, certainly," said Byner. "Well, now, can you
+show me this Stubbs' Lane and the neighbourhood?"
+
+"Just step along t' road a bit and I'll join you in a few o' minutes,"
+assented Pickard. "We'd best not be seen leavin t' house together, or
+our folk'll think it's a put-up job. Walk forrard a piece."
+
+Byner strolled along the road a little way, and leaned over a wall until
+Mr. Pickard, wearing his white billycock hat and accompanied by a fine
+fox-terrier, lounged up with his thumbs in the armholes of his
+waistcoat. Together they went a little further along.
+
+"Now then!" said the landlord, crossing the road towards the entrance of
+a narrow lane which ran between two high stone walls. "This here is
+Stubbs' Lane--so called, I believe, 'cause an owd gentleman named
+similar used to hev a house here 'at's been pulled down. Ye see, it runs
+up fro' this high-road towards yon terrace o' houses. Folks hereabouts
+calls that terrace t' World's End, 'cause they're t' last houses afore
+ye get on to t' open moorlands. Now, that night 'at Parrawhite wor
+aimin' to meet Pratt, it wor i' this very lane. Pratt, when he left t'
+tram-car, t' other side o' my place, 'ud come up t' road, and up this
+lane. And it wor at t' top o' t' lane 'at Bill Thomson see'd Pratt and
+Parrawhite cross into what Bill called t' owd quarry ground."
+
+"Can we go into that?" asked Byner.
+
+"Nowt easier!" said Pickard. "It's a sort of open space where t' childer
+goes and plays about: they hev'n't worked no stone theer for many a long
+year--all t' stone's exhausted, like."
+
+He led Byner along the lane to its further end, pointed out the place
+where Thomson said he had seen Pratt and Parrawhite, and indicated the
+terrace of houses in which Pratt lived. Then he crossed towards the old
+quarries.
+
+"Don't know what they should want to come in here for--unless it wor to
+talk very confidential," said Pickard. "But lor bless yer!--it 'ud be
+quiet enough anywheer about this neighbourhood at that time o' neet.
+However, this is wheer Bill Thomson says he see'd 'em come."
+
+He led the way amongst the disused quarries, and Byner, following,
+climbed on a mound, now grown over with grass and weed, and looked about
+him. To his town eyes the place was something novel. He had never seen
+the like of it before. Gradually he began to understand it. The stone
+had been torn out of the earth, sometimes in square pits, sometimes in
+semi-circular ones, until the various veins and strata had become
+exhausted. Then, when men went away, Nature had stepped in to assert her
+rights. All over the despoiled region she had spread a new clothing of
+green. Turf had grown on the flooring of the quarries; ivy and bramble
+had covered the deep scars; bushes had sprung up; trees were already
+springing. And in one of the worn-out excavations some man had planted a
+kitchen-garden in orderly and formal rows and plots.
+
+"Dangerous place that there!" said Pickard suddenly. "If I'd known o'
+that, I shouldn't ha' let my young 'uns come to play about here. They
+might be tummlin' in and drownin' theirsens! I mun tell my missis to
+keep 'em away!"
+
+Byner turned--to find the landlord pointing at the old shaft which had
+gradually become filled with water. In the morning sunlight its surface
+glittered like a plane of burnished metal, but when the two men went
+nearer and gazed at it from its edge, the water was black and
+unfathomable to the eye.
+
+"Goodish thirty feet o' water in that there!" surmised Pickard. "It's
+none safe for childer to play about--theer's nowt to protect 'em. Next
+time I see Mestur Shepherd I shall mak' it my business to tell him so;
+he owt either to drain that watter off or put a fence around it."
+
+"Is Mr. Shepherd the property-owner?" asked Byner.
+
+"Aye!--it's all his, this land," answered Pickard. He pointed to a
+low-roofed house set amidst elms and chestnuts, some distance off across
+the moor. "Lives theer, does Mestur Shepherd--varry well-to-do man, he
+is."
+
+"How could that water be drained off?" asked Byner with assumed
+carelessness.
+
+"Easy enough!" replied Pickard. "Cut through yon ledge, and let it run
+into t' far quarry there. A couple o' men 'ud do that job in a day."
+
+Byner made no further remark. He and Pickard strolled back to the _Green
+Man_ together. And declining the landlord's invitation to step inside
+and take another glass, but promising to see him again very soon, the
+inquiry agent walked on to the tram-car and rode down to Barford to keep
+his appointment with Eldrick and Collingwood at the barrister's
+chambers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+
+While Byner was pursuing his investigations in the neighbourhood of the
+_Green Man_, Collingwood was out at Normandale Grange, discussing
+certain matters with Nesta Mallathorpe. He had not only thought long and
+deeply over his conversation with Cobcroft the previous evening, but had
+begun to think about the crucial point of the clerk's story as soon as
+he spoke in the morning, and the result of his meditations was that he
+rose early, intercepted Cobcroft before he started for Mallathorpe's
+Mill and asked his permission to re-tell the story to Miss Mallathorpe.
+Cobcroft raised no objection, and when Collingwood had been to his
+chambers and seen his letters, he chartered a car and rode out to
+Normandale where he told Nesta of what he had learned and of his own
+conclusions. And Nesta, having listened carefully to all he had to tell,
+put a direct question to him.
+
+"You think this document which Pratt told me he holds is my late uncle's
+will?" she said. "What do you suppose its terms to be?"
+
+"Frankly--these, or something like these," replied Collingwood. "And I
+get at my conclusions in this way. Your uncle died intestate--consequently,
+everything in the shape of real estate came to your brother and everything
+in personal property to your brother and yourself. Now, supposing that
+the document which Pratt boasts of holding is the will, one fact is very
+certain--the property, real or personal, is not disposed of in the way
+in which it became disposed of because of John Mallathorpe's intestacy.
+He probably disposed of it in quite another fashion. Why do I think that?
+Because the probability is that Pratt said to your mother, 'I have got
+John Mallathorpe's will! It doesn't leave his property to your son and
+daughter. Therefore, I have all of you at my mercy. Make it worth my
+while, or I will bring the will forward.' Do you see that situation?"
+
+"Then," replied Nesta, after a moment's reflection, "you do think that
+my mother was very anxious to get that document--a will--from Pratt?"
+
+Collingwood knew what she was thinking of--her mind was still uneasy
+about Pratt's account of the affair of the foot-bridge. But--the matter
+had to be faced.
+
+"I think your mother would naturally be very anxious to secure such a
+document," he said. "You must remember that according to Pratt's story
+to you, she tried to buy it from him--just as you did yourself, though
+you, of course, had no idea of what it was you wanted to buy."
+
+"What I wanted to buy," she answered readily, "was necessity from
+further interference! But--is there no way of compelling Pratt to give
+up that document--whatever it is? Can't he be made to give it up?"
+
+"A way is may be being made, just now--through another affair," replied
+Collingwood. "At present matters are vague. One couldn't go to Pratt and
+demand something at which one is, after all, only guessing. Your mother,
+of course, would deny that she knows what it is that Pratt holds.
+But--there is the possibility of the duplicate to which Cobcroft
+referred. Now, I want to put the question straight to you--supposing
+that duplicate will can be found--and supposing--to put it plainly---its
+terms dispossess you of all your considerable property--what then?"
+
+"Do you want the exact truth?" she asked. "Well, then, I should just
+welcome anything that cleared up all this mystery! What is it at
+present, this situation, but intolerable? I know that my
+mother is in Pratt's power, and likely to remain so as long as ever this
+goes on--probably for life. She will not give me her confidence. What is
+more, I am certain that she is giving it to Esther Mawson--who is most
+likely hand-in-glove with Pratt. Esther Mawson is always with her. I am
+almost sure that she communicates with Pratt through Esther Mawson. It
+is all what I say--intolerable! I had rather lose every penny that has
+come into my hands than have this go on."
+
+"Answer me a plain question," said Collingwood. "Is your mother fond of
+money, position--all that sort of thing?"
+
+"She is fond of power!" replied Nesta. "It pleased her greatly when we
+came into all this wealth to know that she was the virtual
+administrator. Even if she could only do it by collusion with Pratt, she
+would make a fight for all that she--and I--hold. It's useless to deny
+that. Don't forget," she added, looking appealingly at Collingwood,
+"don't forget that she has known what it was to be poor--and if one does
+come into money--I suppose one doesn't want to lose it again."
+
+"Oh, it's natural enough!" agreed Collingwood. "But--if things are as I
+think, Pratt would be an incubus, a mill-stone, for ever. Anyway, I came
+out to tell you what I've learned, and what I have an idea may be the
+truth, and above all, to get your definite opinion. You want the Pratt
+influence out of the way--at any cost?"
+
+"At any cost!" she affirmed. "Even if I have to go back to earning my
+own living! Whatever pleasure in life could there be for me, knowing
+that at the back of all this there is that--what?"
+
+"Pratt!" answered Collingwood. "Pratt! He's the shadow--with his deep
+schemes. However, as I said--there may be--developing at this
+moment--another way of getting at Pratt. Gentlemen like Pratt, born
+schemers, invariably forget one very important factor in life--the
+unexpected! Even the cleverest and most subtle schemer may have his
+delicate machinery broken to pieces by a chance bit of mere dust getting
+into it at an unexpected turn of the wheels. And to turn to plainer
+language--I'm going back to Barford now to hear what another man has to
+say concerning certain of Pratt's recent movements."
+
+Eldrick was already waiting when Collingwood reached his chambers: Byner
+came there a few moments later. Within half an hour the barrister had
+told his story of Cobcroft, and the inquiry agent his of his visit to
+the _Green Man_ and the quarries. And the solicitor listened quietly and
+attentively to both, and in the end turned to Collingwood.
+
+"I'll withdraw my opinion about the nature of the document which Pratt
+got hold of," he said. "What he's got is what you think--John
+Mallathorpe's will!"
+
+"If I may venture an opinion," remarked Byner, "that's dead certain!"
+
+"And now," continued Eldrick, "we're faced with a nice situation! Don't
+either of you forget this fact. Not out of willingness on her part, but
+because she's got to do it, Mrs. Mallathorpe and Pratt are partners in
+that affair. He's got the will--but she knows its contents. She'll pay
+any price to Pratt to keep them from ever becoming known or operative.
+But, as I say, don't you forget something!"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick tapped the edge of the table, emphasizing his words as he spoke
+them.
+
+"They can destroy that will whenever they like!" he said. "And once
+destroyed, nothing can absolutely prove that it ever existed!"
+
+"The duplicate?" suggested Collingwood.
+
+"Nothing to give us the faintest idea as to its existence!" said
+Eldrick.
+
+"We might advertise," said Collingwood.
+
+"Lots of advertising was done when John Mallathorpe died," replied the
+solicitor. "No!--if any person had had it in possession, it would have
+turned up then. It may be--probably is--possibly must be--somewhere--and
+may yet come to light. But--there's another way of getting at Pratt.
+Through this Parrawhite affair. Pratt most likely had not the least
+notion that he would ever hear of Parrawhite again. He is going to hear
+of Parrawhite again! I am convinced now that Parrawhite knew something
+about this, and that Pratt squared him and got him away. Aren't you?" he
+asked, turning to Byner.
+
+But Byner smiled quietly and shook his head.
+
+"No!" he answered. "I am not, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"You're not?" exclaimed Eldrick, surprised and wondering that anybody
+could fail to agree with him.
+
+"Why not, then?"
+
+"Because," replied Byner. "I am certain that Pratt murdered Parrawhite
+on the night of November twenty-third last. That's why. He didn't square
+him. He didn't get him away. He killed him!"
+
+The effect of this straightforward pronouncement of opinion on the two
+men who heard it was strikingly different. Collingwood's face at once
+became cold and inscrutable; his lips fixed themselves sternly; his eyes
+looked hard into a problematic future. But Eldrick flushed as if a
+direct accusation had been levelled at himself, and he turned on the
+inquiry agent almost impatiently.
+
+"Murder!" he exclaimed. "Oh, come! I--really, that's rather a stiff
+order! I dare say Pratt's been up to all sorts of trickery, and even
+deviltry--but murder is quite another thing. You're pretty ready to
+accuse him!"
+
+Byner moved his head in Collingwood's direction--and Eldrick turned and
+looked anxiously at Collingwood, who, finding the eyes of both men on
+him, opened his hitherto tight-shut lips.
+
+"I think it quite likely!" he said.
+
+Byner laughed softly and looked at the solicitor.
+
+"Just listen to me a minute or two, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "I'll sum up
+my own ideas on this matter, got from the various details that have been
+supplied to me since I came to Barford. Just consider my points one by
+one. Let's take them separately--and see how they fit in.
+
+"1. Mr. Bartle is seen by his shop-boy to take a certain paper from a
+book which came from the late John Mallathorpe's office at Mallathorpe
+Mill. He puts that paper in his pocket.
+
+"2. Immediately afterwards Mr. Bartle goes to your office. Nobody is
+there but Pratt--as far as Pratt knows.
+
+"3. Bartle dies suddenly--after telling Pratt that the paper is John
+Mallathorpe's will. Pratt steals the will. And the probability is that
+Parrawhite, unknown to Pratt, was in that office, and saw him steal it.
+Why is that probable? Because--
+
+"4. Next night Parrawhite, who is being pressed for money by Pickard,
+tells Pickard that he can get it out of Pratt, over whom he has a hold.
+What hold? We can imagine what hold. Anyway--
+
+"5. Parrawhite leaves Pickard to meet Pratt. He did meet Pratt--in
+Stubbs' Lane. He was seen to go with Pratt into the disused quarry. And
+there, in my opinion, Pratt killed him--and disposed of his body.
+
+"6. What does Pratt do next? He goes to your office first thing next
+morning, and removes certain moneys which you say you carelessly left in
+your desk the night before, and tears out certain cheque forms from your
+book. When Parrawhite never turns up that morning, you--and
+Pratt--conclude that he's the thief, and that he's run away.
+
+"7. If you want some proof of the correctness of this last suggestion,
+you'll find it in the fact that no use has ever been made of those blank
+cheques, and that--in all probability--the stolen bank-notes have never
+reached the Bank of England. On that last point I'm making inquiry--but
+my feeling is that Pratt destroyed both cheques and bank-notes when he
+stole them.
+
+"8. This man Parrawhite out of the way, Pratt has a clear field. He's
+got the will. He's already acquainted Mrs. Mallathorpe with that fact,
+and with the terms of the will--whatever they may be. We may be sure,
+however, that they are of such a nature as to make her willing to agree
+to his demands upon her--and, accidentally, to go to any lengths--upon
+which we needn't touch, at present--towards getting possession of the
+will from him.
+
+"9. And the present situation--from Pratt's standpoint of yesterday--is
+this. He's so sure of his own safety that he doesn't mind revealing to
+the daughter that the mother's in his power. Why? Because Pratt, like
+most men of his sort, cannot believe that self-interest isn't paramount
+with everybody--it's beyond him to conceive it possible that Miss
+Mallathorpe would do anything that might lose her several thousands a
+year. He argued--'So long as I hold that will, nobody and nothing can
+make me give it up nor divulge its contents. But I can bind one person
+who benefits by it--Miss Mallathorpe, and for the mother's sake I can
+keep the daughter quiet!' Well--he hasn't kept the daughter quiet!
+She--spoke!
+
+"10. And last--in all such schemes as Pratt's, the schemer invariably
+forgets something. Pratt forgot that there might arise what actually has
+arisen--inquiry for Parrawhite. The search for Parrawhite is afoot--and
+if you want to get at Pratt, it will have to be through what I firmly
+believe to be a fact--his murder of Parrawhite and his disposal of
+Parrawhite's body.
+
+"That's all, Mr. Eldrick," concluded Byner who had spoken with much
+emphasis throughout. "It all seems very clear to me, and," he added,
+with a glance at Collingwood, "I think Mr. Collingwood is inclined to
+agree with most of what I've said."
+
+"Pretty nearly all--if not all," assented Collingwood. "I think you've
+put into clear language precisely what I feel. I don't believe there's a
+shadow of doubt that Pratt killed Parrawhite! And we can--and must--get
+at him in that way. What do you suggest?" he continued, turning to
+Byner. "You have some idea, of course?"
+
+"First of all," answered Byner, "we mustn't arouse any suspicion on
+Pratt's part. Let us work behind the screen. But I have an idea as to
+how he disposed of Parrawhite, and I'm going to follow it up this very
+day--my first duty, you know, is towards the people who want Parrawhite,
+or proof of his death. I propose to----"
+
+Just then Collingwood's clerk came in with a telegram.
+
+"Sent on from the _Central Hotel_, sir," he answered. "They said Mr.
+Black would be found here."
+
+"That's mine," said the inquiry agent. "I left word at the hotel that
+they were to send to your chambers if any wire came for me. Allow me."
+He opened the telegram, looked it over, and waiting until the clerk had
+gone, turned to his companions. "Here's a message from my partner, Mr.
+Halstead," he continued. "Listen to what he wires:
+
+ "'Wire just received from Murgatroyd, shipping agent, Peel Row,
+ Barford. He says Parrawhite left that town for America on
+ November 24th last and offers further information. Let me know
+ what to reply!'"
+
+Byner laid the message before Eldrick and Collingwood without further
+comment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+THE CAT'SPAW
+
+
+On the evening of the day whereon Nesta Mallathorpe had paid him the
+visit which had resulted in so much plain speech on both sides, Pratt
+employed his leisure in a calm review of the situation. He was by no
+means dissatisfied, it seemed to him that everything was going very well
+for his purposes. He was not at all sorry that Nesta had been to see
+him--far from it. He regretted nothing that he had said to her. In his
+desperate opinion, his own position was much stronger when she left
+him than it was when he opened his office door to her. She now knew,
+said Pratt, with what a strong and resourceful man she had to deal: she
+would respect him, and have a better idea of him, now that she was aware
+of his impregnable position.
+
+Herein Pratt's innate vanity and his ignorance showed themselves. He had
+little knowledge of modern young women, and few ideas about them; and
+such ideas as he possessed were usually mistaken ones. But one was that
+it is always necessary to keep a firm hand on women--let them see and
+feel your power, said Pratt. He had been secretly delighted to acquaint
+Nesta Mallathorpe with his power, to drive it into her that he had the
+whip hand of her mother, and through her mother, of Nesta herself. He
+had seen that Nesta was much upset and alarmed by what he told her. And
+though she certainly seemed to recover her spirits at the end of the
+interview, and even refused to shake hands with him, he cherished the
+notion that in the war of words he had come off a decided victor. He did
+not believe that Nesta would utter to any other soul one word of what
+had passed between them: she would be too much afraid of calling down
+his vengeance on her mother. What he did believe was that as time went
+by, and all progressed smoothly, Nesta would come to face and accept
+facts: she would find him honest and hardworking in his dealings with
+Mrs. Mallathorpe (as he fully intended to be, from purely personal and
+selfish motives) and she herself would begin to tolerate and then to
+trust him, and eventually--well, who knew what might or might not
+happen? What said the great Talleyrand?--WITH TIME AND PATIENCE, THE
+MULBERRY LEAF IS TURNED INTO SATIN.
+
+But Pratt's self-complacency received a shock next morning. If he had
+been a reader of London newspapers, it would have received a shock the
+day before. Pratt, however, was essentially parochial in his newspaper
+tastes--he never read anything but the Barford papers. And when he
+picked up the Barford morning journal and saw Eldrick's advertisement
+for Parrawhite in a prominent place, he literally started from sheer
+surprise--not unmingled with alarm. It was as if he were the occupant of
+a strong position, only fortified, who suddenly finds a shell dropped
+into his outworks from a totally unexpected quarter.
+
+Parrawhite! Advertised for by Eldrick! Why? For what reason? For what
+purpose? With what idea? Parrawhite!--of all men in the
+world--Parrawhite, of whom he had never wanted to hear again! And what
+on earth could Eldrick want with him, or with news of him? It would
+be--or might be--an uncommonly awkward thing for him, Pratt, if a really
+exhaustive search were made for Parrawhite. For nobody knew better than
+himself that one little thing leads to another, and--but he forbore to
+follow out what might have been his train of thought. Once he was
+tempted to make an excuse for going round to Eldrick & Pascoe's with the
+idea of fishing for information--but he refrained. Let things
+develop--that was a safer plan. Still, he was anxious and disturbed all
+day. Then, towards the end of the afternoon, he bought one of the
+Barford evening papers--and saw, in staring letters, the advertisement
+which Byner had caused to be inserted only a few hours previously. And
+at that, Pratt became afraid.
+
+Parrawhite wanted!--news of Parrawhite wanted!--and in two separate
+quarters. Wanted by Eldrick--wanted by some London people! What in the
+name of the devil did it mean? At any rate, he must see to himself. One
+thing was certain--no search for Parrawhite must be permitted in
+Barford.
+
+That evening, instead of going home to dinner, Pratt remained in town,
+and dined at a quiet restaurant. When he dined, he thought, and planned,
+and schemed--and after treating himself very well in the matter of food
+and drink, he lighted a cigar, returned to his new offices, opened a
+safe which he had just set up, and took from a drawer in it a hundred
+pounds in bank-notes. With these in his pocket-book he went off to a
+quiet part of the town--the part in which James Parrawhite had lodged
+during his stay in Barford.
+
+Pratt turned into a somewhat mean and shabby street--a street of small,
+poor-class shops. He went forward amongst them until he came to one
+which, if anything, was meaner and shabbier than the others and bore
+over its window the name Reuben Murgatroyd--Watchmaker and Jeweller.
+There were few signs of jewellery in Reuben Murgatroyd's window--some
+cheap clocks, some foreign-made watches of the five-shilling and
+seven-and-six variety, a selection of flashy rings and chains were
+spread on the shelves, equally cheap and flashy bangles, bracelets, and
+brooches lay in dust-covered trays on the sloping bench beneath them. At
+these things Pratt cast no more than a contemptuous glance. But he
+looked with interest at the upper part of the window, in which were
+displayed numerous gaily-coloured handbills and small posters relating
+to shipping--chiefly in the way of assisted passages to various parts of
+the globe. These set out that you could get an assisted passage to
+Canada for so much; to Australia for not much more--and if the bills and
+posters themselves did not tell you all you wanted to know, certain big
+letters at the foot of each invited you to apply for further information
+to Mr. R. Murgatroyd, agent, within. And Pratt pushed open the shop-door
+and walked inside.
+
+An untidily dressed, careworn, anxious-looking man came forward from a
+parlour at the rear of his shop. At sight of Pratt--who in the course of
+business had once served him with a writ--his pale face flushed, and
+then whitened, and Pratt hastened to assure him of his peaceful errand.
+
+"All right, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said. "Nothing to be alarmed about--I'm
+out of that line, now--no papers of that sort tonight. I've a bit of
+business I can put in your hands--profitable business. Look here!--have
+you got a quarter of an hour to spare?"
+
+Murgatroyd, who looked greatly relieved to find that his visitor had
+neither writ nor summons for him, glanced at his parlour door.
+
+"I was just going to put the shutters up, and sit down to a bite of
+supper, Mr. Pratt," he answered. "Will you come in, sir?"
+
+"No--you come out with me," said Pratt. "Come round to the _Coach and
+Horses_, and have a drink and we can talk. You'll have a better appetite
+for your supper when you come back," he added, with a wink. "I've a
+profitable job for you."
+
+"Glad to hear it, sir," replied Murgatroyd. "I can do with aught of that
+sort, I assure you!" He went into the parlour, said a word or two to
+some person within, and came out again. "Not much business doing at
+present, Mr. Pratt," he said, as he and his visitor turned into the
+street. "Gets slacker than ever."
+
+"Then you'll do with a slice of good luck," remarked Pratt. "It just
+happens that I can put a bit in your way."
+
+He led Murgatroyd to the end of the street, where stood a corner tavern,
+into a side-door of which Pratt turned as if he were well acquainted
+with the geography of the place. Walking down a narrow passage he
+conducted his companion into a small parlour, at that moment untenanted,
+pointed him to a seat in the corner, and rang the bell. Five minutes
+later, having provided Murgatroyd with rum and water and a cigar, he
+turned on him with a direct question.
+
+"Look here!" he said in a low voice. "Would a hundred pounds be any use
+to you?"
+
+Murgatroyd's cheeks flushed.
+
+"It 'ud be a fortune!" he answered with fervour. "A hundred pound! Lor'
+bless you, Mr. Pratt, it's many a year since I saw a hundred pound--of
+my own--all in one lump!"
+
+Pratt pulled out his roll of bank-notes, fluttered it in his companion's
+face, laid it on the table, and set an ashtray on it.
+
+"There's a hundred pounds there!" he said, "It's yours to pick up--if
+you'll do a little job for me. Easy job, too!--you'll never earn a
+hundred pounds so easy in your life!"
+
+Murgatroyd pricked up his ears. According to his ideas, money easily
+come by was seldom honestly earned. He stirred uncomfortably in his
+seat.
+
+"So long as it's a straight job," he muttered. "I don't want----"
+
+"Straight enough--as straight as it's easy," answered Pratt. "It may
+seem a bit mysterious, but there's reasons for that. I give you my word
+it's all right--all a mere bit of diplomacy--and that nobody'll ever
+know you're in it--that is, beyond a certain stage--and that there's no
+danger to you."
+
+"What is it?" asked Murgatroyd, still uneasy and doubtful.
+
+Pratt pulled the evening paper out of his pocket and showed Murgatroyd
+the advertisement signed Halstead & Byner.
+
+"You see that?" he said. "Information wanted about Parrawhite. Do you
+remember Parrawhite? He once served you with some papers in that affair
+in which we were against you."
+
+"I remember him," answered Murgatroyd. "I've seen him in here now and
+again. So he's wanted, is he? I didn't know he'd left the town."
+
+"Left last November," said Pratt. "And--there are folks--influential
+folks, as you can guess, seeing that they can throw a hundred pounds
+away!--who don't want any inquiries made for him in Barford. They don't
+mind--those folks--how many inquiries and searches are made for him
+anywhere else, but--not here!"
+
+"Well?" asked Murgatroyd anxiously.
+
+"This is it," replied Pratt. "You do a bit now and then as agent for
+some of these shipping lines. You book passages for emigrants--and for
+other people, going to New Zealand or Canada or Timbuctoo--never mind
+where. Now then--couldn't you remember--I'm sure you could--that you
+booked a passage for Parrawhite to America last November? Come! It's an
+easy matter to remember is that--for a hundred pounds."
+
+Murgatroyd's thin fingers trembled a little as he picked up his glass.
+"What do you want me to do--exactly?" he asked.
+
+"This!" said Pratt. "I want you, tomorrow morning, early, to send a
+telegram to these people, Halstead & Byner, St. Martin's Chambers,
+London, just saying that James Parrawhite left Barford for America on
+November 24th last, and that you can give further information if
+necessary."
+
+"And what if it is necessary?" inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"Then--in answer to any letter or telegram of inquiry--you'll just say
+that you knew Parrawhite by sight as a clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's in
+this town, that on November 23rd he told you that he was going to
+emigrate to America, that next day you booked him his passage, for which
+he paid you whatever it was, and that he thereupon set off for
+Liverpool. See?"
+
+"It's all lies, you know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Nobody can find 'em out, anyway," replied Pratt. "That's the one
+important thing to consider. You're safe! And if you're cursed with a
+conscience and it's tender--well, that'll make a good plaister for it!"
+
+He pointed to the little wad of bank-notes--and the man sitting at his
+side followed the pointing finger with hungry eyes. Murgatroyd wanted
+money badly. His business, always poor, was becoming worse: his shipping
+agency rarely produced any result: his rent was in arrears: he owed
+money to his neighbour-tradesmen: he had a wife and young children. To
+such a man, a hundred pounds meant relief, comfort, the lifting of
+pressure.
+
+"You're sure there's naught wrong in it, Mr. Pratt," he asked abruptly
+and assiduously. "It 'ud be a bad job for my family if anything happened
+to me, you know."
+
+"There's naught that will happen," answered Pratt confidently. "Who on
+earth can contradict you? Who knows what people you sell passages
+to--but yourself?"
+
+"There's the folks themselves," replied Murgatroyd. "Suppose Parrawhite
+turns up?"
+
+"He won't!" exclaimed Pratt.
+
+"You know where he is?" suggested Murgatroyd.
+
+"Not exactly," said Pratt, "But--he's left this country for
+another--further off than America. That's certain! And--the folks I
+referred to don't want any inquiry about him here."
+
+"If I am asked questions--later--am I to say he booked in his own name?"
+inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"No--name of Parsons," responded Pratt. "Here, I'll write down for you
+exactly what I want you to say in the telegram to Halstead & Byner, and
+I'll make a few memoranda for you--to post you up in case they write for
+further information."
+
+"I haven't said that I'll do it," remarked Murgatroyd. "I don't like the
+looks of it. It's all a pack of lies."
+
+Pratt paid no heed to this moral reflection. He found some loose paper
+in his pocket and scribbled on it for a while. Then, as if accidentally,
+he moved the ash-tray, and the bank-notes beneath it, all new, gave
+forth a crisp, rustling sound.
+
+"Here you are!" said Pratt, pushing notes and memoranda towards his
+companion. "Take the brass, man!--you don't get a job like that every
+day."
+
+And Murgatroyd put the money in his pocket, and presently went home,
+persuading himself that everything would be all right.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+
+Byner watched Eldrick and Collingwood inquisitively as they bent over
+Halstead's telegram. He was not surprised when Collingwood merely nodded
+in silence--nor when Eldrick turned excitedly in his own direction.
+
+"There!--what did I tell you?" he exclaimed. "There's been no murder!
+The man left the town. Probably, Pratt helped him off. Couldn't have
+better proof than that wire!"
+
+"What do you take that wire to prove, then, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Byner.
+
+"Take it to prove!" answered Eldrick. "Why, that Parrawhite booked a
+passage to America with this man Murgatroyd, last November. Clear
+enough, that!"
+
+"What do you take it to prove, Mr. Collingwood?" continued the inquiry
+agent, as he turned to the barrister with a smile.
+
+"Before I take it for anything," replied Collingwood, "I want to know
+who Murgatroyd is."
+
+Byner looked at Eldrick and laughed.
+
+"Precisely!" he said. "Who is Murgatroyd? Perhaps Mr. Eldrick knows."
+
+"I do just know that he's a man who carries on a small watch and clock
+business in a poorish part of the town, and that he has some sort of a
+shipping agency," answered Eldrick. "But--do you mean to imply that
+whatever message it is that he's sent to your partner in London this
+morning has not been sent in good faith?"
+
+"I don't imply anything," answered Byner. "All I say is--before I attach
+any value to his message I, like Collingwood, want to know something
+about the sender. He may have been put up to sending it. He may be in
+collusion with somebody. Now, Mr. Eldrick, you can come in
+here--strongly! I don't want to be seen in this affair--yet. Will you go
+and see Murgatroyd? Tell him his wire to Halstead & Byner in London has
+been communicated to you here. Ask him for further particulars--and then
+drop in on me at my hotel and tell me what you've learnt. I'll be found
+in the smoking-room there any time after two-thirty onward."
+
+Eldrick's intense curiosity in what was rapidly becoming a fascinating
+mystery to him, led him to accept this embassy. And a little before
+three o'clock he walked into the smoking-room at the _Central Hotel_ and
+discovered Byner in a comfortable corner.
+
+"I've seen Murgatroyd," he whispered, as he took an adjacent chair.
+"Decent honest enough man--very poor, I should say. He tells a plain
+enough story. Parrawhite, whom he knew as one of our clerks, told him,
+last November 23rd----"
+
+"He was exact about dates, then, was he?" interrupted Byner.
+
+"He mentioned them readily enough," replied the solicitor. "But to go
+on--Parrawhite mentioned to him, November 23rd last, that he wanted to
+go to America at once, Murgatroyd told him about bookings. Parrawhite
+called very early next morning, paid for his passage under the name of
+Parsons, and went off--en route for Liverpool, of course. So--there you
+are!"
+
+"That's all Murgatroyd could tell?" inquired Byner.
+
+"That's all he knows," answered Eldrick.
+
+"You say Murgatroyd knew Parrawhite as one of your clerks?" asked Byner
+after a moment's thought.
+
+"We had some process in hand against this man last autumn," replied
+Eldrick. "I dare say Parrawhite served him with papers."
+
+"Would he--Murgatroyd--be likely to know Pratt?" continued Byner.
+
+"He might--in the same connection," admitted Eldrick.
+
+Byner smoked in silence for a while.
+
+"Do you know what I think, Mr. Eldrick?" he said at last. "I think Pratt
+put up Murgatroyd to sending that telegram to us in London this
+morning."
+
+"You do!" exclaimed Eldrick.
+
+"Surely! And now," continued the inquiry agent, "if you will, you can do
+more--much more--without appearing to do anything. Pratt's office is
+only a few minutes away. Can you drop in there, making some excuse, and
+while there, mention, more or less casually, that Parrawhite, or
+information about him, is wanted; that you and a certain Halstead &
+Byner are advertising for him; that you've just seen Murgatroyd in
+respect of a communication which he wired to Halstead's this morning,
+and that--most important of all--a fortune of twenty thousand pounds is
+awaiting Parrawhite! Don't forget the last bit of news."
+
+"Why that particularly?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," answered Byner solemnly, "I want Pratt to know that the
+search for Parrawhite is going to be a thorough one!"
+
+Eldrick went off on his second mission, promising to return in due
+course. Within a few minutes he was in Pratt's office, talking over some
+unimportant matter of business which he had invented as he went along.
+It was not until he was on the point of departure that he referred to
+the real reason of his visit.
+
+"Did you notice that Parrawhite is being advertised for?" he asked,
+suddenly turning on his old clerk.
+
+Pratt was ready for this--had been ready ever since Eldrick walked in.
+He affected a fine surprise.
+
+"Parrawhite!" he exclaimed. "Why--who's advertising for him?"
+
+"Don't you see the newspapers?" asked Eldrick, pointing to some which
+lay about the room. "It's in there--there's an advertisement of mine,
+and one of Halstead & Byner's, of London."
+
+Pratt picked up a Barford paper and looked at the advertisements with a
+clever affectation of having never seen them before.
+
+"I haven't had much time for newspaper reading this last day or two," he
+remarked. "Advertisements for him--from two quarters!"
+
+"Acting together--acting together, you know!" replied Eldrick. "It's
+those people who really want him--Halstead & Byner, inquiry agents,
+working for a firm of City solicitors. I'm only local agent--as it
+were."
+
+"Had any response, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Pratt, throwing aside the paper.
+"Any one come forward?"
+
+"Yes," answered Eldrick, watching Pratt narrowly without seeming to do
+so. "This morning, a man named Murgatroyd, in Peel Row, who does a bit
+of shipping agency, wired to Halstead & Byner to say that he booked
+Parrawhite to New York last November. Of course, they at once
+communicated with me, and I've just been to see Murgatroyd. He's that
+man--watchmaker--we had some proceedings against last year."
+
+"Oh, that man!" said Pratt. "Thought the name was familiar. I remember
+him. And what does he say?"
+
+"Just about as much as--and little more than--he said in his wire to
+London," replied Eldrick. "Booked Parrawhite to America November 24th
+last, and believes he left for Liverpool there and then."
+
+"Ah!" remarked Pratt, "That explains it, then?"
+
+"Explains--what?" asked Eldrick.
+
+Pratt gave his old employer a look--confidential and significant.
+
+"Explains why he took that money out of your desk," he said. "You
+remember--forty odd pounds. He'd use some of that for his passage-money.
+America eh? Now--I suppose he's vanished for good, then--it's not very
+likely he'll ever be heard of from across there."
+
+Eldrick laughed--meaningly, of set purpose.
+
+"We don't know that he's gone there," he observed. "He mightn't get
+beyond Liverpool, you know. Anyhow, we're going to make a very good
+search for him here in Barford, first. We've nothing but Murgatroyd's
+word for his having set out for Liverpool."
+
+"What's he wanted for?" asked Pratt as unconcernedly as possible. "Been
+up to something?"
+
+"No," answered Eldrick, as he turned on his heel. "A relation has left
+him twenty thousand pounds. That's what he's wanted for--and why he must
+be found--or his death proved."
+
+He gave Pratt another quick glance and went off--to return to the hotel
+and Byner, to whom he at once gave a faithful account of what had just
+taken place.
+
+"And he didn't turn a hair," he remarked. "Cool as a cucumber, all
+through! If your theory is correct, Pratt's a cleverer hand than I ever
+took him for--and I've always said he was clever."
+
+"Didn't show anything when you mentioned Murgatroyd?" asked Byner.
+
+"Not a shred of a thing!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"Nor when you spoke of the twenty thousand pounds?"
+
+"No more than what you might call polite and interested surprise!"
+
+Byner laughed, threw away the end of a cigar, and rose out of his
+lounging posture.
+
+"Now, Mr. Eldrick," he said, leaning close to the solicitor, "between
+ourselves, do you know what I'm going to do--next--which means at once?"
+
+"No," replied Eldrick.
+
+"The police!" whispered Byner. "That's my next move. Just now! Within a
+few minutes. So--will you give me a couple of notes--one to the
+principal man here--chief constable, or police superintendent, or
+whatever he is; and another to the best detective there is here--in your
+opinion. They'll save me a lot of trouble."
+
+"Of course--if you wish it," answered Eldrick. "But you don't mean to
+say you're going to have Pratt arrested--on what you know up to now?"
+
+"Not at all!" replied Byner. "Much too soon! All I want is--detective
+help of the strictly professional kind. No--we'll give Mr. Pratt a
+little more rope yet--for another four-and-twenty-hours, say. But--it'll
+come! Now, who is the best local detective--a quiet, steady fellow who
+knows how to do his work unobtrusively?"
+
+"Prydale's the man!" said Eldrick "Detective-Sergeant Prydale--I've had
+reason to employ him, more than once. I'll give you a note to him, and
+one to Superintendent Waterson."
+
+He went over to a writing-table and scribbled a few lines on half-sheets
+of notepaper which he enclosed in envelopes and handed to Byner.
+
+"I don't know what line you're taking," he said, "nor where it's going
+to end--exactly. But I do know this--Pratt never turned a hair when I
+let out all that to him."
+
+But if Eldrick went away from his old clerk's fine new offices thinking
+that Pratt was quite unperturbed and unmoved by the news he had just
+acquired, he was utterly mistaken. Pratt was very much perturbed, deeply
+moved, not a little frightened. He had so schooled himself to keep a
+straight and ever blank expression of countenance in any sudden change
+of events that he had shown nothing to Eldrick--but he was none the less
+upset by the solicitor's last announcement. Twenty thousand pounds was
+lying to be picked up by Parrawhite--or by Parrawhite's next-of-kin!
+What an unhappy turn of fortune! For the next-of-kin would never rest
+until either Parrawhite came to light, or it was satisfactorily
+established that he was dead--and if search begun to be made in Barford,
+where might not that search end? Unmoved?--cool?--if Eldrick had turned
+back, he would have found that Pratt had suddenly given way to a fit of
+nerves.
+
+But that soon passed, and Pratt began to think. He left his office
+early, and betook himself to his favourite gymnasium. Exercise did him
+good--he thought a lot while he was exercising. And once more, instead
+of going home to dinner, he dined in town, and he sat late over his
+dinner in a snug corner of the restaurant, and he thought and planned
+and schemed--and after twilight had fallen on Barford, he went out and
+made his way to Peel Row. He must see Murgatroyd again--at once.
+
+Half-way along Peel Row, Pratt stopped, suddenly--and with sudden fear.
+Out of a side street emerged a man, a quiet ordinary-looking man whom he
+knew very well indeed--Detective-Sergeant Prydale. He was accompanied by
+a smart-looking, much younger man, whom Pratt remembered to have seen in
+Beck Street that afternoon--a stranger to him and to Barford. And as he
+watched, these two covered the narrow roadway, and walked into
+Murgatroyd's shop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+THE BETTER HALF
+
+
+Under the warming influence of two glasses of rum and water, and lulled
+by Pratt's assurance that all would be well, Murgatroyd had carried home
+his hundred pounds with pretty much the same feeling which permeates a
+man who, having been within measurable distance of drowning, suddenly
+finds a substantial piece of timber drifting his way, and takes a firm
+grip on it. After all, a hundred pounds was a hundred pounds. He would
+be able to pay his rent, and his rates, and give something to the grocer
+and the butcher and the baker and the milkman; the children should have
+some much-needed new clothes and boots--when all this was done, there
+would be a nice balance left over. And it was Pratt's affair, when all
+was said and done, and if any trouble arose, why, Pratt would have to
+settle it. So he ate his supper with the better appetite which Pratt had
+prophesied, and he slept more satisfactorily than usual, and next
+morning he went to the nearest telegraph office and sent off the
+stipulated telegram to Halstead & Byner in London, and hoped that there
+was the end of the matter as far as he was concerned. And then, shortly
+after noon, in walked Mr. Eldrick, one of the tribe which Murgatroyd
+dreaded, having had various dealings with solicitors, in the way of
+writs and summonses, and began to ask questions.
+
+Murgatroyd emerged from that ordeal very satisfactorily. Eldrick's
+questions were few, elementary, and easily answered. There were no signs
+of suspicion about him, and Murgatroyd breathed more freely when he was
+gone. It seemed to him that the solicitor's visit would certainly wind
+things up--for him. Eldrick asked all that could be asked, as far as he
+could see, and he had replied: now, he would probably be bothered no
+more. His spirits had assumed quite a cheerful tone by evening--but they
+received a rude shock when, summoned from his little workshop to the
+front premises, he found himself confronting one man whom he certainly
+knew to be a detective, and another who might be one. Do what he would
+he could not conceal some agitation, and Detective-Sergeant Prydale, a
+shrewdly observant man, noticed it--and affected not to.
+
+"Evening, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said cheerily. "We've come to see if you
+can give us a bit of information. You've had Mr. Eldrick, the lawyer,
+here today on the same business. You know--this affair of an old clerk
+of his--Parrawhite?"
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick all I know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Very likely," replied Prydale, "but there's a few questions this
+gentleman and myself would like to ask. Can we come in?"
+
+Murgatroyd fetched his wife to mind the shop, and took the callers into
+the parlour which she had unwillingly vacated. He knew Prydale by sight
+and reputation; about Byner he wondered. Finally he set him down as a
+detective from London--and was all the more afraid of him.
+
+"What do you want to know?" he asked, when the three men were alone. "I
+don't think there's anything that I didn't tell Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Oh, there's a great deal that Mr. Eldrick didn't ask," said Prydale.
+"Mr. Eldrick sort of just skirted round things, like. We want to know a
+bit more. This Parrawhite's got to be found, d'ye see, Mr. Murgatroyd,
+and as you seem to be the last man who had aught to do with him in
+Barford, why, naturally, we come to you. Now, to start with, you say he
+came to you about getting a passage to America? Just so--now, when would
+that be?"
+
+"Day before he did get it," answered Murgatroyd, rapidly thinking over
+the memoranda which Pratt had jotted down for his benefit.
+
+"That," said Prydale, "would be on the 23rd?"
+
+"Yes," replied Murgatroyd, "23rd November, of course."
+
+"What time, now, on the 23rd?" asked the detective.
+
+"Time?" said Murgatroyd. "Oh--in the evening."
+
+"Bit vague," remarked Prydale. "What time in the evening?"
+
+"As near as I can recollect," replied Murgatroyd, "it 'ud be just about
+half-past eight. I was thinking of closing."
+
+"Ah!" said Prydale, with a glance at Byner, who had already told him of
+Parrawhite's presence at the _Green Man_ on the other side of the town,
+a good two miles away, at the hour which Murgatroyd mentioned. "Ah!--he
+was here in your shop at half-past eight on the evening of November 23rd
+last? Asking about a ticket to America?"
+
+"New York," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"And he came next morning and bought one?" asked the detective.
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick that," said Murgatroyd, a little sullenly.
+
+"How much did it cost?" inquired Byner.
+
+"Eight pound ten," replied Murgatroyd. "Usual price."
+
+"What did he pay for it in?" continued Prydale.
+
+"He gave me a ten-pound note and I gave him thirty shillings change,"
+answered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Just so," assented Prydale. "Now what line might that be by?"
+
+Murgatroyd was becoming uneasy under all these questions, and his
+uneasiness was deepened by the way in which both his visitors watched
+him. He was a man who would have been a bad witness in any
+case--nervous, ill at ease, suspicious, inclined to boggle--and in this
+instance he was being forced to invent answers.
+
+"It was--oh, the Royal Atlantic!" he answered at last. "I've an agency
+for them."
+
+"So I noticed from the bills and placards in your window," observed the
+detective. "And of course you issue these tickets on their paper--I've
+seen 'em before. You fill up particulars on a form and a counterfoil,
+don't you? And you send a copy of those particulars to the Royal
+Atlantic offices at Liverpool?"
+
+Murgatroyd nodded silently--this was much more than he bargained for,
+and he did not know how much further it was going. And Prydale gave him
+a sudden searching look.
+
+"Can you show us the counterfoil in this instance?" he asked.
+
+Murgatroyd flushed. But he managed to get out a fairly quick reply. "No,
+I can't," he answered, "I sent that book back at the end of the year."
+
+"Oh, well--they'll have it at Liverpool," observed Prydale. "We can get
+at it there. Of course, they'll have your record of the entire
+transaction. He'd be down on their passenger list--under the name of
+Parsons, I think, Mr. Murgatroyd?"
+
+"He gave me that name," said Murgatroyd.
+
+Prydale gave Byner a look and both rose.
+
+"I think that's about all," said the detective. "Of course, our next
+inquiry will be at Liverpool---at the Royal Atlantic. Thank you, Mr.
+Murgatroyd--much obliged."
+
+Before the watchmaker could collect himself sufficiently to say or ask
+more, Prydale and his companion had walked out of the shop and gone
+away. And then Murgatroyd realized that he was in for--but he did not
+know what he was in for. What he did know was that if Prydale went or
+sent over to Liverpool the whole thing would burst like a bubble. For
+the Royal Atlantic people would tell the detectives at once that no
+passenger named Parsons had sailed under their auspices on November 24th
+last, and that he, Murgatroyd, had been telling a pack of lies.
+
+Mrs. Murgatroyd, a sharp-featured woman whose wits had been sharpened by
+a ten years' daily acquaintance with poverty, came out of the shop into
+the parlour and looked searchingly at her husband.
+
+"What did them fellows want?" she demanded. "I knew one of 'em--Prydale,
+the detective. Now what's up, Reuben? More trouble?"
+
+Murgatroyd hesitated a moment. Then he told his wife the whole story
+concealing nothing.
+
+"If they go to the Royal Atlantic, it'll all come out," he groaned. "I
+couldn't make any excuse or explanation--anyhow! What's to be done?"
+
+"You should ha' had naught to do wi' that Pratt!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd. "A scoundrelly fellow, to come and tempt poor folk to do his
+dirty work! Where's the money?"
+
+"Locked up!" answered Murgatroyd. "I haven't touched a penny of it. I
+thought I'd wait a bit and see if aught happened. But he assured me it
+was all right, and you know as well as I do that a hundred pound doesn't
+come our way every day. We want money!"
+
+"Not at that price!" said his wife. "You can pay too much for money, my
+lad! I wish you'd told me what that Pratt was after--he should have
+heard a bit o' my tongue! If I'd only known----"
+
+Just then the shop door opened, and Pratt walked in. He at once saw
+Murgatroyd and his wife standing between shop and parlour, and realized
+at a glance that his secret in this instance was his no longer.
+
+"Well?" he said, walking up to the watchmaker. "You've had Prydale
+here--and you'd Eldrick this morning. Of course, you knew what to say to
+both?"
+
+"I wish we'd never had you here last night, young man!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd fiercely. "What right have you to come here, making trouble
+for folk that's got plenty already? But at any rate, ours was honest
+trouble. Yours is like to land my husband in dishonesty--if it hasn't
+done so already! And if my husband had only spoken to me----"
+
+"Just let your husband speak a bit now," interrupted Pratt, almost
+insolently. "It's you that's making all the trouble or noise, anyhow!
+There's naught to fuss about, missis. What's upset you, Murgatroyd?"
+
+"They're going to the Royal Atlantic people," muttered the watchmaker.
+"Of course, it'll all come out, then. They know that I never booked any
+Parsons--nor anybody else for that matter--last November. You should ha'
+thought o' that!"
+
+Pratt realized that the man was right. He had never thought of
+that--never anticipated that inquiry would go beyond Murgatroyd. But his
+keen wits at once set to work.
+
+"What's the system?" he asked quickly. "Tell me--what's done when you
+book anybody like that? Come on!--explain, quick!"
+
+Murgatroyd turned to a drawer and pulled out a book and some papers.
+"It's simple enough," he said. "I've this book of forms, d'ye see? I
+fill up this form--sort of ticket or pass for the passenger, and hand it
+to him--it's a receipt as well, to him. Then I enter the same
+particulars on that counterfoil. Then I fill up one of these papers,
+giving just the same particulars, and post it at once to the Company
+with the passage money, less my commission. When one of these books is
+finished, I return the counterfoils to Liverpool--they check 'em.
+Prydale's up to all that. He asked to see the counterfoil in this case.
+I had to say I hadn't got it--I'd sent it to the Company. Of course,
+he'll find out that I didn't."
+
+"Lies!" said Mrs. Murgatroyd, vindictively. "And they didn't start wi'
+us neither!"
+
+"Who was that other man with Prydale?" asked Pratt.
+
+"London detective, I should say," answered the watchmaker. "And judging
+by the way he watched me, a sharp 'un, too!"
+
+"What impression did you get--altogether?" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Why!--that they're going to sift this affair--whatever it is--right
+down to the bottom!" exclaimed Murgatroyd. "They're either going to find
+Parrawhite or get to know what became of him. That's my impression. And
+what am I going to do, now! This'll lose me what bit of business I've
+done with yon shipping firm."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" answered Pratt scornfully. "Don't be a fool!
+You're all right. You listen to me. You write--straight off--to the
+Royal Atlantic. Tell 'em you had some inquiry made about a man named
+Parsons, who booked a passage with you for New York last November. Say
+that on looking up your books you found that you unaccountably forgot to
+send them the forms for him and his passage money. Make out a form for
+that date, and crumple it up--as if it had been left lying in a drawer.
+Enclose the money in it--here, I'll give you ten pounds to cover it," he
+went on, drawing a bank-note from his purse. "Get it off at once--you've
+time now--plenty--to catch the night-mail at the General. And then, d'ye
+see, you're all right. It's only a case then--as far as you're
+concerned--of forgetfulness. What's that?--we all forget something in
+business, now and then. They'll overlook that--when they get the money."
+
+"Aye, but you're forgetting something now!" remarked Murgatroyd. "You're
+forgetting this--no such passenger ever went! They'll know that by their
+passenger lists."
+
+"What the devil has that to do with it?" snarled Pratt impatiently.
+"What the devil do we care whether any such passenger went or not? All
+that you're concerned about is to prove that you issued a ticket to
+Parrawhite, under the name of Parsons. What's it matter to you where
+Parrawhite, _alias_ Parsons, went, when he'd once left your shop? You
+naturally thought he'd go straight to the Lancashire and Yorkshire
+Station, on his way to Liverpool and New York! But, for aught you know,
+he may have fallen down a drain pipe in the next street! Don't you see,
+man? There's nothing, there's nobody, not all the detectives in London
+and Barford, can prove that you didn't issue a ticket to Parrawhite on
+that date? It isn't up to you to prove that you did!--it's up to them to
+prove that you didn't! And--they can't. It's impossible. You get that
+letter off--at once--to Liverpool, with that money inside it, and you're
+as safe as houses--and your hundred pounds as well. Get it done! And if
+those chaps come asking any more questions, tell 'em you're not going to
+answer a single one! Mind you!--do what I tell you, and you're safe!"
+
+With that Pratt walked out of the shop and went off towards the centre
+of the town, inwardly raging and disturbed. It was very evident that
+these people meant to find Parrawhite, alive or dead; evident, too, that
+they had called in the aid of the Barford police. And in spite of all
+his assurances to the watchmaker and his suggestion for the next move,
+Pratt was far from easy about the whole matter. He would have been
+easier if he had known who Prydale's companion was--probably he was, as
+Murgatroyd had suggested, a London detective who might have been making
+inquiries in the town for some time and knew much more than he, Pratt,
+could surmise. That was the devil of the whole thing!--in Pratt's
+opinion. Adept himself in working underground, he feared people who
+adopted the same tactics. What was this stranger chap after? What did he
+know? What was he doing? Had he let Eldrick know anything? Was there a
+web of detectives already being spun around himself? Was that silly,
+unfortunate affair with Parrawhite being slowly brought to light--to
+wreck him on the very beginning of what he meant to be a brilliant
+career? He cursed Parrawhite again and again as he left Peel Row behind
+him.
+
+The events of the day had made Pratt cautious as well as anxious. He
+decided to keep away from his lodgings that night, and when he reached
+the centre of the town he took a room at a quiet hotel. He was up early
+next morning; he had breakfasted by eight o'clock; by half-past eight he
+was at his office. And in his letter-box he found one letter--a thickish
+package which had not come by post, but had been dropped in by hand, and
+was merely addressed to Mr. Pratt.
+
+Pratt tore that package open with a conviction of imminent disaster. He
+pulled out a sheet of cheap note-paper--and a wad of bank-notes. His
+face worked curiously as he read a few lines, scrawled in illiterate,
+female handwriting.
+
+ "MR PRATT,--My husband and me don't want any more to do with
+ either you or your money which it is enclosed. Been honest up to
+ now though poor, and intending to remain so our purpose is to
+ make a clean breast of everything to the police first thing
+ tomorrow morning for which you have nobody but yourself to blame
+ for wickedness in tempting poor people to do wrong.
+
+ "Yours, MRS. MURGATROYD."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+DRY SHERRY
+
+
+Pratt wasted no time in cursing Mrs. Murgatroyd. There would be plenty
+of opportunity for such relief to his feelings later on. Just then he
+had other matters to occupy him--fully. He tore the indignant letter to
+shreds; he hastily thrust the bank-notes into one pocket and drew his
+keys from another. Within five minutes he had taken from his safe a
+sealed packet, which he placed in an inside pocket of his coat, and had
+left his office--for the last time, as he knew very well. That part of
+the game was up--and it was necessary to be smart in entering on another
+phase of it.
+
+Since Eldrick's visit of the previous day, Pratt had been prepared for
+all eventuality. He had made ready for flight. And he was not going
+empty-handed. He had a considerable amount of Mrs. Mallathorpe's money
+in his possession; by obtaining her signature to one or two documents he
+could easily obtain much more in London, at an hour's notice. Those
+documents were all ready, and in the sealed packet which he had just
+taken from the safe; in it, too, were some other documents--John
+Mallathorpe's will; the letter which Mrs. Mallathorpe had written to him
+on the evening previous to her son's fatal accident; and the power of
+attorney which Pratt had obtained from her at his first interview after
+that occurrence. All was ready--and now there was nothing to do but to
+get to Normandale Grange, see Mrs. Mallathorpe, and--vanish. He had
+planned it all out, carefully, when he perceived the first danger
+signals, and knew that his other plans and schemes were doomed to
+failure. Half an hour at Normandale Grange--a journey to London--a
+couple of hours in the City--and then the next train to the Continent,
+on his way to regions much further off. Here, things had turned out
+badly, unexpectedly badly--but he would carry away considerable, easily
+transported wealth, to a new career in a new country.
+
+Pratt began his flight in methodical fashion. He locked up his office,
+and left the building by a back entrance which took him into a network
+of courts and alleys at the rear of the business part of Barford. He
+made his way in and out of these places until he reached a
+bicycle-dealer's shop in an obscure street, whereat he had left a
+machine of his own on the previous evening under the excuse of having it
+thoroughly cleaned and oiled. It was all ready for him on his arrival,
+and he presently mounted it and rode away through the outskirts of the
+town, carefully choosing the less frequented streets and roads. He rode
+on until he was clear of Barford: until, in fact, he was some miles from
+it, and had reached a village which was certainly not on the way to
+Normandale. And then, at the post-office he dismounted, and going
+inside, wrote out and dispatched a telegram. It was a brief message
+containing but three words--"One as usual"--and it was addressed Esther
+Mawson, The Grange, Normandale. This done, he remounted his bicycle,
+rode out of the village, and turned across country in quite a different
+direction. It was not yet ten o'clock--he had three hours to spare
+before the time came for keeping the appointment which he had just made.
+
+At an early stage of his operations, Pratt had found that even the
+cleverest of schemers cannot work unaided. It had been absolutely
+necessary to have some tool close at hand to Normandale Grange and its
+inhabitants; to have some person there upon whom he could depend for
+news. He had found that person, that tool, in Esther Mawson, who, as
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid, had opportunities which he at once recognized
+as being likely to be of the greatest value to him. The circumstances of
+Harper Mallathorpe's death had thrown Pratt and the maid together, and
+he had quickly discovered that she was to be bought, and would do
+anything for money. He had soon come to an understanding with her; soon
+bargained with her, and made her a willing accomplice in certain of his
+schemes, without letting her know their full meaning and extent: all,
+indeed, that she had learned from Pratt was that he had some
+considerable hold on her mistress.
+
+But it is dangerous work to play with edged tools, and if Pratt had only
+known it, he was running great risks in using Esther Mawson as a
+semi-accomplice. Esther Mawson was in constant touch with her mistress,
+and Mrs. Mallathorpe, afraid of her daughter, and not greatly in
+sympathy with her, badly needed a confidante. Little by little the
+mistress began to confide in the maid, and before long Esther Mawson
+knew the secret--and thenceforward she played a double game. Pratt found
+her useful in arranging meetings with Mrs. Mallathorpe unknown to Nesta,
+and he believed her to be devoted to him. But the truth was that Esther
+Mawson had only one object of devotion--herself--and she was waiting and
+watching for an opportunity to benefit that object--at Pratt's expense.
+
+Pratt knew nothing of this as he slowly made his way to Normandale that
+morning. Having plenty of time he went by devious and lonely roads and
+by-lanes. Eventually he came to the boundary of Normandale Park at a
+point far away from the Grange. There he dismounted, hid his bicycle in
+a coppice wherein he had often left it before, and went on towards the
+house through the woods and plantations. He knew every yard of the
+ground he traversed, and was skilled in taking cover if he saw any sign
+of woodman or gamekeeper. And in the end, just as one o'clock chimed
+from the clock over the stables, he came to a quiet spot in the
+shrubberies behind the Grange, and found Esther Mawson waiting for him
+in an old summer-house in which they had met on previous and similar
+occasions.
+
+Esther Mawson immediately realized that something unusual was in the
+air. Clever as Pratt was at concealing his feelings, she was cleverer in
+seeing small signs, and she saw that this was no ordinary visit.
+
+"Anything wrong?" she asked at once.
+
+"Bit of bother--nothing much--it'll blow over," answered Pratt, who knew
+that a certain amount of candour was necessary in dealing with this
+woman. "But--I shall have to be away for a bit--week or two, perhaps."
+
+"You want to see her?" inquired Esther.
+
+"Of course! I've some papers for her to sign," replied Pratt. "How do
+things stand? Coast clear?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe's going into Barford after lunch," answered Esther.
+"She'll be driving in about half-past two. I can manage it then. How
+long shall you want to be with her?"
+
+"Oh, a quarter of an hour'll do," said Pratt. "Ten minutes, if it comes
+to that."
+
+"And after that?" asked Esther.
+
+"Then I want to get a train at Scaleby," replied Pratt, mentioning a
+railway junction which lay ten miles across country in another
+direction. "So make it as soon after two-thirty as you can."
+
+"You can see her as soon as Miss Mallathorpe's gone," said Esther.
+"You'd better come into the house--I've got the key of the turret door,
+and all's clear--the servants are all at dinner."
+
+"I could do with something myself," observed Pratt, who, in his anxiety,
+had only made a light breakfast that morning. "Can it be managed?"
+
+"I'll manage it," she answered. "Come on--now."
+
+Behind the summer-house in which they had met a narrow path led through
+the shrubberies to an old part of the Grange which was never used, and
+was, in fact, partly ruinous. Esther Mawson led the way along this until
+she and Pratt came to a turret in the grey walls, in the lower story of
+which a massive oaken door, heavily clamped with iron, gave entrance to
+a winding stair, locked it from inside when she and Pratt had entered,
+and preceded her companion up the stair, and across one or two empty and
+dust-covered chambers to a small room in which a few pieces of ancient
+furniture were slowly dropping to decay. Pratt had taken refuge in this
+room before, and he sat down in one of the old chairs and mopped his
+forehead.
+
+"I want something to drink, above everything," he remarked. "What can
+you get?"
+
+"Nothing but wine," answered Esther Mawson. "As much as you like of
+that, because I've a stock that's kept up in Mrs. Mallathorpe's room. I
+couldn't get any ale without going to the butler. I can get wine and
+sandwiches without anybody knowing."
+
+"That'll do," said Pratt. "What sort of wine?"
+
+"Port, sherry, claret," she replied. "Whichever you like."
+
+"Sherry, then," answered Pratt. "Bring a bottle if you can get it--I
+want a good drink."
+
+The woman went away--through the disused part of the old house into the
+modern portion. She went straight to a certain store closet and took
+from it a bottle of old dry sherry which had been brought there from a
+bin in the cellars--it was part of a quantity of fine wine laid down by
+John Mallathorpe, years before, and its original owner would have been
+disgusted to think that it should ever be used for the mere purpose of
+quenching thirst. But Esther Mawson had another purpose in view, with
+respect to that bottle. Carrying it to her own sitting-room, she
+carefully cut off the thick mass of sealing-wax at its neck, drew the
+cork, and poured a little of the wine away. And that done, she unlocked
+a small box which stood on a corner of her dressing table, and took from
+it a glass phial, half full of a colourless liquid. With steady hands
+and sure fingers, she dropped some of that liquid into the wine,
+carefully counting the drops. Then she restored the phial to its
+hiding-place and re-locked the box--after which, taking up a spoon which
+lay on her table, she poured out a little of the sherry and smelled and
+tasted it. No smell--other than that which ought to be there; no
+taste--other than was proper. Pratt would suspect nothing even if he
+drunk the whole bottle.
+
+Esther Mawson had anticipated Pratt's desires in the way of refreshment,
+and she now went to a cupboard and took from it a plate of sandwiches,
+carefully swathed in a napkin. Carrying these in one hand, and the
+bottle of sherry and a glass in the other, she stole quietly back to the
+disused part of the house, and set her provender before its expectant
+consumer. Pratt poured out a glassful of the sherry, and drank it
+eagerly.
+
+"Good stuff that!" he remarked, smacking his lips. "Some of old John
+Mallathorpe's--no doubt."
+
+"It was here when we came, anyhow," replied Esther. "Well--I shall have
+to go. You'll be all right until I come back."
+
+"What time do you think it'll be?" asked Pratt. "Make it as soon as the
+coast's clear--I want to be off."
+
+"As soon as ever she's gone," agreed Esther. "I heard her order the
+carriage for half-past two."
+
+"And no fear of anybody else being about?" asked Pratt. "That butler
+man, for instance? Or servants?"
+
+"I'll see to it," replied Esther reassuringly. "I'll lock this door and
+take the key until I come back--make yourself comfortable."
+
+She locked Pratt in the old room and went off, and the willing prisoner
+ate his sandwiches and drank his sherry, and looked out of a mullioned
+window on the wide stretches of park and coppice and the breezy
+moorlands beyond. He indulged in some reflections--not wholly devoid of
+sentiment. He had cherished dreams of becoming the virtual owner of
+Normandale. Always confident in his own powers, he had believed that
+with time and patience he could have persuaded Nesta Mallathorpe to
+marry him--why not? Now--all owing to that cursed and unfortunate
+contretemps with Parrawhite, that seemed utterly impossible--all he
+could do now was to save himself--and to take as much as he could get.
+More than once that morning, as he made his way across country, he had
+remembered Parrawhite's advice to take cash and be done with
+it--perhaps, he reflected, it might have been better. Still--when he
+presently began his final retreat, he would carry away with him a lot of
+the Mallathorpe money.
+
+But before long Pratt indulged in no more reflections--sentiment or
+practical. He had eaten all his sandwiches; he had drunk three-quarters
+of the bottle of sherry. And suddenly he felt unusually drowsy, and he
+laid his head back in his big chair, and fell soundly asleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+
+If Pratt had only known what was going on in the old quarries at
+Whitcliffe, about the very time that he was riding slowly out to Barford
+on his bicycle, he would not only have accelerated his pace, but would
+have taken good care to have chosen another route: he would also have
+made haste to exchange bicycle for railway train as quickly as possible,
+and to have got himself far away before anybody could begin looking for
+him in his usual haunts, or at places wherein there was a possibility of
+his being found. But Pratt knew nothing of what Byner had done. He was
+conscious of Byner's visit to the _Green Man_. He did not know what
+Pickard had been told by Bill Thomson. He was unaware of anything which
+Pickard had told to Byner. If he had known that Byner, guided by
+Pickard, had been to the old quarries, had fixed his inquiring eye on
+the shaft which was filled to its brim with water, and had got certain
+ideas from the mere sight of it, Pratt would have hastened to put
+hundreds of miles between himself and Barford as quickly as possible.
+But all that Pratt knew was that there was a possibility of
+suspicion--which might materialize eventually, but not immediately.
+
+On the previous evening, Pratt--had he but known it--made a great
+mistake. Instead of going into Murgatroyd's shop after he had watched
+Byner and Prydale away from it--he should have followed those two astute
+and crafty persons, and have ascertained something of their movements.
+Had he done so, he would certainly not have troubled to return to Peel
+Row, nor to remain in Barford an hour longer than was absolutely
+necessary. For Pratt was sharp-witted enough when it came to a question
+of putting one and two together, and if he had tracked Prydale and the
+unknown man who was with him to a certain house whereto they repaired as
+soon as they quitted Murgatroyd's shop, he would have drawn an inference
+from the mere fact of their visit which would have thrown him into a
+cold sweat of fear. But Pratt, after all, was only one man, one brain,
+one body, and could not be in two places, nor go in two ways, at the
+same time. He took his own way--ignorant of his destruction.
+
+Byner also took a way of his own. As soon as he and Prydale left
+Murgatroyd's shop, they chartered the first cab they met with, and
+ordered its driver to go to Whitcliffe Moor.
+
+"It's the quickest thing to do--if my theory's correct," observed Byner,
+as they drove along, "Of course, it is all theory--mere theory! But I've
+grounds for it. The place--the time--mere lonely situation--that scrap
+iron lying about, which would be so useful in weighting a dead body!--I
+tell you, I shall be surprised if we don't find Parrawhite at the bottom
+of that water!"
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," agreed Prydale. "One thing's very certain, as we
+shall prove before we're through with it--Pratt's put that poor devil
+Murgatroyd up to this passage-to-America business. And a bit clumsily,
+too--fancy Murgatroyd being no better posted up than to tell me that
+Parrawhite called on him at a certain hour that night!"
+
+"But you've got to remember that Pratt didn't know of Parrawhite's
+affairs with Pickard, nor that he was at the _Green Man_ at that hour,"
+rejoined Byner. "My belief is that Pratt thinks himself safe--that he
+fancies he's provided for all contingencies. If things turn out as I
+think they will, I believe we shall find Pratt calmly seated at his desk
+tomorrow morning."
+
+"Well--if things do turn out as you expect, we'll lose no time in
+seeking him there!" observed Prydale dryly. "We'd better arrange to get
+the job done first thing."
+
+"This Mr. Shepherd'll make no objection, I suppose?" asked Byner.
+
+"Objection! Lor' bless you--he'll love it!" exclaimed Prydale. "It'll be
+a bit of welcome diversion to a man like him that's naught to do. He'll
+object none, not he!"
+
+Shepherd, a retired quarry-owner, who lived in a picturesque old stone
+house in the middle of Whitcliffe Moor, with nothing to occupy his
+attention but the growing of roses and vegetables, and an occasional
+glance at the local newspapers, listened to Prydale's request with
+gradually rising curiosity. Byner had at once seen that this call was
+welcome to this bluff and hearty Yorkshireman, who, without any question
+as to their business, had immediately welcomed them to his hearth and
+pressed liquor and cigars on them: he sized up Shepherd as a man to whom
+any sort of break in the placid course of retired life was a delightful
+event.
+
+"A dead man i' that old shaft i' one o' my worked out quarries!" he
+exclaimed. "Ye don't mean to say so! An' how long d'yer think he might
+ha' been there, now, Prydale?"
+
+"Some months, Mr. Shepherd," replied the detective.
+
+"Why, then it's high time he were taken out," said Shepherd. "When might
+you be thinkin' o' doin' t' job, like?"
+
+"As soon as possible," said Prydale. "Tomorrow morning, early, if that's
+convenient to you."
+
+"I'll tell you what I'll do," observed the retired quarry-owner. "You
+leave t' job to me. I'll get two or three men first thing tomorrow
+morning, and we'll do it reight. You be up there by half-past eight
+o'clock, and we'll soon satisfy you as to whether there's owt i' t'
+shape of a dead man or not i' t' pit. You hev' grounds for believin' 'at
+theer is----what?"
+
+"Strong grounds!" replied the detective, "and equally strong ones for
+believing the man came there by foul play, too."
+
+"Say no more!" said Shepherd. "T' mystery shall be cleared up. Deary me!
+An' to think 'at I've walked past yon theer pit many a dozen times
+within this last few o' months, and nivver dreamed 'at theer wor owt in
+it but watter! Howivver, gentlemen, ye can put yer minds at ease--we'll
+investigate the circumstances, as the sayin' goes, before noon
+tomorrow."
+
+"One other matter," remarked Prydale. "We want things kept quiet. We
+don't want all the folk of the neighbourhood round about, you know."
+
+"Leave it to me," answered Shepherd. "There'll be me, and these men, and
+yourselves--and a pair of grapplin' irons. We'll do it quiet and
+comfortable--and we'll do it reight."
+
+"Odd character!" remarked Byner, when he and Prydale went away.
+
+"Useful man--for a job of that sort," said the detective laconically.
+"Now then--are we going to let anybody else know what we're after--Mr.
+Eldrick or Mr. Collingwood, for instance? Do you want them, or either of
+them, to be present?"
+
+"No!" answered Byner, after a moment's reflection. "Let us see what
+results. We can let them know, soon enough, if we've anything to tell.
+But--what about Pratt?"
+
+"Keeping an eye on him--you mean?" said Prydale. "You said just now that
+in your opinion we should find him at his desk."
+
+"Just so--but that's no reason why he shouldn't be looked after tomorrow
+morning," answered Byner.
+
+"All right--I'll put a man on to shadow him, from the time he leaves his
+lodgings until--until we want him," said the detective. "That is--if we
+do want him."
+
+"It will be one of the biggest surprises I ever had in my life if we
+don't!" asserted Byner. "I never felt more certain of anything than I do
+of finding Parrawhite's body in that pit!"
+
+It was this certainty which made Byner appear extraordinarily cool and
+collected, when next day, about noon, he walked into Eldrick's private
+room, where Collingwood was at that moment asking the solicitor what was
+being done. The certainty was now established, and it seemed to Byner
+that it would have been a queer thing if he had not always had it. He
+closed the door and gave the two men an informing glance.
+
+"Parrawhite's body has been found," he said quietly.
+
+Eldrick started in his chair, and Collingwood looked a sharp inquiry.
+
+"Little doubt about his having been murdered, just as I conjectured,"
+continued Byner. "And his murderer had pretty cleverly weighted his body
+with scrap iron, before dropping it into a pit full of water, where it
+might have remained for a long time undiscovered. However--that's
+settled!"
+
+Eldrick got out the first question.
+
+"Pratt?"
+
+"Prydale's after him," answered Byner. "I expect we shall hear something
+in a few minutes--if he's in town. But I confess I'm a bit doubtful and
+anxious now, on that score. Because, when Prydale and I got down from
+Whitcliffe half an hour ago--where the body's now lying, at the _Green
+Man_, awaiting the inquest--we found Murgatroyd hanging about the police
+station. He'd come to make a clean breast of it--about Pratt. And it
+unfortunately turns out that Pratt saw Prydale and me go to Murgatroyd's
+shop last night, and afterwards went in there himself, and of course
+pumped Murgatroyd dry as to why we'd been."
+
+"Why unfortunately?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Because that would warn Pratt that something was afoot," said Byner.
+"And--he may have disappeared during the night. He----"
+
+But just then Prydale came in, shaking his head.
+
+"I'm afraid he's off!" he announced. "I'd a man watching for him outside
+his lodgings from an early hour this morning, but he never came out, and
+finally my man made an excuse and asked for him there, and then he heard
+that he'd never been home last night. And his office is closed."
+
+"What steps are you taking?" asked Byner.
+
+"I've got men all over the place already," replied Prydale. "But--if he
+got off in the night, as I'm afraid he did, we shan't find him in
+Barford. It's a most unlucky thing that he saw us go to Murgatroyd's
+last evening! That, of course, would set him off: he'd know things were
+reaching a crisis."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood had arranged to lunch together that day, and
+they presently went off, asking the detective to keep them informed of
+events. But up to half-past three o 'clock they heard no more--then, as
+they were returning along the street Byner came running up to them.
+
+"Prydale's just had a telephone message from the butler at Normandale!"
+he exclaimed. "Pratt is there!--and something extraordinary is going on:
+the butler wants the police. We're off at once--there's Prydale in a
+motor, waiting for me. Will you follow?"
+
+He darted away again, and Eldrick looking round for a car, suddenly
+recognized the Mallathorpe livery.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "There's Miss Mallathorpe--just driving in.
+Better tell her!"
+
+A moment later, he and Collingwood had joined Nesta in her carriage, and
+the horses' heads were turned in the direction towards which Byner and
+Prydale were already hastening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+
+Esther Mawson, leaving Pratt to enjoy his sherry and sandwiches at his
+leisure, went away through the house, out into the gardens, and across
+the shrubbery to the stables. The coachman and grooms were at
+dinner--with the exception of one man who lived in a cottage at the
+entrance to the stable-yard. This was the very man she wanted to see,
+and she found him in the saddle-room, and beckoned him to its door.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe wants me to go over to Scaleby on an errand for her
+this afternoon," she said. "Can you have the dog-cart ready, at the
+South Garden gate at three o'clock sharp? And--without saying anything
+to the coachman? It's a private errand."
+
+Of late this particular groom had received several commissions of this
+sort, and being a sharp fellow he had observed that they were generally
+given to him when Miss Mallathorpe was out.
+
+"All right," he answered. "The young missis is going out in the carriage
+at half-past two. South Garden gate--three sharp. Anybody but you?"
+
+"Only me," replied Esther. "Don't say anything to anybody about where
+we're going. Get the dog-cart ready after the carriage has gone."
+
+The groom nodded in comprehension, and Esther went back to the house and
+to her own room. She ought at that time of day to have been eating her
+dinner with the rest of the upper servants, but she had work to do which
+was of much more importance than the consumption of food and drink.
+There was going to be a flight that afternoon--but it would not be Pratt
+who would undertake it. Esther Mawson had carefully calculated all her
+chances as soon as Pratt told her that he was going to be away for a
+while. She knew that Pratt would not have left Barford for any
+indefinite period unless something had gone seriously wrong. But she
+knew more--by inference and intuition. If Pratt was going away--rather,
+since he was going away, he would have on his person things of
+value--documents, money. She meant to gain possession of everything that
+he had; she meant to have a brief interview with Mrs. Mallathorpe; then
+she meant to drive to Scaleby--and to leave that part of the country
+just as thoroughly and completely as Pratt had meant to leave it. And
+now in her own room she was completing her preparations. There was
+little to do. She knew that if her venture came off successfully, she
+could easily afford to leave her personal possessions behind her, and
+that she would be all the more free and unrestricted in her movements if
+she departed without as much as a change of clothes and linen. And so by
+two o'clock she had arrayed herself in a neat and unobtrusive
+tailor-made travelling costume, had put on an equally neat and plain
+hat, had rolled her umbrella, and laid it, her gloves, and a cloak where
+they could be readily picked up, and had attached to her slim waist a
+hand-bag--by means of a steel chain which she secured by a small padlock
+as soon as she had arranged it to her satisfaction. She was not the sort
+of woman to leave a hand-bag lying about in a railway carriage at any
+time, but in this particular instance she was not going to run any risk
+of even a moment's forgetfulness.
+
+Everything was in readiness by twenty minutes past two, and she took up
+her position in a window from which she could see the front door of the
+house. At half-past two the carriage and its two fine bay horses came
+round from the stables; a minute or two later Nesta Mallathorpe emerged
+from the hall; yet another minute and the carriage was whirling down the
+park in the direction of Barford. And then Esther moved from the window,
+picked up the umbrella, the cloak, the gloves, and went off in the
+direction of the room wherein she had left Pratt.
+
+No one ever went near those old rooms except on some special errand or
+business, and there was a dead silence all around her as she turned the
+key in the lock and slipped inside the door--to lock it again as soon as
+she had entered. There was an equally deep silence within the room--and
+for a moment she glanced a little fearfully at the recumbent figure in
+the old, deep-backed chair. Pratt had stretched himself fully in his
+easy quarters---his legs lay extended across the moth-eaten hearth-rug;
+his head and shoulders were thrown far back against the faded tapestry,
+and he was so still that he might have been supposed to be dead. But
+Esther Mawson had tried the effect of that particular drug on a good
+many people, and she knew that the victim in this instance was merely
+plunged in a sleep from which nothing whatever could wake him yet
+awhile. And after one searching glance at him, and one lifting of an
+eyelid by a practised finger, she went rapidly and thoroughly through
+Pratt's pockets, and within a few minutes of entering the room had
+cleared them of everything they contained. The sealed packet which he
+had taken from his safe that morning; the bank-notes which Mrs.
+Murgatroyd had returned in her indignant letter; another roll of notes,
+of considerable value, in a note-case; a purse containing notes and gold
+to a large amount--all those she laid one by one on a dust-covered
+table. And finally--and as calmly as if she were sorting linen--she
+swept bank-notes, gold, and purse into her steel-chained bag, and tore
+open the sealed envelope.
+
+There were five documents in that envelope--Esther examined each with
+meticulous care. The first was an authority to Linford Pratt to sell
+certain shares standing in the name of Ann Mallathorpe. The second was a
+similar document relating to other shares: each was complete, save for
+Ann Mallathorpe's signature. The third document was the power of
+attorney which Ann Mallathorpe had given to Linford Pratt: the fourth,
+the letter which she had written to him on the evening before the fatal
+accident to Harper. And the fifth was John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+At last she held in her hand the half-sheet of foolscap paper of which
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, driven to distraction, and knowing that she would get
+no sympathy from her own daughter, had told her. She was a woman of a
+quick and an understanding mind, and she had read the will through and
+grasped its significance as swiftly as her eyes ran over it. And those
+eyes turned to the unconscious Pratt with a flash of contempt--she, at
+any rate, would not follow his foolish example, and play for too high a
+stake--no, she would make hay while the sun shone its hottest! She was
+of the Parrawhite persuasion--better, far better one good bird in the
+hand than a score of possible birds in the bush.
+
+She presently restored the five documents to the stout envelope, picked
+up her other belongings, and without so much as a glance at Pratt, left
+the room. She turned the key in the door and took it away with her. And
+now she went straight to a certain sitting-room which Mrs. Mallathorpe
+had tenanted by day ever since her illness. The final and most important
+stage of Esther's venture was at hand.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat at an open window, wearily gazing out on the park.
+Ever since her son's death she had remained in a more or less torpid
+condition, rarely talking to any person except Esther Mawson: it had
+been manifest from the first that her daughter's presence distressed and
+irritated her, and by the doctor's advice Nesta had gone to her as
+little as possible, while taking every care to guard her and see to her
+comfort. All day long she sat brooding--and only Esther Mawson, now for
+some time in her full confidence, knew that her brooding was rapidly
+developing into a monomania. Mrs. Mallathorpe, indeed, had but one
+thought in her mind--the eventual circumventing of Pratt, and the
+destruction of John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+She turned slowly as the maid came in and carefully closed the door
+behind her, and her voice was irritable and querulous as she at once
+began to complain.
+
+"You've never been near me for two hours!" she said. "Your dinner time
+was over long since! I might have been wanting all sorts of things for
+aught you cared!"
+
+"I've had something else to do--for you!" retorted Esther, coming close
+to her mistress. "Listen, now!--I've got it!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's attitude and manner suddenly changed. She caught
+sight of the packet of papers in the woman's hand, and at once sprang to
+her feet, white and trembling. Instinctively she held out her own hands
+and moved a little nearer to the maid. And Esther quickly put the table
+between them, and shook her head.
+
+"No--no!" she exclaimed. "No handling of anything--yet! You keep your
+hands off! You were ready enough to bargain with Pratt--now you'll have
+to bargain with me. But I'm not such a fool as he was--I'll take cash
+down, and be done with it."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe rested her trembling hands on the table and bent
+forward across it.
+
+"Is it--is it--really--the will?" she whispered hoarsely.
+
+Instead of replying in words, Esther, taking care to keep at a safe
+distance behind the table, and with the door only a yard or two in her
+rear, drew out the documents one by one and held them up.
+
+"The will!" she said. "Your letter to Pratt. The power of attorney. Two
+papers that he brought for you to sign. That's the lot! And now, as I
+said, we'll bargain."
+
+"Where is--he?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. "How--how did you get them? Does
+he know--did he give them up?"
+
+"If you want to know, he's safe and sound asleep in one of the rooms in
+the old part of the house," answered Esther. "I drugged him. There's
+something afoot--something gone wrong with his schemes--at Barford, and
+he came here on his way--elsewhere. And so--I took the chance. Now
+then--what are you going to give me?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, whose nervous agitation was becoming more and more
+marked, wrung her hands.
+
+"I've nothing to give!" she cried. "You know very well he's had the
+management of everything--I don't know how things are----"
+
+"Stuff!" exclaimed Esther. "I know better than that. You've a lot of
+ready money in that desk there--you know you drew a lot out of the bank
+some time ago, and it's there now. You kept it for a contingency--the
+contingency's here. And--you've your rings--the diamond and ruby
+rings--I know what they're worth! Come on, now--I mean to have the whole
+lot, so it's no use hesitating."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at the maid's bold and resolute eyes--and then
+at the papers. And she glanced from eyes and papers to a bright fire
+which burned in the grate close by.
+
+"You'll give everything up?" she asked nervously.
+
+"Put those bank-notes that you've got in your desk, and those rings that
+are in your jewel-case, on the table between us," answered Esther, "and
+I'll hand over these papers on the instant! I'm not going to be such a
+fool as to keep them--not I! Come on, now!--isn't this the chance you've
+wanted?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a small bunch of keys from her gown, and went over
+to the desk which Esther had pointed to. Within a minute she was back
+again at the table, a roll of bank notes in one hand, half a dozen
+magnificent rings in the other. She put both hands halfway across and
+unclasped them. And Esther Mawson, with a light laugh, threw the papers
+over the table, and hastily swept their price into her handbag.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's nerves suddenly became steady. With a deep sigh she
+caught up the various documents and looked them quickly and thoroughly
+over. Then she tore them into fragments and flung the fragments in the
+fire--and as they blazed up, she turned and looked at Esther Mawson in a
+way which made Esther shrink a little. But she was already at the
+door--and she opened it and walked out and down the stair.
+
+She was half-way across the hall beneath, where the butler and one of
+the footmen were idly talking, when a sharp cry from above made her then
+look up. Mrs. Mallathorpe, suddenly restored to life and energy, was
+leaning over the balustrade.
+
+"Stop that woman, you men!" she said. "Seize her! Fasten her up!--lock
+the door wherever you put her! She's stolen my rings, and a lot of money
+out of my desk! And telephone instantly to Barford, and tell them to
+send the police here--at once!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, who had just arrived in Barford when Eldrick caught
+sight of her, was seriously startled as he and Collingwood came running
+up to her carriage. The solicitor entered it without ceremony or
+explanation, and turning to the coachman bade him drive back to
+Normandale as fast as he could make his horses go. Meanwhile Collingwood
+turned to Nesta. "Don't be alarmed!" he said. "Something is happening at
+the Grange--your mother has just telephoned to the police here to go
+there at once--there they are--in front of us, in that car!"
+
+"Did my mother say if she was in danger?" demanded Nesta.
+
+"She can't be!" exclaimed Eldrick, turning from the coachman, as the
+horses were whipped round and the carriage moved off. "She evidently
+gave orders for the message. No--Pratt's there! And--but of course, you
+don't know--the police want Pratt. They've been searching for him since
+noon. He's wanted for murder!"
+
+"Don't frighten Miss Mallathorpe," said Collingwood. "The murder has
+nothing to do with present events," he went on reassuringly. "It's
+something that happened some time ago. Don't be afraid about your
+mother--there are plenty of people round her, you know."
+
+"I can't help feeling anxious if Pratt is there," she answered. "How did
+he come to be there? It's not an hour since I left home. This is all
+some of Esther Mawson's work! And we shall have to wait nearly an hour
+before we know what is going on!--it's all uphill work to Normandale,
+and the horses can't do it in the time."
+
+"Eldrick!" said Collingwood, as the carriage came abreast of the Central
+Station and a long line of motorcars. "Stop the coachman! Let's get one
+of those cars--we shall get to Normandale twice as quickly. The main
+thing is to relieve Miss Mallathorpe of anxiety. Now!" he went on, as
+they hastily left the carriage and transferred themselves to a car
+quickly scented by Eldrick as the most promising of the lot. "Tell the
+driver to go as fast as he can--the other car's not very far in
+front--tell him to catch it up."
+
+Eldrick leaned over and gave his orders.
+
+"I've told him not only to catch him up, but to get in front of 'em," he
+said, settling down again in his seat. "This is a better car than
+theirs, and we shall be there first. Now, Miss Mallathorpe, don't you
+bother--this is probably going to be the clearing-up point of
+everything. One feels certain, at any rate--Pratt has reached the end of
+his tether!"
+
+"If I seem to bother," replied Nesta, "it's because I know that he and
+Esther Mawson are at Normandale--working mischief."
+
+"We shall be there in half an hour," said Collingwood, as their own car
+ran past that in which the detectives and Byner were seated. "They can't
+do much mischief in that time."
+
+None of the three spoke again until the car pulled up suddenly at the
+gates of Normandale Park. The lodge-keeper, an old man, coming out to
+open them, approached the door of the car on seeing Nesta within.
+
+"There's a young woman just gone up to the house that wants to see you
+very particular, miss," he said. "I tell'd her that you'd gone to
+Barford, but she said she'd come a long way, and she'd wait till you
+come back. She's going across the park there--crossin' yon path."
+
+He pointed over the level sward to the slight figure of a woman in
+black, who was obviously taking a near cut up to the Grange. Nesta
+looked wonderingly across the park as the car cleared the gate and went
+on up the drive.
+
+"Who can she be?" she said musingly. "A woman from a long way--to see
+me?"
+
+"She'll get to the house soon after we reach it," said Eldrick. "Let's
+attend to this more pressing business first. We should know what's afoot
+here in a minute or two."
+
+But it was somewhat difficult to make out or to discover what really was
+afoot. The car stopped at the hall door: the second car came close
+behind it; Nesta, Collingwood, Eldrick, Byner, and the detectives poured
+into the hall--encountered a much mystified-looking butler, a couple of
+footmen, and the groom whose services Esther Mawson had requisitioned,
+and who, weary of waiting for her, had come up to the house.
+
+"What's all this?" asked Eldrick, taking the situation into his own
+hands. "What's the matter? Why did you send for the police?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe's orders, sir," answered the butler, with an
+apologetic glance at his young mistress. "Really, sir, I don't
+know--exactly--what is the matter! We are all so confused! What happened
+was, that not very long after Miss Mallathorpe had left for town in the
+carriage, Esther Mawson, the maid, came downstairs from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's room, and was crossing the lower part of the hall, when
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly appeared up there and called to me and James
+to stop her and lock her up, as she'd stolen money and jewels! We were
+to lock her up and telephone for the police, sir, and to add that Mr.
+Pratt was here."
+
+"Well?" demanded Eldrick.
+
+"We did lock her up, sir! She's in my pantry," continued the butler,
+ruefully. "We've got her in there because there are bars to the
+windows--she can't get out of that. A terrible time we had, too,
+sir--she fought us like--like a maniac, protesting all the time that
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had given her what she had on her. Of course, sir, we
+don't know what she may have on her--we simply obeyed Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+"Where is Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked Collingwood. "Is she safe?"
+
+"Oh, quite safe, sir!" replied the butler. "She returned to her room
+after giving those orders. Mrs. Mallathorpe appeared to be--quite calm,
+sir."
+
+Prydale pushed himself forward--unceremoniously and insistently.
+
+"Keep that woman locked up!" he said. "First of all--where's Pratt?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe said he would be found in a room in the old part of
+the house," answered the butler, shaking his head as if he were
+thoroughly mystified. "She said you would find him fast asleep--Mawson
+had drugged him!"
+
+Prydale looked at Byner and at his fellow-detectives. Then he turned to
+the butler.
+
+"Come on!" he said brusquely. "Take us there at once!" He glanced at
+Eldrick. "I'm beginning to see through it, Mr. Eldrick!" he whispered.
+"This maid's caught Pratt for us. Let's hope he's still----"
+
+But before he could say more, and just as the butler opened a door which
+led into a corridor at the rear of the hall, a sharp crack which was
+unmistakably that of a revolver, rang through the house, waking equally
+sharp echoes in the silent room. And at that, Nesta hurried up the
+stairway to her mother's apartment, and the men, after a hurried glance
+at each other, ran along the corridor after the butler and the footmen.
+
+Pratt came out of his stupor much sooner than Esther Mawson had reckoned
+on. According to her previous experiments with the particular drug which
+she had administered to him, he ought to have remained in a profound and
+an undisturbed slumber until at least five o'clock. But he woke at
+four--woke suddenly, sharply, only conscious at first of a terrible pain
+in his head, which kept him groaning and moaning in his chair for a
+minute or two before he fairly realized where he was and what had
+happened. As the pain became milder and gave way to a dull throbbing and
+a general sense of discomfort, he looked round out of aching eyes and
+saw the bottle of sherry. And so dull were his wits that his only
+thought at first was that the wine had been far stronger than he had
+known, and that he had drunk far too much of it, and that it had sent
+him to sleep--and just then his wandering glance fell on some papers
+which Esther Mawson had taken from one of his pockets and thrown aside
+as of no value.
+
+He leapt to his feet, trembling and sweating. His hands, shaking as if
+smitten with a sudden palsy, went to his pockets--he tore off his coat
+and turned his pockets out, as if touch and feeling were not to be
+believed, and his eyes must see that there was really nothing there.
+Then he snatched up the papers on the floor and found nothing but
+letters, and odd scraps of unimportant memoranda. He stamped his feet on
+those things, and began to swear and curse, and finally to sob and
+whine. The shock of his discovery had driven all his stupefaction away
+by that time, and he knew what had happened. And his whining and sobbing
+was not that of despair, but the far worse and fiercer sobbing and
+whining of rage and terrible anger. If the woman who had tricked him had
+been there he would have torn her limb from limb, and have glutted
+himself with revenge. But--he was alone.
+
+And presently, after moving around his prison more like a wild beast
+than a human being, his senses having deserted him for a while, he
+regained some composure, and glanced about him for means of escape. He
+went to the door and tried it. But the old, substantial oak stood firm
+and fast--nothing but a crow-bar would break that door. And so he turned
+to the mullioned window, set in a deep recess.
+
+He knew that it was thirty or forty feet above the level of the
+ground--but there was much thick ivy growing on the walls of Normandale
+Grange, and it might be possible to climb down by its aid. With a great
+effort he forced open one of the dirt-encrusted sashes and looked
+out--and in the same instant he drew in his head with a harsh groan. The
+window commanded a full view of the hall door--and he had seen Prydale,
+and two other detectives, and the stranger from London whom he believed
+to be a detective, hurrying from their motorcar into the house.
+
+There was but one thing for it, now. Esther Mawson had robbed him of
+everything that was on him in the way of papers and money. But in his
+hip-pocket she had left a revolver which Pratt had carried, always
+loaded, for some time. And now, without the least hesitation, he drew it
+out and sent one of its bullets through his brain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, returning to the hall from the room in which
+they and the detectives had found Pratt's dead body, stood a little
+later in earnest conversation with Prydale, who had just come there from
+an interview with Esther Mawson. Nesta Mallathorpe suddenly called to
+them from the stairs, at the same time beckoning them to go up to her.
+
+"Will you come with me and speak to my mother?" she said. "She knows you
+are here, and she wants to say something about what has
+happened--something about that document which Pratt said he possessed."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood exchanged glances without speaking. They
+followed Nesta into her mother's sitting-room. And instead of the
+semi-invalid whom they had expected to find there, they saw a woman who
+had evidently regained not only her vivacity and her spirits but her
+sense of authority and her inclination to exercise it.
+
+"I am sorry that you gentlemen should have been drawn into all this
+wretched business!" she exclaimed, as she pointed the two men to chairs.
+"Everything must seem very strange, and indeed have seemed so for some
+time. But I have been the victim of as bad a scoundrel as ever
+lived--I'm not going to be so hypocritical as to pretend that I'm sorry
+he's dead--I'm not! I only wish he'd met his proper fate--on the
+scaffold. I don't know what you may have heard, or gathered--my daughter
+herself, from what she tells me, has only the vaguest notions--but I
+wanted to tell you, Mr. Eldrick, and you, Mr. Collingwood--seeing that
+you're one a solicitor and the other a barrister, that Pratt invented a
+most abominable plot against me, which, of course, hasn't a word of
+truth in it, yet was so clever that----"
+
+Eldrick suddenly raised his hand.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" he said quietly. "I think you had better let me
+speak before you go any further. Perhaps we--Mr. Collingwood and I--know
+more than you think. Don't trifle, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for your own and
+your daughter's sake! Tell the truth--and answer a plain question, which
+I assure you, is asked in your own interest. What have you done with
+John Mallathorpe's will?"
+
+Collingwood, anxious for Nesta, was watching her closely, and now he saw
+her turn a startled and inquiring look on her mother, who, in her turn,
+dashed a surprised glance at Eldrick. But if Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+surprised, she was also indignant, or she simulated indignation, and she
+replied to the solicitor's question with a sharp retort.
+
+"What do you mean?--John Mallathorpe's will!" she exclaimed. "What do I
+know of John Mallathorpe's will? There never was----"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" interrupted Eldrick. "Don't! I'm speaking in your
+interest, I tell you! There was a will! It was made on the morning of
+John Mallathorpe's death. It was found by Mr. Collingwood's late
+grandfather, Antony Bartle: when he died suddenly in my office, it fell
+into Pratt's hands. That is the document which Pratt held over you--and
+not an hour ago, Esther Mawson took it from Pratt, and she gave it to
+you. Again I ask you--what have you done with it?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated a moment. Then she suddenly faced Eldrick
+with a defiant look. "Let them--let everybody--do what they like!" she
+exclaimed. "It's burnt! I threw it in that fire as soon as I got it! And
+now----"
+
+Nesta interrupted her mother.
+
+"Does any one know the terms of that will?" she asked, looking at
+Eldrick. "Tell me!--if you know. Hush!" she went on, as Mrs. Mallathorpe
+tried to speak again. "I will know!"
+
+"Yes!" answered Eldrick. "Esther Mawson knows them. She read the will
+carefully. She told Prydale just now what they were. With the exception
+of three legacies of ten thousand pounds each to your mother, your
+brother, and yourself, John Mallathorpe left everything he possessed to
+the town of Barford for an educational trust."
+
+"Then," asked Nesta quietly, as she made a peremptory sign to her mother
+to be silent, "we--never had any right to be here--at all?"
+
+"I'm afraid not," replied Eldrick.
+
+"Then of course we shall go," said Nesta. "That's certain! Do you hear
+that, mother? That's my decision. It's final!"
+
+"You can do what you like," retorted Mrs. Mallathorpe sullenly. "I am
+not going to be frightened by anything that Esther Mawson says. Nor by
+what you say!" she continued, turning on Eldrick. "All that has got to
+be proved. Who can prove it? What can prove it? Do you think I am going
+to give up my rights without fighting for them? I shall swear that every
+word of Esther Mawson's is a lie! No one can bring forward a will that
+doesn't exist. And what concern is it of yours, Mr. Eldrick? What right
+have you?"
+
+"You are quite right, Mrs. Mallathorpe," said Eldrick. "It is no concern
+of mine. And so----"
+
+He turned to the door--and as he turned the door opened, to admit the
+old butler who looked apologetically but earnestly at Nesta as he
+stepped forward.
+
+"A Mrs. Gaukrodger wishes to see you on very particular business," he
+murmured. "She's been waiting some little time--something, she says,
+about some papers she has just found--belonging to the late Mr. John
+Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood, who was standing close to Nesta, caught all the butler
+said.
+
+"Gaukrodger!" he exclaimed, with a quick glance at Eldrick. "That was
+the name of the manager--a witness. See the woman at once," he whispered
+to Nesta.
+
+"Bring Mrs. Gaukrodger in, Dickenson," said Nesta. "Stay--I'll come with
+you, and bring her in myself."
+
+She returned a moment later with a slightly built, rather careworn woman
+dressed in deep mourning--the woman in black whom they had seen crossing
+the park--who looked nervously round her as she entered.
+
+"What is it you have for me, Mrs. Gaukrodger?" asked Nesta. "Papers
+belonging to the late Mr. John Mallathorpe? How--where did you get
+them?"
+
+Mrs. Gaukrodger drew a large envelope from under her cloak. "This,
+miss," she answered. "One paper--I only found it this morning. In this
+way," she went on, addressing herself to Nesta. "When my husband was
+killed, along with Mr. John Mallathorpe, they, of course, brought home
+the clothes he was wearing. There were a lot of papers in the pockets of
+the coat--two pockets full of them. And I hadn't heart or courage to
+look at them at that time, miss!--I couldn't, and I locked them up in a
+box. I never looked at them until this very day--but this morning I
+happened to open that box, and I saw them, and I thought I'd see what
+they were. And this was one--you see, it's in a plain envelope--it was
+sealed, but there's no writing on it. I cut the envelope open, and drew
+the paper out, and I saw at once it was Mr. John Mallathorpe's will--so
+I came straight to you with it."
+
+She handed the envelope over to Nesta, who at once gave it to Eldrick.
+The solicitor hastily drew out the enclosure, glanced it over, and
+turned sharply to Collingwood with a muttered exclamation.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "That man Cobcroft was right! There _was_ a
+duplicate! And here it is!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had come nearer. The sight of the half sheet of
+foolscap in Eldrick's hands seemed to fascinate her. And the expression
+of her face as she came close to his side was so curious that the
+solicitor involuntarily folded up the will and hastily put it behind his
+back--he had not only seen that expression but had caught sight of Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's twitching fingers.
+
+"Is--that--that--another will?" she whispered. "John Mallathorpe's?"
+
+"Precisely the same--another copy--duly signed and witnessed!" answered
+Eldrick firmly. "What you foolishly did was done for nothing. And--it's
+the most fortunate thing in the world, Mrs. Mallathorpe, that this has
+turned up!--most fortunate for you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe steadied herself on the edge of the table and looked at
+him fixedly. "Everything'll have to be given up?" she asked.
+
+"The terms of this will will be carried out," answered Eldrick.
+
+"Will--will they make me give up--what we've--saved?" she whispered.
+
+"Mother!" said Nesta appealingly. "Don't! Come away somewhere and let me
+talk to you--come!"
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shook off her daughter's hand and turned again to
+Eldrick.
+
+"Will they?" she demanded. "Answer!"
+
+"I don't think you'll find the trustees at all hard when it comes to a
+question of account," answered Eldrick. "They'll probably take matters
+over from now and ignore anything that's happened during the past two
+years."
+
+Again Nesta tried to lead her mother away, and again Mrs. Mallathorpe
+pushed the appealing hand from her. All her attention was fixed on
+Eldrick. "And--and will the police give me--now--what they found on that
+woman?" she whispered.
+
+"I have no doubt they will," replied Eldrick. "It's--yours."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a sigh of relief. She looked at the solicitor
+steadily for a moment--then without another word she turned and went
+away--to find Prydale.
+
+Eldrick turned to Nesta.
+
+"Don't forget," he said in a low voice, "it's a terrible blow to her,
+and she's been thinking of your interests! Leave her alone for a
+while--she'll get used to the altered circumstances. I'm sorry for
+her--and for you!"
+
+But Nesta made a sign of dissent.
+
+"There's no need to be sorry for me, Mr. Eldrick," she answered. "It's a
+greater relief than you can realize." She turned from him and went over
+to Mrs. Gaukrodger who had watched this scene without fully
+comprehending it. "Come with me," she said. "You look very tired and you
+must have some tea and rest awhile--come now."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, left alone, looked at each, other in silence
+for a moment. Then the solicitor shook his head expressively.
+
+"Well, that's over!" he exclaimed. "I must go back and hand this will
+over to the two trustees. But you, Collingwood--stay here a bit--if ever
+that girl needs company and help, it's now!"
+
+"I'm stopping," said Collingwood.
+
+He remained for a time where Eldrick left him; at last he went down to
+the hall and out into the gardens. And presently Nesta came to him
+there, and as if with a mutual understanding they walked away into the
+nearer stretches of the park. Normandale had never looked more beautiful
+than it did that afternoon, and in the midst of a silence which up to
+then neither of them had cared to break, Collingwood suddenly turned to
+the girl who had just lost it.
+
+"Are you sure that you won't miss all this--greatly?" he asked. "Just
+think!"
+
+"I'd rather lose more than this, however fond I'd got of it, than go
+through what I've gone through lately," she answered frankly. "Do you
+know what I want to do?"
+
+"No--I think not," he said. "What?"
+
+"If it's possible--to forget all about this," she replied. "And--if
+that's also possible--to help my mother to forget, too. Don't think too
+hardly of her--I don't suppose any of us know how much all this
+place--and the money--meant to her."
+
+"I've got no hard thoughts about her," said Collingwood. "I'm sorry for
+her. But--is it too soon to talk about the future?"
+
+Nesta looked at him in a way which showed him that she only half
+comprehended the question. But there was sufficient comprehension in her
+eyes to warrant him in taking her hands in his.
+
+"You know why I didn't go to India?" he said, bending his face to hers.
+
+"I--guessed!" she answered shyly.
+
+Then Collingwood, at this suddenly arrived supreme moment, became
+curiously bereft of speech. And after a period of silence, during which,
+being in the shadow of a grove of beech-trees which kindly concealed
+them from the rest of the world, they held each other's hands, all that
+he could find to say was one word.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Nesta laughed.
+
+"Well--what?" she whispered.
+
+Collingwood suddenly laughed too and put his arm round her.
+
+"It's no good!" he said. "I've often thought of what I'd to say to
+you--and now I've forgotten all. Shall I say it all at once!"
+
+"Wouldn't it be best?" she murmured with another laugh.
+
+"Then--you're going to marry me?" he asked.
+
+"Am I to answer--all at once?" she said.
+
+"One word will do!" he exclaimed, drawing her to him.
+
+"Ah!" she whispered as she lifted her face to his. "I couldn't say it
+all in one word. But--we've lots of time before us!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
+
+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: The Talleyrand Maxim
+
+Author: J. S. Fletcher
+
+Posting Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #9834]
+Release Date: February, 2006
+First Posted: October 22, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sandra Brown and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+BY J. S. FLETCHER
+
+
+1920
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER
+
+I DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+II IN TRUST
+
+III THE SHOP-BOY
+
+IV THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+V POINT-BLANK
+
+VI THE UNEXPECTED
+
+VII THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+VIII TERMS
+
+IX UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+X THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+XI THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+XII THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+XIII THE FIRST TRICK
+
+XIV CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+XV PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+XVI A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+XVII ADVERTISEMENT
+
+XVIII THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+XIX THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+XX THE _Green Man_
+
+XXI THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+XXII THE CAT'SPAW
+
+XXIII SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+XXIV THE BETTER HALF
+
+XXV DRY SHERRY
+
+XXVI THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+XXVII RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+XXVIII THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+
+Linford Pratt, senior clerk to Eldrick & Pascoe, solicitors, of Barford,
+a young man who earnestly desired to get on in life, by hook or by
+crook, with no objection whatever to crookedness, so long as it could be
+performed in safety and secrecy, had once during one of his periodical
+visits to the town Reference Library, lighted on a maxim of that other
+unscrupulous person, Prince Talleyrand, which had pleased him greatly.
+"With time and patience," said Talleyrand, "the mulberry leaf is turned
+into satin." This seemed to Linford Pratt one of the finest and soundest
+pieces of wisdom which he had ever known put into words.
+
+A mulberry leaf is a very insignificant thing, but a piece of satin is a
+highly marketable commodity, with money in it. Henceforth, he regarded
+himself as a mulberry leaf which his own wit and skill must transform
+into satin: at the same time he knew that there is another thing, in
+addition to time and patience, which is valuable to young men of his
+peculiar qualities, a thing also much beloved by Talleyrand--opportunity.
+He could find the patience, and he had the time--but it would give him
+great happiness if opportunity came along to help in the work. In
+everyday language, Linford Pratt wanted a chance--he waited the arrival
+of the tide in his affairs which would lead him on to fortune.
+
+Leave him alone--he said to himself--to be sure to take it at the flood.
+If Pratt had only known it, as he stood in the outer office of Eldrick &
+Pascoe at the end of a certain winter afternoon, opportunity was slowly
+climbing the staircase outside--not only opportunity, but temptation,
+both assisted by the Devil. They came at the right moment, for Pratt was
+alone; the partners had gone: the other clerks had gone: the office-boy
+had gone: in another minute Pratt would have gone, too: he was only
+looking round before locking up for the night. Then these things
+came--combined in the person of an old man, Antony Bartle, who opened
+the door, pushed in a queer, wrinkled face, and asked in a quavering
+voice if anybody was in.
+
+"I'm in, Mr. Bartle," answered Pratt, turning up a gas jet which he had
+just lowered. "Come in, sir. What can I do for you?"
+
+Antony Bartle came in, wheezing and coughing. He was a very, very old
+man, feeble and bent, with little that looked alive about him but his
+light, alert eyes. Everybody knew him--he was one of the institutions of
+Barford--as well known as the Town Hall or the Parish Church. For fifty
+years he had kept a second-hand bookshop in Quagg Alley, the narrow
+passage-way which connected Market Street with Beck Street. It was not
+by any means a common or ordinary second-hand bookshop: its proprietor
+styled himself an "antiquarian bookseller"; and he had a reputation in
+two Continents, and dealt with millionaire buyers and virtuosos in both.
+
+Barford people sometimes marvelled at the news that Mr. Antony Bartle
+had given two thousand guineas for a Book of Hours, and had sold a
+Missal for twice that amount to some American collector; and they got a
+hazy notion that the old man must be well-to-do--despite his snuffiness
+and shabbiness, and that his queer old shop, in the window of which
+there was rarely anything to be seen but a few ancient tomes, and two or
+three rare engravings, contained much that he could turn at an hour's
+notice into gold. All that was surmise--but Eldrick & Pascoe--which term
+included Linford Pratt--knew all about Antony Bartle, being his
+solicitors: his will was safely deposited in their keeping, and Pratt
+had been one of the attesting witnesses.
+
+The old man, having slowly walked into the outer office, leaned against
+a table, panting a little. Pratt hastened to open an inner door.
+
+"Come into Mr. Eldrick's room, Mr. Bartle," he said. "There's a nice
+easy chair there--come and sit down in it. Those stairs are a bit
+trying, aren't they? I often wish we were on the ground floor."
+
+He lighted the gas in the senior partner's room, and turning back, took
+hold of the visitor's arm, and helped him to the easy chair. Then,
+having closed the doors, he sat down at Eldrick's desk, put his fingers
+together and waited. Pratt knew from experience that old Antony Bartle
+would not have come there except on business: he knew also, having been
+at Eldrick & Pascoe's for many years, that the old man would confide in
+him as readily as in either of his principals.
+
+"There's a nasty fog coming on outside," said Bartle, after a fit of
+coughing. "It gets on my lungs, and then it makes my heart bad. Mr.
+Eldrick in?"
+
+"Gone," replied Pratt. "All gone, Mr. Bartle--only me here."
+
+"You'll do," answered the old bookseller. "You're as good as they are."
+He leaned forward from the easy chair, and tapped the clerk's arm with a
+long, claw-like finger. "I say," he continued, with a smile that was
+something between a wink and a leer, and suggestive of a pleased
+satisfaction. "I've had a find!"
+
+"Oh!" responded Pratt. "One of your rare books, Mr. Bartle? Got
+something for twopence that you'll sell for ten guineas? You're one of
+the lucky ones, you know, you are!"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" chuckled Bartle. "And I had to pay for my
+knowledge, young man, before I got it--we all have. No--but I've found
+something: not half an hour ago. Came straight here with it. Matters for
+lawyers, of course."
+
+"Yes?" said Pratt inquiringly. "And--what may it be?" He was expecting
+the visitor to produce something, but the old man again leaned forward,
+and dug his finger once more into the clerk's sleeve.
+
+"I say!" he whispered. "You remember John Mallathorpe and the affair
+of--how long is it since?"
+
+"Two years," answered Pratt promptly. "Of course I do. Couldn't very
+well forget it, or him."
+
+He let his mind go back for the moment to an affair which had provided
+Barford and the neighbourhood with a nine days' sensation. One winter
+morning, just two years previously, Mr. John Mallathorpe, one of the
+best-known manufacturers and richest men of the town, had been killed by
+the falling of his own mill-chimney. The condition of the chimney had
+been doubtful for some little time; experts had been examining it for
+several days: at the moment of the catastrophe, Mallathorpe himself,
+some of his principal managers, and a couple of professional
+steeple-jacks, were gathered at its base, consulting on a report. The
+great hundred-foot structure above them had collapsed without the
+slightest warning: Mallathorpe, his principal manager, and his cashier,
+had been killed on the spot: two other bystanders had subsequently died
+from injuries received. No such accident had occurred in Barford, nor in
+the surrounding manufacturing district, for many years, and there had
+been much interest in it, for according to the expert's conclusions the
+chimney was in no immediate danger.
+
+Other mill-owners then began to examine their chimneys, and for many
+weeks Barford folk had talked of little else than the danger of living
+in the shadows of these great masses of masonry.
+
+But there had soon been something else to talk of. It sprang out of the
+accident--and it was of particular interest to persons who, like Linford
+Pratt, were of the legal profession. John Mallathorpe, so far as anybody
+knew or could ascertain, had died intestate. No solicitor in the town
+had ever made a will for him. No solicitor elsewhere had ever made a
+will for him. No one had ever heard that he had made a will for himself.
+There was no will. Drastic search of his safes, his desks, his drawers
+revealed nothing--not even a memorandum. No friend of his had ever heard
+him mention a will. He had always been something of a queer man. He was
+a confirmed bachelor. The only relation he had in the world was his
+sister-in-law, the widow of his deceased younger brother, and her two
+children--a son and a daughter. And as soon as he was dead, and it was
+plain that he had died intestate, they put in their claim to his
+property.
+
+John Mallathorpe had left a handsome property. He had been making money
+all his life. His business was a considerable one--he employed two
+thousand workpeople. His average annual profit from his mills was
+reckoned in thousands--four or five thousands at least. And some years
+before his death, he had bought one of the finest estates in the
+neighbourhood, Normandale Grange, a beautiful old house, set amidst
+charming and romantic scenery in a valley, which, though within twelve
+miles of Barford, might have been in the heart of the Highlands.
+Therefore, it was no small thing that Mrs. Richard Mallathorpe and her
+two children laid claim to. Up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death,
+they had lived in very humble fashion--lived, indeed, on an allowance
+from their well-to-do kinsman--for Richard Mallathorpe had been as much
+of a waster as his brother had been of a money-getter. And there was no
+withstanding their claim when it was finally decided that John
+Mallathorpe had died intestate--no withstanding that, at any rate, of
+the nephew and niece. The nephew had taken all the real estate: he and
+his sister had shared the personal property. And for some months they
+and their mother had been safely installed at Normandale Grange, and in
+full possession of the dead man's wealth and business.
+
+All this flashed through Linford Pratt's mind in a few seconds--he knew
+all the story: he had often thought of the extraordinary good fortune of
+those young people. To be living on charity one week--and the next to be
+legal possessors of thousands a year!--oh, if only such luck would come
+his way!
+
+"Of course!" he repeated, looking thoughtfully at the old bookseller.
+"Not the sort of thing one does forget in a hurry, Mr. Bartle. What of
+it?"
+
+Antony Bartle leaned back in his easy chair and chuckled--something,
+some idea, seemed to be affording him amusement.
+
+"I'm eighty years old," he remarked. "No, I'm more, to be exact. I shall
+be eighty-two come February. When you've lived as long as that, young
+Mr. Pratt, you'll know that this life is a game of topsy-turvy--to some
+folks, at any rate. Just so!"
+
+"You didn't come here to tell me that, Mr. Bartle," said Pratt. He was
+an essentially practical young man who dined at half-past six every
+evening, having lunched on no more than bread-and-cheese and a glass of
+ale, and he also had his evenings well mapped out. "I know that already,
+sir."
+
+"Aye, aye, but you'll know more of it later on," replied Bartle.
+"Well--you know, too, no doubt, that the late John Mallathorpe was a
+bit--only a bit--of a book-collector; collected books and pamphlets
+relating to this district?"
+
+"I've heard of it," answered the clerk.
+
+"He had that collection in his private room at the mill," continued the
+old bookseller, "and when the new folks took hold, I persuaded them to
+sell it to me. There wasn't such a lot--maybe a hundred volumes
+altogether--but I wanted what there was. And as they were of no interest
+to them, they sold 'em. That's some months ago. I put all the books in a
+corner--and I never really examined them until this very afternoon.
+Then--by this afternoon's post--I got a letter from a Barford man who's
+now out in America. He wanted to know if I could supply him with a nice
+copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_. I knew there was one in that
+Mallathorpe collection, so I got it out, and examined it. And in the
+pocket inside, in which there's a map, I found--what d'ye think?"
+
+"Couldn't say," replied Pratt. He was still thinking of his dinner, and
+of an important engagement to follow it, and he had not the least idea
+that old Antony Bartle was going to tell him anything very important.
+"Letters? Bank-notes? Something of that sort?"
+
+The old bookseller leaned nearer, across the corner of the desk, until
+his queer, wrinkled face was almost close to Pratt's sharp, youthful
+one. Again he lifted the claw-like finger: again he tapped the clerk's
+arm.
+
+"I found John Mallathorpe's will!" he whispered. "His--will!"
+
+Linford Pratt jumped out of his chair. For a second he stared in
+speechless amazement at the old man; then he plunged his hands deep into
+his trousers' pockets, opened his mouth, and let out a sudden
+exclamation.
+
+"No!" he said. "No! John Mallathorpe's--will? His--will!"
+
+"Made the very day on which he died," answered Bartle, nodding
+emphatically.
+
+"Queer, wasn't it? He might have had some--premonition, eh?"
+
+Pratt sat down again.
+
+"Where is it?" he asked.
+
+"Here in my pocket," replied the old bookseller, tapping his rusty coat.
+"Oh, it's all right, I assure you. All duly made out, signed, and
+witnessed. Everything in order, I know!--because a long, a very long
+time ago, I was like you, an attorney's clerk. I've drafted many a will,
+and witnessed many a will, in my time. I've read this, every word of
+it--it's all right. Nothing can upset it."
+
+"Let's see it," said Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Well--I've no objection--I know you, of course," answered Bartle, "but
+I'd rather show it first to Mr. Eldrick. Couldn't you telephone up to
+his house and ask him to run back here?"
+
+"Certainly," replied Pratt. "He mayn't be there, though. But I can try.
+You haven't shown it to anybody else?"
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," said Bartle.
+"I tell you it's not much more than half an hour since I found it. It's
+not a long document. Do you know how it is that it's never come out?" he
+went on, turning eagerly to Pratt, who had risen again. "It's easily
+explained. The will's witnessed by those two men who were killed at the
+same time as John Mallathorpe! So, of course, there was nobody to say
+that it was in evidence. My notion is that he and those two
+men--Gaukrodger and Marshall, his manager and cashier--had signed it not
+long before the accident, and that Mallathorpe had popped it into the
+pocket of that book before going out into the yard. Eh? But see if you
+can get Mr. Eldrick down here, and we'll read it together. And I
+say--this office seems uncommonly stuffy--can you open the window a bit
+or something?--I feel oppressed, like."
+
+Pratt opened a window which looked out on the street. He glanced at the
+old man for a moment and saw that his face, always pallid, was even
+paler than usual.
+
+"You've been talking too much," he said. "Rest yourself, Mr. Bartle,
+while I ring up Mr. Eldrick's house. If he isn't there, I'll try his
+club--he often turns in there for an hour before going home."
+
+He went out by a private door to the telephone box, which stood in a
+lobby used by various occupants of the building. And when he had rung up
+Eldrick's private house and was waiting for the answer, he asked himself
+what this discovery would mean to the present holders of the Mallathorpe
+property, and his curiosity--a strongly developed quality in him--became
+more and more excited. If Eldrick was not at home, if he could not get
+in touch with him, he would persuade old Bartle to let him see his
+find--he would cheerfully go late to his dinner if he could only get a
+peep at this strangely discovered document. Romance! Why, this indeed
+was romance; and it might be--what else? Old Bartle had already chuckled
+about topsy-turvydom: did that mean that--
+
+The telephone bell rang: Eldrick had not yet reached his house. Pratt
+got on to the club: Eldrick had not been there. He rang off, and went
+back to the private room.
+
+"Can't get hold of him, Mr. Bartle," he began, as he closed the door.
+"He's not at home, and he's not at the club. I say!--you might as well
+let me have a look at----"
+
+Pratt suddenly stopped. There was a strange silence in the room: the old
+man's wheezy breathing was no longer heard. And the clerk moved forward
+quickly and looked round the high back of the easy chair....
+
+He knew at once what had happened--knew that old Bartle was dead before
+he laid a finger on the wasted hand which had dropped helplessly at his
+side. He had evidently died without a sound or a movement--died as
+quietly as he would have gone to sleep. Indeed, he looked as if he had
+just laid his old head against the padding of the chair and dropped
+asleep, and Pratt, who had seen death before, knew that he would never
+wake again. He waited a moment, listening in the silence. Once he
+touched the old man's hand; once, he bent nearer, still listening. And
+then, without hesitation, and with fingers that remained as steady as if
+nothing had happened, he unbuttoned Antony Bartle's coat, and drew a
+folded paper from the inner pocket.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+IN TRUST
+
+
+As quietly and composedly as if he were discharging the most ordinary of
+his daily duties, Pratt unfolded the document, and went close to the
+solitary gas jet above Eldrick's desk. What he held in his hand was a
+half-sheet of ruled foolscap paper, closely covered with writing, which
+he at once recognized as that of the late John Mallathorpe. He was
+familiar with that writing--he had often seen it. It was an
+old-fashioned writing--clear, distinct, with every letter well and fully
+formed.
+
+"Made it himself!" muttered Pratt. "Um!--looks as if he wanted to keep
+the terms secret. Well----"
+
+He read the will through--rapidly, but with care, murmuring the
+phraseology half aloud.
+
+"This is the last will of me, John Mallathorpe, of Normandale Grange, in
+the parish of Normandale, in the West Riding of the County of York. I
+appoint Martin William Charlesworth, manufacturer, of Holly Lodge,
+Barford, and Arthur James Wyatt, chartered accountant, of 65, Beck
+Street, Barford, executors and trustees of this my will. I give and
+devise all my estate and effects real and personal of which I may die
+possessed or entitled to unto the said Martin William Charlesworth and
+Arthur James Wyatt upon trust for the following purposes to be carried
+out by them under the following instructions, namely:--As soon after my
+death as is conveniently possible they will sell all my real estate,
+either by private treaty or by public auction; they shall sell all my
+personal property of any nature whatsoever; they shall sell my business
+at Mallathorpe's mill in Barford as a going concern to any private
+purchaser or to any company already in existence or formed for the
+purpose of acquiring it; and they shall collect all debts and moneys due
+to me. And having sold and disposed of all my property, real and
+personal, and brought all the proceeds of such sales and of such
+collection of debts and moneys into one common fund they shall first pay
+all debts owing by me and all legal duties and expenses arising out of
+my death and this disposition of my property and shall then distribute
+my estate as follows, namely: to each of themselves, Martin William
+Charlesworth and Arthur James Wyatt, they shall pay the sum of five
+thousand pounds; to my sister-in-law, Ann Mallathorpe, they shall pay
+the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my nephew, Harper John Mallathorpe,
+they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my niece, Nesta
+Mallathorpe, they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds. And as to
+the whole of the remaining residue they shall pay it in one sum to the
+Mayor and Corporation of the borough of Barford in the County of York to
+be applied by the said Mayor and Corporation at their own absolute
+discretion and in any manner which seems good to them to the
+establishment, furtherance and development of technical and commercial
+education in the said borough of Barford. Dated this sixteenth day of
+November, 1906.
+
+ Signed by the testator in
+ the presence of us both
+ present at the same
+ time who in his presence } JOHN MALLATHORPE
+ and in the presence
+ of each other
+ have hereunto set our
+ names as witnesses.
+
+ HENRY GAUKRODGER, 16, Florence Street,
+ Barford, Mill Manager.
+
+ CHARLES WATSON MARSHALL, 56, Laburnum Terrace,
+ Barford, Cashier."
+
+As the last word left his lips Pratt carefully folded up the will,
+slipped it into an inner pocket of his coat, and firmly buttoned the
+coat across his chest. Then, without as much as a glance at the dead
+man, he left the room, and again visited the telephone box. He was
+engaged in it for a few minutes. When he came out he heard steps coming
+up the staircase, and looking over the banisters he saw the senior
+partner, Eldrick, a middle-aged man. Eldrick looked up, and saw Pratt.
+
+"I hear you've been ringing me up at the club, Pratt," he said. "What is
+it?"
+
+Pratt waited until Eldrick had come up to the landing. Then he pointed
+to the door of the private room, and shook his head.
+
+"It's old Mr. Bartle, sir," he whispered. "He's in your room
+there--dead!"
+
+"Dead?" exclaimed Eldrick. "Dead!"
+
+Pratt shook his head again.
+
+"He came up not so long after you'd gone, sir," he said. "Everybody had
+gone but me--I was just going. Wanted to see you about something I don't
+know what. He was very tottery when he came in--complained of the stairs
+and the fog. I took him into your room, to sit down in the easy chair.
+And--he died straight off. Just," concluded Pratt, "just as if he was
+going quietly to sleep!"
+
+"You're sure he is dead?--not fainting?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"He's dead, sir--quite dead," replied Pratt. "I've rung up Dr.
+Melrose--he'll be here in a minute or two--and the Town Hall--the
+police--as well. Will you look at him, sir?"
+
+Eldrick silently motioned his clerk to open the door; together they
+walked into the room. And Eldrick looked at his quiet figure and wan
+face, and knew that Pratt was right.
+
+"Poor old chap!" he murmured, touching one of the thin hands. "He was a
+fine man in his time, Pratt; clever man! And he was very, very old--one
+of the oldest men in Barford. Well, we must wire to his grandson, Mr.
+Bartle Collingwood. You'll find his address in the book. He's the only
+relation the old fellow had."
+
+"Come in for everything, doesn't he, sir?" asked Pratt, as he took an
+address book from the desk, and picked up a sheaf of telegram forms.
+
+"Every penny!" murmured Eldrick. "Nice little fortune, too--a fine thing
+for a young fellow who's just been called to the Bar. As a matter of
+fact, he'll be fairly well independent, even if he never sees a brief in
+his life."
+
+"He has been called, has he, sir?" asked Pratt, laying a telegram form
+on Eldrick's writing pad and handing him a pen. "I wasn't aware of
+that."
+
+"Called this term--quite recently--at Gray's Inn," replied Eldrick, as
+he sat down. "Very promising, clever young man. Look here!--we'd better
+send two wires, one to his private address, and one to his chambers.
+They're both in that book. It's six o'clock, isn't it?--he might be at
+his chambers yet, but he may have gone home. I'll write both
+messages--you put the addresses on, and get the wire off--we must have
+him down here as soon as possible."
+
+"One address is 53x, Pump Court; the other's 96, Cloburn Square,"
+remarked Pratt consulting the book. "There's an express from King's
+Cross at 8.15 which gets here midnight."
+
+"Oh, it would do if he came down first thing in the morning--leave it to
+him," said Eldrick. "I say, Pratt, do you think an inquest will be
+necessary?"
+
+Pratt had not thought of that--he began to think. And while he was
+thinking, the doctor whom he had summoned came in. He looked at the dead
+man, asked the clerk a few questions, and was apparently satisfied. "I
+don't think there's any need for an inquest," he said in reply to
+Eldrick. "I knew the old man very well--he was much feebler than he
+would admit. The exertion of coming up these stairs of yours, and the
+coughing brought on by the fog outside--that was quite enough. Of
+course, the death will have to be reported in the usual way, but I have
+no hesitation in giving a certificate. You've let the Town Hall people
+know? Well, the body had better be removed to his rooms--we must send
+over and tell his housekeeper. He'd no relations in the town, had he?"
+
+"Only one in the world that he ever mentioned--his grandson--a young
+barrister in London," answered Eldrick. "We've just been wiring to him.
+Here, Pratt, you take these messages now, and get them off. Then we'll
+see about making all arrangements. By-the-by," he added, as Pratt moved
+towards the door, "you don't know what--what he came to see me about?"
+
+"Haven't the remotest idea, sir," answered Pratt, readily and glibly.
+"He died--just as I've told you--before he could tell me anything."
+
+He went downstairs, and out into the street, and away to the General
+Post Office, only conscious of one thing, only concerned about one
+thing--that he was now the sole possessor of a great secret. The
+opportunity which he had so often longed for had come. And as he hurried
+along through the gathering fog he repeated and repeated a fragment of
+the recent conversation between the man who was now dead, and
+himself--who remained very much alive.
+
+"You haven't shown it to anybody else?" Pratt had asked.
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," Antony Bartle
+had answered. So, in all that great town of Barford, he, Linford Pratt,
+he, alone out of a quarter of a million people, knew--what? The
+magnitude of what he knew not only amazed but exhilarated him. There
+were such possibilities for himself in that knowledge. He wanted to be
+alone, to think out those possibilities; to reckon up what they came to.
+Of one thing he was already certain--they should be, must be, turned to
+his own advantage.
+
+It was past eight o'clock before Pratt was able to go home to his
+lodgings. His landlady, meeting him in the hall, hoped that his dinner
+would not be spoiled: Pratt, who relied greatly on his dinner as his one
+great meal of the day, replied that he fervently hoped it wasn't, but
+that if it was it couldn't be helped, this time. For once he was
+thinking of something else than his dinner--as for his engagement for
+that evening, he had already thrown it over: he wanted to give all his
+energies and thoughts and time to his secret. Nevertheless, it was
+characteristic of him that he washed, changed his clothes, ate his
+dinner, and even glanced over the evening newspaper before he turned to
+the real business which was already deep in his brain. But at last, when
+the maid had cleared away the dinner things, and he was alone in his
+sitting-room, and had lighted his pipe, and mixed himself a drop of
+whisky-and-water--the only indulgence in such things that he allowed
+himself within the twenty-four hours--he drew John Mallathorpe's will
+from his pocket, and read it carefully three times. And then he began to
+think, closely and steadily.
+
+First of all, the will was a good will. Nothing could upset it. It was
+absolutely valid. It was not couched in the terms which a solicitor
+would have employed, but it clearly and plainly expressed John
+Mallathorpe's intentions and meanings in respect to the disposal of his
+property. Nothing could be clearer. The properly appointed trustees were
+to realize his estate. They were to distribute it according to his
+specified instructions. It was all as plain as a pikestaff. Pratt, who
+was a good lawyer, knew what the Probate Court would say to that will if
+it were ever brought up before it, as he did, a quite satisfactory will.
+And it was validly executed. Hundreds of people, competent to do so,
+could swear to John Mallathorpe's signature; hundreds to Gaukrodger's;
+thousands to Marshall's--who as cashier was always sending his signature
+broadcast. No, there was nothing to do but to put that into the hands of
+the trustees named in it, and then....
+
+Pratt thought next of the two trustees. They were well-known men in the
+town. They were comparatively young men--about forty. They were men of
+great energy. Their chief interests were in educational matters--that,
+no doubt, was why John Mallathorpe had appointed them trustees. Wyatt
+had been plaguing the town for two years to start commercial schools:
+Charlesworth was a devoted champion of technical schools. Pratt knew how
+the hearts of both would leap, if he suddenly told them that enormous
+funds were at their disposal for the furtherance of their schemes. And
+he also knew something else--that neither Charlesworth nor Wyatt had the
+faintest, remotest notion or suspicion that John Mallathorpe had ever
+made such a will, or they would have moved heaven and earth, pulled down
+Normandale Grange and Mallathorpe's Mill, in their efforts to find it.
+
+But the effect--the effect of producing the will--now? Pratt, like
+everybody else, had been deeply interested in the Mallathorpe affair.
+There was so little doubt that John Mallathorpe had died intestate, such
+absolute certainty that his only living relations were his deceased
+brother's two children and their mother, that the necessary proceedings
+for putting Harper Mallathorpe and his sister Nesta in possession of the
+property, real and personal, had been comparatively simple and speedy.
+But--what was it worth? What would the two trustees have been able to
+hand over to the Mayor and Corporation of Barford, if the will had been
+found as soon as John Mallathorpe died? Pratt, from what he remembered
+of the bulk and calculations at the time, made a rapid estimate. As near
+as he could reckon, the Mayor and Corporation would have got about
+L300,000.
+
+That, then--and this was what he wanted to get at--was what these young
+people would lose if he produced the will. Nay!--on second thoughts, it
+would be much more, very much more in some time; for the manufacturing
+business was being carried on by them, and was apparently doing as well
+as ever. It was really an enormous amount which they would lose--and
+they would get--what? Ten thousand apiece and their mother a like sum.
+Thirty thousand pounds in all--in comparison with hundreds of thousands.
+But they would have no choice in the matter. Nothing could upset that
+will.
+
+He began to think of the three people whom the production of this will
+would dispossess. He knew little of them beyond what common gossip had
+related at the time of John Mallathorpe's sudden death. They had lived
+in very quiet fashion, somewhere on the outskirts of the town, until
+this change in their fortunes. Once or twice Pratt had seen Mrs.
+Mallathorpe in her carriage in the Barford streets--somebody had pointed
+her out to him, and had observed sneeringly that folk can soon adapt
+themselves to circumstances, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe now gave herself
+all the airs of a duchess, though she had been no more than a hospital
+nurse before she married Richard Mallathorpe. And Pratt had also seen
+young Harper Mallathorpe now and then in the town--since the good
+fortune arrived--and had envied him: he had also thought what a strange
+thing it was that money went to young fellows who seemed to have no
+particular endowments of brain or energy. Harper was a very ordinary
+young man, not over intelligent in appearance, who, Pratt had heard, was
+often seen lounging about the one or two fashionable hotels of the
+place. As for the daughter, Pratt did not remember having ever set eyes
+on her--but he had heard that up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death
+she had earned her own living as a governess, or a nurse, or something
+of that sort.
+
+He turned from thinking of these three people to thoughts about himself.
+Pratt often thought about himself, and always in one direction--the
+direction of self-advancement. He was always wanting to get on. He had
+nobody to help him. He had kept himself since he was seventeen. His
+father and mother were dead; he had no brothers or sisters--the only
+relations he had, uncles and aunts, lived--some in London, some in
+Canada. He was now twenty-eight, and earning four pounds a week. He had
+immense confidence in himself, but he had never seen much chance of
+escaping from drudgery. He had often thought of asking Eldrick & Pascoe
+to give him his articles--but he had a shrewd idea that his request
+would be refused. No--it was difficult to get out of a rut. And yet--he
+was a clever fellow, a good-looking fellow, a sharp, shrewd, able--and
+here was a chance, such a chance as scarcely ever comes to a man. He
+would be a fool if he did not take it, and use it to his own best and
+lasting advantage.
+
+And so he locked up the will in a safe place, and went to bed, resolved
+to take a bold step towards fortune on the morrow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+THE SHOP-BOY
+
+
+When Pratt arrived at Eldrick & Pascoe's office at his usual hour of
+nine next morning, he found the senior partner already there. And with
+him was a young man whom the clerk at once set down as Mr. Bartle
+Collingwood, and looked at with considerable interest and curiosity. He
+had often heard of Mr. Bartle Collingwood, but had never seen him. He
+knew that he was the only son of old Antony Bartle's only child--a
+daughter who had married a London man; he knew, too, that Collingwood's
+parents were both dead, and that the old bookseller had left their son
+everything he possessed--a very nice little fortune, as Eldrick had
+observed last night. And since last night he had known that Collingwood
+had just been called to the Bar, and was on the threshold of what
+Eldrick, who evidently knew all about it, believed to be a promising
+career. Well, there he was in the flesh; and Pratt, who was a born
+observer of men and events, took a good look at him as he stood just
+within the private room, talking to Eldrick.
+
+A good-looking fellow; what most folk would call handsome; dark,
+clean-shaven, tall, with a certain air of reserve about his well-cut
+features, firm lips, and steady eyes that suggested strength and
+determination. He would look very well in wig and gown, decided Pratt,
+viewing matters from a professional standpoint; he was just the sort
+that clients would feel a natural confidence in, and that juries would
+listen to. Another of the lucky ones, too; for Pratt knew the contents
+of Antony Bartle's will, and that the young man at whom he was looking
+had succeeded to a cool five-and-twenty thousand pounds, at least,
+through his grandfather's death.
+
+"Here is Pratt," said Eldrick, glancing into the outer office as the
+clerk entered it. "Pratt, come in here--here is Mr. Bartle Collingwood,
+He would like you to tell him the facts about Mr. Bartle's death."
+
+Pratt walked in--armed and prepared. He was a clever hand at foreseeing
+things, and he had known all along that he would have to answer
+questions about the event of the previous night.
+
+"There's very little to tell, sir," he said, with a polite
+acknowledgment of Collingwood's greeting. "Mr. Bartle came up here just
+as I was leaving--everybody else had left. He wanted to see Mr. Eldrick.
+Why, he didn't say. He was coughing a good deal when he came in, and he
+complained of the fog outside, and of the stairs. He said
+something--just a mere mention--about his heart being bad. I lighted the
+gas in here, and helped him into the chair. He just sat down, laid his
+head back, and died."
+
+"Without saying anything further?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Not a word more, Mr. Collingwood," answered Pratt. "He--well, it was
+just as if he had dropped off to sleep. Of course, at first I thought
+he'd fainted, but I soon saw what it was--it so happens that I've seen a
+death just as sudden as that, once before--my landlady's husband died in
+a very similar fashion, in my presence. There was nothing I could do,
+Mr. Collingwood--except ring up Mr. Eldrick, and the doctor, and the
+police."
+
+"Mr. Pratt made himself very useful last night in making arrangements,"
+remarked Eldrick, looking at Collingwood. "As it is, there is very
+little to do. There will be no need for any inquest; Melrose has given
+his certificate. So--there are only the funeral arrangements. We can
+help you with that matter, of course. But first you'd no doubt like to
+go to your grandfather's place and look through his papers? We have his
+will here, you know--and I've already told you its effect."
+
+"I'm much obliged to you, Mr. Pratt," said Collingwood, turning to the
+clerk. He turned again to Eldrick. "All right," he went on. "I'll go
+over to Quagg Alley. Bye-the-bye, Mr. Pratt--my grandfather didn't tell
+you anything of the reason of his call here?"
+
+"Not a word, sir," replied Pratt. "Merely said he wanted Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Had he any legal business in process?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick and his clerk both shook their heads. No, Mr. Bartle had no
+business of that sort that they knew of. Nothing--but there again Pratt
+was prepared.
+
+"It might have been about the lease of that property in Horsebridge
+Land, sir," he said, glancing at his principal. "He did mention that,
+you know, when he was in here a few weeks ago."
+
+"Just so," agreed Eldrick. "Well, you'll let me know if we can be of
+use," he went on, as Collingwood turned away. "Pratt can be at your
+disposal, any time."
+
+Collingwood thanked him and went off. He had travelled down from London
+by the earliest morning train, and leaving his portmanteau at the hotel
+of the Barford terminus, had gone straight to Eldrick & Pascoe's office;
+accordingly this was his first visit to the shop in Quagg Alley. But he
+knew the shop and its surroundings well enough, though he had not been
+in Barford for some time; he also knew Antony Bartle's old housekeeper,
+Mrs. Clough, a rough and ready Yorkshirewoman, who had looked after the
+old man as long as he, Collingwood, could remember. She received him as
+calmly as if he had merely stepped across the street to inquire after
+his grandfather's health.
+
+"I thowt ye'd be down here first thing, Mestur Collingwood," she said,
+as he walked into the parlor at the back of the shop. "Of course,
+there's naught to be done except to see after yer grandfather's burying.
+I don't know if ye were surprised or no when t' lawyers tellygraphed to
+yer last night? I weren't surprised to hear what had happened. I'd been
+expecting summat o' that sort this last month or two."
+
+"You mean--he was failing?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"He were gettin' feebler and feebler every day," said the housekeeper.
+"But nobody dare say so to him, and he wouldn't admit it his-self. He
+were that theer high-spirited 'at he did things same as if he were a
+young man. But I knew how it 'ud be in the end--and so it has been--I
+knew he'd go off all of a sudden. And of course I had all in
+readiness--when they brought him back last night there was naught to do
+but lay him out. Me and Mrs. Thompson next door, did it, i' no time.
+Wheer will you be for buryin' him, Mestur Collingwood?"
+
+"We must think that over," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Well, an' theer's all ready for that, too," responded Mrs. Clough.
+"He's had his grave all ready i' the cemetery this three year--I
+remember when he bowt it--it's under a yew-tree, and he told me 'at he'd
+ordered his monnyment an' all. So yer an' t' lawyers'll have no great
+trouble about them matters. Mestur Eldrick, he gev' orders for t' coffin
+last night."
+
+Collingwood left these gruesome details--highly pleasing to their
+narrator--and went up to look at his dead grandfather. He had never seen
+much of him, but they had kept up a regular correspondence, and always
+been on terms of affection, and he was sorry that he had not been with
+the old man at the last. He remained looking at the queer, quiet, old
+face for a while; when he went down again, Mrs. Clough was talking to a
+sharp-looking lad, of apparently sixteen or seventeen years, who stood
+at the door leading into the shop, and who glanced at Collingwood with
+keen interest and speculation.
+
+"Here's Jabey Naylor wants to know if he's to do aught, Mestur," said
+the housekeeper. "Of course, I've telled him 'at we can't have the shop
+open till the burying's over--so I don't know what theer is that he can
+do."
+
+"Oh, well, let him come into the shop with me," answered Collingwood. He
+motioned the lad to follow him out of the parlour. "So you were Mr.
+Bartle's assistant, eh?" he asked. "Had he anybody else?"
+
+"Nobody but me, sir," replied the lad. "I've been with him a year."
+
+"And your name's what?" inquired Collingwood.
+
+"Jabez Naylor, sir, but everybody call me Jabey."
+
+"I see--Jabey for short, eh?" said Collingwood good-humouredly. He
+walked into the shop, followed by the boy, and closed the door. The
+outer door into Quagg Alley was locked: a light blind was drawn over the
+one window; the books and engravings on the shelves and in the presses
+were veiled in a half-gloom. "Well, as Mrs. Clough says, we can't do any
+business for a few days, Jabey--after that we must see what can be done.
+You shall have your wages just the same, of course, and you may look in
+every day to see if there's anything you can do. You were here
+yesterday, of course? Were you in the shop when Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the lad. "I'd been in with him all the afternoon. I
+was here when he went out--and here when they came to say he'd died at
+Mr. Eldrick's."
+
+Collingwood sat down in his grandfather's chair, at a big table, piled
+high with books and papers, which stood in the middle of the floor.
+
+"Did my grandfather seem at all unwell when he went out?" he asked.
+
+"No, sir. He had been coughing a bit more than usual--that was all.
+There was a fog came on about five o'clock, and he said it bothered
+him."
+
+"What had he been doing during the afternoon? Anything particular?"
+
+"Nothing at all particular before half-past four or so, sir."
+
+Collingwood took a closer look at Jabez Naylor. He saw that he was an
+observant lad, evidently of superior intelligence--a good specimen of
+the sharp town lad, well trained in a modern elementary school.
+
+"Oh?" he said. "Nothing particular before half-past four, eh? Did he do
+something particular after half-past four?"
+
+"There was a post came in just about then, sir," answered Jabey. "There
+was an American letter--that's it, sir--just in front of you. Mr. Bartle
+read it, and asked me if we'd got a good clear copy of Hopkinson's
+_History of Barford_. I reminded him that there was a copy amongst the
+books that had been bought from Mallathorpe's Mill some time ago."
+
+"Books that had belonged to Mr. John Mallathorpe, who was killed?" asked
+Collingwood, who was fully acquainted with the chimney accident.
+
+"Yes, sir, Mr. Bartle bought a lot of books that Mr. Mallathorpe had at
+the Mill--local books. They're there in that corner: they were put there
+when I fetched them, and he'd never looked over them since,
+particularly."
+
+"Well--and this _History of Barford_? You reminded him of it?"
+
+"I got it out for him, sir. He sat down--where you're sitting--and began
+to examine it. He said something about it being a nice copy, and he'd
+get it off that night--that's it, sir: I didn't read it, of course. And
+then he took some papers out of a pocket that's inside it, and I heard
+him say 'Bless my soul--who'd have thought it!'"
+
+Collingwood picked up the book which the boy indicated--a thick,
+substantially bound volume, inside one cover of which was a linen
+pocket, wherein were some loose maps and plans of Barford.
+
+"These what he took out?" he asked, holding them up.
+
+"Yes, sir, but there was another paper, with writing on it--a biggish
+sheet of paper--written all over."
+
+"Did you see what the writing was? Did you see any of it?"
+
+"No, sir--only that it was writing, I was dusting those shelves out,
+over there; when I heard Mr. Bartle say what he did. I just looked
+round, over my shoulder--that was all."
+
+"Was he reading this paper that you speak of?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he was holding it up to the gas, reading it."
+
+"Do you know what he did with it?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he folded it up and put it in his pocket."
+
+"Did he say any more--make any remark?"
+
+"No, sir. He wrote a letter then."
+
+"At once?"
+
+"Yes, sir--straight off. But he wasn't more than a minute writing it.
+Then he sent me to post it at the pillar-box, at the end of the Alley."
+
+"Did you read the address?"
+
+The lad turned to a book which stood with others in a rack over the
+chimney-piece, and tapped it with his finger.
+
+"Yes, sir--because Mr. Bartle gave orders when I first came here that a
+register of every letter sent out was to be kept--I've always entered
+them in this book."
+
+"And this letter you're talking about--to whom was it addressed?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe, Normandale Grange, sir."
+
+"You went and posted it at once?"
+
+"That very minute, sir."
+
+"Was it soon afterwards that Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"He went out as soon as I came back, sir."
+
+"And you never saw him again?"
+
+Jabey shook his head.
+
+"Not alive, sir," he answered. "I saw him when they brought him back."
+
+"How long had he been out when you heard he was dead?"
+
+"About an hour, sir--just after six it was when they told Mrs. Clough
+and me. He went out at ten minutes past five."
+
+Collingwood got up. He gave the lad's shoulder a friendly squeeze.
+
+"All right!" he said. "Now you seem a smart, intelligent lad--don't
+mention a word to any one of what we've been talking about. You have not
+mentioned it before, I suppose? Not a word? That's right--don't. Come in
+again tomorrow morning to see if I want you to be here as usual. I'm
+going to put a manager into this shop."
+
+When the boy had gone Collingwood locked up the shop from the house
+side, put the key in his pocket, and went into the kitchen.
+
+"Mrs. Clough," he said. "I want to see the clothes which my grandfather
+was wearing when he was brought home last night. Where are they?"
+
+"They're in that little room aside of his bed-chamber, Mestur
+Collingwood," replied the housekeeper. "I laid 'em all there, on the
+clothes-press, just as they were taken off of him, by Lawyer Eldrick's
+orders--he said they hadn't been examined, and wasn't to be, till you
+came. Nobody whatever's touched 'em since."
+
+Collingwood went upstairs and into the little room--a sort of box-room
+opening out of that in which the old man lay. There were the clothes; he
+went through the pockets of every garment. He found such things as keys,
+a purse, loose money, a memorandum book, a bookseller's catalogue or
+two, two or three letters of a business sort--but there was no big
+folded paper, covered with writing, such as Jabey Naylor had described.
+
+The mention of that paper had excited Collingwood's curiosity. He
+rapidly summed up what he had learned. His grandfather had found a
+paper, closely written upon, in a book which had been the property of
+John Mallathorpe, deceased. The discovery had surprised him, for he had
+given voice to an exclamation of what was evidently astonishment. He had
+put the paper in his pocket. Then he had written a letter--to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe of Normandale Grange. When his shop-boy had posted that
+letter, he himself had gone out--to his solicitor. What, asked
+Collingwood, was the reasonable presumption? The old man had gone to
+Eldrick to show him the paper which he had found.
+
+He lingered in the little room for a few minutes, thinking. No one but
+Pratt had been with Antony Bartle at the time of his seizure and sudden
+death. What sort of a fellow was Pratt? Was he honest? Was his word to
+be trusted? Had he told the precise truth about the old man's death? He
+was evidently a suave, polite, obliging sort of fellow, this clerk, but
+it was a curious thing that if Antony Bartle had that paper, whatever it
+was--in his pocket when he went to Eldrick's office it should not be in
+his pocket still--if his clothing had really remained untouched. Already
+suspicion was in Collingwood's mind--vague and indefinable, but there.
+
+He was half inclined to go straight back to Eldrick & Pascoe's and tell
+Eldrick what Jabey Naylor had just told him. But he reflected that while
+Naylor went out to post the letter, the old bookseller might have put
+the paper elsewhere; locked it up in his safe, perhaps. One thing,
+however, he, Collingwood, could do at once--he could ask Mrs.
+Mallathorpe if the letter referred to the paper. He was fully acquainted
+with all the facts of the Mallathorpe history; old Bartle, knowing they
+would interest his grandson, had sent him the local newspaper accounts
+of its various episodes. It was only twelve miles to Normandale
+Grange--a motor-car would carry him there within the hour. He glanced at
+his watch--just ten o 'clock.
+
+An hour later, Collingwood found himself standing in a fine oak-panelled
+room, the windows of which looked out on a romantic valley whose thickly
+wooded sides were still bright with the red and yellow tints of autumn.
+A door opened--he turned, expecting to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. Instead, he
+found himself looking at a girl, who glanced inquiringly at him, and
+from him to the card which he had sent in on his arrival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+
+Collingwood at once realized that he was in the presence of one of the
+two fortunate young people who had succeeded so suddenly--and, according
+to popular opinion, so unexpectedly--to John Mallathorpe's wealth. This
+was evidently Miss Nesta Mallathorpe, of whom he had heard, but whom he
+had never seen. She, however, was looking at him as if she knew him, and
+she smiled a little as she acknowledged his bow.
+
+"My mother is out in the grounds, with my brother," she said, motioning
+Collingwood towards a chair. "Won't you sit down, please?--I've sent for
+her; she will be here in a few minutes."
+
+Collingwood sat down; Nesta Mallathorpe sat down, too, and as they
+looked at each other she smiled again.
+
+"I have seen you before, Mr. Collingwood," she said. "I knew it must be
+you when they brought up your card."
+
+Collingwood used his glance of polite inquiry to make a closer
+inspection of his hostess. He decided that Nesta Mallathorpe was not so
+much pretty as eminently attractive--a tall, well-developed,
+warm-coloured young woman, whose clear grey eyes and red lips and
+general bearing indicated the possession of good health and spirits. And
+he was quite certain that if he had ever seen her before he would not
+have forgotten it.
+
+"Where have you seen me?" he asked, smiling back at her.
+
+"Have you forgotten the mock-trial--year before last?" she asked.
+
+Collingwood remembered what she was alluding to. He had taken part, in
+company with various other law students, in a mock-trial, a breach of
+promise case, for the benefit of a certain London hospital, to him had
+fallen one of the principal parts, that of counsel for the plaintiff.
+"When I saw your name, I remembered it at once," she went on. "I was
+there--I was a probationer at St. Chad's Hospital at that time."
+
+"Dear me!" said Collingwood, "I should have thought our histrionic
+efforts would have been forgotten. I'm afraid I don't remember much
+about them, except that we had a lot of fun out of the affair. So you
+were at St. Chad's?" he continued, with a reminiscence of the
+surroundings of the institution they were talking of. "Very different to
+Normandale!"
+
+"Yes," she replied. "Very--very different to Normandale. But when I was
+at St. Chad's, I didn't know that I--that we should ever come to
+Normandale."
+
+"And now that you are here?" he asked.
+
+The girl looked out through the big window on the valley which lay in
+front of the old house, and she shook her head a little.
+
+"It's very beautiful," she answered, "but I sometimes wish I was back at
+St. Chad's--with something to do. Here--there's nothing to do but to do
+nothing." Collingwood realized that this was not the complaint of the
+well-to-do young woman who finds time hang heavy--it was rather
+indicative of a desire for action.
+
+"I understand!" he said. "I think I should feel like that. One wants--I
+suppose--is it action, movement, what is it?"
+
+"Better call it occupation--that's a plain term," she answered. "We're
+both suffering from lack of occupation here, my brother and I. And it's
+bad for us--especially for him."
+
+Before Collingwood could think of any suitable reply to this remarkably
+fresh and candid statement, the door opened, and Mrs. Mallathorpe came
+in, followed by her son. And the visitor suddenly and immediately
+noticed the force and meaning of Nesta Mallathorpe's last remark. Harper
+Mallathorpe, a good-looking, but not remarkably intelligent appearing
+young man, of about Collingwood's own age, gave him the instant
+impression of being bored to death; the lack-lustre eye, the aimless
+lounge, the hands thrust into the pockets of his Norfolk jacket as if
+they took refuge there from sheer idleness--all these things told their
+tale. Here, thought Collingwood, was a fine example of how riches can be
+a curse--relieved of the necessity of having to earn his daily bread by
+labour, Harper Mallathorpe was finding life itself laborious.
+
+But there was nothing of aimlessness, idleness, or lack of vigour in
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. She was a woman of character, energy, of
+brains--Collingwood saw all that at one glance. A little, neat-figured,
+compact sort of woman, still very good-looking, still on the right side
+of fifty, with quick movements and sharp glances out of a pair of shrewd
+eyes: this, he thought, was one of those women who will readily
+undertake the control and management of big affairs. He felt, as Mrs.
+Mallathorpe turned inquiring looks on him, that as long as she was in
+charge of them the Mallathorpe family fortunes would be safe.
+
+"Mother," said Nesta, handing Collingwood's card to Mrs. Mallathorpe,
+"this gentleman is Mr. Bartle Collingwood. He's--aren't you?--yes, a
+barrister. He wants to see you. Why, I don't know. I have seen Mr.
+Collingwood before--but he didn't remember me. Now he'll tell you what
+he wants to see you about."
+
+"If you'll allow me to explain why I called on you, Mrs. Mallathorpe,"
+said Collingwood, "I don't suppose you ever heard of me--but you know,
+at any rate, the name of my grandfather, Mr. Antony Bartle, the
+bookseller, of Barford? My grandfather is dead--he died very suddenly
+last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe and Nesta murmured words of polite sympathy. Harper
+suddenly spoke--as if mere words were some relief to his obvious
+boredom.
+
+"I heard that, this morning," he said, turning to his mother. "Hopkins
+told me--he was in town last night. I meant to tell you."
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe, glancing at some letters which
+stood on a rack above the mantelpiece. "Why--I had a letter from Mr.
+Bartle this very morning!"
+
+"It is that letter that I have come to see you about," said Collingwood.
+"I only got down here from London at half-past eight this morning, and
+of course, I have made some inquiries about the circumstances of my
+grandfather's sudden death. He died very suddenly indeed at Mr.
+Eldrick's office. He had gone there on some business about which nobody
+knows nothing--he died before he could mention it. And according to his
+shop-boy, Jabey Naylor, the last thing he did was to write a letter to
+you. Now--I have reason for asking--would you mind telling me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe, what that letter was about?" Mrs. Mallathorpe moved over to
+the hearth, and took an envelope from the rack. She handed it to
+Collingwood, indicating that he could open it. And Collingwood drew out
+one of old Bartle's memorandum forms, and saw a couple of lines in the
+familiar crabbed handwriting:
+
+ "MRS. MALLATHORPE, Normandale Grange.
+
+ "Madam,--If you should drive into town tomorrow, will you kindly
+ give me a call? I want to see you particularly.
+
+ "Respectfully, A. BARTLE."
+
+Collingwood handed back the letter.
+
+"Have you any idea to what that refers?" he asked.
+
+"Well, I think I have--perhaps," answered Mrs. Mallathorpe. "Mr. Bartle
+persuaded us to sell him some books--local books--which my late
+brother-in-law had at his office in the mill. And since then he has been
+very anxious to buy more local books and pamphlets about this
+neighbourhood, and he had some which Mr. Bartle was very anxious indeed
+to get hold of. I suppose he wanted to see me about that." Collingwood
+made no remarks for the moment. He was wondering whether or not to tell
+what Jabey Naylor had told him about this paper taken from the linen
+pocket inside the _History of Barford_. But Mrs. Mallathorpe's ready
+explanation had given him a new idea, and he rose from his chair.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "I suppose that's it. You may think it odd that I
+wanted to know what he'd written about, but as it was certainly the last
+letter he wrote----"
+
+"Oh, I'm quite sure it must have been that!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+"And as I am going into Barford this afternoon, in any case, I meant to
+call at Mr. Bartle's. I'm sorry to hear of his death, poor old
+gentleman! But he was very old indeed, wasn't he?"
+
+"He was well over eighty," replied Collingwood. "Well, thank you
+again--and good-bye--I have a motorcar waiting outside there, and I have
+much to do in Barford when I get back."
+
+The two young people accompanied Collingwood into the hall. And Harper
+suddenly brightened.
+
+"I say!" he said. "Have a drink before you go. It's a long way in and
+out. Come into the dining-room."
+
+But Collingwood caught Nesta's eye, and he was quick to read a signal in
+it.
+
+"No, thanks awfully!" he answered. "I won't really--I must get
+back--I've such a lot of things to attend to. This is a very beautiful
+place of yours," he went on, as Harper, whose face had fallen at the
+visitor's refusal, followed with his sister to where the motor-car
+waited. "It might be a hundred miles from anywhere."
+
+"It's a thousand miles from anywhere!" muttered Harper. "Nothing to do
+here!"
+
+"No hunting, shooting, fishing?" asked Collingwood. "Get tired of 'em?
+Well, why not make a private golf-links in your park? You'd get a fine
+sporting course round there."
+
+"That's a good notion, Harper," observed Nesta, with some eagerness.
+"You could have it laid out this winter."
+
+Harper suddenly looked at Collingwood.
+
+"Going to stop in Barford?" he asked.
+
+"Till I settle my grandfather's affairs--yes," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Come and see us again," said Harper. "Come for the night--we've got a
+jolly good billiard table."
+
+"Do!" added Nesta heartily.
+
+"Since you're so kind, I will, then," replied Collingwood. "But not for
+a few days."
+
+He drove off--to wonder why he had visited Normandale Grange at all. For
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's explanation of the letter was doubtless the right
+one: Collingwood, little as he had seen of Antony Bartle, knew what a
+veritable sleuth-hound the old man was where rare books or engravings
+were concerned. Yet--why the sudden exclamation on finding that paper?
+Why the immediate writing of the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe? Why the
+setting off to Eldrick & Pascoe's office as soon as the letter was
+written? It all looked as if the old man had found some document, the
+contents of which related to the Mallathorpe family, and was anxious to
+communicate its nature to Mrs. Mallathorpe, and to his own solicitor, as
+soon as possible.
+
+"But that's probably only my fancy," he mused, as he sped back to
+Barford; "the real explanation is doubtless that suggested by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. Something made the old man think of the collection of local
+books at Normandale Grange--and he immediately wrote off to ask her to
+see him, with the idea of persuading her to let him have them. That's
+all there is in it--what a suspicious sort of party I must be getting!
+And suspicious of whom--and of what? Anyhow, I'm glad I went out
+there--and I'll certainly go again."
+
+On his way back to Barford he thought a good deal of the two young
+people he had just left. There was something of the irony of fate about
+their situation. There they were, in possession of money and luxury and
+youth--and already bored because they had nothing to do. He felt what
+closely approached a contemptuous pity for Harper--why didn't he turn to
+some occupation? There was their own business--why didn't he put in so
+many hours a day there, instead of leaving it to managers? Why didn't he
+interest himself in local affairs?--work at something? Already he had
+all the appearance of a man who is inclined to slackness--and in that
+case, mused Collingwood, his money would do him positive harm. But he
+had no thoughts of that sort about Nesta Mallathorpe: he had seen that
+she was of a different temperament.
+
+"She'll not stick there--idling," he said. "She'll break out and do
+something or other. What did she say? 'Suffering from lack of
+occupation'? A bad thing to suffer from, too--glad I'm not similarly
+afflicted!"
+
+There was immediate occupation for Collingwood himself when he reached
+the town. He had already made up his mind as to his future plans. He
+would sell his grandfather's business as soon as he could find a
+buyer--the old man had left a provision in his will, the gist of which
+Eldrick had already communicated to Collingwood, to the effect that his
+grandson could either carry on the business with the help of a competent
+manager until the stock was sold out, or could dispose of it as a going
+concern--Collingwood decided to sell it outright, and at once. But first
+it was necessary for him to look round the collection of valuable books
+and prints, and get an idea of what it was that he was about to sell.
+And when he had reached Barford again, and had lunched at his hotel, he
+went to Quagg Alley, and shut himself in the shop, and made a careful
+inspection of the treasures which old Bartle had raked up from many
+quarters.
+
+Within ten minutes of beginning his task Collingwood knew that he had
+gone out to Normandale Grange about a mere nothing. Picking up the
+_History of Barford_ which Jabey Naylor had spoken of, and turning over
+its leaves, two papers dropped out; one a half sheet of foolscap,
+folded; the other, a letter from some correspondent in the United
+States. Collingwood read the letter first--it was evidently that which
+Naylor had referred to as having been delivered the previous afternoon.
+It asked for a good, clear copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_--and
+then it went on, "If you should come across a copy of what is, I
+believe, a very rare tract or pamphlet, _Customs of the Court Leet of
+the Manor of Barford_, published, I think, about 1720, I should be glad
+to pay you any price you like to ask for it--in reason." So much for the
+letter--Collingwood turned from it to the folded paper. It was headed
+"List of Barford Tracts and Pamphlets in my box marked B.P. in the
+library at N Grange," and it was initialled at the foot J.M. Then
+followed the titles of some twenty-five or thirty works--amongst them
+was the very tract for which the American correspondent had inquired.
+And now Collingwood had what he believed to be a clear vision of what
+had puzzled him--his grandfather having just read the American buyer's
+request had found the list of these pamphlets inside the _History of
+Barford_, and in it the entry of the particular one he wanted, and at
+once he had written to Mrs. Mallathorpe in the hope of persuading her to
+sell what his American correspondent desired to buy. It was all quite
+plain--and the old man's visit to Eldrick & Pascoe's had nothing to do
+with the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Nor had he carried the folded paper
+in his pocket to Eldrick's--when Jabey Naylor went out to post the
+letter, Antony had placed the folded paper and the American letter
+together in the book and left them there. Quite, quite simple!--he had
+had his run to Normandale Grange and back all about nothing, and for
+nothing--except that he had met Nesta Mallathorpe, whom he was already
+sufficiently interested in to desire to see again. But having arrived at
+an explanation of what had puzzled him and made him suspicious, he
+dismissed that matter from his mind and thought no more of it.
+
+But across the street, all unknown to Collingwood, Linford Pratt was
+thinking a good deal. Collingwood had taken his car from a rank
+immediately opposite Eldrick & Pascoe's windows; Pratt, whose desk
+looked on to the street, had seen him drive away soon after ten o'clock
+and return about half-past twelve. Pratt, who knew everybody in the
+business centre of the town, knew the man who had driven Collingwood,
+and when he went out to his lunch he asked him where he had been that
+morning. The man, who knew no reason for secrecy, told him--and Pratt
+went off to eat his bread and cheese and drink his one glass of ale and
+to wonder why young Collingwood had been to Normandale Grange. He became
+slightly anxious and uneasy. He knew that Collingwood must have made
+some slight examination of old Bartle's papers. Was it--could it be
+possible that the old man, before going to Eldrick's, had left some
+memorandum of his discovery in his desk--or in a diary? He had said that
+he had not shown the will, nor mentioned the will, to a soul--but he
+might;--old men were so fussy about things--he might have set down in
+his diary that he had found it on such a day, and under such-and-such
+circumstances.
+
+However, there was one person who could definitely inform him of the
+reason of Collingwood's visit to Normandale Grange--Mrs. Mallathorpe. He
+would see her at once, and learn if he had any grounds for fear. And so
+it came about that at nine o'clock that evening, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for
+the second time that day, found herself asked to see a limb of the law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+POINT-BLANK
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was alone when Pratt's card was taken to her. Harper
+and Nesta were playing billiards in a distant part of the big house.
+Dinner had been over for an hour; Mrs. Mallathorpe, who had known what
+hard work and plenty of it was, in her time, was trifling over the
+newspapers--rest, comfort, and luxury were by no means boring to her.
+She looked at the card doubtfully--Pratt had pencilled a word or two on
+it: "Private and important business." Then she glanced at the butler--an
+elderly man who had been with John Mallathorpe many years before the
+catastrophe occurred.
+
+"Who is he, Dickenson?" she asked. "Do you know him?"
+
+"Clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's, in the town, ma'am," replied the butler.
+"I know the young man by sight."
+
+"Where is he?" inquired Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+
+"In the little morning room, at present, ma'am," said Dickenson.
+
+"Take him into the study," commanded Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I'll come to him
+presently." She was utterly at a loss to understand Pratt's presence
+there. Eldrick & Pascoe were not her solicitors, and she had no business
+of a legal nature in which they could be in any way concerned. But it
+suddenly struck her that that was the second time she had heard
+Eldrick's name mentioned that day--young Mr. Collingwood had said that
+his grandfather's death had taken place at Eldrick & Pascoe's office.
+Had this clerk come to see her about that?--and if so, what had she to
+do with it? Before she reached the room in which Pratt was waiting for
+her, Mrs. Mallathorpe was filled with curiosity. But in that curiosity
+there was not a trace of apprehension; nothing suggested to her that her
+visitor had called on any matter actually relating to herself or her
+family.
+
+The room into which Pratt had been taken was a small apartment opening
+out of the library--John Mallathorpe, when he bought Normandale Grange,
+had it altered and fitted to suit his own tastes, and Pratt, as soon as
+he entered it, saw that it was a place in which privacy and silence
+could be ensured. He noticed that it had double doors, and that there
+were heavy curtains before the window. And during the few minutes which
+elapsed between his entrance and Mrs. Mallathorpe's, he took the
+precaution to look behind those curtains, and to survey his
+surroundings--what he had to say was not to be overheard, if he could
+help it.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked her curiosity as soon as she came in. She did
+not remember that she had ever seen this young man before, but she
+recognized at once that he was a shrewd and sharp person, and she knew
+from his manner that he had news of importance to give her. She quietly
+acknowledged Pratt's somewhat elaborate bow, and motioned him to take a
+chair at the side of the big desk which stood before the fireplace--she
+herself sat down at the desk itself, in John Mallathorpe's old
+elbow-chair. And Pratt thought to himself that however much young Harper
+John Mallathorpe might be nominal master of Normandale Grange, the real
+master was there, in the self-evident, quiet-looking woman who turned to
+him in business-like fashion.
+
+"You want to see me?" said Mrs. Mallathorpe. "What is it?"
+
+"Business, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt. "As I said on my card--of a
+private and important sort."
+
+"To do with me?" she asked.
+
+"With you--and with your family," said Pratt. "And before we go any
+further, not a soul knows of it but--me."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe took another searching look at her visitor. Pratt was
+leaning over the corner of the desk, towards her; already he had lowered
+his tones to the mysterious and confidential note.
+
+"I don't know what you're talking about," she said. "Go on."
+
+Pratt bent a little nearer.
+
+"A question or two first, if you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe. And--answer
+them! They're for your own good. Young Mr. Collingwood called on you
+today."
+
+"Well--and what of it?"
+
+"What did he want?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated and frowned a little. And Pratt hastened to
+reassure her. "I'm using no idle words, Mrs. Mallathorpe, when I say
+it's for your own good. It is! What did he come for?"
+
+"He came to ask what there was in a letter which his grandfather wrote
+to me yesterday afternoon."
+
+"Antony Bartle had written to you, had he? And what did he say, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? For that is important!"
+
+"No more than that he wanted me to call on him today, if I happened to
+be in Barford."
+
+"Nothing more?"
+
+"Nothing more--not a word."
+
+"Nothing as to--why he wanted to see you?"
+
+"No! I thought that he probably wanted to see me about buying some books
+of the late Mr. Mallathorpe's."
+
+"Did you tell Collingwood that?" asked Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Yes--of course."
+
+"Did it satisfy him?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe frowned again.
+
+"Why shouldn't I?" she demanded. "It was the only explanation I could
+possibly give him. How do I know what the old man really wanted?"
+
+Pratt drew his chair still nearer to the desk. His voice dropped to a
+whisper and his eyes were full of meaning.
+
+"I'll tell you what he wanted!" he said speaking very slowly. "It's what
+I've come for. Listen! Antony Bartle came to our office soon after five
+yesterday afternoon. I was alone--everybody else had gone. I took him
+into Eldrick's room. He told me that in turning over one of the books
+which he had bought from Mallathorpe Mill, some short time ago, he had
+found--what do you think?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's cheek had flushed at the mention of the books from
+the Mill. Now, at Pratt's question, and under his searching eye, she
+turned very pale, and the clerk saw her fingers tighten on the arms of
+her chair.
+
+"What?" she asked. "What?"
+
+"John Mallathorpe's will!" he answered. "Do you understand? His--will!"
+
+The woman glanced quickly about her--at the doors, the uncurtained
+window.
+
+"Safe enough here," whispered Pratt. "I made sure of that. Don't be
+afraid--no one knows--but me."
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe seemed to find some difficulty in speaking, and
+when she at last got out a word her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Impossible!"
+
+"It's a fact!" said Pratt. "Nothing was ever more a fact as you'll see.
+But let me finish my story. The old man told me how he'd found the
+will--only half an hour before--and he asked me to ring up Eldrick, so
+that we might all read it together. I went to the telephone--when I came
+back, Bartle was dead--just dead. And--I took the will out of his
+pocket."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe made an involuntary gesture with her right hand. And
+Pratt smiled, craftily, and shook his head.
+
+"Much too valuable to carry about, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said. "I've got
+it--all safe--under lock and key. But as I've said--nobody knows of it
+but myself. Not a living soul. No one has any idea! No one can have any
+idea. I was a bit alarmed when I heard that young Collingwood had been
+to you, for I thought that the old man, though he didn't tell me of any
+such thing, might have dropped you a line saying what he'd found. But as
+he didn't--well, not one living soul knows that the will's in
+existence, except me--and you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was regaining her self-possession. She had had a great
+shock, but the worst of it was over. Already she knew, from Pratt's
+manner, insidious and suggesting, that the will was of a nature that
+would dispossess her and hers of this recently acquired wealth--the
+clerk had made that evident by look and tone. So--there was nothing but
+to face things.
+
+"What--what does it--say?" she asked, with an effort.
+
+Pratt unbuttoned his overcoat, plunged a hand into the inner pocket,
+drew out a sheet of paper, unfolded it and laid it on the desk.
+
+"An exact copy," he said tersely. "Read it for yourself."
+
+In spite of the determined effort which she made to be calm, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's fingers still trembled as she took up the sheet on which
+Pratt had made a fair copy of the will. The clerk watched her narrowly
+as she read. He knew that presently there would be a tussle between
+them: he knew, too, that she was a woman who would fight hard in defence
+of her own interest, and for the interests of her children.
+
+Always keeping his ears open to local gossip, especially where money was
+concerned, Pratt had long since heard that Mrs. Mallathorpe was a keen
+and sharp business woman. And now he was not surprised when, having
+slowly and carefully read the copy of the will from beginning to end,
+she laid it down, and turned to him with a business-like question.
+
+"The effect of that?" she asked. "What would it be--curtly?"
+
+"Precisely what it says," answered Pratt. "Couldn't be clearer!"
+
+"We--should lose all?" she demanded, almost angrily. "All?"
+
+"All--except what he says--there," agreed Pratt.
+
+"And that," she went on, drumming her fingers on the paper, "that--would
+stand?"
+
+"What it's a copy of would stand," said Pratt. "Oh, yes, don't you make
+any mistake about it, Mrs. Mallathorpe! Nothing can upset that will. It
+is plain as a pikestaff how it came to be made. Your late brother-in-law
+evidently wrote his will out--it's all in his own handwriting--and took
+it down to the Mill with him the very day of the chimney accident. Just
+as evidently he signed it in the presence of his manager, Gaukrodger,
+and his cashier, Marshall--they signed at the same time, as it says,
+there. Now I take it that very soon after that, Mr. Mallathorpe went out
+into his mill yard to have a look at the chimney--Gaukrodger and
+Marshall went with him. Before he went, he popped the will into the
+book, where old Bartle found it yesterday--such things are easily done.
+Perhaps he was reading the book--perhaps it lay handy--he slipped the
+will inside, anyway. And then--he was killed--and, what's more the two
+witnesses were killed with him. So there wasn't a man left who could
+tell of that will! But--there's half Barford could testify to these
+three signatures! Mrs. Mallathorpe, there's not a chance for you if I
+put that will into the hands of the two trustees!"
+
+He leaned back in his chair after that--nodding confidently, watching
+keenly. And now he saw that the trembling fingers were interlacing each
+other, twisting the rings on each other, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+thinking as she had most likely never thought in her life. After a
+moment's pause Pratt went on. "Perhaps you didn't understand," he said.
+"I mean, you don't know the effect. Those two trustees--Charlesworth &
+Wyatt--could turn you all clean out of this--tomorrow, in a way of
+speaking. Everything's theirs! They can demand an account of every penny
+that you've all had out of the estate and the business--from the time
+you all took hold. If anything's been saved, put aside, they can demand
+that. You're entitled to nothing but the three amounts of ten thousand
+each. Of course, thirty thousand is thirty thousand--it means, at five
+per cent., fifteen hundred a year--if you could get five per cent.
+safely. But--I should say your son and daughter are getting a few
+thousand a year each, aren't they, Mrs. Mallathorpe? It would be a nice
+come-down! Five hundred a year apiece--at the outside. A small house
+instead of Normandale Grange. Genteel poverty--comparatively
+speaking--instead of riches. That is--if I hand over the will to
+Charlesworth & Wyatt."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe slowly turned her eyes on Pratt. And Pratt suddenly
+felt a little afraid--there was anger in those eyes; anger of a curious
+sort. It might be against fate--against circumstance: it might not--why
+should it?--be against him personally, but it was there, and it was
+malign and almost evil, and it made him uncomfortable.
+
+"Where is the will!" she asked.
+
+"Safe! In my keeping," answered Pratt.
+
+She looked him all over--surmisingly.
+
+"You'll sell it to me?" she suggested. "You'll hand it over--and let me
+burn it--destroy it?"
+
+"No!" answered Pratt. "I shall not!"
+
+He saw that his answer produced personal anger at last. Mrs. Mallathorpe
+gave him a look which would have warned a much less observant man than
+Pratt. But he gave her back a look that was just as resolute.
+
+"I say no--and I mean no!" he continued. "I won't sell--but I'll
+bargain. Let's be plain with each other. You don't want that will to be
+handed over to the trustees named in it, Charlesworth & Wyatt?"
+
+"Do you think I'm a fool--man!" she flashed out.
+
+"I should be a fool myself if I did," replied Pratt calmly. "And I'm not
+a fool. Very well--then you'll square me. You'll buy me. Come to terms
+with me, and nobody shall ever know. I repeat to you what I've said
+before--not a soul knows now, no nor suspects! It's utterly impossible
+for anybody to find out. The testator's dead. The attesting witnesses
+are dead. The man who found this will is dead. No one but you and myself
+ever need know a word about all this. If--you make terms with me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe."
+
+"What do you want?" she asked sullenly. "You forget--I've nothing of my
+own. I didn't come into anything."
+
+"I've a pretty good notion who's real master here--and at Mallathorpe
+Mill, too," retorted Pratt. "I should say you're still in full control
+of your children, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and that you can do pretty well what
+you like with them."
+
+"With one of them perhaps," she said, still angry and sullen. "But--I
+tell you, for you may as well know--if my daughter knew of what you've
+told me, she'd go straight to these trustees and tell! That's a fact
+that you'd better realize. I can't control her."
+
+"Oh!" remarked Pratt. "Um!--then we must take care that she doesn't
+know. But we don't intend that anybody should know but you and me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. You needn't tell a soul--not even your son. You mustn't
+tell! Listen, now--I've thought out a good scheme which'll profit me,
+and make you safe. Do you know what you want on this estate?"
+
+She stared at him as if wondering what this question had to do with the
+matter which was of such infinite importance. And Pratt smiled, and
+hastened to enlighten her.
+
+"You want--a steward," he said. "A steward and estate agent. John
+Mallathorpe managed everything for himself, but your son can't, and
+pardon me if I say that you can't--properly. You need a man--you need
+me. You can persuade your son to that effect. Give me the job of steward
+here. I'll suggest to you how to do it in such a fashion that it'll
+arouse no suspicion, and look just like an ordinary--very
+ordinary--business job--at a salary and on conditions to be arranged,
+and--you're safe! Safe, Mrs. Mallathorpe--you know what that means!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly rose from her chair.
+
+"I know this!" she said. "I'll discuss nothing, and do nothing, till
+I've seen that will!"
+
+Pratt rose, too, nodding his head as if quite satisfied. He took up the
+copy, tore it in two pieces, and carefully dropped them into the glowing
+fire.
+
+"I shall be at my lodgings at any time after five-thirty tomorrow
+evening," he answered quietly. "Call there. You have the address. And
+you can then read the will with your own eyes. I shan't bring it here.
+The game's in my hands, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Within a few minutes he was out in the park again, and making his way to
+the little railway station in the valley below. He felt triumphant--he
+knew that the woman he had just left was at his mercy and would accede
+to his terms. And all the way back to town, and through the town to his
+lodgings, he considered and perfected the scheme he was going to suggest
+to Mrs. Mallathorpe on the morrow.
+
+Pratt lived in a little hamlet of old houses on the very outskirts of
+Barford--on the edge of a stretch of Country honeycombed by
+stone-quarries, some in use, some already worked out. It was a lonely
+neighbourhood, approached from the nearest tramway route by a narrow,
+high-walled lane. He was half-way along that lane when a stealthy foot
+stole to his side, and a hand was laid on his arm--just as stealthily
+came the voice of one of his fellow-clerks at Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"A moment, Pratt! I've been waiting for you. I want--a word or two--in
+private!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+THE UNEXPECTED
+
+
+Pratt started when he heard that voice and felt the arresting hand. He
+knew well enough to whom they belonged--they were those of one James
+Parrawhite, a little, weedy, dissolute chap who had been in Eldrick &
+Pascoe's employ for about a year. It had always been a mystery to him
+and the other clerks that Parrawhite had been there at all, and that
+being there he was allowed to stop. He was not a Barford man. Nobody
+knew anything whatever about him, though his occasional references to it
+seemed to indicate that he knew London pretty thoroughly. Pratt shrewdly
+suspected that he was a man whom Eldrick had known in other days,
+possibly a solicitor who had been struck off the rolls, and to whom
+Eldrick, for old times' sake, was disposed to extend a helping hand.
+
+All that any of them knew was that one morning some fifteen months
+previously, Parrawhite, a complete stranger, had walked into the office,
+asked to see Eldrick, had remained closeted with him half an hour, and
+had been given a job at two pounds a week, there and then. That he was a
+clever and useful clerk no one denied, but no one liked him.
+
+He was always borrowing half-crowns. He smelt of rum. He was altogether
+undesirable. It was plain to the clerks that Pascoe disliked him. But he
+was evidently under Eldrick's protection, and he did his work and did it
+well, and there was no doubt that he knew more law than either of the
+partners, and was better up in practice than Pratt himself. But--he was
+not desirable ... and Pratt never desired him less than on this
+occasion.
+
+"What are you after--coming on a man like that!" growled Pratt.
+
+"You," replied Parrawhite. "I knew you'd got to come up this lane, so I
+waited for you. I've something to say."
+
+"Get it said, then!" retorted Pratt.
+
+"Not here," answered Parrawhite. "Come down by the quarry--nobody about
+there."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Then you'll be very sorry for yourself--tomorrow," replied Parrawhite.
+"That's all!"
+
+Pratt had already realized that this fellow knew something. Parrawhite's
+manner was not only threatening but confident. He spoke as a man speaks
+who has got the whip hand. And so, still growling, and inwardly raging
+and anxious, he turned off with his companion into a track which lay
+amongst the stone quarries. It was a desolate, lonely place; no house
+was near; they were as much alone as if they had been in the middle of
+one of the great moors outside the town, the lights of which they could
+see in the valley below them. In the grey sky above, a waning moon gave
+them just sufficient light to see their immediate surroundings--a
+grass-covered track, no longer used, and the yawning mouths of the old
+quarries, no longer worked, the edges of which were thick with gorse and
+bramble. It was the very place for secret work, and Pratt was certain
+that secret work was at hand.
+
+"Now then!" he said, when they had walked well into the wilderness.
+"What is it? And no nonsense!"
+
+"You'll get no nonsense from me," sneered Parrawhite. "I'm not that
+sort. This is what I want to say. I was in Eldrick's office last night
+all the time you were there with old Bartle."
+
+This swift answer went straight through Pratt's defences. He was
+prepared to hear something unpleasant and disconcerting, but not that.
+And he voiced the first thought that occurred to him.
+
+"That's a lie!" he exclaimed. "There was nobody there!"
+
+"No lie," replied Parrawhite. "I was there. I was behind the curtain of
+that recess--you know. And since I know what you did, I don't mind
+telling you--we're in the same boat, my lad!--what I was going to do.
+You thought I'd gone--with the others. But I hadn't. I'd merely done
+what I've done several times without being found out--slipped in
+there--to wait until you'd gone. Why? Because friend Eldrick, as you
+know, is culpably careless about leaving loose cash in the unlocked
+drawer of his desk, culpably careless, too, about never counting it.
+And--a stray sovereign or half-sovereign is useful to a man who only
+gets two quid a week. Understand?"
+
+"So you're a thief?" said Pratt bitterly.
+
+"I'm precisely what you are--a thief!" retorted Parrawhite. "You stole
+John Mallathorpe's will last night. I heard everything, I tell you!--and
+saw everything. I heard the whole business--what the old man said--what
+you, later, said to Eldrick. I saw old Bartle die--I saw you take the
+will from his pocket, read it, and put it in your pocket. I know
+all!--except the terms of the will. But--I've a pretty good idea of what
+those terms are. Do you know why? Because I watched you set off to
+Normandale by the eight-twenty train tonight!"
+
+"Hang you for a dirty sneak!" growled Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite laughed, and flourished a heavy stick which he carried.
+
+"Not a bit of it!" he said, almost pleasantly. "I thought you were more
+of a philosopher--I fancied I'd seen gleams--mere gleams--of philosophy
+in you at times. Fortunes of war, my boy! Come now--you've seen enough
+of me to know I'm an adventurer. This is an adventure of the sort I
+love. Go into it heart and soul, man! Own up!--you've found out that the
+will leaves the property away from the present holders, and you've been
+to Normandale to--bargain? Come, now!"
+
+"What then!" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Then, of course, I come in at the bargaining," answered Parrawhite.
+"I'm going to have my share. That's a certainty. You'd better take my
+advice. Because you're absolutely in my power. I've nothing to do but to
+tell Eldrick tomorrow morning."
+
+"Suppose I tell Eldrick tomorrow morning of what you've told me?"
+interjected Pratt.
+
+"Eldrick will believe me before you," retorted Parrawhite,
+imperturbably. "I'm a much cleverer, more plausible man than you are, my
+friend--I've had an experience of the world which you haven't, I can
+easily invent a fine excuse for being in that room. For two pins I'll
+incriminate you! See? Be reasonable--for if it comes to a contest of
+brains, you haven't a rabbit's chance against a fox. Tell me all about
+the will--and what you've done. You've got to--for, by the Lord
+Harry!--I'm going to have my share. Come, now!"
+
+Pratt stood, in a little hollow wherein they had paused, and thought,
+rapidly and angrily. There was no doubt about it--he was trapped. This
+fearful scoundrel at his side, who boasted of his cleverness, would
+stick to him like a leach--he would have to share. All his own smart
+schemes for exploiting Mrs. Mallathorpe, for ensuring himself a
+competence for life, were knocked on the head. There was no helping
+it--he would have to tell--and to share. And so, sullenly, resentfully,
+he told.
+
+Parrawhite listened in silence, taking in every point. Pratt, knowing
+that concealment was useless, told the truth about everything,
+concisely, but omitting nothing.
+
+"All right!" remarked Parrawhite at the end, "Now, then, what terms do
+you mean to insist on?"
+
+"What's the good of going into that?" growled Pratt. "Now that you've
+stuck your foot in it, what do my terms matter?"
+
+"Quite right," agreed Parrawhite, "They don't. What matter is--our
+terms. Now let me suggest--no, insist on--what they must be. Cash! Do
+you know why I insist on that? No? Then I'll tell you. Because this
+young barrister chap, Collingwood, has evidently got some suspicion
+of--something."
+
+"I can't see it," said Pratt uneasily. "He was only curious to know what
+that letter was about."
+
+"Never mind," continued Parrawhite. "He had some suspicion--or he
+wouldn't have gone out there almost as soon as he reached Barford after
+his grandfather's death. And even if suspicion is put to sleep for
+awhile, it can easily be reawakened, so--cash! We must profit at
+once--before any future risk arises. But--what terms were you thinking
+of?"
+
+"Stewardship of this estate for life," muttered Pratt gloomily.
+
+"With the risk of some discovery being made, some time, any time!"
+sneered Parrawhite. "Where are your brains, man? The old fellow, John
+Mallathorpe, probably made a draft or two of that will before he did his
+fair copy--he may have left those drafts among his papers."
+
+"If he did, Mrs. Mallathorpe 'ud find 'em," said Pratt slowly. "I don't
+believe there's the slightest risk. I've figured everything out. I don't
+believe there's any danger from Collingwood or from anybody--it's
+impossible! And if we take cash now--we're selling for a penny what we
+ought to get pounds for."
+
+"The present is much more important than the future, my friend,"
+answered Parrawhite. "To me, at any rate. Now, then, this is my
+proposal. I'll be with you when this lady calls at your place tomorrow
+evening. We'll offer her the will, to do what she likes with, for ten
+thousand pounds. She can find that--quickly. When she pays--as she
+will!--we share, equally, and then--well, you can go to the devil! I
+shall go--somewhere else. So that's settled."
+
+"No!" said Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite turned sharply, and Pratt saw a sinister gleam in his eyes.
+
+"Did you say no?" he asked.
+
+"I said--no!" replied Pratt. "I'm not going to take five thousand pounds
+for a chance that's worth fifty thousand. Hang you!--if you hadn't been
+a black sneak-thief, as you are, I'd have had the whole thing to myself!
+And I don't know that I will give way to you. If it comes to it, my
+word's as good as yours--and I don't believe Eldrick would believe you
+before me. Pascoe wouldn't anyway. You've got a past!--in quod, I should
+think--my past's all right. I've a jolly good mind to let you do your
+worst--after all, I've got the will. And by george! now I come to think
+of it, you can do your worst! Tell what you like tomorrow morning. I
+shall tell 'em what you are--a scoundrel."
+
+He turned away at that--and as he turned, Parrawhite, with a queer cry
+of rage that might have come from some animal which saw its prey
+escaping, struck out at him with the heavy stick. The blow missed
+Pratt's head, but it grazed the tip of his ear, and fell slantingly on
+his left shoulder. And then the anger that had been boiling in Pratt
+ever since the touch on his arm in the dark lane, burst out in activity,
+and he turned on his assailant, gripped him by the throat before
+Parrawhite could move, and after choking and shaking him until his teeth
+rattled and his breath came in jerking sobs, flung him violently against
+the masses of stone by which they had been standing.
+
+Pratt was of considerable physical strength. He played cricket and
+football; he visited a gymnasium thrice a week. His hands had the grip
+of a blacksmith; his muscles were those of a prize-fighter. He had put
+more strength than he was aware of into his fierce grip on Parrawhite's
+throat; he had exerted far more force than he knew he was exerting, when
+he flung him away. He heard a queer cracking sound as the man struck
+something, and for the moment he took no notice of it--the pain of that
+glancing blow on his shoulder was growing acute, and he began to rub it
+with his free hand and to curse its giver.
+
+"Get up, you fool, and I'll give you some more!" he growled. "I'll teach
+you to----"
+
+He suddenly noticed the curiously still fashion in which Parrawhite was
+lying where he had flung him--noticed, too, as a cloud passed the moon
+and left it unveiled, how strangely white the man's face was. And just
+as suddenly Pratt forgot his own injury, and dropped on his knees beside
+his assailant. An instant later, and he knew that he was once more
+confronting death. For Parrawhite was as dead as Antony Bartle--violent
+contact of his head with a rock had finished what Pratt had nearly
+completed with that vicious grip. There was no questioning it, no
+denying it--Pratt was there in that lonely place, staring half
+consciously, half in terror, at a dead man.
+
+He stood up at last, cursing Parrawhite with the anger of despair. He
+had not one scrap of pity for him. All his pity was for himself. That he
+should have been brought into this!--that this vile little beast,
+perfect scum that he was, should have led him to what might be the utter
+ruin of his career!--it was shameful, it was abominable, it was cruel!
+He felt as if he could cheerfully tear Parrawhite's dead body to pieces.
+But even as these thoughts came, others of a more important nature
+crowded on them. For--there lay a dead man, who was not to be put in
+one's pocket, like a will. It was necessary to hide that thing from the
+light--ever that light. Within a few hours, morning would break, and
+lonely and deserted as that place was nowadays, some one might pass that
+way. Out of sight with him, then!--and quickly.
+
+Pratt was very well acquainted with the spot at which he stood. Those
+old quarries had a certain picturesqueness. They had become grass-grown;
+ivy, shrubs, trees had clustered about them--the people who lived in the
+few houses half a mile away, sometimes walked around them; the children
+made a playground of the place: Pratt himself had often gone into some
+quiet corner to read and smoke. And now his quick mind immediately
+suggested a safe hiding place for this thing that he could not carry
+away with him, and dare not leave to the morning sun--close by was a
+pit, formerly used for some quarrying purpose, which was filled, always
+filled, with water. It was evidently of considerable depth; the water
+was black in it; the mouth was partly obscured by a maze of shrub and
+bramble. It had been like that ever since Pratt came to lodge in that
+part of the district--ten or twelve years before; it would probably
+remain like that for many a long year to come. That bit of land was
+absolutely useless and therefore neglected, and as long as rain fell and
+water drained, that pit would always be filled to its brim.
+
+He remembered something else: also close by where he stood--a heap of
+old iron things--broken and disused picks, smashed rails, fragments
+thrown aside when the last of the limestone had been torn out of the
+quarries. Once more luck was playing into his hands--those odds and ends
+might have been put there for the very purpose to which he now meant to
+turn them. And being certain that he was alone, and secure, Pratt
+proceeded to go about his unpleasant task skilfully and methodically. He
+fetched a quantity of the iron, fastened it to the dead man's clothing,
+drew the body, thus weighted, to the edge of the pit, and prepared to
+slide it into the black water. But there an idea struck him. While he
+made these preparations he had had hosts of ideas as to his operations
+next morning--this idea was supplementary to them. Quickly and
+methodically he removed the contents of Parrawhite's pockets to his
+own--everything: money, watch and chain, even a ring which the dead man
+had been evidently vain of. Then he let Parrawhite glide into the
+water--and after him he sent the heavy stick, carefully fastened to a
+bar of iron.
+
+Five minutes later, the surface of the water in that pit was as calm and
+unruffled as ever--not a ripple showed that it had been disturbed. And
+Pratt made his way out of the wilderness, swearing that he would never
+enter it again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+
+Pratt was in Eldrick & Pascoe's office soon after half-past eight next
+morning, and for nearly forty minutes he had the place entirely to
+himself. But it took only a few of those minutes for him to do what he
+had carefully planned before he went to bed the previous night. Shutting
+himself into Eldrick's private room, and making sure that he was alone
+that time, he immediately opened the drawer in the senior partner's
+desk, wherein Eldrick, culpably enough, as Parrawhite had sneeringly
+remarked, was accustomed to put loose money. Eldrick was strangely
+careless in that way: he would throw money into that drawer in presence
+of his clerks--notes, gold, silver. If it happened to occur to him, he
+would take the money out at the end of the afternoon and hand it to
+Pratt to lock up in the safe; but as often as not, it did not occur.
+Pratt had more than once ventured on a hint which was almost a
+remonstrance, and Eldrick had paid no attention to him. He was a
+careless, easy-going man in many respects, Eldrick, and liked to do
+things in his own way. And after all, as Pratt had decided, when he
+found that his hints were not listened to, it was Eldrick's own affair
+if he liked to leave the money lying about.
+
+There was money lying about in that drawer when Pratt drew it open; it
+was never locked, day or night, or, if it was, the key was left in it.
+As soon as he opened it, he saw gold--two or three sovereigns--and
+silver--a little pile of it. And, under a letter weight, four banknotes
+of ten pounds each. But this was precisely what Pratt had expected to
+see; he himself had handed banknotes, gold, and silver to Eldrick the
+previous evening, just after receiving them from a client who had called
+to pay his bill. And he had seen Eldrick place them in the drawer, as
+usual, and soon afterwards Eldrick had walked out, saying he was going
+to the club, and he had never returned.
+
+What Pratt now did was done as the result of careful thought and
+deliberation. There was a cheque-book lying on top of some papers in the
+drawer; he took it up and tore three cheques out of it. Then he picked
+up the bank-notes, tore them and the abstracted blank cheques into
+pieces, and dropped the pieces in the fire recently lighted by the
+caretaker. He watched these fragments burn, and then he put the gold and
+silver in his hip-pocket, where he already carried a good deal of his
+own, and walked out.
+
+Nine o'clock brought the office-boy; a quarter-past nine brought the
+clerks; at ten o'clock Eldrick walked in. According to custom, Pratt
+went into Eldrick's room with the letters, and went through them with
+him. One of them contained a legal document over which the solicitor
+frowned a little.
+
+"Ask Parrawhite's opinion about that," he said presently, indicating a
+marked paragraph.
+
+"Parrawhite has not come in this morning, sir," observed Pratt,
+gathering up letters and papers. "I'll draw his attention to it when he
+arrives."
+
+He went into the outer office, only to be summoned back to Eldrick a few
+minutes later. The senior partner was standing by his desk, looking a
+little concerned, and, thought Pratt, decidedly uncomfortable. He
+motioned the clerk to close the door.
+
+"Has Parrawhite come?" he asked.
+
+"No," replied Pratt, "Not yet, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Is--is he usually late?" inquired Eldrick.
+
+"Usually quite punctual--half-past nine," said Pratt.
+
+Eldrick glanced at his watch; then at his clerk.
+
+"Didn't you give me some cash last night?" he asked.
+
+"Forty-three pounds nine," answered Pratt. "Thompson's bill of costs--he
+paid it yesterday afternoon."
+
+Eldrick looked more uncomfortable than ever.
+
+"Well--the fact is," he said, "I--I meant to hand it to you to put in
+the safe, Pratt, but I didn't come back from the club. And--it's gone!"
+
+Pratt simulated concern--but not astonishment. And Eldrick pulled open
+the drawer, and waved a hand over it.
+
+"I put it down there," he said. "Very careless of me, no doubt--but
+nothing of this sort has ever happened before, and--however, there's the
+unpleasant fact, Pratt. The money's gone!"
+
+Pratt, who had hastily turned over the papers and other contents of the
+drawer, shook his head and used his privilege as an old and confidential
+servant. "I've always said, sir, that it was a great mistake to leave
+loose money lying about," he remarked mournfully. "If there'd only been
+a practice of letting me lock anything of that sort up in the safe every
+night--and this chequebook, too, sir--then----"
+
+"I know--I know!" said Eldrick. "Very reprehensible on my part--I'm
+afraid I am careless--no doubt of it. But----"
+
+He in his turn was interrupted by Pratt, who was turning over the
+cheque-book.
+
+"Some cheque forms have been taken out of this," he said. "Three! at the
+end. Look there, sir!"
+
+Eldrick uttered an exclamation of intense annoyance and disgust. He
+looked at the despoiled cheque-book, and flung it into the drawer.
+
+"Pratt!" he said, turning half appealingly, half confidentially to the
+clerk. "Don't say a word of this--above all, don't mention it to Mr.
+Pascoe. It's my fault and I must make the forty-three pounds good.
+Pratt, I'm afraid this is Parrawhite's work. I--well, I may as well tell
+you--he'd been in trouble before he came here. I gave him another
+chance--I'd known him, years ago. I thought he'd go straight. But--I
+fear he's been tempted. He may have seen me leave money about. Was he in
+here last night?"
+
+Pratt pointed to a document which lay on Eldrick's desk.
+
+"He came in here to leave that for your perusal," he answered. "He was
+in here--alone--a minute or two before he left."
+
+All these lies came readily and naturally--and Eldrick swallowed each.
+He shook his head.
+
+"My fault--all my fault!" he said. "Look here--keep it quiet. But--do
+you know where Parrawhite has lived--lodged?"
+
+"No!" replied Pratt. "Some of the others may, though!"
+
+"Try to find out--quickly," continued Eldrick; "Then, make some excuse
+to go out--take papers somewhere, or something--and find if he's left
+his lodgings! I--I don't want to set the police on him. He was a decent
+fellow, once. See what you can make out, Pratt. In strict secrecy, you
+know---I do not want this to go further."
+
+Pratt could have danced for joy when he presently went out into the
+town. There would be no hue-and-cry after Parrawhite--none! Eldrick
+would accept the fact that Parrawhite had robbed him and flown--and
+Parrawhite would never be heard of--never mentioned again. It was the
+height of good luck for him. Already he had got rid of any small scraps
+of regret or remorse about the killing of his fellow-clerk. Why should
+he be sorry? The scoundrel had tried to murder him, thinking no doubt
+that he had the will on him. And he had not meant to kill him--what he
+had done, he had done in self-defence. No--everything was working most
+admirably--Parrawhite's previous bad record, Eldrick's carelessness and
+his desire to shut things up: it was all good. From that day forward,
+Parrawhite would be as if he had never been. Pratt was not even afraid
+of the body being discovered--though he believed that it would remain
+where it was for ever--for the probability was that the authorities
+would fill up that pit with earth and stones. But if it was brought to
+light? Why, the explanation was simple.
+
+Parrawhite, having robbed his employer, had been robbed himself,
+possibly by men with whom he had been drinking, and had been murdered in
+the bargain. No suspicion could attach to him, Pratt--he had nothing to
+fear--nothing!
+
+For the form of the thing, he called at the place whereat Parrawhite had
+lodged--they had seen nothing of him since the previous morning. They
+were poor, cheap lodgings in a mean street. The woman of the house said
+that Parrawhite had gone out as usual the morning before, and had never
+been in again. In order to find out all he could, Pratt asked if he had
+left much behind him in the way of belongings, and--just as he had
+expected--he learned that Parrawhite's personal property was remarkably
+limited: he possessed only one suit of clothes and not over much
+besides, said the landlady.
+
+"Is there aught wrong?" she asked, when Pratt had finished his
+questions. "Are you from where he worked?"
+
+"That's it," answered Pratt, "And he hasn't turned up this morning, and
+we think he's left the town. Owe you anything, missis?"
+
+"Nay, nothing much," she replied. "Ten shillings 'ud cover it, mister."
+
+Pratt gave her half a sovereign. It was not out of consideration for
+her, nor as a concession to Parrawhite's memory: it was simply to stop
+her from coming down to Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"Well, I don't think you'll see him again," he remarked. "And I dare say
+you won't care if you don't."
+
+He turned away then, but before he had gone far, the woman called him
+back.
+
+"What am I to do with his bits of things, mister, if he doesn't come
+back?" she asked.
+
+"Aught you please," answered Pratt, indifferently. "Throw 'em on the
+dust-heap."
+
+As he went back to the centre of the town, he occupied himself in
+considering his attitude to Mrs. Mallathorpe when she called on him that
+evening. In spite of his own previous notion, and of his
+carefully-worked-out scheme about the stewardship, he had been impressed
+by what Parrawhite has said as to the wisdom of selling the will for
+cash. Pratt did not believe that there was anything in the Collingwood
+suggestion--no doubt whatever, he had decided, that old Bartle had meant
+to tell Mrs. Mallathorpe of his discovery when she called in answer to
+his note, but as he had died before she could call, and as he had told
+nobody but him, Pratt, what possible danger could there be from
+Collingwood? And a stewardship for life appealed to him. He knew, from
+observation of the world, what a fine thing it is to have a certainty.
+
+Once he became steward and agent of the Normandale Grange estate, he
+would stick there, until he had saved a tidy heap of money. Then he
+would retire--with a pension and a handsome present--and enjoy himself.
+To be provided for, for life!--what more could a wise man want? And
+yet--there was something in what that devil Parrawhite had urged.
+
+For there was a risk--however small--of discovery, and if discovery were
+made, there would be a nice penalty to pay. It might, after all, be
+better to sell the will outright--for as much ready money as ever he
+could get, and to take his gains far away, and start out on a career
+elsewhere. After all, there was much to be said for the old proverb. The
+only question was--was the bird in hand worth the two; or the money,
+which he believed he would net in the bush?
+
+Pratt's doubts on this point were settled in a curious fashion. He had
+reached the centre of the town in his return to Eldrick's, and there, in
+the fashionable shopping street, he ran up against an acquaintance. He
+and the acquaintance stopped and chatted--about nothing. And as they
+lounged on the curb, a smart victoria drew up close by, and out of it,
+alone, stepped a girl who immediately attracted Pratt's eyes. He watched
+her across the pavement; he watched her into the shop. And his companion
+laughed.
+
+"That's the sort!" he remarked flippantly. "If you and I had one each,
+old man--what?"
+
+"Who is she?" demanded Pratt.
+
+The acquaintance stared at him in surprise.
+
+"What!" he exclaimed. "You don't know. That's Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I didn't know," said Pratt. "Fact!"
+
+He waited until Nesta Mallathorpe came out and drove away--so that he
+could get another and a closer look at her. And when she was gone, he
+went slowly back to the office, his mind made up. Risk or no risk, he
+would carry out his original notion. Whatever Mrs. Mallathorpe might
+offer, he would stick to his idea of close and intimate connection with
+Normandale Grange.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+TERMS
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, left to face the situation which Pratt had revealed to
+her in such sudden and startling fashion, had been quick to realize its
+seriousness. It had not taken much to convince her that the clerk knew
+what he was talking about. She had no doubt whatever that he was right
+when he said that the production of John Mallathorpe's will would mean
+dispossession to her children, and through them to herself. Nor had she
+any doubt, either, of Pratt's intention to profit by his discovery. She
+saw that he was a young man of determination, not at all scrupulous,
+eager to seize on anything likely to turn to his own advantage. She was,
+in short, at his mercy. And she had no one to turn to. Her son was weak,
+purposeless, almost devoid of character; he cared for nothing beyond
+ease and comfort, and left everything to her so long as he was allowed
+to do what he liked. She dared not confide in him--he was not fit to be
+entrusted with such a secret, nor endowed with the courage to carry it
+boldly and unflinchingly. Nor dare she confide it to her daughter--Nesta
+was as strong as her brother was weak: Mrs. Mallathorpe had only told
+the plain truth when she said to Pratt that if her daughter knew of the
+will she would go straight to the two trustees. No--she would have to do
+everything herself. And she could do nothing save under Pratt's
+dictation. So long as he had that will in his possession, he could make
+her agree to whatever terms he liked to insist upon.
+
+She spent a sleepless night, resolving all sorts of plans; she resolved
+more plans and schemes during the day which followed. But they all ended
+at the same point--Pratt. All the future depended upon--Pratt. And by
+the end of the day it had come to this--she must make a determined
+effort to buy Pratt clean out, so that she could get the will into her
+own possession and destroy it. She knew that she could easily find the
+necessary money--Harper Mallathorpe had such a natural dislike of all
+business matters and was so little fitted to attend to them that he was
+only too well content to leave everything relating to the estate and the
+mill at Barford to his mother. Up to that time Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+managed the affairs of both, and she had large sums at her disposal, out
+of which she could pay Pratt without even Harper being aware that she
+was paying him anything. And surely no young man in Pratt's position--a
+mere clerk, earning a few pounds a week--would refuse a big sum of ready
+money! It seemed incredible to her--and she went into Barford towards
+evening hoping that by the time she returned the will would have been
+burned to grey ashes.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe used some ingenuity in making her visit to Pratt.
+Giving out that she was going to see a friend in Barford, of whose
+illness she had just heard, she drove into the town, and on arriving
+near the Town Hall dismissed her carriage, with orders to the coachman
+to put up his horses at a certain livery stable, and to meet her at the
+same place at a specified time. Then she went away on foot, and drew a
+thick veil over her face before hiring a cab in which she drove up to
+the outskirt on which Pratt had his lodging. She was still veiled when
+Pratt's landlady showed her into the clerk's sitting-room.
+
+"Is it safe here?" she asked at once. "Is there no fear of anybody
+hearing what we may say?"
+
+"None!" answered Pratt reassuringly. "I know these folks--I've lived
+here several years. And nobody could hear however much they put their
+ears to the keyhole. Good thick old walls, these, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and
+a solid door. We're as safe here as we were in your study last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat down in the chair which Pratt politely drew near
+his fire. She raised her veil and looked at him, and the clerk saw at
+once how curious and eager she was.
+
+"That--will!" she said, in a low voice. "Let me see it--first."
+
+"One moment," answered Pratt. "First--you understand that I'm not going
+to let you handle it. I'll hold it before you, so you can read it.
+Second--you give me your promise--I'm trusting you--that you'll make no
+attempt to seize it. It's not going out of my hands."
+
+"I'm only a woman--and you're a strong man," she retorted sullenly.
+
+"Quite so," said Pratt. "But women have a trick of snatching at things.
+And--if you please--you'll do exactly what I tell you to do. Put your
+hands behind you! If I see you make the least movement with them--back
+goes the will into my pocket!"
+
+If Pratt had looked more closely at her just then, he would have taken
+warning from the sudden flash of hatred and resentment which swept
+across Mrs. Mallathorpe's face--it would have told him that he was
+dealing with a dangerous woman who would use her wits to circumvent and
+beat him--if not now, then later. But he was moving the gas bracket over
+the mantelpiece, and he did not see.
+
+"Very well--but I had no intention of touching it," said Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. "All I want is to see it--and read it."
+
+She obediently followed out Pratt's instructions, and standing in front
+of her he produced the will, unfolded it, and held it at a convenient
+distance before her eyes. He watched her closely, as she read it, and he
+saw her grow very pale.
+
+"Take your time--read it over two or three times," he said quietly. "Get
+it well into your mind, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+She nodded her head at last, and Pratt stepped back, folded up the will,
+and turning to a heavy box which lay open on the table, placed it
+within, under lock and key. And that done, he turned back and took a
+chair, close to his visitor.
+
+"Safe there, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said with a glance that was both
+reassuring and cunning. "But only for the night. I keep a few securities
+of my own at one of the banks in the town--never mind which--and that
+will shall be deposited with them tomorrow morning."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe shook her head.
+
+"No!" she said. "Because--you'll come to terms with me."
+
+Pratt shook his head, too, and he laughed.
+
+"Of course I shall come to terms with you," he answered. "But they'll be
+my terms--and they don't include any giving up of that document. That's
+flat, Mrs. Mallathorpe!"
+
+"Not if I make it worth your while?" she asked. "Listen!--you don't know
+what ready money I can command. Ready money, I tell you--cash down, on
+the spot!"
+
+"I've a pretty good notion," responded Pratt. "It's generally understood
+in the town that your son's a mere figure-head, and that you're the real
+boss of the whole show. I know that you're at the mill four times a
+week, and that the managers are under your thumb. I know that you manage
+everything connected with the estate. So, of course, I know you've lots
+of ready money at your disposal."
+
+"And I know that you don't earn more than four or five pounds a week, at
+the outside," said Mrs. Mallathorpe quietly. "Come, now--just think what
+a nice, convenient thing it would be to a young man of your age to
+have--a capital. Capital! It would be the making of you. You could go
+right away--to London, say, and start out on whatever you liked. Be
+sensible--sell me that paper--and be done with the whole thing."
+
+"No!" replied Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at him for a full moment. She was a shrewd judge
+of character, and she felt that Pratt was one of those men who are hard
+to stir from a position once adopted. But she had to make her
+effort--and she made it in what she thought the most effective way.
+
+"I'll give you five thousand pounds--cash--for it," she said. "Meet me
+with it tomorrow--anywhere you like in the town--any time you like--and
+I'll hand you the money--in notes."
+
+"No!" said Pratt. "No!"
+
+Once more she looked at him. And Pratt looked back--and smiled.
+
+"When I say no, I mean no," he went on. "And I never meant 'No' more
+firmly than I do now."
+
+"I don't believe you," she answered, affecting a doubt which she
+certainly did not feel. "You're only holding out for more money."
+
+"If I were holding out for more money, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt,
+"if I meant to sell you that will for cash payment, I should have stated
+my terms to you last night. I should have said precisely how much I
+wanted--and I shouldn't have budged from the amount. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe!--it's no good. I've got my own schemes, and my own
+ideas--and I'm going to carry 'em out. I want you to appoint me steward
+to your property, your affairs, for life."
+
+"Life!" she exclaimed. "Life!"
+
+"My life," answered Pratt. "And let me tell you--you'll find me a
+first-class man--a good, faithful, honest servant. I'll do well by you
+and yours. You'll never regret it as long as you live. It'll be the best
+day's work you've ever done. I'll look after your son's
+interests--everybody's interests--as if they were my own. As indeed," he
+added, with a sly glance, "they will be."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe realized the finality, the resolve, in all this--but
+she made one more attempt.
+
+"Ten thousand!" she said. "Come, now!--think what ten thousand pounds in
+cash would mean to you!"
+
+"No--nor twenty thousand," replied Pratt. "I've made up my mind. I'll
+have my own terms. It's no use--not one bit of use--haggling or
+discussing matters further. I'm in possession of the will--and therefore
+of the situation, Mrs. Mallathorpe, you've just got to do what I tell
+you!"
+
+He got up from his chair, and going over to a side-table took from it a
+blotting-pad, some writing paper and a pencil. For the moment his back
+was turned--and again he did not see the look of almost murderous hatred
+which came into his visitor's eyes; had he seen and understood it, he
+might even then have reconsidered matters and taken Mrs. Mallathorpe's
+last offer. But the look had gone when he turned again, and he noticed
+nothing as he handed over the writing materials.
+
+"What are these for?" she asked.
+
+"You'll see in a moment," replied Pratt, reseating himself, and drawing
+his chair a little nearer her own. "Now listen--because it's no good
+arguing any more. You're going to give me that stewardship and agency.
+You'll simply tell your son that it's absolutely necessary to have a
+steward. He'll agree. If he doesn't, no matter--you'll convince him.
+Now, then, we must do it in a fashion that won't excite any suspicion.
+Thus--in a few days--say next week--you'll insert in the Barford
+papers--all three of them--the advertisement I'm going to dictate to
+you. We'll put it in the usual, formal phraseology. Write this down, if
+you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+He dictated an advertisement, setting forth the requirements of which he
+had spoken, and Mrs. Mallathorpe obeyed him and wrote. She hated Pratt
+more than ever at that moment--there was a quiet, steadfast
+implacability about him that made her feel helpless. But she restrained
+all sign of it, and when she had done his bidding she looked at him as
+calmly as he looked at her.
+
+"I am to insert this in the Barford papers next week," she said.
+"And--what then?"
+
+"Then you'll get a lot of applications for the job," chuckled Pratt.
+"There'll be mine amongst them. You can throw most of 'em in the fire.
+Keep a few for form's sake. Profess to discuss them with Mr. Harper--but
+let the discussion be all on your side. I'll send two or three good
+testimonials--you'll incline to me from the first. You'll send for me.
+Your interview with me will be highly satisfactory. And you'll give me
+the appointment."
+
+"And--your terms?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. Now that her own scheme had
+failed, she seemed quite placable to all Pratt's proposals--a sure sign
+of danger to him if he had only known it. "Better let me know them
+now--and have done with it."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Pratt. "But first of all--can you keep this secret to
+yourself and me? The money part, any way?"
+
+"I can--and shall," she answered.
+
+"Good!" said Pratt. "Very well. I want a thousand a year. Also I want
+two rooms--and a business room--at the Grange. I shall not interfere
+with you or your family, or your domestic arrangements, but I shall
+expect to have all my meals served to me from your kitchen, and to have
+one of your servants at my disposal. I know the Grange--I've been over
+it more than once. There's much more room there than you can make use
+of. Give me the rooms I want in one of the wings. I shan't disturb any
+of you. You'll never see me except on business--and if you want to."
+
+Again the calm acquiescence which would have surprised some men. Why
+Pratt failed to be surprised by it was because he was just then feeling
+exceedingly triumphant--he believed that Mrs. Mallathorpe was,
+metaphorically, at his feet. He had more than a little vanity in him,
+and it pleased him greatly, that dictating of terms: he saw himself a
+conqueror, with his foot on the neck of his victim.
+
+"Is that all, then?" asked the visitor.
+
+"All!" answered Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe calmly folded up the draft advertisement and placed it
+in her purse. Then she rose and adjusted her veil.
+
+"Then--there is nothing to be done until I get your answer to this--your
+application?" she asked. "Very well."
+
+Pratt showed her out, and walked to the cab with her. He went back to
+his rooms highly satisfied--and utterly ignorant of what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was thinking as she drove away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+
+Within a week of his sudden death in Eldrick's private office, old
+Antony Bartle was safely laid in the tomb under the yew-tree of which
+Mrs. Clough had spoken with such appreciation, and his grandson had
+entered into virtual possession of all that he had left. Collingwood
+found little difficulty in settling his grandfather's affairs.
+Everything had been left to him: he was sole executor as well as sole
+residuary legatee. He found his various tasks made uncommonly easy.
+Another bookseller in the town hurried to buy the entire stock and
+business, goodwill, book debts, everything--Collingwood was free of all
+responsibility of the shop in Quagg Alley within a few days of the old
+man's funeral. And when he had made a handsome present to the
+housekeeper, a suitable one to the shop-boy, and paid his grandfather's
+last debts, he was free to depart--a richer man by some five-and-twenty
+thousand pounds than when he hurried down to Barford in response to
+Eldrick's telegram.
+
+He sat in Eldrick's office one afternoon, winding up his affairs with
+him. There were certain things that Eldrick & Pascoe would have to do;
+as for himself it was necessary for him to get back to London.
+
+"There's something I want to propose to you," said Eldrick, when they
+had finished the immediate business. "You're going to practise, of
+course?"
+
+"Of course!" replied Collingwood, with a laugh. "If I get the chance!"
+
+"You'll get the chance," said Eldrick. "What were you going in for?"
+
+"Commercial law--company law--as a special thing," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I'll tell you what it is," continued Eldrick eagerly. "There's a career
+for you if you'll take my advice. Leave London--come down here and take
+chambers in the town, and go the North-Eastern Circuit. I'll promise
+you--for our firm alone--plenty of work. You'll get more--there's lots
+of work waiting here for a good, smart young barrister. Ah!--you smile,
+but I know what I'm talking about. You don't know Barford men. They
+believe in the old adage that one should look at home before going
+abroad. They're terribly litigious, too, and if you were here, on the
+spot, they'd give you work. What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"That sounds very tempting. But I was thinking of sticking to London."
+
+"Not one hundredth part of the chance in London that there is here!"
+affirmed Eldrick. "We badly want two or three barristers in this place. A
+man who's really well up in commercial and company law would soon have
+his hands full. There's work, I tell you. Take my advice, and come!"
+
+"I couldn't come--in any case--for a few months," said Collingwood,
+musingly. "Of course, if you really think there's an opening----"
+
+"I know there is!" asserted Eldrick. "I'll guarantee you lots of
+work--our work. I'm sick of fetching men down all the way from town, or
+getting them from Leeds. Come!--and you'll see."
+
+"I might come in a few months' time, and try things for a year or two,"
+replied Collingwood. "But I'm off to India, you know, next week, and I
+shall be away until the end of spring--four months or so."
+
+"To India!" exclaimed Eldrick. "What are you going to do there?"
+
+"Sir John Standridge," said Collingwood, mentioning a famous legal
+luminary of the day, "is going out to Hyderabad to take certain
+evidence, and hold a sort of inquiry, in a big case, and I'm going with
+him as his secretary and assistant--I was in his chambers for two years,
+you know. We leave next week, and we shall not be back until the end of
+April."
+
+"Lucky man!" remarked the solicitor. "Well, when you return, don't
+forget what I've said. Come back!--you'll not regret it. Come and settle
+down. Bye-the-bye, you're not engaged, are you?"
+
+"Engaged?" said Collingwood. "To what--to whom--what do you mean?"
+
+"Engaged to be married," answered Eldrick coolly. "You're not? Good! If
+you want a wife, there's Miss Mallathorpe. Nice, clever girl, my
+boy--and no end of what Barford folk call brass. The very woman for
+you."
+
+"Do you Barford people ever think of anything else but what you call
+brass?" asked Collingwood, laughing.
+
+"Sometimes," replied Eldrick. "But it's generally of something that
+nothing but brass can bring or produce. After all, a rich wife isn't a
+despicable thing, nowadays. You've seen this young lady?"
+
+"I've been there once," asserted Collingwood.
+
+"Go again--before you leave," counselled Eldrick. "You're just the right
+man. Listen to the counsels of the wise! And while you're in India,
+think well over my other advice. I tell you there's a career for you,
+here in the North, that you'd never get in town."
+
+Collingwood left him and went out--to find a motorcar and drive off to
+Normandale Grange, not because Eldrick had advised him to go, but
+because of his promise to Harper and Nesta Mallathorpe. And once more he
+found Nesta alone, and though he had no spice of vanity in his
+composition it seemed to him that she was glad when he walked into the
+room in which they had first met.
+
+"My mother is out--gone to town--to the mill," she said. "And Harper is
+knocking around the park with a gun--killing rabbits--and time. He'll be
+in presently to tea--and he'll be delighted to see you. Are you going to
+stay in Barford much longer?"
+
+"I'm going up to town this evening--seven o'clock train," answered
+Collingwood, watching her keenly. "All my business is finished now--for
+the present."
+
+"But--you'll be coming back?" she asked.
+
+"Perhaps," he said. "I may come back--after a while."
+
+"When you do come back," she went on, a little hurriedly, "will you come
+and see us again? I--it's difficult to explain--but I do wish Harper
+knew more men--the right sort of men. Do you understand?"
+
+"You mean--he needs more company?"
+
+"More company of the right kind. He doesn't know many nice men. And he
+has so little to occupy him. He's no head for business--my mother
+attends to all that--and he doesn't care much about sport--and when he
+goes into Barford he only hangs about the club, and, I'm afraid, at two
+or three of the hotels there, and--it's not good for him."
+
+"Can't you get him interested in anything?" suggested Collingwood. "Is
+there nothing that he cares about?"
+
+"He never did care about anything," replied Nesta with a sigh. "He's
+apathetic! He just moves along. Sometimes I think he was born half
+asleep, and he's never been really awakened. Pity, isn't it?"
+
+"Considering everything--a great pity," agreed Collingwood. "But--he's
+provided for."
+
+Nesta gave him a swift glance.
+
+"It might have been a good deal better for him if he hadn't been
+provided for!" she said. "He'd have just had to do something, then.
+But--if you come back, you'll come here sometimes?"
+
+"Of course!" answered Collingwood. "And if I come back, it will probably
+be to stop here. Mr. Eldrick says there's a lot of work going begging in
+Barford--for a smart young barrister well up in commercial law. Perhaps
+I may try to come up to his standard--I'm certainly young, but I don't
+know whether I'm smart."
+
+"Better come and try," she said, smiling. "Don't forget that I've seen
+you look the part, anyway--your wig and gown suited you very well."
+
+"Theatrical properties," he replied, laughing. "The wig was too small,
+and the gown too long. Well--we'll see. But in the meantime, I'm going
+away for four months--to India."
+
+"To India--four months!" she exclaimed. "That sounds nice."
+
+"Legal business," said Collingwood. "I shall be back about the end of
+April--and then I shall probably come down here again, and seriously
+consider Eldrick's suggestion. I'm very much inclined to take it."
+
+"Then--you'd leave London?" she asked.
+
+"I've little to leave there," replied Collingwood. "My father and mother
+are dead, and I've no brothers, no sisters--no very near relations.
+Sounds lonely, doesn't it?"
+
+"One can feel lonely when one has relations," said Nesta.
+
+"Are you saying that from--experience?" he asked.
+
+"I often wish I had more to do," she answered frankly. "What's the use
+of denying it? I've next to nothing to do, here. I liked my work at the
+hospital--I was busy all day. Here----"
+
+"If I were you," interrupted Collingwood, "I'd set to work nursing in
+another fashion. Look after your brother! Get him going at
+something--even if it's playing golf. Play with him! It would do
+him--and you--all the good in the world if you got thoroughly infatuated
+with even a game. Don't you see?"
+
+"You mean--anything is better than nothing," she replied. "All
+right--I'll try that, anyway. For--I'm anxious about Harper. All this
+money!--and no occupation!"
+
+Collingwood, who was sitting near the windows, looked out across the
+park and into the valley beyond.
+
+"I should have thought that a man who had come into an estate like this
+would have found plenty of occupation," he remarked. "What is there,
+beside the house and this park?"
+
+Nesta, who had busied herself with some fancy-work since Collingwood's
+entrance, laid it down and came to the windows. She pointed to certain
+roofs and gables in the valley.
+
+"There's the whole village of Normandale," she said. "A busy place, no
+doubt, but it's all Harper's--he's lord of the manor. He's patron of the
+living, too. It's all his--farms, cottages, everything. And the woods,
+and the park, and this house, and a stretch of the moors, as well. Of
+course, he ought to find a lot to do--but he doesn't. Perhaps because my
+mother does everything. She really is a business woman."
+
+Collingwood looked out over the area which Nesta had indicated. Harper
+Mallathorpe, he calculated, must be possessed of some three or four
+thousand acres.
+
+"A fine property!" he said. "He's a very fortunate fellow!"
+
+Just then this very fortunate fellow came in. His face, dull enough as
+he entered, lighted up at sight of a visitor, and fell again when
+Collingwood explained that his visit was a mere flying one, and that he
+was returning to London that night. Collingwood led him on to the
+project which he had mentioned at his previous visit--the making of golf
+links in the park, and pointed out, as a devotee of the sport, what a
+fine course could be made. Before he left he had succeeded in arousing
+like interest in Harper--he promised to go into the matter, and to
+employ a man whom Collingwood recommended as an expert in laying out
+golf courses.
+
+"You'll have got your greens in something like order by this time next
+year, if you start operations soon," said Collingwood. "And then, if I
+settle down at Barford, I'll come out now and then, if you'll let me."
+
+"Let you!" exclaimed Harper. "By Jove!--we're only too glad to have
+anybody out here--aren't we, Nesta?"
+
+"We shall always be glad to see Mr. Collingwood," said Nesta.
+
+Collingwood went away with that last intimation warm in his memory. He
+had an idea that the girl meant what she said--and for a moment he was
+sorry that he was going to India. He might have settled down at Barford
+there and then, and--but at that he laughed at himself.
+
+"A young woman with several thousands a year of her own!" he said. "Of
+course, she'll marry some big pot in the county. They feel a little
+lonely, those two, just now, because everything's new to them, and
+they're new to their changed circumstances. But when I get back--ah!--I
+guess they'll have got plenty of people around them."
+
+And he determined, being a young man of sense, not to think any
+more--for already he had thought a good deal of Nesta Mallathorpe, until
+he returned from his Indian travels. Let him attend to his business, and
+leave possibilities until they came nearer.
+
+"All the same." he mused, as he drew near the town again, "I'm pretty
+sure I shall come back here next spring--I feel like it."
+
+He called in at Eldrick's office on his way to the hotel, to take some
+documents which had been preparing for him. It was then late in the
+afternoon, and no one but Pratt was there--Pratt, indeed, had been
+waiting until Collingwood called.
+
+"Going back to town, Mr. Collingwood?" asked Pratt as he handed over a
+big envelope. "When shall we have the pleasure of seeing you again,
+sir?"
+
+Something in the clerk's tone made Collingwood think--he could not tell
+why--that Pratt was fishing for information. And--also for reasons which
+he could not explain--Collingwood had taken a curious dislike to Pratt,
+and was not inclined to give him any confidence.
+
+"I don't know," he answered, a little icily. "I am leaving for India
+next week."
+
+He bade the clerk a formal farewell and went off, and Pratt locked the
+office door and slowly followed him downstairs.
+
+"To India!" he said to himself, watching the young barrister's
+retreating figure. "To India, eh? For a time--or for--what?"
+
+Anyway, that was good news, Pratt had seen in Collingwood a possible
+rival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+
+Collingwood's return to London was made on a Friday evening: next day he
+began the final preparations for his departure to India on the following
+Thursday. He was looking forward to his journey and his stay in India
+with keen expectation. He would have the society of a particularly
+clever and brilliant man; they were to break their journey in Italy and
+in Egypt; he would enjoy exceptional facilities for seeing the native
+life of India; he would gain valuable experience. It was a chance at
+which any young man would have jumped, and Collingwood had been greatly
+envied when it was known that Sir John Standridge had offered it to him.
+And yet he was conscious that if he could have done precisely what he
+desired, he would have stayed longer at Barford, in order to see more of
+Nesta Mallathorpe. Already it seemed a long time to the coming spring,
+when he would be back--and free to go North again.
+
+But Collingwood was fated to go North once more much sooner than he had
+dreamed of. As he sat at breakfast in his rooms on the Monday morning
+after his departure from Barford, turning over his newspaper with no
+particular aim or interest, his attention was suddenly and sharply
+arrested by a headline. Even that headline might not have led him to
+read what lay beneath. But in the same instant in which he saw it he
+also saw a name--Mallathorpe. In the next he knew that heavy trouble had
+fallen on Normandale Grange, the very day after he had left it.
+
+This is what Collingwood read as he sat, coffee-cup in one hand,
+newspaper in the other--staring at the lines of unleaded type:
+
+ TRAGIC FATE OF YOUNG YORKSHIRE SQUIRE
+
+ "A fatal accident, of a particularly sad and disturbing nature,
+ occurred near Barford, Yorkshire, on Saturday. About four
+ o'clock on Saturday afternoon, Mr. Linford Pratt, managing clerk
+ to Messrs. Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, of Barford, who was
+ crossing the grounds of Normandale Grange on his way to a
+ business appointment, discovered the dead body of Mr. H. J.
+ Mallathorpe, the owner of the Normandale Estate, lying in a
+ roadway which at that point is spanned, forty feet above, by a
+ narrow foot-bridge. The latter is an ancient construction of
+ wood, and there is no doubt that it was in extremely bad repair,
+ and had given way when the unfortunate young gentleman, who was
+ out shooting in his park, stepped upon it. Mr. Mallathorpe, who
+ was only twenty-four years of age, succeeded to the Normandale
+ estates, one of the finest properties in the neighbourhood of
+ Barford, about two years ago, under somewhat romantic--and also
+ tragic--circumstances, their previous owner, his uncle, Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe, a well-known Barford manufacturer, meeting a sudden
+ death by the falling of his mill chimney--a catastrophe which
+ also caused the deaths of several of his employees. Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe died intestate, and the estate at Normandale passed
+ to the young gentleman who met such a sad fate on Saturday
+ afternoon. Mr. H.J. Mallathorpe was unmarried, and it is
+ understood that Normandale (which includes the village of that
+ name, the advowson of the living, and about four thousand acres
+ of land) now becomes the property of his sister, Miss Nesta
+ Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood set down his cup, and dropped the newspaper. He was but half
+way through his breakfast, but all his appetite had vanished. All that
+he was conscious of was that here was trouble and grief for a girl in
+whom--it was useless to deny it--he had already begun to take a warm
+interest. And suddenly he started from his chair and snatched up a
+railway guide. As he turned over its pages, he thought rapidly. The
+preparations for his journey to India were almost finished--what was not
+done he could do in a few hours. He had no further appointment with Sir
+John Standridge until nine o'clock on Thursday morning, when he was to
+meet him at the train for Dover and Paris. Monday--Tuesday--Wednesday--he
+had three days--ample time to hurry down to Normandale, to do what he
+could to help there, and to get back in time to make his own last
+arrangements. He glanced at his watch--he had forty minutes in which to
+catch an express from King's Cross to Barford. Without further delay he
+picked up a suit-case which was already packed and set out for the
+station.
+
+He was in Barford soon after two o'clock--in Eldrick's office by
+half-past two. Eldrick shook his head at sight of him.
+
+"I can guess what's brought you down, Collingwood," he said. "Good of
+you, of course--I don't think they've many friends out there."
+
+"I can scarcely call myself that--yet," answered Collingwood. "But--I
+thought I might be of some use. I'll drive out there presently. But
+first--how was it?"
+
+Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"Don't know much more than what the papers say," he answered. "There's
+an old foot-bridge there that spans a road in the park--road cut through
+a ravine. They say it was absolutely rotten, and the poor chap's weight
+was evidently too much for it. And there was a drop of forty feet into a
+hard road. Extraordinary thing that nobody on the estate seems to have
+known of the dangerous condition of that bridge!--but they say it was
+little used--simply a link between one plantation and another.
+However;--it's done, now. Our clerk--Pratt, you know--found the body.
+Hadn't been dead five minutes, Pratt says."
+
+"What was Pratt doing there?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Oh, business of his own," replied Eldrick. "Not ours. There was an
+advertisement in Saturday's papers which set out that a steward was
+wanted for the Normandale estate, and Pratt mentioned it to me in the
+morning that he thought of applying for the job if we'd give him a good
+testimonial. I suppose he'd gone out there to see about the
+preliminaries. Anyway, he was walking through the park when he found
+young Mallathorpe's body. I understand he made himself very useful, too,
+and I've sent him out there again today, to do anything he can--smart
+chap, Pratt!"
+
+"Possibly, then, there is nothing I can do," remarked Collingwood.
+
+"I should say you'll do a lot by merely going there," answered Eldrick.
+"As I said just now, they've few friends, and no relations, and I hear
+that Mrs. Mallathorpe is absolutely knocked over. Go, by all means--a
+bit of sympathy goes a long way on these occasions. I say!--what a
+regular transformation an affair of this sort produces. Do you know,
+that young fellow, just like his uncle, had not made any will! Fact!--I
+had it from Robson, their solicitor, this very morning. The whole of the
+estate comes to the sister, of course--she and the mother will share the
+personal property. By that lad's death, Nesta Mallathorpe becomes one of
+the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!"
+
+Collingwood made no reply to this communication. But as he drove off to
+Normandale Grange, it was fresh in his mind. And it was not very
+pleasant to him. One of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!--and he
+was already realizing that he would like to make Nesta Mallathorpe his
+wife: it was because he felt what he did for her that he had rushed down
+to do anything he could that would be of help. Supposing--only
+supposing--that people--anybody--said that he was fortune-hunting!
+Somewhat unduly sensitive, proud, almost to a fault, he felt his cheek
+redden at the thought, and for a moment he wished that old John
+Mallathorpe's wealth had never passed to his niece. But then he sneered
+at himself for his presumption.
+
+"Ass!" he said. "She's never even thought of me--in that way, most
+likely! Anyway, I'm a stupid fool for thinking of these things at
+present."
+
+But he knew, within a few minutes of entering the big, desolate-looking
+house, that Nesta had been thinking of him. She came to him in the room
+where they had first met, and quietly gave him her hand.
+
+"I was not surprised when they told me you were here," she said. "I was
+thinking about you--or, rather, expecting to hear from you."
+
+"I came at once," answered Collingwood, who had kept her hand in his.
+"I--well, I couldn't stop away. I thought, perhaps, I could do
+something--be of some use."
+
+"It's a great deal of use to have just--come," she said. "Thank you!
+But--I suppose you'll have to go?"
+
+"Not for two days, anyway," he replied. "What can I do?"
+
+"I don't know that you can actually do anything," she answered.
+"Everything is being done. Mr. Eldrick sent his clerk, Mr. Pratt--who
+found Harper--he's been most kind and useful. He--and our own
+solicitor--are making all arrangements. There's got to be an inquest.
+No--I don't know that you can do actual things. But--while you're
+here--you can look in when you like. My mother is very ill--she has
+scarcely spoken since Saturday."
+
+"I'll tell you what I will do," said Collingwood determinedly. "I
+noticed in coming through the village just now that there's quite a
+decent inn there. I'll go down and arrange to stay there until Wednesday
+evening--then I shall be close by--if you should need me."
+
+He saw by her look of quick appreciation and relief that this suggestion
+pleased her. She pressed his hand and withdrew her own. "Thank you
+again!" she said. "Do you know--I can't quite explain--I should be glad
+if you were close at hand? Everybody has been very kind--but I do feel
+that there is nobody I can talk to. If you arrange this, will you come
+in again this evening?"
+
+"I shall arrange it," answered Collingwood. "I'll see to it now. Tell
+your people I am to be brought in whenever I call. And--I'll be close by
+whenever you want me."
+
+It seemed little to say, little to do, but he left her feeling that he
+was being of some use. And as he went off to make his arrangements at
+the inn he encountered Pratt, who was talking to the butler in the outer
+hall.
+
+The clerk looked at Collingwood with an unconcern and a composure which
+he was able to assume because he had already heard of his presence in
+the house. Inwardly, he was malignantly angry that the young barrister
+was there, but his voice was suave, and polite enough when he spoke.
+
+"Good afternoon, Mr. Collingwood," he said quietly. "Very sad occasion
+on which we meet again, sir. Come to offer your sympathy, Mr.
+Collingwood, of course--very kind of you."
+
+"I came," answered Collingwood, who was not inclined to bandy phrases
+with Pratt, "to see if I could be of any practical use."
+
+"Just so, sir," said Pratt. "Mr. Eldrick sent me here for the same
+purpose. There's really not much to do--beyond the necessary
+arrangements, which are already pretty forward. Going back to town,
+sir?" he went on, following Collingwood out to his motor-car, which
+stood waiting in the drive.
+
+"No!" replied Collingwood. "I'm going to send this man to Barford to
+fetch my bag to the inn down there in the village, where I'm going to
+stay for a few days. Did you hear that?" he continued, turning to the
+driver. "Go back to Barford--get my bag from the _Station Hotel_
+there--bring it to the _Normandale Arms_--I'll meet you there on your
+return."
+
+The car went off, and Collingwood, with a nod to Pratt, was about to
+turn down a side path towards the village. But Pratt stopped him.
+
+"Would you care to see the place where the accident happened, Mr.
+Collingwood?" he said. "It's close by--won't take five minutes."
+
+Collingwood hesitated a moment; then he turned back. It might be well,
+he reflected, if he made himself acquainted with all the circumstances
+of this case, simple as they seemed.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "If it's so near."
+
+"This way, sir," responded Pratt. He led his companion along the front
+of the house, through the shrubberies at the end of a wing, and into a
+plantation by a path thickly covered with pine needles. Presently they
+emerged upon a similar track, at right angles to that by which they had
+come, and leading into a denser part of the woods. And at the end of a
+hundred yards of it they came to a barricade, evidently of recent
+construction, over which Pratt stretched a hand. "There!" he said.
+"That's the bridge, sir." Collingwood looked over the barricade. He saw
+that he and Pratt were standing at the edge of one thick plantation of
+fir and pine; the edge of a similar plantation stretched before them
+some ten yards away. But between the two lay a deep, dark ravine, which,
+immediately in front of the temporary barricade, was spanned by a narrow
+rustic bridge--a fragile-looking thing of planks, railed in by boughs of
+trees. And in the middle was a jagged gap in both floor and side-rails,
+showing where the rotten wood had given way.
+
+"I'll explain, Mr. Collingwood," said the clerk presently. "I knew this
+park, sir--I knew it well, before the late Mr. John Mallathorpe bought
+the property. That path at the other end of the bridge makes a short cut
+down to the station in the valley--through the woods and the lower part
+of the park. I came up that path, from the station, on Saturday
+afternoon, intending to cross this bridge and go on to the house, where
+I had private business. When I got to the other end of the bridge,
+there, I saw the gap in the middle. And then I looked down into the
+cut--there's a road--a paved road--down there, and I saw--him! And so I
+made shift to scramble down--stiff job it was!--to get to him. But he
+was dead, Mr. Collingwood--stone dead, sir!--though I'm certain he
+hadn't been dead five minutes. And----"
+
+"Aye, an' he'd never ha' been dead at all, wouldn't young Squire, if
+only his ma had listened to what I telled her!" interrupted a voice
+behind them. "He'd ha' been alive at this minute, he would, if his ma
+had done what I said owt to be done--now then!"
+
+Collingwood turned sharply--to confront an old man, evidently one of the
+woodmen on the estate who had come up behind them unheard on the thick
+carpeting of pine needles. And Pratt turned, too--with a keen look and a
+direct question.
+
+"What do you mean?" he asked. "What are you talking about?"
+
+"I know what I'm talking about, young gentleman," said the man doggedly.
+"I ain't worked, lad and man, on this one estate nine-and-forty
+years--and happen more--wi'out knowin' all about it. I tell'd Mrs.
+Mallathorpe on Friday noon 'at that there owd brig 'ud fall in afore
+long if it worn't mended. I met her here, at this very place where we're
+standin', and I showed her 'at it worn't safe to cross it. I tell'd her
+'t she owt to have it fastened up theer an' then. It's been rottin' for
+many a year, has this owd brig--why, I mind when it wor last repaired,
+and that wor years afore owd Mestur Mallathorpe bowt this estate!"
+
+"When do you say you told Mrs. Mallathorpe all that?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Friday noon it were, sir," answered the woodman. "When I were on my way
+home--dinner time. 'Cause I met the missis here, and I made bold to tell
+her what I'd noticed. That there owd brig!--lor' bless yer, gentlemen!
+it were black rotten i' the middle, theer where poor young maister he
+fell through it. 'Ye mun hev' that seen to at once, missis,' I says.
+'Sartin sure, 'tain't often as it's used,' I says, 'but surely sartin
+'at if it ain't mended, or closed altogether,' I says, 'summun 'll be
+going through and brekkin' their necks,' I says. An' reight, too,
+gentlemen--forty feet it is down to that road. An' a mortal hard road,
+an' all, paved wi' granite stone all t' way to t' stable-yard."
+
+"You're sure it was Friday noon?" repeated Pratt.
+
+"As sure as that I see you," answered the woodman. "An' Mrs. Mallathorpe
+she said she'd hev it seen to. Dear-a-me!--it should ha' been closed!"
+
+The old man shook his head and went off amongst the trees, and Pratt,
+giving his vanishing figure a queer look, turned silently back along the
+path, followed by Collingwood. At the point where the other path led to
+the house, he glanced over his shoulder at the young barrister.
+
+"If you keep straight on, Mr. Collingwood," he said, "you'll get
+straight down to the village and the inn. I must go this way."
+
+He went off rapidly, and Collingwood walked on through the plantation
+towards the _Normandale Arms_--wondering, all the way, why Pratt was so
+anxious to know exactly when it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe had been
+warned about the old bridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+
+Until that afternoon Collingwood had never been in the village to which
+he was now bending his steps; on that and his previous visits to the
+Grange he had only passed the end of its one street. Now, descending
+into it from the slopes of the park, he found it to be little more than
+a hamlet--a church, a farmstead or two, a few cottages in their gardens,
+all clustering about a narrow stream spanned by a high-arched bridge of
+stone. The _Normandale Arms_, a roomy, old-fashioned place, stood at one
+end of the bridge, and from the windows of the room into which
+Collingwood was presently shown he could look out on the stream itself
+and on the meadows beyond it. A peaceful, pretty, quiet place--but the
+gloom which was heavy at the big house or the hill seemed to have spread
+to everybody that he encountered.
+
+"Bad job, this, sir!" said the landlord, an elderly, serious-faced man,
+to whom Collingwood had made known his wants, and who had quickly formed
+the opinion that his guest was of the legal profession. "And a queer
+one, too! Odd thing, sir, that our old squire, and now the young one,
+should both have met their deaths in what you might term violent
+fashion."
+
+"Accident--in both cases," remarked Collingwood.
+
+The landlord nodded his head--and then shook it in a manner which seemed
+to indicate that while he agreed with this proposition in one respect he
+entertained some sort of doubt about it in others.
+
+"Ay, well!" he answered. "Of course, a mill chimney falling, without
+notice, as it were, and a bridge giving way--them's accidents, to be
+sure. But it's a very strange thing about this foot-bridge, up yonder at
+the Grange--very strange indeed! There's queer talk about it, already."
+
+"What sort of talk?" asked Collingwood. Ever since the old woodman had
+come up to him and Pratt, as they stood looking at the foot-bridge, he
+had been aware of a curious sense of mystery, and the landlord's remark
+tended to deepen it. "What are people talking about?"
+
+"Nay--it's only one or two," replied the landlord. "There's been two men
+in here since the affair happened that crossed that bridge Friday
+afternoon--and both of 'em big, heavy men. According to what one can
+learn that there bridge wasn't used much by the Grange people--it led to
+nowhere in particular for them. But there is a right of way across that
+part of the park, and these two men as I'm speaking of--they made use of
+it on Friday--getting towards dark. I know 'em well--they'd both of 'em
+weigh four times as much--together--as young Squire Mallathorpe, and yet
+it didn't give way under them. And then--only a few hours later, as you
+might say, down it goes with him!"
+
+"I don't think you can form any opinion from that!" said Collingwood.
+"These things, these old structures, often give way quite suddenly and
+unexpectedly."
+
+"Ay, well, they did admit, these men too, that it seemed a bit tottery,
+like," remarked the landlord. "Talking it over, between themselves, in
+here, they agreed, to be sure, that it felt to give a bit. All the same,
+there's them as says that it's a queer thing it should ha' given
+altogether when young squire walked on it."
+
+Collingwood clinched matters with a straight question.
+
+"You don't mean to say that people are suggesting that the foot-bridge
+had been tampered with?" he asked.
+
+"There is them about as wouldn't be slow to say as much," answered the
+landlord. "Folks will talk! You see, sir--nobody saw what happened. And
+when country folk doesn't see what takes place, with their own eyes,
+then they----"
+
+"Make mysteries out of it," interrupted Collingwood, a little
+impatiently. "I don't think there's any mystery here, landlord--I
+understood that this foot-bridge was in a very unsafe condition. No! I'm
+afraid the whole affair was only too simple."
+
+But he was conscious, as he said this, that he was not precisely voicing
+his own sentiments. He himself was mystified. He was still wondering why
+Pratt had been so pertinacious in asking the old woodman when,
+precisely, he had told Mrs. Mallathorpe about the unsafe condition of
+the bridge--still wondering about a certain expression which had come
+into Pratt's face when the old man told them what he did--still
+wondering at the queer look which Pratt had given the information as he
+went off into the plantation. Was there, then, something--some secret
+which was being kept back by--somebody?
+
+He was still pondering over these things when he went back to the
+Grange, later in the evening--but he was resolved not to say anything
+about them to Nesta. And he saw Nesta only for a few minutes. Her
+mother, she said, was very ill indeed--the doctor was with her then, and
+she must go back to them. Since her son's death, Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+scarcely spoken, and the doctor, knowing that her heart was not strong,
+was somewhat afraid of a collapse.
+
+"If there is anything that I can do,--or if you should want me, during
+the night," said Collingwood, earnestly, "promise me that you'll send at
+once to the inn!"
+
+"Yes," answered Nesta. "I will. But--I don't think there will be any
+need. We have two nurses here, and the doctor will stop. There is
+something I should be glad if you would do tomorrow," she went on,
+looking at him a little wistfully, "You know about--the inquest?"
+
+"Yes," said Collingwood.
+
+"They say we--that is I, because, of course, my mother couldn't--that I
+need not be present," she continued. "Mr. Robson--our solicitor--says it
+will be a very short, formal affair. He will be there, of
+course,--but--would you mind being there, too!--so that you
+can--afterwards--tell me all about it?"
+
+"Will you tell me something--straight out?" answered Collingwood,
+looking intently at her. "Have you any doubt of any description about
+the accepted story of your brother's death? Be plain with me!"
+
+Nesta hesitated for awhile before answering.
+
+"Not of the actual circumstances," she replied at last,--"none at all of
+what you call the accepted story. The fact is, I'm not a good hand at
+explaining anything, and perhaps I can't convey to you what I mean. But
+I've a feeling--an impression--that there is--or was some mystery on
+Saturday which might have--and might not have--oh, I can't make it
+clear, even to myself.
+
+"If you would be at the inquest tomorrow, and listen carefully to
+everything--and then tell me afterwards--do you understand?"
+
+"I understand," answered Collingwood. "Leave it to me."
+
+Whether he expected to hear anything unusual at the inquest, whether he
+thought any stray word, hint, or suggestion would come up during the
+proceedings, Collingwood was no more aware than Nesta was certain of her
+vague ideas. But he was very soon assured that there was going to be
+nothing beyond brevity and formality. He had never previously been
+present at an inquest--his legal mind was somewhat astonished at the way
+in which things were done. It was quickly evident to him that the twelve
+good men and true of the jury--most of them cottagers and labourers
+living on the estate--were quite content to abide by the directions of
+the coroner, a Barford solicitor, whose one idea seemed to be to get
+through the proceedings as rapidly and smoothly as possible. And
+Collingwood felt bound to admit that, taking the evidence as it was
+brought forward, no simpler or more straightforward cause of
+investigation could be adduced. It was all very simple indeed--as it
+appeared there and then.
+
+The butler, a solemn-faced, respectable type of the old family
+serving-man, spoke as to his identification of the dead master's body,
+and gave his evidence in a few sentences. Mr. Mallathorpe, he said, had
+gone out of the front door of the Grange at half-past two on Saturday
+afternoon, carrying a gun, and had turned into the road leading towards
+the South Shrubbery. At about three o'clock Mr. Pratt had come running
+up the drive to the house, and told him and Miss Mallathorpe that he had
+just found Mr. Mallathorpe lying dead in the sunken cut between the
+South and North Shrubbery. Nobody had any question to ask the butler.
+Nor were any questions asked of Pratt--the one really important witness.
+
+Pratt gave his evidence tersely and admirably. On Saturday morning he
+had seen an advertisement in the Barford newspapers which stated that a
+steward and agent was wanted for the Normandale Estate, and all
+applications were to be made to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Desirous of applying
+for the post, he had written out a formal letter during Saturday
+morning, had obtained a testimonial from his present employers, Messrs.
+Eldrick & Pascoe, and, anxious to present his application as soon as
+possible, had decided to take it to Normandale Grange himself, that
+afternoon. He had left Barford by the two o'clock train, which arrived
+at Normandale at two-thirty-five. Knowing the district well, he had
+taken the path through the plantations. Arrived at the foot-bridge, he
+had at once noticed that part of it had fallen in. Looking into the
+cutting, he had seen a man lying in the roadway beneath--motionless. He
+had scrambled down the side of the cutting, discovered that the man was
+Mr. Harper Mallathorpe, and that he was dead, and had immediately
+hurried up the road to the house, where he had informed the last witness
+and Miss Mallathorpe.
+
+A quite plain story, evidently thought everybody--no questions needed.
+Nor were there any questions needed in the case of the only other
+witnesses--the estate carpenter who said that the foot-bridge was very
+old, but that he had not been aware that it was in quite so bad a
+condition, and who gave it as his opinion that the recent heavy rains
+had had something to do with the matter; and the doctor who testified
+that the victim had suffered injuries which would produce absolutely
+instantaneous death. A clear case--nothing could be clearer, said the
+coroner to his obedient jury, who presently returned the only
+verdict--one of accidental death--which, on the evidence, was possible.
+
+Collingwood heard no comments on the inquest from those who were
+present. But that evening, as he sat in his parlour at the _Normandale
+Arms_, the landlord, coming in on pretence of attending to the fire,
+approached him with an air of mystery and jerked his thumb in the
+direction of the regions which he had just quitted.
+
+"You remember what we were talking of this afternoon when you come in,
+sir?" he whispered. "There's some of 'em--regular nightly customers,
+village folk, you understand--talking of the same thing now, and of this
+here inquest. And if you'd like to hear a bit of what you may call local
+opinion--and especially one man's--I'll put you where you can hear it,
+without being seen. It's worth hearing, anyway."
+
+Collingwood, curious to know what the village wiseacres had to say,
+rose, and followed the landlord into a small room at the back of the
+bar-parlour.
+
+An open hatchment in the wall, covered by a thin curtain, allowed him to
+hear every word which came from what appeared to be a full company. But
+it was quickly evident that in that company there was one man who either
+was, or wished to be dictator and artifex--a man of loud voice and
+domineering tone, who was laying down the law to the accompaniment of
+vigorous thumpings of the table at which he sat. "What I say is--and I
+say it agen---I reckon nowt at all o' crowners' quests!" he was
+affirming, as Collingwood and his guide drew near the curtained opening.
+"What is a crowner's quest, anyway? It's nowt but formality--all form
+and show--it means nowt. All them 'at sits on t' jury does and says just
+what t' crowner tells 'em to say and do. They nivver ax no questions out
+o' their own mouths--they're as dumb as sheep--that's what yon jury wor
+this mornin'--now then!"
+
+"That's James Stringer, the blacksmith," whispered the landlord, coming
+close to Collingwood's elbow. "He thinks he knows everything!"
+
+"And pray, what would you ha' done, Mestur Stringer, if you'd been on
+yon jury?" inquired a milder voice. "I suppose ye'd ha' wanted to know a
+bit more, what?" "Mestur Stringer 'ud ha' wanted to know a deal more,"
+observed another voice. "He would do!"
+
+"There's a many things I want to know," continued the blacksmith, with a
+stout thump of the table. "They all tak' it for granted 'at young squire
+walked on to yon bridge, an' 'at it theer and then fell to pieces. Who
+see'd it fall to pieces? Who was theer to see what did happen?"
+
+"What else did happen or could happen nor what were testified to?" asked
+a new voice. "Theer wor what they call circumstantial evidence to show
+how all t' affair happened!"
+
+"Circumstantial evidence be blowed!" sneered the blacksmith heartily. "I
+reckon nowt o' circumstantial evidence! Look ye here! How do you
+know--how does anybody know 'at t' young squire worn't thrown off that
+bridge, and 'at t' bridge collapsed when he wor thrown? He might ha' met
+somebody on t' bridge, and quarrelled wi' 'em, and whoivver it wor might
+ha' been t' strongest man, and flung him into t' road beneath!"
+
+"Aye, but i' that case t' other feller--t' assailant--'ud ha' fallen wi'
+him," objected somebody.
+
+"Nowt o' t' sort!" retorted the blacksmith. "He'd be safe on t' sound
+part o' t' bridge--it's only a piece on 't that gave way. I say that
+theer idea wants in-quirin' into. An' theer's another thing--what wor
+that lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What
+reight had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and
+at that time? Come, now!--theer's a tickler for somebody."
+
+"He telled that," exclaimed several voices. "He had business i' t'
+place. He had some papers to 'liver."
+
+"Then why didn't he go t' nearest way to t' house t' 'liver 'em?"
+demanded Stringer. "T' shortest way to t' house fro' t' railway station
+is straight up t' carriage drive--not through them plantations. I ax
+agen--what wor that feller doin' theer? It's important."
+
+"Why, ye don't suspect him of owt, do yer, Mestur Stringer?" asked
+somebody. "A respectable young feller like that theer--come!"
+
+"I'm sayin' nowt about suspectin' nobody!" vociferated the blacksmith.
+"I'm doin' nowt but puttin' a case, as t' lawyers 'ud term it. I say 'at
+theer's a lot o' things 'at owt to ha' comed out. I'll tell ye one on
+'em--how is it 'at nowt--not a single word--wor said at yon inquest
+about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t' affair? Not one word!"
+
+A sudden silence fell on the company, and the landlord tapped
+Collingwood's arm and took the liberty of winking at him.
+
+"Why," inquired somebody, at last, "what about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t'
+affair? What had she to do wi' t' affair?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice became judicial in its solemnity.
+
+"Ye listen to me!" he said with emphasis. "I know what I'm talking
+about. Ye know what came out at t' inquest. When this here Pratt ran to
+tell t' news at t' house he returned to what they term t' fatal spot i'
+company wi' t' butler, and a couple of footmen, and Dan Scholes, one o'
+t' grooms. Now theer worn't a word said at t' inquest about what that
+lot--five on em, mind yer--found when they reached t' dead corpse--not
+one word! But I know--Dan Scholes tell'd me!"
+
+"What did they find, then, Mestur Stringer?" asked an eager member of
+the assemblage. "What wor it?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice sank to a mysterious whisper.
+
+"I'll tell yer!" he replied. "They found Mrs. Mallathorpe, lyin' i' a
+dead faint--close by! And they say 'at she's nivver done nowt but go out
+o' one faint into another, ivver since. So, of course, she's nivver been
+able to tell if she saw owt or knew owt! And what I say is," he
+concluded, with a heavy thump of the table, "that theer crowner's quest
+owt to ha' been what they term adjourned, until Mrs. Mallathorpe could
+tell if she did see owt, or if she knew owt, or heer'd owt! She mun ha'
+been close by--or else they wo'dn't ha' found her lyin' theer aside o'
+t' corpse. What did she see? What did she hear? Does she know owt? I
+tell ye 'at theer's questions 'at wants answerin'--and theer's trouble
+ahead for somebody if they aren't answered--now then!"
+
+Collingwood went away from his retreat, beckoning the landlord to
+follow. In the parlour he turned to him.
+
+"Have you heard anything of what Stringer said just now?" he asked. "I
+mean--about Mrs. Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Heard just the same--and from the same chap, Scholes, the groom, sir,"
+replied the landlord. "Oh, yes! Of course, people will wonder why they
+didn't get some evidence from Mrs. Mallathorpe--just as Stringer says."
+
+Collingwood sat a long time that night, thinking over the things he had
+heard. He came to the conclusion that the domineering blacksmith was
+right in one of his dogmatic assertions--there was trouble ahead. And
+next morning, before going up to the Grange, he went to the nearest
+telegraph office, and sent Sir John Standridge a lengthy message in
+which he resigned the appointment that would have taken him to India.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+
+Collingwood had many things to think over as he walked across Normandale
+Park that morning. He had deliberately given up his Indian appointment
+for Nesta's sake, so that he might be near her in case the trouble which
+he feared arose suddenly. But it was too soon yet to let her know that
+she was the cause of his altered arrangements--in any case, that was not
+the time to tell her that it was on her account that he had altered
+them.
+
+He must make some plausible excuse: then he must settle down in Barford,
+according to Eldrick's suggestion. He would then be near at hand--and if
+the trouble, whatever it might be, took tangible form, he would be able
+to help. But he was still utterly in the dark as to what that possible
+trouble might be--yet, of one thing he felt convinced--it would have
+some connection with Pratt.
+
+He remembered, as he walked along, that he had formed some queer, uneasy
+suspicion about Pratt when he first hurried down to Barford on hearing
+of Antony Bartle's death: that feeling, subsequently allayed to some
+extent, had been revived. There might be nothing in it, he said to
+himself, over and over again; everything that seemed strange might be
+easily explained; the evidence of Pratt at the inquest had appeared
+absolutely truthful and straightforward, and yet the blunt, rough,
+downright question of the blacksmith, crudely voiced as it was, found a
+ready agreement in Collingwood's mind. As he drew near the house he
+found himself repeating Stringer's broad Yorkshire--"What wor that
+lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What reight
+had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and at that
+time? Come, now--theer's a tickler for somebody!" And even as he smiled
+at the remembrance of the whole rustic conversation of the previous
+evening, and thought that the blacksmith's question certainly might be a
+ticklish one--for somebody--he looked up from the frosted grass at his
+feet, and saw Pratt.
+
+Pratt, a professional-looking bag in his hand, a morning newspaper under
+the other arm, was standing at the gate of one of the numerous
+shrubberies which flanked the Grange, talking to a woman who leaned over
+it. Collingwood recognized her as a person whom he had twice seen in the
+house during his visits on the day before---a middle-aged, slightly
+built woman, neatly dressed in black, and wearing a sort of nurse's cap
+which seemed to denote some degree of domestic servitude. She was a
+woman who had once been pretty, and who still retained much of her good
+looks; she was also evidently of considerable shrewdness and
+intelligence and possessed a pair of remarkably quick eyes--the sort of
+eyes, thought Collingwood, that see everything that happens within their
+range of vision. And she had a firm chin and a mouth which expressed
+determination; he had seen all that as she exchanged some conversation
+with the old butler in Collingwood's presence--a noticeable woman
+altogether. She was evidently in close conference with Pratt at that
+moment--but as Collingwood drew near she turned and went slowly in the
+direction of the house, while Pratt, always outwardly polite, stepped
+towards the interrupter of this meeting, and lifted his hat.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Collingwood," he said. "A fine, sharp morning, sir! I
+was just asking Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid how her mistress is this
+morning--she was very ill when I left last night. Better, sir, I'm glad
+to say--Mrs. Mallathorpe has had a much better night."
+
+"I'm very pleased to hear it," replied Collingwood. He was going towards
+the front of the Grange, and Pratt walked at his side, evidently in the
+same direction. "I am afraid she has had a great shock. You are still
+here, then?" he went on, feeling bound to make some remark, and saying
+the first obvious thing. "Still busy?"
+
+"Mr. Eldrick has lent me--so to speak--until the funeral's over,
+tomorrow," answered Pratt. "There are a lot of little things in which I
+can be useful, you know, Mr. Collingwood. I suppose your
+arrangements--you said you were sailing for India--won't permit of your
+being present tomorrow, sir?"
+
+Collingwood was not sure if the clerk was fishing for information.
+Pratt's manner was always polite, his questions so innocently put, that
+it was difficult to know what he was actually after. But he was not
+going to give him any information--either then, or at any time.
+
+"I don't quite know what my arrangements may be," he answered. And just
+then they came to the front entrance, and Collingwood was taken off in
+one direction by a footman, while Pratt, who already seemed to be fully
+acquainted with the house and its arrangements, took himself and his bag
+away in another.
+
+Nesta came to Collingwood looking less anxious than when he had left her
+at his last call the night before. He had already told her what his
+impressions of the inquest were, and he was now wondering whether to
+tell her of the things he had heard said at the village inn. But
+remembering that he was now going to stay in the neighbourhood, he
+decided to say nothing at that time--if there was anything in these
+vague feelings and suspicions it would come out, and could be dealt with
+when it arose. At present he had need of a little diplomacy.
+
+"Oh!--I wanted to tell you," he said, after talking to her awhile about
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I--there's a change in my arrangements, I'm not going
+to India, after all."
+
+He was not prepared for the sudden flush that came over the girl's face.
+It took him aback. It also told him a good deal that he was glad to
+know--and it was only by a strong effort of will that he kept himself
+from taking her hands and telling her the truth. But he affected not to
+see anything, and he went on talking rapidly. "Complete change in the
+arrangements at the last minute," he said. "I've just been writing about
+it. So--as that's off, I think I shall follow Eldrick's advice, and take
+chambers in Barford for a time, and see how things turn out. I'm going
+into Barford now, to see Eldrick about all that."
+
+Nesta, who was conscious of her betrayal of more than she cared to show
+just then, tried to speak calmly.
+
+"But--isn't it an awful disappointment?" she said. "You were looking
+forward so to going there, weren't you?"
+
+"Can't be helped," replied Collingwood. "All these affairs
+are--provisional. I thought I'd tell you at once, however--so that
+you'll know--if you ever want me--that I shall be somewhere round about.
+In fact, as it's quite comfortable there, I shall stop at the inn until
+I've got rooms in the town."
+
+Then, not trusting himself to remain longer, he went off to Barford,
+certain that he was now definitely pledged in his own mind to Nesta
+Mallathorpe, and not much less that when the right time came she would
+not be irresponsive to him. And on that, like a cold douche, came the
+remembrance of her actual circumstances--she was what Eldrick had said,
+one of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire. The thought of her
+riches made Collingwood melancholy for a while--he possessed a curious
+sort of pride which made him hate and loathe the notion of being taken
+for a fortune-hunter. But suddenly, and with a laugh, he remembered that
+he had certain possessions of his own--ability, knowledge, and
+perseverance. Before he reached Eldrick's office, he had had a vision of
+the Woolsack.
+
+Eldrick received Collingwood's news with evident gratification. He
+immediately suggested certain chambers in an adjacent building; he
+volunteered information as to where the best rooms in the town were to
+be had. And in proof of his practical interest in Collingwood's career,
+he there and then engaged his professional services for two cases which
+were to be heard at a local court within the following week.
+
+"Pratt shall deliver the papers to you at once," he said. "That is, as
+soon as he's back from Normandale this afternoon. I sent him there again
+to make himself useful."
+
+"I saw him this morning," remarked Collingwood. "He appears to be a very
+useful person."
+
+"Clever chap," asserted Eldrick, carelessly. "I don't know what'll be
+done about that stewardship that he was going to apply for. Everything
+will be altered now that young Mallathorpe's dead. Of course, I,
+personally, shouldn't have thought that Pratt would have done for a job
+like that, but Pratt has enough self-assurance and self-confidence for a
+dozen men, and he thought he would do, and I couldn't refuse him a
+testimonial. And as he's made himself very useful out there, it may be
+that if this steward business goes forward, Pratt will get the
+appointment. As I say, he's a smart chap."
+
+Collingwood offered no comment. But he was conscious that it would not
+be at all pleasing to him to know that Linford Pratt held any official
+position at Normandale. Foolish as it might be, mere inspiration though
+it probably was, he could not get over his impression that Eldrick's
+clerk was not precisely trustworthy. And yet, he reflected, he himself
+could do nothing--it would be utter presumption on his part to offer any
+gratuitous advice to Nesta Mallathorpe in business matters. He was very
+certain of what he eventually meant to say to her about his own personal
+hopes, some time hence, when all the present trouble was over, but in
+the meantime, as regarded anything else, he could only wait and watch,
+and be of service to her if she asked him to render any.
+
+Some time went by before Collingwood was asked to render service of any
+sort. At Normandale Grange, events progressed in apparently ordinary and
+normal fashion. Harper Mallathorpe was buried; his mother began to make
+some recovery from the shock of his death; the legal folk were busied in
+putting Nesta in possession of the estate, and herself and her mother in
+proprietorship of the mill and the personal property. In Barford, things
+went on as usual, too. Pratt continued his round of duties at Eldrick &
+Pascoe's; no more was heard--by outsiders, at any rate--of the
+stewardship at Normandale. As for Collingwood, he settled down in
+chambers and lodgings and, as Eldrick had predicted, found plenty of
+work. And he constantly went out to Normandale Grange, and often met
+Nesta elsewhere, and their knowledge of each other increased, and as the
+winter passed away and spring began to show on the Normandale woods and
+moors, Collingwood felt that the time was coming when he might speak. He
+was professionally engaged in London for nearly three weeks in the early
+part of that spring--when he returned, he had made up his mind to tell
+Nesta the truth, at once. He had faced it for himself--he was by that
+time so much in love with her that he was not going to let monetary
+considerations prevent him from telling her so.
+
+But Collingwood found something else than love to talk about when he
+presented himself at Normandale Grange on the morning after his arrival
+from his three weeks' absence in town. As soon as he met her, he saw
+that Nesta was not only upset and troubled, but angry.
+
+"I am glad you have come," she said, when they were alone. "I want some
+advice. Something has happened--something that bothers--and puzzles--me
+very, very much! I'm dreadfully bothered."
+
+"Tell me," suggested Collingwood.
+
+Nesta frowned--at some recollection or thought.
+
+"Yesterday afternoon," she answered, "I was obliged to go into Barford,
+on business. I left my mother fairly well---she has been recovering fast
+lately, and she only has one nurse now. Unfortunately, she, too, was out
+for the afternoon. I came back to find my mother ill and much
+upset---and there's no use denying it--she'd all the symptoms of having
+been--well, frightened. I can't think of any other term than
+that--frightened. And then I learned that, in my absence, Mr. Eldrick's
+clerk, Mr. Pratt--you know him--had been here, and had been with her for
+quite an hour. I am furiously angry!"
+
+Collingwood had expected this announcement as soon as she began to
+explain. So--the trouble was beginning!
+
+"How came Pratt to be admitted to your mother?" he asked.
+
+"That makes me angry, too," answered Nesta. "Though I confess I ought to
+be angry with myself for not giving stricter orders. I left the house
+about two--he came about three, and asked to see my mother's maid,
+Esther Mawson. He told her that it was absolutely necessary for him to
+see my mother on business, and she told my mother he was there. My
+mother consented to see him--and he was taken up. And as I say, I found
+her ill--and frightened--and that's not the worst of it!"
+
+"What is the worst of it?" asked Collingwood, anxiously. "Better tell
+me!--I may be able to do something."
+
+"The worst of it," she said, "is just this--my mother won't tell me what
+that man came about! She flatly refuses to tell me anything! She will
+only say that it was business of her own. She won't trust me with it,
+you see!--her own daughter! What business can that man have with
+her?--or she with him? Eldrick & Pascoe are not our solicitors! There's
+some secret and----"
+
+"Will you answer one or two questions?" said Collingwood quietly. He had
+never seen Nesta angry before, and he now realized that she had certain
+possibilities of temper and determination which would be formidable when
+roused. "First of all, is that maid you speak of, Esther Mawson,
+reliable?"
+
+"I don't know!" answered Nesta. "My mother has had her two years--she's
+a Barford woman. Sometimes I think she's sly and cunning. But I've given
+her such strict orders now that she'll never dare to let any one see my
+mother again without my consent."
+
+"The other question's this," said Collingwood. "Have you any idea, any
+suspicion of why Pratt wanted to see your mother?"
+
+"Not unless it was about that stewardship," replied Nesta. "But--how
+could that frighten her? Besides, all that's over. Normandale is
+mine!--and if I have a steward, or an estate agent, I shall see to the
+appointment myself. No!--I do not know why he should have come here!
+But--there's some mystery. The curious thing is----"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood, as she paused.
+
+"Why," she said, shaking her head wonderingly, "that I'm absolutely
+certain that my mother never even knew this man Pratt--I don't I think
+she even knew his name--until quite recently. I know when she got to
+know him, too. It was just about the time that you first called here--at
+the time of Mr. Bartle's death. Our butler told me this morning that
+Pratt came here late one evening--just about that time!--and asked to
+see my mother, and was with her for some time in the study. Oh! what is
+it all about?--and why doesn't she tell me?"
+
+Collingwood stood silently staring out of the window. At the time of
+Antony Bartle's death? An evening visit?--evidently of a secret nature.
+And why paid to Mrs. Mallathorpe at that particular time? He suddenly
+turned to Nesta.
+
+"What do you wish me to do?" he asked.
+
+"Will you speak to Mr. Eldrick?" she said. "Tell him that his clerk must
+not call upon, or attempt to see, my mother. I will not have it!"
+
+Collingwood went off to Barford, and straight to Eldrick's office. He
+noticed as he passed through the outer rooms that Pratt was not in his
+accustomed place--as a rule, it was impossible to get at either Eldrick
+or Pascoe without first seeing Pratt.
+
+"Hullo!" said Eldrick. "Just got in from town? That's lucky--I've got a
+big case for you."
+
+"I got in last night," replied Collingwood. "But I went out to
+Normandale first thing this morning: I've just come back from there. I
+say, Eldrick, here's an unpleasant matter to tell you of"; and he told
+the solicitor all that Nesta had just told him, and also of Pratt's
+visit to Mrs. Mallathorpe about the time of Antony Bartle's death.
+"Whatever it is," he concluded sternly, "it's got to stop! If you've any
+influence over your clerk----"
+
+Eldrick made a grimace and waved his hand.
+
+"He's our clerk no longer!" he said. "He left us the week after you went
+up to town, Collingwood. He was only a weekly servant, and he took
+advantage of that to give me a week's notice. Now, what game is Master
+Pratt playing? He's smart, and he's deep, too. He----"
+
+Just then an office-boy announced Mr. Robson, the Mallathorpe family
+solicitor, a bustling, rather rough-and-ready type of man, who came into
+Eldrick's room looking not only angry but astonished. He nodded to
+Collingwood, and flung himself into a chair at the side of Eldrick's
+desk.
+
+"Look here, Eldrick!" he exclaimed. "What on earth has that clerk of
+yours, Pratt, got to do with Mrs. Mallathorpe? Do you know what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has done? Hang it, she must be out of her senses,--or--or
+there's something I can't fathom. She's given your clerk, Linford Pratt,
+a power of attorney to deal with all her affairs and all her property!
+Oh, it's all right, I tell you! Pratt's been to my office, and exhibited
+it to me as if--as if he were the Lord Chancellor!"
+
+Eldrick turned to Collingwood, and Collingwood to Eldrick--and then both
+turned to Robson.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE FIRST TRICK
+
+
+The Mallathorpe family solicitor shook his head impatiently under those
+questioning glances.
+
+"It's not a bit of use appealing to me to know what it means!" he
+exclaimed. "I know no more than what I've told you. That chap walked
+into my office as bold as brass, half an hour ago, and exhibited to me a
+power of attorney, all duly drawn up and stamped, executed in his favour
+by Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday. And as Mrs. Mallathorpe is, as far as I
+know, in her senses,--why--there you are!"
+
+"What is it?" asked Eldrick. "A general power? Or a special?"
+
+"General!" answered Robson, with an air of disgust. "Authorizes him to
+act for her in all business matters. It means, of course, that that
+fellow now has full control over--why, a tremendous amount of money! The
+estate, of course, is Miss Mallathorpe's--he can't interfere with that.
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shares equally with her daughter as regards the
+personal property of Harper Mallathorpe--his share in the business, and
+all that he left, and what's more, Mrs. Mallathorpe is administratrix of
+the personal property. She's simply placed in Pratt's hands an enormous
+power! And--for what reason? Who on earth is Pratt--what right, title,
+age, or qualification, has he to be entrusted with such a big affair? I
+never knew of such a business in the whole course of my professional
+experiences!"
+
+"Nor I!" agreed Eldrick. "But there's one thing in which you're
+mistaken, Robson. You ask what qualification Pratt has for a post of
+that sort? Pratt's a very smart, clever, managing chap!"
+
+"Oh, of course! He's your clerk!" retorted Robson, a little sneeringly.
+"Naturally, you've a big idea of his abilities. But----"
+
+"He's not our clerk any longer," said Eldrick. "He left us about a week
+ago. I heard this morning that he's set up an office in Market
+Street--in the Atlas Building--and I wondered for what purpose."
+
+"Purpose of fleecing Mrs. Mallathorpe, I should say!" grumbled Robson.
+"Of course, everything of hers must pass through his hands. What on
+earth can her daughter have been thinking of to allow----"
+
+"Stop a bit!" interrupted Eldrick. "Collingwood came in to tell me about
+that--he's just come from Normandale Grange. Miss Mallathorpe complains
+that Pratt called there yesterday in her absence. That's probably when
+this power of attorney was signed. But Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know
+anything of it--she insists that Pratt shall not visit her mother."
+
+Robson stirred impatiently in his chair.
+
+"That's all bosh!" he said. "She can't prevent it. I saw Mrs.
+Mallathorpe myself three days ago--she's recovering very well, and she's
+in her right senses, and she's capable of doing business. Her daughter
+can't prevent her from doing anything she likes! And if she did what she
+liked yesterday when she signed that document--why, everybody's
+powerless--except Pratt."
+
+"There's the question of how the document was obtained," remarked
+Collingwood. "There may have been undue influence."
+
+The two solicitors looked at each other. Then Eldrick rose from his
+chair. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he said. "It's no affair of mine,
+but we employed Pratt for years, and he'll confide in me. I'll go and
+see him, and ask him what it's all about. Wait here a while, you two."
+
+He went out of his office and across into Market Street, where the Atlas
+Building, a modern range of offices and chambers, towered above the
+older structures at its foot. In the entrance hall a man was gilding the
+name of a new tenant on the address board--that name was Pratt's, and
+Eldrick presently found himself ascending in the lift to Pratt's
+quarters on the fifth floor. Within five minutes of leaving Collingwood
+and Robson, he was closeted with Pratt in a well-furnished and appointed
+little office of two rooms, the inner one of which was almost luxurious
+in its fittings. And Pratt himself looked extremely well satisfied, and
+confident--and quite at his ease. He wheeled forward an easy chair for
+his visitor, and pushed a box of cigarettes towards him.
+
+"Glad to see you, Mr. Eldrick," he said, with a cordial politeness which
+suggested, however, somehow, that he and the solicitor were no longer
+master and servant. "How do you like my little place of business?"
+
+"You're making a comfortable nest of it, anyhow, Pratt," answered
+Eldrick, looking round. "And--what sort of business are you going to do,
+pray?"
+
+"Agency," replied Pratt, promptly. "It struck me some little time ago
+that a smart man,--like myself, eh?--could do well here in Barford as an
+agent in a new sort of fashion--attending to things for people who
+aren't fitted or inclined to do 'em for themselves--or are rich enough
+to employ somebody to look after their affairs. Of course, that
+Normandale stewardship dropped out when young Harper died, and I don't
+suppose the notion 'll be revived now that his sister's come in. But
+I've got one good job to go on with---Mrs. Mallathorpe's given me her
+affairs to look after."
+
+Eldrick took one of the cigarettes and lighted it--as a sign of his
+peaceable and amicable intentions.
+
+"Pratt!" he said. "That's just what I've come to see you about.
+Unofficially, mind--in quite a friendly way. It's like this"; and he
+went on to tell Pratt of what had just occurred at his own office.
+"So--there you are," he concluded. "I'm saying nothing, you know, it's
+no affair of mine--but if these people begin to say that you've used any
+undue influence----"
+
+"Mr. Collingwood, and Mr. Robson, and Miss Mallathorpe--and anybody,"
+answered Pratt, slowly and firmly, "had better mind what they are
+saying, Mr. Eldrick. There's such a thing as slander, as you're well
+aware. I'm not the man to be slandered, or libelled, or to have my
+character defamed--without fighting for my rights. There has been no
+undue influence! I went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday at her own
+request. The arrangement between me and her is made with her approval
+and free will. If her daughter found her a bit upset, it's because she'd
+such a shock at the time of her son's death. I did nothing to frighten
+her, not I! The fact is, Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know that her mother
+and I have had a bit of business together of late. And all that Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has entrusted to me is the power to look after her affairs
+for her. And why not? You know that I'm a good man of business, a really
+good hand at commercial accountancy, and well acquainted with the trade
+of this town. You know too, Mr. Eldrick, that I'm scrupulously
+honest--I've had many and many a thousand pounds of yours and your
+partner's through my hands! Who's got anything to say against me? I'm
+only trying to earn an honest living."
+
+"Well, well!" said Eldrick, who, being an easy-going and
+kindly-dispositioned man, was somewhat inclined to side with his old
+clerk. "I suppose Mr. Robson thinks that if Mrs. Mallathorpe wished to
+put her affairs in anybody's hands, she should have put them in his.
+He's their family solicitor, you know, Pratt, while you're a young man
+with no claim on Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Pratt smiled--a queer, knowing smile--and reached out his hand to some
+papers which lay on his desk.
+
+"You're wrong there, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "But of course, you don't
+know. I didn't know myself, nor did Mrs. Mallathorpe, until lately. But
+I have a claim--and a good one--to get a business lift from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. I'm a relation."
+
+"What--of the Mallathorpe family?" exclaimed Eldrick, whose legal mind
+was at once bitten by notion of kinship and succession, and who knew
+that Harper Mallathorpe was supposed to have no male relatives at all,
+of any degree. "You don't mean it?"
+
+"No!--but of hers, Mrs. Mallathorpe," answered Pratt. "My mother was her
+cousin. I found that out by mere chance, and when I'd found it, I worked
+out the facts from our parish church register. They're all here--fairly
+copied--Mrs. Mallathorpe has seen them. So I have some claim--even if
+it's only that of a poor relation."
+
+Eldrick took the sheets of foolscap which Pratt handed to him, and
+looked them over with interest and curiosity. He was something of an
+expert in such matters, and had helped to edit a print more than once of
+the local parish registers. He soon saw from a hasty examination of the
+various entries of marriages and births that Pratt was quite right in
+what he said.
+
+"I call it a poor--and a mean--game," remarked Pratt, while his old
+master was thus occupied, "a very mean game indeed, of well-to-do folk
+like Mr. Collingwood and Mr. Robson to want to injure me in a matter
+which is no business of theirs. I shall do my duty by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe--you yourself know I'm fully competent to do it--and I shall
+fully earn the percentage that she'll pay me. What right have these
+people--what right has her daughter--to come between me and my living?"
+
+"Oh, well, well!" said Eldrick, as he handed back the papers and rose.
+"It's one of those matters that hasn't been understood. You made a
+mistake, you know, Pratt, when you went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday
+in her daughter's absence. You shouldn't have done that."
+
+Pratt pulled open a drawer and, after turning over some loose papers,
+picked out a letter.
+
+"Do you know Mrs. Mallathorpe's handwriting?" he asked. "Very
+well--there it is! Isn't that a request from her that I should call on
+her yesterday afternoon? Very well then!"
+
+Eldrick looked at the letter with some surprise. He had a good memory,
+and he remembered that Collingwood had told him that Nesta had said that
+Pratt had gone to Normandale Grange, seen Esther Mawson, and told her
+that it was absolutely necessary for him to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. And
+though Eldrick was naturally unsuspicious, an idea flashed across his
+mind--had Pratt got Mrs. Mallathorpe to write that letter while he was
+there--yesterday--and brought it away with him?
+
+"I think there's a good deal of misunderstanding," he said. "Mr.
+Collingwood says that you went there and told her maid that it was
+absolutely necessary for you to see her mistress--sort of forced
+yourself in, you see, Pratt."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" retorted Pratt. He flourished the letter in his
+hand. "Doesn't it say there, in Mrs. Mallathorpe's own handwriting, that
+she particularly desires to see me at three o'clock? It does! Then it
+was absolutely necessary for me to see her. Come, now! And Mr.
+Collingwood had best attend to his own business. What's he got to do
+with all this? After Miss Mallathorpe and her money, I should
+think!--that's about it!"
+
+Eldrick said another soothing word or two, and went back to his own
+office. He was considerably mystified by certain things, but inclined to
+be satisfied about others, and in giving an account of what had just
+taken place he unconsciously seemed to take Pratt's side--much to
+Robson's disgust, and to Collingwood's astonishment.
+
+"You can't get over this, you know, Robson," said Eldrick. "Pratt went
+there yesterday by appointment--went at Mrs. Mallathorpe's own express
+desire, made in her own handwriting. And it's quite certain that what he
+says about the relationship is true---I examined the proof myself. It's
+not unnatural that Mrs. Mallathorpe should desire to do something for
+her own cousin's son."
+
+"To that extent?" sneered Robson. "Bless me, you talk as if it were no
+more than presenting him with a twenty pound note, instead of its being
+what it is--giving him the practical control of many a thousand pounds
+every year. There'll be more heard of this--yet!"
+
+He went away angrier than when he came, and Eldrick looked at
+Collingwood and shook his head.
+
+"I don't see what more there is to do," he said. "So far as I can make
+out, or see, Pratt is within his rights. If Mrs. Mallathorpe liked to
+entrust her business to him, what is to prevent it? I see nothing at all
+strange in that. But there is a fact which does seem uncommonly strange
+to me! It's this--how is it that Mrs. Mallathorpe doesn't consult,
+hasn't consulted--doesn't inform, hasn't informed--her daughter about
+all this?"
+
+"That," answered Collingwood, "is precisely what strikes me--and I can't
+give any explanation. Nor, I believe, can Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+He felt obliged to go back to Normandale, and tell Nesta the result of
+the afternoon's proceedings. And having seen during his previous visit
+how angry she could be, he was not surprised to see her become angrier
+and more determined than ever.
+
+"I will not have Mr. Pratt coming here!" she exclaimed. "He shall not
+see my mother--under my roof, at any rate. I don't believe she sent for
+him."
+
+"Mr. Eldrick saw her letter!" interrupted Collingwood quietly.
+
+"Then that man made her write it while he was here!" exclaimed Nesta.
+"As to the relationship--it may be so. I never heard of it. But I don't
+care what relation he is to my mother--he is not going to interfere with
+her affairs!"
+
+"The strange thing," said Collingwood, as pointedly as was consistent
+with kindness, "is that your mother--just now, at any rate--doesn't seem
+to be taking you into her confidence."
+
+Nesta looked steadily at him for a moment, without speaking. When she
+did speak it was with decision.
+
+"Quite so!" she said. "She is keeping something from me! And if she
+won't tell me things--well, I must find them out for myself."
+
+She would say no more than that, and Collingwood left her. And as he
+went back to Barford he cursed Linford Pratt soundly for a deep and
+underhand rogue who was most certainly playing some fine game.
+
+But Pratt himself was quite satisfied--up to that point. He had won his
+first trick and he had splendid cards still left in his hand. And he was
+reckoning his chances on them one morning a little later when a ring at
+his bell summoned him to his office door--whereat stood Nesta
+Mallathorpe, alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+
+Had any third person been present, closely to observe the meeting of
+these two young people, he would have seen that the one to whom it was
+unexpected and a surprise was outwardly as calm and self-possessed as if
+the other had come there to keep an ordinary business appointment.
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, looking very dignified and almost stately in her
+mourning, was obviously angry, indignant, and agitated. But Pratt was as
+cool and as fully at his ease as if he were back in Eldrick's office,
+receiving the everyday ordinary client. He swept his door open and
+executed his politest bow--and was clever enough to pretend that he saw
+nothing of his visitor's agitation. Yet deep within himself he felt more
+tremors than one, and it needed all his powers of dissimulation to act
+and speak as if this were the most usual of occurrences.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "You wish to see me? Come
+into my private office, if you please. I haven't fixed on a clerk yet,"
+he went on, as he led his visitor through the outer room, and to the
+easy chair by his desk. "I have several applications from promising
+aspirants, but I have to be careful, you know, Miss Mallathorpe--it's a
+position of confidence. And now," he concluded, as he closed the door
+upon Nesta and himself, "how is Mrs. Mallathorpe today? Improving, I
+hope?"
+
+Nesta made no reply to these remarks, or to the question. And instead of
+taking the easy chair which Eldrick had found so comfortable, she went
+to one which stood against the wall opposite Pratt's desk and seated
+herself in it in as upright a position as the wall behind her.
+
+"I wish to speak to you--plainly!" she said, as Pratt, who now regarded
+her somewhat doubtfully, realizing that he was in for business of a
+serious nature, sat down at his desk. "I want to ask you a plain
+question--and I expect a plain answer. Why are you blackmailing my
+mother?"
+
+Pratt shook his head--as if he felt more sorrow than anger. He glanced
+deprecatingly at his visitor.
+
+"I think you'll be sorry--on reflection--that you said that, Miss
+Mallathorpe," he answered. "You're a little--shall we say--upset? A
+little--shall we say--angry? If you were calmer, you wouldn't say such
+things--you wouldn't use such a term as--blackmailing. It's--dear me, I
+dare say you don't know it!--it's actionable. If I were that sort of
+man, Miss Mallathorpe, and you said that of me before witnesses--ah! I
+don't know what mightn't happen. However--I'm not that sort of man.
+But--don't say it again, if you please!"
+
+"If you don't answer my question--and at once," said Nesta, whose cheeks
+were pale with angry determination, "I shall say it again in a fashion
+you won't like--not to you, but to the police!"
+
+Pratt smiled--a quiet, strange smile which made his visitor feel a
+sudden sense of fear. And again he shook his head, slowly and
+deprecatingly.
+
+"Oh, no!" he said gently. "That's a bigger mistake than the other, Miss
+Mallathorpe! The police! Oh, not the police, I think, Miss Mallathorpe.
+You see--other people than you might go to the police--about something
+else."
+
+Nesta's anger cooled down under that scarcely veiled threat. The sight
+of Pratt, of his self-assurance, his comfortable offices, his general
+atmosphere of almost sleek satisfaction, had roused her temper, already
+strained to breaking point. But that smile, and the quiet look which
+accompanied his last words, warned her that anger was mere foolishness,
+and that she was in the presence of a man who would have to be dealt
+with calmly if the dealings were to be successful. Yet--she repeated her
+words, but this time in a different tone.
+
+"I shall certainly go to the police authorities," she said, "unless I
+get some proper explanation from you. I shall have no option. You are
+forcing--or have forced--my mother to enter into some strange
+arrangements with you, and I can't think it is for anything but what I
+say--blackmail. You've got--or you think you've got--some hold on her.
+Now what is it? I mean to know, one way or another!"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," said Pratt. "You're taking a wrong course--with me.
+Now who advised you to come here and speak to me like this, as if I were
+a common criminal? Mr. Collingwood, no doubt? Or perhaps Mr. Robson? Now
+if either----"
+
+"Neither Mr. Robson nor Mr. Collingwood know anything whatever about my
+coming here!" retorted Nesta. "No one knows! I am quite competent to
+manage my own affairs--of this sort. I want to know why my mother has
+been forced into that arrangement with you--for I am sure you have
+forced her! If you will not tell me why--then I shall do what I said."
+
+"You'll go to the police authorities?" asked Pratt. "Ah!--but let us
+consider things a little, Miss Mallathorpe. Now, to start with, who says
+there has been any forcing? I know one person who won't say so--and
+that's your mother herself!"
+
+Nesta felt unable to answer that assertion. And Pratt smiled
+triumphantly and went on.
+
+"She'll tell you--Mrs. Mallathorpe'll tell you--that she's very pleased
+indeed to have my poor services," he said. "She knows that I shall serve
+her well. She's glad to do a kind service to a poor relation. And since
+I am your mother's relation, Miss Mallathorpe, I'm yours, too. I'm some
+degree of cousin to you. You might think rather better, rather more
+kindly, of me!"
+
+"Are you going to tell me anything more than that?" asked Nesta
+steadily. Pratt shrugged his shoulders and waved his hands.
+
+"What more can I tell?" he asked. "The fact is, there's a business
+arrangement between me and your mother--and you object to it. Well--I'm
+sorry, but I've my own interests to consider."
+
+"Are you going to tell me what it was that induced my mother to sign
+that paper you got from her the other day?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Can I say more than that it was--a business arrangement?" pleaded
+Pratt. "There's nothing unusual in one party in a business arrangement
+giving a power of attorney to another party. Nothing!"
+
+"Very well!" said Nesta, rising from the straight-backed chair, and
+looking very rigid herself as she stood up. "You won't tell me anything!
+So--I am now going to the police. I don't know what they'll do. I don't
+know what they can do. But--I can tell them what I think and feel about
+this, at any rate. For as sure as I am that I see you, there's something
+wrong! And I'll know what it is."
+
+Pratt recognized that she had passed beyond the stage of mere anger to
+one of calm determination. And as she marched towards the door he called
+her back--as the result of a second's swift thought on his part.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," he said. "Oblige me by sitting down again. I'm not
+in the least afraid of your going to the police. But my experience is
+that if one goes to them on errands of this sort, it sets all sorts of
+things going--scandal, and suspicion, and I don't know what! You don't
+want any scandal. Sit down, if you please, and let us think for a
+moment. And I'll see if I can tell you--what you want to know."
+
+Nesta already had a hand on the door. But after looking at him for a
+second or two, she turned back, and sat down in her old position. And
+Pratt, still seated at his desk, plunged his hands in his trousers
+pockets, tilted back his chair, and for five minutes stared with knitted
+brows at his blotting pad. A queer silence fell on the room. The windows
+were double-sashed; no sound came up from the busy street below. But on
+the mantelpiece a cheap Geneva clock ticked and ticked, and Nesta felt
+at last that if it went on much longer, without the accompaniment of a
+human voice, she should suddenly snatch it up, and hurl it--anywhere.
+
+Pratt was in the position of the card-player, who, confronted by a
+certain turn in the course of a game which he himself feels sure he is
+bound to win, wonders whether he had better not expedite matters by
+laying his cards on the table, and asking his opponent if he can
+possibly beat their values and combination. He had carefully reckoned up
+his own position more than once during the progress of recent events,
+and the more carefully he calculated it the more he felt convinced that
+he had nothing to fear. He had had to alter his ground in consequence of
+the death of Harper Mallathorpe, and he had known that he would have to
+fight Nesta. But he had not anticipated that hostilities would come so
+soon, or begin with such evident determination on her part. How would it
+be, then, at this first stage to make such a demonstration in force that
+she would recognize his strength?
+
+He looked up at last and saw Nesta regarding him sternly. But Pratt
+smiled--the quiet smile which made her uneasy.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "I was thinking of two things just then--a
+game at cards--and the science of warfare. In both it's a good thing
+sometimes to let your adversary see what a strong hand you've got. Now,
+then, a question, if you please--are you and I adversaries?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Nesta unflinchingly. "You're acting like an enemy--you
+are an enemy!"
+
+"I've hoped that you and I would be friends--good friends," said Pratt,
+with something like a sigh. "And if I may say so, I've no feeling of
+enmity towards you. When I speak of us being adversaries, I mean it
+in--well, let's say a sort of legal sense. But now I'll show you my
+hand--that is, as far as I please. Will you listen quietly to me?"
+
+"I've no choice," replied Nesta bluntly. "And I came here to know what
+you've got to say for yourself. Say it!"
+
+Pratt moved his chair a little nearer to his visitor.
+
+"Now," he said, speaking very quietly and deliberately, "I'll go through
+what I have to say to you carefully, point by point. I shall ask you to
+go back a little way. It is now some time since I discovered a secret
+about your mother, Mrs. Mallathorpe. Ah, you start!--it may be with
+indignation, but I assure you I'm telling you, and am going to tell you,
+the absolute truth. I say--a secret! No one knows it but myself--not one
+living soul! Except, of course, your mother. I shall not reveal it to
+you--under any consideration, or in any circumstances--but I can tell
+you this--if that secret were revealed, your mother would be ruined for
+life--and you yourself would suffer in more ways than one."
+
+Nesta looked at him incredulously--and yet she began to feel he was
+telling some truth. And Pratt shook his head at the incredulous
+expression.
+
+"It's quite so!" he said. "You'll begin to believe it---from other
+things. Now, it was in connection with this that I paid a visit to
+Normandale Grange one evening some months ago. Perhaps you never heard
+of that? I was alone with your mother for some time in the study."
+
+"I have heard of it," she answered.
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "But you haven't heard that your mother came to
+see me at my rooms here in Barford--my lodgings--the very next night! On
+the same business, of course. But she did--I know how she came, too.
+Secretly--heavily veiled--naturally, she didn't want anybody to know.
+Are you beginning to see something in it, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Go on with your--story," answered Nesta.
+
+"I go on, then, to the day before your brother's death," continued
+Pratt. "Namely, a certain Friday. Now, if you please, I'll invite you to
+listen carefully to certain facts--which are indisputable, which I can
+prove, easily. On that Friday, the day before your brother's death, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was in the shrubbery at Normandale Grange which is near the
+north end of the old foot-bridge. She was approached by Hoskins, an old
+woodman, who has been on the estate a great many years--you know him
+well enough. Hoskins told Mrs. Mallathorpe that the foot-bridge between
+the north and south shrubberies, spanning the cut which was made there a
+long time since so that a nearer road could be made to the stables, was
+in an extremely dangerous condition--so dangerous, in fact, that in his
+opinion, it would collapse under even a moderate weight. I impress this
+fact upon you strongly."
+
+"Well?" said Nesta.
+
+"Hoskins," Pratt went on, "urged upon Mrs. Mallathorpe the necessity of
+having the bridge closed at once, or barricaded. He pointed out to her
+from where they stood certain places in the bridge, and in the railing
+on one side of it, which already sagged in such a fashion, that he, as a
+man of experience, knew that planks and railings were literally rotten
+with damp. Now what did Mrs. Mallathorpe do? She said nothing to
+Hoskins, except that she'd have the thing seen to. But she immediately
+went to the estate carpenter's shop, and there she procured two short
+lengths of chain, and two padlocks, and she herself went back to the
+foot-bridge and secured its wicket gates at both ends. I beg you will
+bear that in mind, too, Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I am bearing everything in mind," said Nesta resolutely. "Don't be
+afraid that I shall forget one word that you say."
+
+"I hear that sneer in your voice," answered Pratt, as he turned,
+unlocked a drawer, and drew out some papers. "But I think you will soon
+learn that the sneer at what I'm telling you is foolish. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe had a set purpose in locking up those gates--as you will see
+presently. You will see it from what I am now going to tell you. Oblige
+me, if you please, by looking at that letter. Do you recognize your
+mother's handwriting?"
+
+"Yes!" admitted Nesta, with a sudden feeling of apprehension. "That is
+her writing."
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "Then before I read it to you, I'll just tell
+you what this letter is. It formed, when it was written, an invitation
+from Mrs. Mallathorpe to me--an invitation to walk, innocently, into
+what she knew--knew, mind you!--to be a death-trap! She meant _me_ to
+fall through the bridge!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+
+For a full moment of tense silence Nesta and Pratt looked at each other
+across the letter which he held in his outstretched hand--looked
+steadily and with a certain amount of stern inquiry. And it was Nesta's
+eyes which first gave way--beaten by the certainty in Pratt's. She
+looked aside; her cheeks flamed; she felt as if something were rising in
+her throat--to choke her.
+
+"I can't believe that!" she muttered. "You're--mistaken! Oh--utterly
+mistaken!"
+
+"No mistake!" said Pratt confidently. "I tell you your mother meant
+me--me!--to meet my death at that bridge. Here's the proof in this
+letter! I'll tell you, first, when I received it: then I'll read you
+what's in it, and if you doubt my reading of it, you shall read it
+yourself--but it won't go out of my hands! And first as to my getting
+it, for that's important. It reached me, by registered post, mind you,
+on the Saturday morning on which your brother met his death. It was
+handed in at Normandale village post-office for registration late on the
+Friday afternoon. And--by whom do you think?"
+
+"I--don't know!" replied Nesta faintly. This merciless piling up of
+details was beginning to frighten her--already she felt as if she
+herself were some criminal, forced to listen from the dock to the
+opening address of a prosecuting counsel. "How should I know?--how can I
+think?"
+
+"It was handed in for registration by your mother's maid, Esther
+Mawson," said Pratt with a dark look. "I've got her evidence, anyway!
+And that was all part of a plan--just as a certain something that was
+enclosed was a part of the same plan--a plot. And now I'll read you the
+letter--and you'll bear it in mind that I got it by first post that
+Saturday morning. This is what it--what your mother--says:--
+
+ "I particularly wish to see you again, at once, about the matter
+ between us and to have another look at _that document_. Can you
+ come here, bringing it with you, tomorrow, Saturday afternoon,
+ by the train which leaves soon after two o'clock? As I am most
+ anxious that your visit should be private and unknown to any one
+ here, do not come to the house. Take the path across the park to
+ the shrubberies near the house, so that if you are met people
+ would think you were taking a near cut to the village. I will
+ meet you in the shrubbery on the house side of the little
+ foot-bridge. The gates--'"
+
+Pratt suddenly paused, and before proceeding looked hard at his visitor.
+
+"Now listen to what follows--and bear in mind what your mother knew, and
+had done, at the time she wrote this letter. This is how the letter goes
+on---let every word fix itself in your mind, Miss Mallathorpe!"
+
+ "'The gates of the foot-bridge are locked, but the enclosed keys
+ will open them. I will meet you amongst the trees on the further
+ side. Be sure to come and to bring _that document_--I have
+ something to say about it on seeing it again.'"
+
+Pratt turned to the drawer from which he had taken the letter and took
+out two small keys, evidently belonging to patent padlocks. He held them
+up before Nesta.
+
+"There they are!" he said triumphantly. "Been in my possession ever
+since--and will remain there. Now--do you wish to read the letter? I've
+read it to you word for word. You don't? Very good--back it goes in
+there, with these keys. And now then," he continued, having replaced
+letter and keys in his drawer, and turned to her again, "now then, you
+see what a diabolical scheme it was that was in your mother's mind
+against me. She meant me to meet with the fate which overtook her own
+son! She meant me to fall through that bridge. Why? She hoped that I
+should break my neck--as he did! She wanted to silence me--but she also
+wanted more--she wanted to take from my dead body, or my unconscious
+body, the certain something which she was so anxious I should bring with
+me, which she referred to as _that document_. She was willing to risk
+anything--even to murder!--to get hold of that. And now you know why I
+went to Normandale Grange that Saturday--you know, now, the real reason.
+I told a deliberate lie at the inquest, for your mother's sake--for your
+sake, if you know it. I did not go there to hand in my application for
+the stewardship--I went in response to the letter I've just read. Is all
+this clear to you?"
+
+Nesta could only move her head in silent acquiescence. She was already
+convinced, that whether all this was entirely true or not, there was
+truth of some degree in what Pratt had told her. And she was thinking of
+her mother--and of the trap which she certainly appeared to have
+laid--and of her brother's fate--and for the moment she felt sick and
+beaten. But Pratt went on in that cold, calculating voice, telling his
+story point by point.
+
+"Now I come to what happened that Saturday afternoon," he said. "I may
+as well tell you that in my own interest I have carefully collected
+certain evidence which never came out at the inquest--which, indeed, has
+nothing to do with the exact matter of the inquest. Now, that Saturday,
+your mother and you had lunch together--your brother, as we shall see in
+a moment, being away--at your lunch time--a quarter to two. About twenty
+minutes past two your mother left the house. She went out into the
+gardens. She left the gardens for the shrubberies. And at twenty-five
+minutes to three, she was seen by one of your gardeners, Featherstone,
+in what was, of course, hiding, amongst the trees at the end of the
+north shrubbery. What was she doing there, Miss Mallathorpe? She was
+waiting!--waiting until a certain hoped-for accident happened--to me.
+Then she would come out of her hiding-place in the hope of getting that
+document from my pocket! Do you see how cleverly she'd laid her
+plans--murderous plans?"
+
+Nesta was making a great effort to be calm. She knew now that she was
+face to face with some awful mystery which could only be solved by
+patience and strenuous endeavour. She knew, too, that she must show no
+sign of fear before this man!
+
+"Will you finish your story, if you please?" she asked.
+
+"In my own way--in my own time," answered Pratt. "I now come to--your
+mother. On the Friday noon, the late Mr. Harper Mallathorpe went to
+Barford to visit a friend--young Stemthwaite, at the Hollies. He was to
+stay the night there, and was not expected home until Saturday evening.
+He did stay the night, and remained in Barford until noon on Saturday;
+but he--unexpectedly--returned to the house at half past two. And almost
+as soon as he'd got in, he picked up a gun and strolled out--into the
+gardens and the north shrubbery. And, as you know, he went to the
+foot-bridge. You see, Miss Mallathorpe, your mother, clever as she was,
+had forgotten one detail--the gates of that footbridge were merely low,
+four-barred things, and there was nothing to prevent an active young man
+from climbing them. She forgot another thing, too--that warning had not
+been given at the house that the bridge was dangerous. And, of course,
+she'd never, never calculated that your brother would return sooner than
+he was expected, or that, on his return, he'd go where he did. And
+so--but I'll spare you any reference to what happened. Only--you know
+now how it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe was found by her son's body. She'd
+been waiting about--for me! But--the fate she'd meant for me was dealt
+out to--him!"
+
+In spite of herself Nesta gave way to a slight cry.
+
+"I can't bear any more of that!" she said. "Have you finished?"
+
+"There's not much more to say--now at any rate," replied Pratt. "And
+what I have to say shall be to the point. I'm sorry enough to have been
+obliged to say all that I have said. But, you know, you forced me to it!
+You threatened me. The real truth, Miss Mallathorpe, is just this--you
+don't understand me at all. You come here--excuse my plain
+speech--hectoring and bullying me with talk about the police, and
+blackmail, and I don't know what! It's I who ought to go to the police!
+I could have your mother arrested, and put in the dock, on a charge of
+attempted murder, this very day! I've got all the proofs."
+
+"I suppose you held that out as a threat to her when you forced her to
+sign that power of attorney?" observed Nesta.
+
+For the first time since her arrival Pratt looked at his visitor in an
+unfriendly fashion. His expression changed and his face flushed a
+little.
+
+"You think that, do you?" he said. "Well, you're wrong. I'm not a fool.
+I held out no such threat. I didn't even tell your mother what I'd found
+out. I wasn't going to show her my hand all at once--though I've shown
+you a good deal of it."
+
+"Not all?" she asked quickly.
+
+"Not all," answered Pratt with a meaning glance. "To use more
+metaphors--I've several cards up my sleeve, Miss Mallathorpe. But you're
+utterly wrong about the threats. I'll tell you--I don't mind that--how I
+got the authority you're speaking about. Your mother had promised me
+that stewardship--for life. I'd have been a good steward. But we
+recognized that your brother's death had altered things--that you,
+being, as she said, a self-willed young woman--you see how plain I
+am--would insist on looking after your own affairs. So she gave
+me--another post. I'll discharge its duties honestly."
+
+"Yes," said Nesta, "but you've already told me that you'd a hold on my
+mother before any of these recent events happened, and that you possess
+some document which she was anxious to get into her hands. So it comes
+to this--you've a double hold on her, according to your story."
+
+"Just so," agreed Pratt. "You're right, I have--a double hold."
+
+Nesta looked at him silently for a while: Pratt looked at her.
+
+"Very well," she said at last. "How much do you want--to be bought out?"
+
+Pratt laughed.
+
+"I thought that would be the end of it!" he remarked. "Yes--I thought
+so!"
+
+"Name your price!" said Nesta.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" answered Pratt, bending forward and speaking with a
+new earnestness. "Just listen to me. It's no good. I'm not to be bought
+out. Your mother tried that game with me before. She offered me first
+five, then ten thousand pounds--cash down--for that document, when she
+came to see me at my rooms. I dare say she'd have gone to twenty
+thousand--and found the money there and then. But I said no then--and I
+say no to you! I'm not to be purchased in that way. I've my own ideas,
+my own plans, my own ambitions, my own--hopes. It's not any use at all
+for you to dangle your money before me. But--I'll suggest something
+else--that you can do."
+
+Nesta made no answer. She continued to look steadily at the man who
+evidently had her mother in his power, and Pratt, who was watching her
+intently, went on speaking quietly but with some intensity of tone.
+
+"You can do this," he said. "To start with--and it'll go a long
+way--just try and think better of me. I told you, you don't understand
+me. Try to! I'm not a bad lot. I've great abilities. I'm a hard worker.
+Eldrick & Pascoe could tell you that I'm scrupulously honest in money
+matters. You'll see that I'll look after your mother's affairs in a
+fashion that'll commend itself to any firm of auditors and accountants
+who may look into my accounts every year. I'm only taking the salary
+from her that I was to have had for the stewardship. So--why not leave
+it at that? Let things be! Perhaps--in time you'll come to see that--I'm
+to be trusted."
+
+"How can I trust a man who deliberately tells me that he holds a secret
+and a document over a woman's head?" demanded Nesta. "You've admitted a
+previous hold on my mother. You say you're in possession of a secret
+that would ruin her--quite apart from recent events. Is that honest?"
+
+"It was none of my seeking," retorted Pratt. "I gained the knowledge by
+accident."
+
+"You're giving yourself away," said Nesta. "Or you've some mental twist
+or defect which prevents you from seeing things straight. It's not how
+you got your knowledge, but the use you're making of it that's the
+important thing! You're using it to force my mother to----"
+
+"Excuse me!" interrupted Pratt with a queer smile. "It's you who don't
+see things straight. I'm using my knowledge to protect--all of you. Let
+your mind go back to what was said at first--to what I said at first. I
+said that I'd discovered a secret which, if revealed, would ruin your
+mother and injure--you! So it would--more than ever, now. So, you see,
+in keeping it, I'm taking care, not only of her interests, but
+of--yours!"
+
+Nesta rose. She realized that there was no more to be said--or done. And
+Pratt rose, too, and looked at her almost appealingly.
+
+"I wish you'd try to see things as I've put them, Miss Mallathorpe," he
+said. "I don't bear malice against your mother for that scheme she
+contrived--I'm willing to put it clear out of my head. Why not accept
+things as they are? I'll keep that secret for ever--no one shall ever
+know about it. Why not be friends, now--why not shake hands?"
+
+He held out his hand as he spoke. But Nesta drew back.
+
+"No!" she said. "My opinion is just what it was when I came here."
+
+Before Pratt could move she had turned swiftly to the door and let
+herself out, and in another minute she was amongst the crowds in the
+street below. For a few minutes she walked in the direction of Robson's
+offices, but when she had nearly reached them, she turned, and went
+deliberately to those of Eldrick & Pascoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+
+By the time she had been admitted to Eldrick's private room, Nesta had
+regained her composure; she had also had time to think, and her present
+action was the result of at any rate a part of her thoughts. She was
+calm and collected enough when she took the chair which the solicitor
+drew forward.
+
+"I called on you for two reasons, Mr. Eldrick," she said. "First, to
+thank you for your kindness and thoughtfulness at the time of my
+brother's death, in sending your clerk to help in making the
+arrangements."
+
+"Very glad he was of any assistance, Miss Mallathorpe," answered
+Eldrick. "I thought, of course, that as he had been on the spot, as it
+were, when the accident happened, he could do a few little things----"
+
+"He was very useful in that way," said Nesta. "And I was very much
+obliged to him. But the second reason for my call is--I want to speak to
+you about him."
+
+"Yes?" responded Eldrick. He had already formed some idea as to what was
+in his visitor's mind, and he was secretly glad of the opportunity of
+talking to her. "About Pratt, eh? What about him, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"He was with you for some years, I believe?" she asked.
+
+"A good many years," answered Eldrick. "He came to us as office-boy, and
+was head-clerk when he left us."
+
+"Then you ought to know him--well," she suggested.
+
+"As to that," replied Eldrick, "there are some people in this world whom
+other people never could know well--that's to say, really well. I know
+Pratt well enough for what he was--our clerk. Privately, I know little
+about him. He's clever--he's ability--he's a chap who reads a good
+deal--he's got ambitions. And I should say he is a bit--subtle."
+
+"Deceitful?" she asked.
+
+"I couldn't say that," replied Eldrick. "It wouldn't be true if I said
+so. I think he's possibilities of strategy in him. But so far as we're
+concerned, we found him hardworking, energetic, truthful, dependable and
+honest, and absolutely to be trusted in money matters. He's had many and
+many a thousand pounds of ours through his hands."
+
+"I believe you're unaware that my mother, for some reason or other,
+unknown to me, has put him in charge of her affairs?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Yes--Mr. Collingwood told me so," answered Eldrick. "So, too, did your
+own solicitor, Mr. Robson--who's very angry about it."
+
+"And you?" she said, putting a direct question. "What do you think? Do
+please, tell me!"
+
+"It's difficult to say, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, with a smile
+and a shake of the head. "If your mother--who, of course, is quite
+competent to decide for herself--wishes to have somebody to look after
+her affairs, I don't see what objection can be taken to her procedure.
+And if she chooses to put Linford Pratt in that position--why not? As I
+tell you, I, as his last--and only--employer, am quite convinced of his
+abilities and probity. I suppose that as your mother's agent, he'll
+supervise her property, collect money due to her, advise her in
+investments, and so on. Well, I should say--personally, mind--he's quite
+competent to do all that, and that he'll do it honestly, I should
+certainly say so."
+
+"But--why should he do it at all?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick waved his hands.
+
+"Ah!" he exclaimed. "Now you ask me a very different question! But--I
+understand--in fact, I know--that Pratt turns out to be a relation of
+yours--distant, but it's there. Perhaps your mother--who, of course, is
+much better off since your brother's sad death--is desirous of
+benefiting Pratt--as a relation."
+
+"Do you advise anything?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Well, you know, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, smiling. "I'm not
+your legal adviser. What about Mr. Robson?"
+
+"Mr. Robson is so very angry about all this--with my mother," said
+Nesta, "that I don't even want to ask his advice. What I really do want
+is the advice, counsel, of somebody--perhaps more as a friend than as a
+solicitor."
+
+"Delighted to give you any help I can--either professionally or as a
+friend," exclaimed Eldrick. "But--let me suggest something. And first of
+all--is there anything--something--in all this that you haven't told to
+anybody yet?"
+
+"Yes--much!" she answered. "A great deal!"
+
+"Then," said Eldrick, "let me advise a certain counsel. Two heads are
+better than one. Let me ask Mr. Collingwood to come here."
+
+He was watching his visitor narrowly as he said this, and he saw a faint
+rise of colour in her cheeks. But for the moment she did not answer, and
+Eldrick saw that she was thinking.
+
+"I can get him across from his chambers in a few minutes," he said.
+"He's sure to be in just now."
+
+"Can I have a few minutes to decide?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick jumped up.
+
+"Of course!" he said. "I'll leave you a while. It so happens I want to
+see my partner, I'll go up to his room, and return to you presently."
+
+Nesta, left alone, gave herself up to deep thought, and to a careful
+reckoning of her position. She was longing to confide in some
+trustworthy person or persons, for Pratt's revelations had plunged her
+into a maze of perplexity. But her difficulties were many. First of all,
+she would have to tell all about the terrible charge brought by Pratt
+against her mother. Then about the second which he professed to--or
+probably did--hold. What sort of a secret could it be? And supposing her
+advisers suggested strong measures against Pratt--what then, about the
+danger to her mother, in a twofold direction?
+
+Would it be better, wiser, if she kept all this to herself at present,
+and waited for events to develop? But at the mere thought of that, she
+shrank, feeling mentally and physically afraid--to keep all that
+knowledge to herself, to brood over it in secret, to wonder what it all
+meant, what lay beneath, what might develop, that was more than she felt
+able to bear. And when Eldrick came back she looked at him and nodded.
+
+"I should like to talk to you and Mr. Collingwood," she said quietly.
+
+Collingwood came across to Eldrick's office at once. And to these two
+Nesta unbosomed herself of every detail that she could remember of her
+interview with Pratt--and as she went on, from one thing to another, she
+saw the men's faces grow graver and graver, and realized that this was a
+more anxious matter than she had thought.
+
+"That's all," she said in the end. "I don't think I've forgotten
+anything. And even now, I don't know if I've done right to tell you all
+this. But--I don't think I could have faced it--alone!"
+
+"My dear Miss Mallathorpe!" said Eldrick earnestly. "You've done the
+wisest thing you probably ever did in your life! Now," he went on,
+looking at Collingwood, "just let us all three realize what is to me a
+more important fact. Nobody would be more astonished than Pratt to know
+that you have taken the wise step you have. You agree, Collingwood?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Collingwood, after a moment's reflection. "I think so."
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe doesn't quite see what we mean," said Eldrick, turning
+to Nesta. "We mean that Pratt firmly believed, when he told you what he
+did, that for your mother's sake and your own, you would keep his
+communication a dead secret. He firmly believed that you would never
+dare to tell anybody what he told you. Most people--in your
+position--wouldn't have told. They'd have let the secret eat their lives
+out. You're a wise and a sensible young woman! And the thing is--we
+must let Pratt remain under the impression that you are keeping your
+knowledge to yourself. Let him continue to believe that you'll remain
+silent under fear. And let us meet his secret policy with a secret
+strategy of our own!"
+
+Again he glanced at Collingwood, and again Collingwood nodded assent.
+
+"Now," continued Eldrick, "just let us consider matters for a few
+minutes from the position which has newly arisen. To begin with. Pratt's
+account of your mother's dealings about the foot-bridge is a very clever
+and plausible one. I can see quite well that it has caused you great
+pain; so before I go any further, just let me say this to you--don't you
+attach one word of importance to it!"
+
+Nesta uttered a heartfelt cry of relief.
+
+"Oh!" she exclaimed. "If you knew how thankful I should be to know that
+it's all lies--that he was lying! Can I really think that--after what I
+saw?"
+
+"I won't ask you to think that he's telling lies--just now," answered
+Eldrick, with a glance at Collingwood, "but I'll ask you to believe that
+your mother could put a totally different aspect and complexion on all
+her actions and words in connection with the entire affair. My
+impression, of course," he went on, with something very like a wink at
+Collingwood, "is that Mrs. Mallathorpe, when she wrote that letter to
+Pratt, intended to have the bridge mended first thing next morning, and
+that something prevented that being done, and that when she was seen
+about the shrubberies in the afternoon, she was on her way to meet Pratt
+before he could reach the dangerous point, so that she could warn him.
+What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"I should say," answered Collingwood, regarding the solicitor earnestly,
+and speaking with great gravity of manner, "that that would make an
+admirable line of defence to any charge which Pratt was wicked enough to
+prefer."
+
+"You don't think my mother meant--meant to----" exclaimed Nesta, eagerly
+turning from one man to the other. "You--don't?"
+
+"There is no evidence worth twopence against your mother!" replied
+Eldrick soothingly. "Put everything that Pratt has said against her
+clear out of your mind. Put all recent events out of your mind! Don't
+interfere with Pratt--just now. The thing to be done about Pratt is
+this--and it's the only thing. We must find out--exactly, as secretly as
+possible--what this secret is of which he speaks. What is this hold on
+Mrs. Mallathorpe? What is this document to which he refers? In other
+words, we must work back to some point which at present we can't see. At
+least, I can't see it. But--we may discover it. What do you say,
+Collingwood?"
+
+"I agree entirely," answered Collingwood. "Let Pratt rest in his fancied
+security. The thing is, certainly, to go back. But--to what point?"
+
+"That we must consider later," said Eldrick. "Now--for the present, Miss
+Mallathorpe,--you are, I suppose, going back home?"
+
+"Yes, at once," answered Nesta. "I have my car at the _Crown Hotel_."
+
+"I should just like to know something," continued Eldrick again, looking
+at Collingwood as if for approval. "That is--Mrs. Mallathorpe's present
+disposition towards affairs in general and Pratt in particular. Miss
+Mallathorpe!--just do something which I will now suggest to you. When
+you reach home, see your mother--she is still, I understand, an invalid,
+though evidently able to transact business. Just approach her gently and
+kindly, and tell her that you are a little--should we say
+uncomfortable?--about certain business arrangements which you hear she
+has made with Mr. Pratt, and ask her, if she won't talk them over with
+you, and give you her full confidence. It's now half-past twelve,"
+continued Eldrick, looking at his watch. "You'll be home before lunch.
+See your mother early in the afternoon, and then telephone, briefly, the
+result to me, here, at four o'clock. Then--Mr. Collingwood and I will
+have a consultation."
+
+He motioned Collingwood to remain where he was, and himself saw Nesta
+down to the street. When he came back to his room he shook his head at
+the young barrister.
+
+"Collingwood!" he said. "There's some dreadful business afloat in all
+this! And it's all the worse because of the fashion in which Pratt
+talked to that girl. She's evidently a very good memory--she narrated
+that conversation clearly and fully. Pratt must be very sure of his hand
+if he showed her his cards in that way--his very confidence in himself
+shows what a subtle network he's either made or is making. I question if
+he'd very much care if he knew that we know. But he mustn't know
+that--yet. We must reply to his mine with a counter-mine!"
+
+"What do you think of Pratt's charge against Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick made a wry face.
+
+"Looks bad!--very, very bad, Collingwood!" he answered. "Art and scheme
+of a desperate woman, of course. But--we mustn't let her daughter think
+we believe it. Let her stick to the suggestion I made--which, as you
+remarked, would certainly make a very good line of defence, supposing
+Pratt even did accuse her. But now--what on earth is this document
+that's been mentioned--this paper of which Pratt has possession? Has
+Mrs. Mallathorpe at some time committed forgery--or bigamy--or--what is
+it? One thing's sure, however--we've got to work quietly. We mustn't let
+Pratt know that we're working. I hope he doesn't know that Miss
+Mallathorpe came here. Will you come back about four and hear what
+message she sends me? After that, we could consult."
+
+Collingwood went away to his chambers. He was much occupied just then,
+and had little time to think of anything but the work in hand. But as he
+ate his lunch at the club which he had joined on settling in Barford, he
+tried to get at some notion of the state of things, and once more his
+mind reverted to the time of his grandfather's death, and his own
+suspicions about Pratt at that period. Clearly that was a point to which
+they must hark back--he himself must make more inquiries about the
+circumstances of Antony Bartle's last hours. For this affair would not
+have to rest where it was--it was intolerable that Nesta Mallathorpe
+should in any way be under Pratt's power. He went back to Eldrick at
+four o'clock with a suggestion or two in his mind. And at the sight of
+him Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"I've had that telephone message from Normandale," he said, "five
+minutes ago. Pretty much what I expected--at this juncture, anyway. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe absolutely declines to talk business with even her daughter
+at present--and earnestly desires that Mr. Linford Pratt may be left
+alone."
+
+"Well?" asked Collingwood after a pause. "What now?"
+
+"We must do what we can--secretly, privately, for the daughter's sake,"
+said Eldrick. "I confess I don't quite see a beginning, but----"
+
+Just then the private door opened, and Pascoe, a somewhat
+lackadaisical-mannered man, who always looked half-asleep, and was in
+reality remarkably wide-awake, lounged in, nodded to Collingwood, and
+threw a newspaper in front of his partner.
+
+"I say, Eldrick," he drawled, as he removed a newly-lighted cigar from
+his lips. "There's an advertisement here which seems to refer to that
+precious protege of yours, who left you with such scant ceremony. Same
+name, anyhow!"
+
+Eldrick snatched up the paper, glanced at it and read a few words aloud.
+
+"INFORMATION WANTED about James Parrawhite, at one time in practice as a
+solicitor."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT
+
+
+Eldrick looked up at his partner with a sharp, confirmatory glance.
+
+"That's our Parrawhite, of course!" he said. "Who's after him, now?" And
+he went on to read the rest of the advertisement, murmuring its
+phraseology half-aloud: "'in practice as a solicitor at Nottingham and
+who left that town six years ago. If the said James Parrawhite will
+communicate with the undersigned he will hear something greatly to his
+advantage. Any person able to give information as to his whereabouts
+will be suitably rewarded. Apply to Halstead & Byner, 56B, St. Martin's
+Chambers, London, W.C.' Um!--Pascoe, hand over that Law List."
+
+Collingwood looked on in silence while Eldrick turned over the pages of
+the big book which his partner took down from a shelf. He wondered at
+Eldrick's apparent and almost eager interest.
+
+"Halstead & Byner are not solicitors," announced Eldrick presently.
+"They must be inquiry agents or something of that sort. Anyway, I'll
+write to them, Pascoe, at once."
+
+"You don't know where the fellow is," said Pascoe. "What's the good?"
+
+"No--but we know where he last was," retorted Eldrick. He turned to
+Collingwood as the junior partner sauntered out of the room. "Rather odd
+that Pascoe should draw my attention to that just now," he remarked.
+"This man Parrawhite was, in a certain sense, mixed up with Pratt--at
+least, Pratt and I are the only two people who know the secret of
+Parrawhite's disappearance from these offices. That was just about the
+time of your grandfather's death."
+
+Collingwood immediately became attentive. His first suspicions of Pratt
+were formed at the time of which Eldrick spoke, and any reference to
+events contemporary excited his interest.
+
+"Who was or is--this man you're talking of?" he asked.
+
+"Bad lot--very!" answered Eldrick, shaking his head. "He and I were
+articled together, at the same time, to the same people: we saw a lot of
+each other as fellow articled clerks. He afterwards practised in
+Nottingham, and he held some good appointments. But he'd a perfect mania
+for gambling--the turf--and he went utterly wrong, and misappropriated
+clients' money, and in the end he got into prison, and was, of course,
+struck off the rolls. I never heard anything of him for years, and then
+one day, some time ago, he turned up here and begged me to give him a
+job. I did--and I'll do him the credit to say that he earned his money.
+But--in the end, his natural badness broke out. One afternoon--I'm
+careless about some things--I left some money lying in this
+drawer--about forty pounds in notes and gold--and next morning
+Parrawhite never came to business. We've never seen or heard of him
+since."
+
+"You mentioned Pratt," said Collingwood.
+
+"Only Pratt and I know--about the money," replied Eldrick. "We kept it
+secret--I didn't want Pascoe to know I'd been so careless. Pascoe didn't
+like Parrawhite--and he doesn't know his record. I only told him that
+Parrawhite was a chap I'd known in better circumstances and wanted to
+give a hand to."
+
+"You said it was about the time of my grandfather's death?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+"It was just about then--between his death and his funeral I should
+say," answered Eldrick, "The two events are associated in my mind.
+Anyway, I'd like to know what it is that these people want Parrawhite
+for. If it's money that's come to him, it'll be of no advantage--it'll
+only go where all the rest's gone."
+
+Collingwood lost interest in Parrawhite. Parrawhite appeared to have
+nothing to do with the affairs in which he was interested. He sat down
+and began to tell Eldrick about his own suspicions of Pratt at the time
+of Antony Bartle's death; of what Jabey Naylor had told him about the
+paper taken from the _History of Barford_; of the lad's account of the
+old man's doings immediately afterwards; and of his own proceedings
+which had led him to believe for the time being that his suspicions were
+groundless.
+
+"But now," he went on, "a new idea occurs to me. Suppose that that
+paper, found by my grandfather in a book which had certainly belonged to
+the late John Mallathorpe, was something important relating to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? Suppose that my grandfather brought it across here to you?
+Suppose that finding you out, he showed it to Pratt? As my grandfather
+died suddenly, with nobody but Pratt there, what was there to prevent
+Pratt from appropriating that paper if he saw that it would give him a
+hold over Mrs. Mallathorpe? We know now that he has some document in his
+possession which does give him a hold--may it not be that of which the
+boy Naylor told me?"
+
+"Might be," agreed Eldrick. "But--my opinion is, taking things all
+together, that the paper which Antony Bartle found was the one you
+yourself discovered later--the list of books. No--I'll tell you what I
+think. I believe that the document which Pratt told Miss Mallathorpe he
+holds, and to which her mother referred in the letter asking Pratt to
+meet her, is probably--most probably!--one which he discovered in
+searching out his relationship to Mrs. Mallathorpe. He's a cute
+chap--and he may have found some document which--well, I'll tell you
+what it might be--something which would upset the rights of Harper
+Mallathorpe to his uncle's estates. No other relatives came forward, or
+were heard of, or were discoverable when John Mallathorpe was killed in
+that chimney accident; but there may be some--there may be one in
+particular. That's my notion!--and I intend, in the first place, to make
+a personal search of the parish registers from which Pratt got his
+information. He may have discovered something there which he's keeping
+to himself."
+
+"You think that is the course to adopt?" asked Collingwood, after a
+moment's reflection.
+
+"At present--yes," replied Eldrick. "And while I'm making it--I'll do it
+myself--we'll just go on outwardly--as if nothing had happened. If I
+meet Pratt--as I shall--I shall not let him see that I know anything. Do
+you go on in just the usual way. Go out to Normandale Grange now and
+then--and tell Miss Mallathorpe to think no more of her interview with
+Pratt until we've something to talk to her about. You talk to her
+about--something else."
+
+When Collingwood had left him Eldrick laid a telegram form on his
+plotting pad, and after a brief interval of thought wrote out a message
+addressed to the people whose advertisement had attracted Pascoe's
+attention.
+
+ "HALSTEAD & BYNER, 56B, St. Martin's Chambers, London, W.C.
+
+ "I can give you definite information concerning James Parrawhite
+ if you will send representative to see me personally.
+
+ "CHARLES ELDRICK, Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford."
+
+After Eldrick had sent off a clerk with this message to the nearest
+telegraph office, he sat thinking for some time. And at the close of his
+meditations, and after some turning over of a diary which lay on his
+desk, he picked up pen and paper, and drafted an advertisement of his
+own.
+
+ "TEN POUNDS REWARD will be paid to any person who can give
+ reliable and useful information as to James Parrawhite, who
+ until November last was a clerk in the employ of Messrs. Eldrick
+ & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford, and who is believed to have left
+ the town on the evening of November 23.--Apply to Mr. CHARLES
+ ELDRICK, of the above firm."
+
+"Worth risking ten pounds on--anyway," muttered Eldrick. "Whether these
+London people will cover it or not. Here!" he went on, turning to a
+clerk who had just entered the room. "Make three copies of this
+advertisement, and take one to each of the three newspaper offices, and
+tell 'em to put it in their personal column tonight."
+
+He sat musing for some time after he was left alone again, and when he
+at last rose, it was with a shake of the head.
+
+"I wonder if Pratt told me the truth that morning?" he said to himself.
+"Anyway, he's now being proved to be even deeper than I'd ever
+considered him. Well--other folk than Pratt are possessed of pretty good
+wits."
+
+Before he left the office that evening Eldrick was handed a telegram
+from Messrs. Halstead & Byner, of St. Martin's Chambers, informing him
+that their Mr. Byner would travel to Barford by the first express next
+morning, and would call upon him at eleven o'clock.
+
+"Then they have some important news for Parrawhite," mused Eldrick, as
+he put the message in his pocket and went off to his club. "Inquiry
+agents don't set off on long journeys at a moment's notice for a matter
+of a trifling agency. But--where is Parrawhite?"
+
+He awaited the arrival of Mr. Byner next morning with considerable
+curiosity. And soon after eleven there was shown in to him, a smart,
+well-dressed, alert-looking young man, who, having introduced himself as
+Mr. Gerald Byner, immediately plunged into business.
+
+"You can tell me something of James Parrawhite, Mr. Eldrick?" he began.
+"We shall be glad--we've been endeavouring to trace him for some months.
+It's odd that you didn't see our advertisement before."
+
+"I don't look at that sort of advertisement," replied Eldrick. "I
+believe it was by mere accident that my partner saw yours yesterday
+afternoon. But now, a question or two first. What are you--inquiry
+agents?"
+
+"Just so, sir--inquiry agents--with a touch of private detective
+business," answered Mr. Gerald Byner with a smile. "We undertake to find
+people, to watch people, to recover lost property, and so on. In this
+case we're acting for Messrs. Vickers, Marshall & Hebbleton, Solicitors,
+of Cannon Street. They want James Parrawhite badly."
+
+"Why?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," replied Byner with a dry laugh, "there's about twenty
+thousand pounds waiting for him, in their hands."
+
+Eldrick whistled with astonishment.
+
+"Whew!" he said. "Twenty thousand--for Parrawhite! My good sir--if
+that's so, and if, as you say, you've been advertising----"
+
+"Advertising in several papers," interrupted Byner. "Dailies, weeklies,
+provincials. Never had one reply, till your wire."
+
+"Then--Parrawhite must be dead!" said Eldrick. "Or--in gaol, under
+another name. Twenty thousand pounds--waiting for Parrawhite! If
+Parrawhite was alive, man, or at liberty, he wouldn't let twenty
+thousand pence wait five minutes! I know him!"
+
+"What can you tell me, Mr. Eldrick?" asked the inquiry agent.
+
+Eldrick told all he knew--concealing nothing. And Byner listened
+silently and eagerly.
+
+"There's something strikes me at once," he said. "You say that with him
+disappeared three or four ten-pound notes of yours. Have you the numbers
+of those notes?"
+
+"I can't say," replied Eldrick, doubtfully. "I haven't, certainly.
+But--they were paid in to our head-clerk, Pratt, and I think he used to
+enter such things in a sort of day-ledger. I'll get it."
+
+He went into the clerks' office and presently returned with an oblong,
+marble-backed book which he began to turn over.
+
+"This may be what you ask about," he said at last. "Here, under date
+November 23, are some letters and figures which obviously refer to
+bank-notes. You can copy them if you like."
+
+"Another question, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner as he made a note of the
+entries. "You say some cheque forms were abstracted from a book of yours
+at the same time. Have you ever heard of any of these cheque forms being
+made use of?"
+
+"Never!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"No forgery of your name or anything?" suggested the caller.
+
+"No," said Eldrick. "There's been nothing of that sort."
+
+"I can soon ascertain if these bank-notes have reached the Bank of
+England," said Byner. "That's a simple matter. Now suppose they
+haven't!"
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"You know, of course," continued Byner, "that it doesn't take long for a
+Bank of England note, once issued, to get back to the Bank? You know,
+too, that it's never issued again. Now if those notes haven't been
+presented at the Bank--where are they? And if no use has been made of
+your stolen cheques--where are they?"
+
+"Good!" agreed Eldrick. "I see that you ought to do well in your special
+line of business. Now--are you going to pursue inquiries for Parrawhite
+here in Barford, after what I've told you?"
+
+"Certainly!" said Byner. "I came down prepared to stop awhile. It's
+highly important that this man should be found--highly important," he
+added smiling, "to other people than Parrawhite himself."
+
+"In what way?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Why," replied Byner, "if he's dead--as he may be--this money goes to
+somebody else--a relative. The relative would be very glad to hear he is
+dead! But--definite news will be welcome, in any case. Oh, yes, now that
+I've got down here, I shall do my best to trace him. You have the
+address of the woman he lodged with, you say. I shall go there first, of
+course. Then I must try to find out what he did with himself in his
+spare time. But, from all you tell me, it's my impression he's
+dead--unless, as you say, he's got into prison again--possibly under
+another name. It seems impossible that he should not have seen our
+advertisements."
+
+"You never advertised in any Yorkshire newspapers?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"No," said Byner. "Because we'd no knowledge of his having come so far
+North. We advertised in the Midland papers. But then, all the London
+papers, daily and weekly, that we used come down to Yorkshire."
+
+"Parrawhite," said Eldrick reflectively, "was a big newspaper reader. He
+used to go to the Free Library reading-room a great deal. I begin to
+think he must certainly be dead--or locked up. However, in supplement of
+your endeavours, I did a little work of my own last night. There you
+are!" he went on, picking up the local papers and handing them over. "I
+put that in--we'll see if any response comes. But now a word, Mr. Byner,
+since you've come to me. You have heard me mention my late
+clerk--Pratt?"
+
+"Yes," answered Byner.
+
+"Pratt has left us, and is in business as a sort of estate agent in the
+next street," continued Eldrick. "Now I have particular reasons--most
+particular reasons!--why Pratt should remain in absolute ignorance of
+your presence in the town. If you should happen to come across him--as
+you may, for though there are a quarter of a million of us here, it's a
+small place, compared with London--don't let him know your business."
+
+"I'm not very likely to do that, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner quietly.
+
+"Aye, but you don't take my meaning," said Eldrick eagerly. "I mean
+this--it's just possible that Pratt may see that advertisement of yours,
+and that he may write to your firm. In that case, as he's here, and
+you're here, your partner would send his letter to you. Don't deal with
+it--here. Don't--if you should come across Pratt, even let him know your
+name!"
+
+"When I've a job of this sort," replied Byner, "I don't let anybody know
+my name--except people like you. When I register at one of your hotels
+presently, I shall be Mr. Black of London. But--if this Pratt wanted to
+give any information about Parrawhite, he'd give it to you, surely, now
+that you've advertised."
+
+"No, he wouldn't!" asserted Eldrick. "Why? Because he's told me all he
+knows--or says he knows--already!"
+
+The inquiry agent looked keenly at the solicitor for a moment during
+which they both kept silence. Then Byner smiled.
+
+"You said--'or says he knows,'" he remarked. "Do you think he didn't
+tell the truth about Parrawhite?"
+
+"I should say--now--it's quite likely he didn't," answered Eldrick. "The
+truth is, I'm making some inquiry myself about Pratt--and I don't want
+this to interfere with it. You keep me informed of what you find out,
+and I'll help you all I can while you're here. It may be----"
+
+A clerk came into the room and looked at his master.
+
+"Mr. George Pickard, of the _Green Man_ at Whitcliffe, sir," he said.
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Wants to see you about that advertisement in the paper this morning,
+sir," continued the clerk.
+
+Eldrick looked at Byner and smiled significantly. Then he turned towards
+the door.
+
+"Bring Mr. Pickard in," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+
+The clerk presently ushered in a short, thick-set, round-faced man,
+apparently of thirty to thirty-five years of age, whose chief personal
+characteristics lay in a pair of the smallest eyes ever set in a human
+countenance and a mere apology for a nose. But both nose and eyes
+combined somehow to communicate an idea of profound inquiry as the round
+face in which they were placed turned from the solicitor to the man from
+London, and a podgy forefinger was lifted to a red forehead.
+
+"Servant, gentlemen," said the visitor. "Fine morning for the time of
+year!"
+
+"Take a chair, Mr. Pickard," replied Eldrick. "Let me see--from the
+_Green Man_, at Whitcliffe, I believe?"
+
+"Landlord, sir--had that house a many years," answered Pickard, as he
+took a seat near the wall. "Seven year come next Michaelmas, any road."
+
+"Just so--and you want to see me about the advertisement in this
+morning's paper?" continued Eldrick. "What about it--now?"
+
+The landlord looked at Eldrick and then at Eldrick's companion. The
+solicitor understood that look: it meant that what his caller had to say
+was of a private nature.
+
+"It's all right, Mr. Pickard," he remarked reassuringly. "This gentleman
+is here on just the same business--whatever you say will be treated as
+confidential--it'll go no further. You've something to tell about my
+late clerk, James Parrawhite."
+
+Pickard, who had been nervously fingering a white billycock hat, now put
+it down on the floor and thrust his hands into the pockets of his
+trousers as if to keep them safe while he talked.
+
+"It's like this here," he answered. "When I saw that there advertisement
+in the paper this mornin', says I to my missus, 'I'll away,' I says,
+'an' see Lawyer Eldrick about that there, this very day!' 'Cause you
+see, Mr. Eldrick, there is summat as I can tell about yon man 'at you
+mention--James Parrawhite. I've said nowt about it to nobody, up to now,
+'cause it were private business atween him and me, as it were, but I
+lost money over it, and of course, ten pound is ten pound, gentlemen."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Eldrick, "And you shall have your ten pounds if you
+can tell anything useful."
+
+"I don't know owt about it's being useful, sir, nor what use is to be
+made on it," said Pickard, "but I can tell you a bit o' truth, and you
+can do what you like wi' what I tell. But," he went on, lowering his
+voice and glancing at the door by which he had just entered, "there's
+another name 'at 'll have to be browt in--private, like. Name, as it so
+happens, o' one o' your clerks--t' head clerk, I'm given to
+understand--Mr. Pratt."
+
+Eldrick showed no sign of surprise. But he continued to look
+significantly at Byner as he turned to the landlord.
+
+"Mr. Pratt has left me," he said. "Left me three weeks ago. So you
+needn't be afraid, Mr. Pickard--say anything you like."
+
+"Oh, I didn't know," remarked Pickard. "It's not oft that I come down in
+t' town, and we don't hear much Barford news up our way. Well, it's this
+here, Mr. Eldrick--you know where my place is, of course?"
+
+Eldrick nodded, and turned to Byner.
+
+"I'd better explain to you," he said. "Whitcliffe is an outlying part of
+the town, well up the hills--a sort of wayside hamlet with a lot of our
+famous stone quarries in its vicinity. The _Green Man_, of which our
+friend here is the landlord, is an old-fashioned tavern by the
+roadside--where people are rather fond of dropping in on a Sunday, I
+fancy, eh, Mr. Pickard?"
+
+"You're right, sir," replied the landlord. "It makes a nice walk out on
+a Sunday. And it were on a Sunday, too, 'at I got to know this here
+James Parrawhite as you want to know summat about. He began coming to my
+place of a Sunday evenin', d'ye see, gentlemen?--he'd walk across t'
+valley up there to Whitcliffe and stop an hour or two, enjoyin' hisself.
+Well, now, as you're no doubt well aweer, Mr. Eldrick, he were a reight
+hand at talkin', were yon Parrawhite--he'd t' gift o' t' gab reight
+enough, and talked well an' all. And of course him an' me, we hed bits
+o' conversation at times, 'cause he come to t' house reg'lar and
+sometimes o' week-nights an' all. An' he tell'd me 'at he'd had a deal
+o' experience i' racin' matters--whether it were true or not, I couldn't
+say, but----"
+
+"True enough!" said Eldrick. "He had."
+
+"Well, so he said," continued Pickard, "and he was allus tellin' me 'at
+he could make a pile o' brass on t' turf if he only had capital. An' i'
+t' end, he persuaded me to start what he called investin' money with him
+i' that way--i' plain language, it meant givin' him brass to put on
+horses 'at he said was goin' to win, d'ye understand?"
+
+"Perfectly," replied Eldrick. "You gave him various amounts which he was
+to stake for you."
+
+"Just so, sir! And at first," said Pickard, with a shake of the head,
+"at first I'd no great reason to grumble. He cert'ny wor a good hand at
+spottin' a winner. But as time went on, I' t' greatest difficulty in
+gettin' a settlement wi' him, d'ye see? He wor just as good a hand at
+makin' excuses as he wor at pickin' out winners--better, I think! I
+nivver knew wheer I was wi' him--he'd pay up, and then he'd persuade me
+to go in for another do wi' t' brass I'd won, and happen we should lose
+that time, and then of course we had to hev another investment to get
+back what we'd dropped, and so it went on. But t' end wor this
+here--last November theer wor about fifty to sixty pound o' mine i' his
+hands, and I wanted it. I'd a spirit merchant's bill to settle, and I
+wanted t' brass badly for that. I knew Parrawhite had been paid, d'ye
+see, by t' turf agent, 'at he betted wi', and I plagued him to hand t'
+brass over to me. He made one excuse and then another--howsumivver, it
+come to that very day you're talkin' about i' your advertisement, Mr.
+Eldrick--the twenty-third o' November----"
+
+"Stop a minute, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Eldrick. "Now, how do you
+know--for a certainty--that this day you're going to talk about was the
+twenty-third of November?"
+
+The landlord, who had removed his hands from his pockets, and was now
+twiddling a pair of fat thumbs as he talked, chuckled slyly.
+
+"For a very good reason," he answered. "I had to pay that spirit bill I
+tell'd about just now on t' twenty-fourth, and that I'm going to tell
+you happened t' night afore t' twenty-fourth, so of course it were t'
+twenty-third. D'ye see?"
+
+"I see," asserted Eldrick. "That'll do! And now--what did happen?"
+
+"This here," replied Pickard. "On that night--t' twenty-third
+November--Parrawhite came into t' _Green Man_ at about, happen,
+half-past eight. He come into t' little private parlour to me, bold as
+brass--as indeed, he allers wor. 'Ye're a nice un!' I says. 'I've
+written yer three letters durin' t' last week, and ye've nivver answered
+one o' 'em!' 'I've come to answer i' person,' he says. 'There's nobbut
+one answer I want,' says I. 'Wheer's my money?' 'Now then, be quiet a
+bit,' he says. 'You shall have your money before the evening's over,' he
+says. 'Or, if not, as soon as t' banks is open tomorrow mornin',' he
+says. 'Wheer's it coomin' from?' says I. 'Now, never you mind,' he says.
+'It's safe!' 'I don't believe a word you're sayin',' says I. 'Ye're
+havin' me for t' mug!--that's about it.' An' I went on so at him, 'at i'
+t' end he tell'd me 'at he wor presently goin' to meet Pratt, and 'at he
+could get t' brass out o' Pratt an' as much more as iwer he liked to ax
+for. Well, I don't believe that theer, and I said so. 'What brass has
+Pratt?' says I. 'Pratt's nowt but a clerk, wi' happen three or four
+pound a week!' 'That's all you know,' he says. 'Pratt's become a gold
+mine, and I'm going to dig in it a bit. What's it matter to you,' he
+says, 'so long as you get your brass?' Well, of course, that wor true
+enough--all 'at I wanted just then were to handle my brass. And I tell'd
+him so. 'I'll brek thy neck, Parrawhite,' I says, 'if thou doesn't bring
+me that theer money eyther to-night or t' first thing tomorrow--so now!'
+'Don't talk rot!' he says. 'I've told you!' And he had money wi' him
+then--'nough to pay for drinks and cigars, any road, and we had a drink
+or two, and a smoke or two, and then he went out, sayin' he wor goin' to
+meet Pratt, and he'd be back at my place before closin' time wi' either
+t' cash or what 'ud be as good. An' I waited--and waited after closin'
+time, an' all. But I've nivver seen Parrawhite from that day to
+this---nor heerd tell on him neither!"
+
+Eldrick and Byner looked at each other for a moment. Then the solicitor
+spoke--quietly and with a significance which the agent understood.
+
+"Do you want to ask Mr. Pickard any questions?" he said.
+
+Byner nodded and turned to the landlord.
+
+"Did Parrawhite tell you where he was going to meet Pratt?" he asked.
+
+"He did," replied Pickard. "Near Pratt's lodgin' place."
+
+"Did--or does--Pratt live near you, then?"
+
+"Closish by--happen ten minutes' walk. There's few o' houses--a sort o'
+terrace, like, on t' edge o' what they call Whitcliffe Moor. Pratt
+lodged--lodges now for all I know to t' contrary--i' one o' them."
+
+"Did Parrawhite give you any idea that he was going to the house in
+which Pratt lodged?"
+
+"No! He were not goin' to t' house. I know he worn't. He tell'd me 'at
+he'd a good idea what time Pratt 'ud be home, 'cause he knew where he
+was that evening and he were goin' to meet him just afore Pratt got to
+his place. I know where he'd meet him."
+
+"Where?" asked Byner. "Tell me exactly. It's important."
+
+"Pratt 'ud come up fro' t' town i' t' tram," answered Pickard. "He'd
+approach this here terrace I tell'd you about by a narrow lane that runs
+off t' high road. He'd meet him there, would Parrawhite."
+
+"Did you ever ask any question of Pratt about Parrawhite?"
+
+"No--never! I'd no wish that Pratt should know owt about my dealin's
+with Parrawhite. When Parrawhite never come back--why, I kep' it all to
+myself, till now."
+
+"What do you think happened to Parrawhite, Mr. Pickard?" asked Byner.
+
+"Gow, I know what I think!" replied Pickard disgustedly. "I think 'at if
+he did get any brass out o' Pratt--which is what I know nowt about, and
+hewn't much belief in--he went straight away fro' t' town--vanished! I
+do know this--he nivver went back to his lodgin's that neet, 'cause I
+went theer mysen next day to inquire."
+
+Eldrick pricked up his ears at that. He remembered that he had sent
+Pratt to make inquiry at Parrawhite's lodgings on the morning whereon
+the money was missing.
+
+"What time of the day--on the twenty-fourth--was that, Mr. Pickard?" he
+asked.
+
+"Evenin', sir," replied the landlord. "They'd nivver seen naught of him
+since he went out the day before. Oh, he did me, did Parrawhite! Of
+course, I lost mi brass--fifty odd pounds!"
+
+Byner gave Eldrick a glance.
+
+"I think Mr. Pickard has earned the ten pounds you offered," he said.
+
+Eldrick took the hint and pulled out his cheque-book.
+
+"Of course, you're to keep all this private--strictly private, Mr.
+Pickard," he said as he wrote. "Not a word to a soul!"
+
+"Just as you order, sir," agreed Pickard. "I'll say nowt--to nobody."
+
+"And--perhaps tomorrow--perhaps this afternoon--you'll see me at the
+_Green Man_," remarked Byner. "I shall just drop in, you know. You
+needn't know me--if there's anybody about."
+
+"All right, sir--I understand," said Pickard.
+
+"Quiet's the word--what? Very good--much obliged to you, gentlemen."
+
+When the landlord had gone Eldrick motioned Byner to pick up his hat.
+"Come across the street with me," he said. "I want us to have a
+consultation with a friend of mine, a barrister, Mr. Collingwood. For
+this matter is assuming a very queer aspect, and we can't move too
+warily, nor consider all the features too thoroughly."
+
+Collingwood listened with deep interest to Eldrick's account of the
+morning's events. And once again he was struck by the fact that all
+these various happenings in connection with Pratt, and now with
+Parrawhite, took place at the time of Antony Bartle's death, and he said
+so.
+
+"True enough!" agreed Eldrick.
+
+"And once more," pointed out Collingwood. "We're hearing of a hold!
+Pratt claims to have a hold on Mrs. Mallathorpe--now it turns out that
+Parrawhite boasted of a hold on Pratt. Suppose all these things have a
+common origin? Suppose the hold which Parrawhite had--or has--on Pratt
+is part and parcel of the hold which Pratt has on Mrs. Mallathorpe? In
+that case--or cases--what is the best thing to do?"
+
+"Will you gentlemen allow me to suggest something?" said Byner. "Very
+well--find Parrawhite! Of all the people concerned in this, Parrawhite,
+from your account of him, anyway, Mr. Eldrick, is the likeliest person
+to extract the truth from."
+
+"There's a great deal in that suggestion," said Eldrick. "Do you know
+what I think?" he went on, turning to Collingwood, "Mr. Byner tells me
+he means to stay here until he has come across some satisfactory news of
+Parrawhite or solved the mystery of his disappearance. Well, now that
+we've found that there is some ground for believing that Parrawhite was
+in some fashion mixed up with Pratt about that time, why not place the
+whole thing in Mr. Byner's hands--let him in any case see what he can do
+about the Parrawhite-Pratt business of November twenty-third, eh?"
+
+"I take it," answered Collingwood, looking at the inquiry agent, "that
+Mr. Byner having heard what he has, would do that quite apart from us?"
+
+"Yes," said Byner. "Now that I've heard what Pickard had to say, I
+certainly shall follow that up."
+
+"I am following out something of my own," said Collingwood, turning to
+Eldrick. "I shall know more by this time tomorrow. Let us have a
+conference here--at noon."
+
+They separated on that understanding, and Byner went his own ways. His
+first proceeding was to visit, one after another, the Barford newspaper
+offices, and to order the insertion in large type, and immediately, of
+the Halstead-Byner advertisement for news of Parrawhite. His second was
+to seek the General Post Office, where he wrote out and dispatched a
+message to his partner in London. That message was in cypher--translated
+into English, it read as follows:--
+
+ "If person named Pratt sends any communication to us _re_
+ Parrawhite, on no account let him know I am in Barford, but
+ forward whatever he sends to me at once, addressed to H.D.
+ Black, Central Station Hotel."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+
+When Collingwood said that he was following out something of his own, he
+was thinking of an interesting discovery which he had made. It was one
+which might have no significance in relation to the present
+perplexities--on the other hand, out of it might come a good deal of
+illumination. Briefly, it was that on the evening before this
+consultation with Eldrick & Byner, he had found out that he was living
+in the house of a man who had actually witnessed the famous catastrophe
+at Mallathorpe's Mill, whereby John Mallathorpe, his manager, and his
+cashier, together with some other bystanders, had lost their lives.
+
+On settling down in Barford, Collingwood had spent a couple of weeks in
+looking about him for comfortable rooms of a sort that appealed to his
+love of quiet and retirement. He had found them at last in an old house
+on the outskirts of the town--a fine old stone house, once a farmstead,
+set in a large garden, and tenanted by a middle-aged couple, who having
+far more room than they needed for themselves, had no objection to
+letting part of it to a business gentleman. Collingwood fell in love
+with this place as soon as he saw it. The rooms were large and full of
+delightful nooks and corners; the garden was rich in old trees; from it
+there were fine views of the valley beneath, and the heather-clad hills
+in the distance; within two miles of the town and easily approached by a
+convenient tram-route, it was yet quite out in the country.
+
+He was just as much set up by his landlady--a comfortable, middle-aged
+woman, who fostered true Yorkshire notions about breakfast, and knew how
+to cook a good dinner at night. With her Collingwood had soon come to
+terms, and to his new abode had transferred a quantity of books and
+pictures from London. He soon became acquainted with the domestic
+menage. There was the landlady herself, Mrs. Cobcroft, who, having no
+children of her own, had adopted a niece, now grown up, and a teacher in
+an adjacent elementary school: there was a strapping, rosy-cheeked
+servant-maid, whose dialect was too broad for the lodger to understand
+more than a few words of it; finally there was Mr. Cobcroft, a
+mild-mannered, quiet man who disappeared early in the morning, and was
+sometimes seen by Collingwood returning home in the evening.
+
+Lately, with the advancing spring, this unobtrusive individual was seen
+about the garden at the end of the day: Collingwood had so seen him on
+the evening before the talk with Eldrick and Byner, busied in setting
+seeds in the flower-beds. And he had asked Mrs. Cobcroft, just then in
+his sitting-room, if her husband was fond of gardening.
+
+"It's a nice change for him, sir," answered the landlady. "He's kept
+pretty close at it all day in the office yonder at Mallathorpe's Mill,
+and it does him good to get a bit o' fresh air at nights, now that the
+fine weather's coming on. That was one reason why we took this old
+place--it's a deal better air here nor what it is in the town."
+
+"So your husband is at Mallathorpe's Mill, eh?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Been there--in the counting-house--boy and man, over thirty years,
+sir," replied Mrs. Cobcroft.
+
+"Did he see that terrible affair then--was it two years ago?"
+
+The landlady shook her head and let out a weighty sigh.
+
+"Aye, I should think he did!" she answered. "And a nice shock it gave
+him, too!--he actually saw that chimney fall--him and another clerk were
+looking out o' the counting-house window when it gave way."
+
+Collingwood said no more then--except to remark that such a sight must
+indeed have been trying to the nerves. But for purposes of his own he
+determined to have a talk with Cobcroft, and the next evening, seeing
+him in his garden again, he went out to him and got into conversation,
+and eventually led up to the subject of Mallathorpe's Mill, the new
+chimney of which could be seen from a corner of the garden.
+
+"Your wife tells me," observed Collingwood, "that you were present when
+the old chimney fell at the mill yonder?"
+
+Cobcroft, a quiet, unassuming man, usually of few words, looked along
+the hillside at the new chimney, and nodded his head. A curious,
+far-away look came into his eyes.
+
+"I was, sir!" he said. "And I hope I may never see aught o' that sort
+again, as long as ever I live. It was one o' those things a man can
+never forget!"
+
+"Don't talk about it if you don't want to," remarked Collingwood. "But
+I've heard so much about that affair that----"
+
+"Oh, I don't mind talking about it," replied Cobcroft. He leaned over
+the fence of his garden, still gazing at the mill in the distance.
+"There were others that saw it, of course: lots of 'em. But I was close
+at hand--our office was filled with the dust in a few seconds."
+
+"It was a sudden affair?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It was one of those affairs," answered Cobcroft slowly, "that some folk
+had been expecting for a long time--only nobody had the sense to see
+that it might happen at some unexpected minute. It was a very old
+chimney. It looked all right--stood plumb, and all that. But Mr.
+Mallathorpe--my old master, Mr. John Mallathorpe, I'm talking of--he got
+an idea from two or three little things, d'ye see, that it wasn't as
+safe as it ought to be. And he got a couple of these professional
+steeplejacks to examine it. They made a thorough examination, too--so
+far as one could tell by what they did. They'd been at the job several
+days when the accident happened. One of 'em had only just come down when
+the chimney fell. Mr. Mallathorpe, himself, and his manager, and his
+cashier, had just stepped out of the counting-house and crossed the yard
+to hear what this man had got to say when--down it came! Not the
+slightest warning at the time. It just--collapsed!"
+
+"You saw the actual collapse?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--didn't I?" exclaimed Cobcroft. "Another man and myself were
+looking out of the office window, right opposite. It fell in the
+queerest way--like this," he went on, holding up his garden-rake.
+"Supposing this shaft was the chimney--standing straight up. As we
+looked we saw it suddenly bulge out, on all sides--it was a square
+chimney, same size all the way up till you got to the cornice at the
+top--bulge out, d'ye see, just about half-way up--simultaneous, like.
+Then--down it came with a roar that they heard over half the town! O'
+course, there were some two or three thousands of tons of stuff in that
+chimney--and when the dust was cleared a bit there it was in one great
+heap, right across the yard. And it was a good job," concluded Cobcroft,
+reflectively, "that it fell straight--collapsed in itself, as you might
+say--for if it had fallen slanting either way, it 'ud ha' smashed right
+through some of the sheds, and there'd ha' been a terrible loss of
+life."
+
+"Mr. John Mallathorpe was killed on the spot, I believe?" suggested
+Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--and Gaukrodger, and Marshall, and the steeplejack that had just
+come down, and another or two," said Cobcroft. "They'd no chance--they
+were standing in a group at the very foot, talking. They were all killed
+there and then--instantaneous. Some others were struck and injured--one
+or two died. Yes, sir,--I'm not very like to forget that!"
+
+"A terrible experience!" agreed Collingwood. "It would naturally fix
+itself on your memory."
+
+"Aye--my memory's very keen about it," said Cobcroft. "I remember every
+detail of that morning. And," he continued, showing a desire to become
+reminiscent, "there was something happened that morning, before the
+accident, that I've oft thought over and has oft puzzled me. I've never
+said aught to anybody about it, because we Yorkshiremen we're not given
+to talking about affairs that don't concern us, and after all, it was
+none o' mine! But you're a law gentleman, and I dare say you get things
+told to you in confidence now and then, and, of course, this is between
+you and me. I'll not deny that I have oft thought that I would like to
+tell it to a lawyer of some sort, and find out how it struck him."
+
+"Anything that you like to tell me, Mr. Cobcroft, I shall treat as a
+matter of confidence--until you tell me it's no longer a secret,"
+answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why," continued Cobcroft, "it isn't what you rightly would call a
+secret--though I don't think anybody knows aught about it but myself! It
+was just this--and it may be there's naught in it but a mere fancy o'
+mine. That morning, before the accident happened, I was in and out of
+the private office a good deal--carrying in and out letters, and account
+books, and so on. Mr. John Mallathorpe's private office, ye'll
+understand, sir, opened out of our counting-house--as it does still--the
+present manager, Mr. Horsfall, has it, just as it was. Well, now, on one
+occasion, when I went in there, to take a ledger back to the safe, Mr.
+Mallathorpe had his manager and cashier, Gaukrodger and Marshall in with
+him. Mr. Mallathorpe, he always used a stand-up desk to write at--never
+wrote sitting down, though he had a big desk in the middle of the room
+that he used to sit at to look over accounts or talk to people. Now when
+I went in, he and Gaukrodger and Marshall were all at this stand-up
+desk--in the window-place--and they were signing some papers. At least
+Gaukrodger had just signed a paper, and Marshall was taking the pen from
+him. 'Sign there, Marshall,' says Mr. Mallathorpe. And then he went on,
+'Now we'll sign this other--it's well to have these things in duplicate,
+in case one gets lost.' And then--well, then, I went out, and--why, that
+was all."
+
+"You've some idea in your mind about that," said Collingwood, who had
+watched Cobcroft closely as he talked. "What is it?"
+
+Cobcroft smiled--and looked round as if to ascertain that they were
+alone. "Why!" he answered in a low voice. "I'll tell you what I did
+wonder--some time afterwards. I dare say you're aware--it was all in the
+papers--that Mr. John Mallathorpe died intestate?"
+
+"Yes," asserted Collingwood. "I know that."
+
+"I've oft wondered," continued Cobcroft, "if that could ha' been his
+will that they were signing! But then I reflected a bit on matters. And
+there were two or three things that made me say naught at all--not a
+word. First of all, I considered it a very unlikely thing that a rich
+man like Mr. John Mallathorpe would make a will for himself. Second--I
+remembered that very soon after I'd been in his private office Marshall
+came out into the counting-house and gave the office lad a lot of
+letters and documents to take to the post--some of 'em big
+envelopes--and I thought that what I'd seen signed was some agreement or
+other that was in one of them. And third--and most important--no will
+was ever found in any of Mr. John Mallathorpe's drawers or safes or
+anywhere, though they turned things upside down at the office, and, I
+heard, at his house as well. Of course, you see, sir, supposing that to
+have been a will--why, the only two men who could possibly have proved
+it was were dead and gone! They were killed with him. And of course, the
+young people, the nephew and niece, they came in for everything--so
+there was an end of it. But--I've oft wondered what those papers were.
+One thing is certain, anyway!" concluded Cobcroft, with a grim laugh,
+"when those three signed 'em, they were picking up their pens for the
+last time!"
+
+"How long was it--after you saw the signing of those papers--that the
+accident occurred?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It 'ud be twelve or fifteen minutes, as near as I can recollect,"
+replied Cobcroft. "A few minutes after I'd left the private office,
+Gaukrodger came out of it, alone, and stood at the door leading into the
+yard, looking up at the chimney. The steeple-jack was just coming down,
+and his mate was waiting for him at the bottom. Gaukrodger turned back
+to the private office and called Mr. Mallathorpe out. All three of 'em,
+Mallathorpe, Gaukrodger, Marshall, went out and walked across the yard
+to the chimney foot. They stood there talking a bit--and then--down it
+came!"
+
+Collingwood thought matters over. Supposing that the document which
+Cobcroft spoke of as being in process of execution before him were
+indeed duplicate copies of a will. What could have been done with them,
+in the few minutes which elapsed between the signing and the catastrophe
+to the chimney? It was scarcely likely that John Mallathorpe would have
+sent them away by post. If they had been deposited in his own pocket,
+they would have been found when his clothing was removed and examined.
+If they were in the private office when the three men left it----
+
+"You're sure the drawers, safe and so on in Mr. Mallathorpe's room were
+thoroughly searched--after his death?" he asked.
+
+"I should think they were!" answered Cobcroft laconically. "I helped at
+that, myself. There wasn't as much as an old invoice that was not well
+fingered and turned over. No!--I came to the conclusion that what I'd
+seen signed was some contract or something--sent off there and then by
+the lad to post."
+
+Collingwood made no further remark and asked no more questions. But he
+thought long and seriously that night, and he came to certain
+conclusions. First: what Cobcroft had seen signed was John Mallathorpe's
+will. Second: John Mallathorpe had made it himself and had taken the
+unusual course of making a duplicate copy. Third: John Mallathorpe had
+probably slipped the copy into the _History of Barford_ which was in his
+private office when he went out to speak to the steeple-jack. Fourth:
+that copy had come into Linford Pratt's hands through Antony Bartle.
+
+And now arose two big questions. What were the terms of that will?
+And--where was the duplicate copy? He was still putting these to himself
+when noon of the next day came and brought Eldrick and Byner for the
+promised serious consultation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE _GREEN MAN_
+
+
+Byner, in taking his firm's advertisement for Parrawhite to the three
+Barford newspaper offices, had done so with a special design--he wanted
+Pratt to see that a serious wish to discover Parrawhite was alive in
+more quarters than one. He knew that Pratt was almost certain to see
+Eldrick's advertisement in his own name; now he wanted Pratt to see
+another advertisement of the same nature in another name. Already he had
+some suspicion that Pratt had not told Eldrick the truth about
+Parrawhite, and that nothing would suit him so well as that Parrawhite
+should never be heard of or mentioned again: now he wished Pratt to
+learn that Parrawhite was much wanted, and was likely to be much
+mentioned--wherefore the supplementary advertisements with Halstead &
+Byner's name attached. It was extremely unlikely that Pratt could fail
+to see those advertisements.
+
+There were three newspapers in Barford: one a morning journal of large
+circulation throughout the county; the other two, evening journals,
+which usually appeared in three or four editions. As Byner stipulated
+for large type, and a prominent position, in the personal column of
+each, it was scarcely within the bounds of probability that a townsman
+like Pratt would miss seeing the advertisement. Most likely he would see
+it in all three newspapers. And if he had also seen Eldrick's similar
+advertisement, he would begin to think, and then----
+
+"Why, then," mused Byner, ruminating on his design, "then we will see
+what he will do!"
+
+Meanwhile, there was something he himself wanted to do, and on the
+morning following his arrival in the town, he set out to do it. Byner
+had been much struck by Pickard's account of his dealings with James
+Parrawhite on the evening which appeared to be the very last wherein
+Parrawhite was ever seen. He had watched the landlord of the _Green Man_
+closely as he told his story, and had set him down for an honest, if
+somewhat sly and lumpish soul, who was telling a plain tale to the best
+of his ability. Byner believed all the details of that story--he even
+believed that when Parrawhite told Pickard that he would find him fifty
+pounds that evening, or early next day, he meant to keep his word. In
+the circumstances--as far as Byner could reckon them up from what he had
+gathered--it would not have paid Parrawhite to do otherwise. Byner put
+the situation to himself in this fashion--Pratt had got hold of some
+secret which was being, or could be made to be, highly profitable to
+him. Parrawhite had discovered this, and was in a position to blackmail
+Pratt. Therefore Parrawhite would not wish to leave Pratt's
+neighbourhood--so long as there was money to be got out of Pratt,
+Parrawhite would stick to him like a leech. But if Parrawhite was to
+abide peaceably in Barford, he must pay Pickard that little matter of
+between fifty and sixty pounds. Accordingly, in Byner's opinion,
+Parrawhite had every honest intention of returning to the _Green Man_ on
+the evening of the twenty-third of November after having seen Pratt.
+And, in Byner's further--and very seriously considered--opinion, the
+whole problem for solution--possibly involving the solution of other and
+more important problems--was this: Did Parrawhite meet Pratt that night,
+and if he did what took place between them which prevented Parrawhite
+from returning to Pickard?
+
+It was in an endeavour to get at some first stage of a solution of this
+problem that Byner, having breakfasted at the _Central Hotel_ on his
+second day in the town, went out immediately afterwards, asked his way
+to Whitcliffe, and was directed to an electric tram which started from
+the Town Hall Square, and after running through a district of tall
+warehouses and squat weaving-sheds, began a long and steady climb to the
+heights along the town. When he left it, he found himself in a district
+eminently characteristic of that part of the country. The tram set him
+down at a cross-roads on a high ridge of land. Beneath him lay Barford,
+its towers and spires and the gables of its tall buildings showing
+amongst the smoke of its many chimneys. All about him lay open ground,
+broken by the numerous stone quarries of which Eldrick had spoken, and
+at a little distance along one of the four roads at the intersection of
+which he stood, he saw a few houses and cottages, one of which, taller
+and bigger than the rest, was distinguished by a pole, planted in front
+of its stone porch and bearing a swinging sign whereon was rudely
+painted the figure of a man in Lincoln green. Byner walked on to this,
+entered a flagged hall, and found himself confronting Pickard, who at
+sight of him, motioned him into a little parlour behind the bar.
+
+"Mornin', mister," said he. "You'll be all right in here--there's nobody
+about just now, and if my missis or any o' t' servant lasses sees yer,
+they'll tak' yer for a brewer's traveller, or summat o' that sort. Come
+to hev a look round, like--what?"
+
+"I want to have a look at the place where you told us Parrawhite was to
+meet Pratt that night," replied Byner. "I thought you would perhaps be
+kind enough to show me where it is."
+
+"I will, an' all--wi' pleasure," said the landlord, "but ye mun hev a
+drop o' summat first--try a glass o' our ale," he went on, with true
+Yorkshire hospitality. "I hev some bitter beer i' my cellar such as I'll
+lay owt ye couldn't get t' likes on down yonder i' Barford--no, nor i'
+London neyther!--I'll just draw a jug."
+
+Byner submitted to this evidence of friendliness, and Pickard, after
+disappearing into a dark archway and down some deeply worn stone steps,
+came back with a foaming jug, the sight of which seemed to give him
+great delight. He gazed admiringly at the liquor which he presently
+poured into two tumblers, and drew his visitor's attention to its
+colour.
+
+"Reight stuff that, mister--what?" he said. "I nobbut tapped that barril
+two days since, and I'd been keepin' it twelve month, so you've come in
+for it at what they call t' opportune moment. I say!" he went on, after
+pledging Byner and smacking his lips over the ale. "I heard summat last
+night 'at might be useful to you and Lawyer Eldrick--about this here
+Parrawhite affair."
+
+"Oh!" said Byner, at once interested. "What now?"
+
+"You'll ha' noticed, as you come along t' road just now, 'at there's a
+deal o' stone quarries i' this neighbourhood?" replied Pickard. "Well,
+now, of course, some o' t' quarry men comes in here. Last night theer
+wor sev'ral on 'em i' t' bar theer, talkin', and one on 'em wor readin'
+t' evenin' newspaper--t' _Barford Dispatch_. An' he read out that theer
+advertisement about Parrawhite--wi' your address i' London at t' foot on
+it. Well, theer wor nowt said, except summat about advertisin' for
+disappeared folk, but later on, one o' t' men, a young man, come to me,
+private like. 'I say, Pickard,' he says, 'between you an' me, worrn't t'
+name o' that man 'at used to come in here on a Sunday sometimes,
+Parrawhite? It runs a' my mind,' he says, ''at I've heerd you call him
+by that name.' 'Well, an' what if it wor?' I says. 'Nay, nowt much,' he
+says, 'but I see fro' t' _Dispatch_ 'at he's wanted, and I could tell a
+bit about him,' he says. 'What could ye tell?' says I--just like that
+theer. 'Why,' he says, 'this much--one night t' last back-end----'"
+
+"Stop a bit, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Byner. "What does that mean--that
+term 'back-end'?"
+
+"Why, it means t' end o' t' year!" answered the landlord. "What some
+folks call autumn, d'ye understand? 'One night t' last back-end,' says
+this young fellow, 'I wor hengin' about on t' quiet at t' end o' Stubbs'
+Lane,' he says: 'T' truth wor,' he says, 'I wor waitin' for a word wi' a
+young woman 'at lives i' that terrace at t' top o' Stubbs' Lane--she wor
+goin' to come out and meet me for half an hour or so. An,' he says, 'I
+see'd that theer feller 'at I think I've heerd you call Parrawhite, come
+out o' Stubbs' Lane wi' that lawyer chap 'at lives i' t' Terrace--Pratt.
+I know Pratt,' he says, ''cause them 'at he works for--Eldricks--once
+did a bit o' law business for me.' 'Where did you see 'em go to, then?'
+says I. 'I see'd 'em cross t' road into t' owd quarry ground,' he says.
+'I see'd 'em plain enough, tho' they didn't see me--I wor keepin' snug
+agen 't wall--it wor a moonlit night, that,' he says. 'Well,' I says,
+'an' what now?' 'Why,' he says, 'd'yer think I could get owt o' this
+reward for tellin that theer?' So I thowt pretty sharp then, d'ye see,
+mister. 'I'll tell yer what, mi lad,' I says. 'Say nowt to nobody--keep
+your tongue still--and I'll tell ye tomorrow night what ye can do--I
+shall see a man 'at's on that job 'tween now and then,' I says. So theer
+it is," concluded Pickard, looking hard at Byner. "D'yer think this
+chap's evidence 'ud be i' your line?"
+
+"Decidedly I do!" replied Byner. "Where is he to be found?"
+
+"I couldn't say wheer he lives," answered the landlord. "But it'll be
+somewhere close about; anyway, he'll be in here tonight. Bill Thomson t'
+feller's name is--decent young feller enough."
+
+"I must contrive to see him, certainly," said Byner. "Well, now, can you
+show me this Stubbs' Lane and the neighbourhood?"
+
+"Just step along t' road a bit and I'll join you in a few o' minutes,"
+assented Pickard. "We'd best not be seen leavin t' house together, or
+our folk'll think it's a put-up job. Walk forrard a piece."
+
+Byner strolled along the road a little way, and leaned over a wall until
+Mr. Pickard, wearing his white billycock hat and accompanied by a fine
+fox-terrier, lounged up with his thumbs in the armholes of his
+waistcoat. Together they went a little further along.
+
+"Now then!" said the landlord, crossing the road towards the entrance of
+a narrow lane which ran between two high stone walls. "This here is
+Stubbs' Lane--so called, I believe, 'cause an owd gentleman named
+similar used to hev a house here 'at's been pulled down. Ye see, it runs
+up fro' this high-road towards yon terrace o' houses. Folks hereabouts
+calls that terrace t' World's End, 'cause they're t' last houses afore
+ye get on to t' open moorlands. Now, that night 'at Parrawhite wor
+aimin' to meet Pratt, it wor i' this very lane. Pratt, when he left t'
+tram-car, t' other side o' my place, 'ud come up t' road, and up this
+lane. And it wor at t' top o' t' lane 'at Bill Thomson see'd Pratt and
+Parrawhite cross into what Bill called t' owd quarry ground."
+
+"Can we go into that?" asked Byner.
+
+"Nowt easier!" said Pickard. "It's a sort of open space where t' childer
+goes and plays about: they hev'n't worked no stone theer for many a long
+year--all t' stone's exhausted, like."
+
+He led Byner along the lane to its further end, pointed out the place
+where Thomson said he had seen Pratt and Parrawhite, and indicated the
+terrace of houses in which Pratt lived. Then he crossed towards the old
+quarries.
+
+"Don't know what they should want to come in here for--unless it wor to
+talk very confidential," said Pickard. "But lor bless yer!--it 'ud be
+quiet enough anywheer about this neighbourhood at that time o' neet.
+However, this is wheer Bill Thomson says he see'd 'em come."
+
+He led the way amongst the disused quarries, and Byner, following,
+climbed on a mound, now grown over with grass and weed, and looked about
+him. To his town eyes the place was something novel. He had never seen
+the like of it before. Gradually he began to understand it. The stone
+had been torn out of the earth, sometimes in square pits, sometimes in
+semi-circular ones, until the various veins and strata had become
+exhausted. Then, when men went away, Nature had stepped in to assert her
+rights. All over the despoiled region she had spread a new clothing of
+green. Turf had grown on the flooring of the quarries; ivy and bramble
+had covered the deep scars; bushes had sprung up; trees were already
+springing. And in one of the worn-out excavations some man had planted a
+kitchen-garden in orderly and formal rows and plots.
+
+"Dangerous place that there!" said Pickard suddenly. "If I'd known o'
+that, I shouldn't ha' let my young 'uns come to play about here. They
+might be tummlin' in and drownin' theirsens! I mun tell my missis to
+keep 'em away!"
+
+Byner turned--to find the landlord pointing at the old shaft which had
+gradually become filled with water. In the morning sunlight its surface
+glittered like a plane of burnished metal, but when the two men went
+nearer and gazed at it from its edge, the water was black and
+unfathomable to the eye.
+
+"Goodish thirty feet o' water in that there!" surmised Pickard. "It's
+none safe for childer to play about--theer's nowt to protect 'em. Next
+time I see Mestur Shepherd I shall mak' it my business to tell him so;
+he owt either to drain that watter off or put a fence around it."
+
+"Is Mr. Shepherd the property-owner?" asked Byner.
+
+"Aye!--it's all his, this land," answered Pickard. He pointed to a
+low-roofed house set amidst elms and chestnuts, some distance off across
+the moor. "Lives theer, does Mestur Shepherd--varry well-to-do man, he
+is."
+
+"How could that water be drained off?" asked Byner with assumed
+carelessness.
+
+"Easy enough!" replied Pickard. "Cut through yon ledge, and let it run
+into t' far quarry there. A couple o' men 'ud do that job in a day."
+
+Byner made no further remark. He and Pickard strolled back to the _Green
+Man_ together. And declining the landlord's invitation to step inside
+and take another glass, but promising to see him again very soon, the
+inquiry agent walked on to the tram-car and rode down to Barford to keep
+his appointment with Eldrick and Collingwood at the barrister's
+chambers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+
+While Byner was pursuing his investigations in the neighbourhood of the
+_Green Man_, Collingwood was out at Normandale Grange, discussing
+certain matters with Nesta Mallathorpe. He had not only thought long and
+deeply over his conversation with Cobcroft the previous evening, but had
+begun to think about the crucial point of the clerk's story as soon as
+he spoke in the morning, and the result of his meditations was that he
+rose early, intercepted Cobcroft before he started for Mallathorpe's
+Mill and asked his permission to re-tell the story to Miss Mallathorpe.
+Cobcroft raised no objection, and when Collingwood had been to his
+chambers and seen his letters, he chartered a car and rode out to
+Normandale where he told Nesta of what he had learned and of his own
+conclusions. And Nesta, having listened carefully to all he had to tell,
+put a direct question to him.
+
+"You think this document which Pratt told me he holds is my late uncle's
+will?" she said. "What do you suppose its terms to be?"
+
+"Frankly--these, or something like these," replied Collingwood. "And I
+get at my conclusions in this way. Your uncle died intestate--consequently,
+everything in the shape of real estate came to your brother and everything
+in personal property to your brother and yourself. Now, supposing that
+the document which Pratt boasts of holding is the will, one fact is very
+certain--the property, real or personal, is not disposed of in the way
+in which it became disposed of because of John Mallathorpe's intestacy.
+He probably disposed of it in quite another fashion. Why do I think that?
+Because the probability is that Pratt said to your mother, 'I have got
+John Mallathorpe's will! It doesn't leave his property to your son and
+daughter. Therefore, I have all of you at my mercy. Make it worth my
+while, or I will bring the will forward.' Do you see that situation?"
+
+"Then," replied Nesta, after a moment's reflection, "you do think that
+my mother was very anxious to get that document--a will--from Pratt?"
+
+Collingwood knew what she was thinking of--her mind was still uneasy
+about Pratt's account of the affair of the foot-bridge. But--the matter
+had to be faced.
+
+"I think your mother would naturally be very anxious to secure such a
+document," he said. "You must remember that according to Pratt's story
+to you, she tried to buy it from him--just as you did yourself, though
+you, of course, had no idea of what it was you wanted to buy."
+
+"What I wanted to buy," she answered readily, "was necessity from
+further interference! But--is there no way of compelling Pratt to give
+up that document--whatever it is? Can't he be made to give it up?"
+
+"A way is may be being made, just now--through another affair," replied
+Collingwood. "At present matters are vague. One couldn't go to Pratt and
+demand something at which one is, after all, only guessing. Your mother,
+of course, would deny that she knows what it is that Pratt holds.
+But--there is the possibility of the duplicate to which Cobcroft
+referred. Now, I want to put the question straight to you--supposing
+that duplicate will can be found--and supposing--to put it plainly---its
+terms dispossess you of all your considerable property--what then?"
+
+"Do you want the exact truth?" she asked. "Well, then, I should just
+welcome anything that cleared up all this mystery! What is it at
+present, this situation, but intolerable? I know that my
+mother is in Pratt's power, and likely to remain so as long as ever this
+goes on--probably for life. She will not give me her confidence. What is
+more, I am certain that she is giving it to Esther Mawson--who is most
+likely hand-in-glove with Pratt. Esther Mawson is always with her. I am
+almost sure that she communicates with Pratt through Esther Mawson. It
+is all what I say--intolerable! I had rather lose every penny that has
+come into my hands than have this go on."
+
+"Answer me a plain question," said Collingwood. "Is your mother fond of
+money, position--all that sort of thing?"
+
+"She is fond of power!" replied Nesta. "It pleased her greatly when we
+came into all this wealth to know that she was the virtual
+administrator. Even if she could only do it by collusion with Pratt, she
+would make a fight for all that she--and I--hold. It's useless to deny
+that. Don't forget," she added, looking appealingly at Collingwood,
+"don't forget that she has known what it was to be poor--and if one does
+come into money--I suppose one doesn't want to lose it again."
+
+"Oh, it's natural enough!" agreed Collingwood. "But--if things are as I
+think, Pratt would be an incubus, a mill-stone, for ever. Anyway, I came
+out to tell you what I've learned, and what I have an idea may be the
+truth, and above all, to get your definite opinion. You want the Pratt
+influence out of the way--at any cost?"
+
+"At any cost!" she affirmed. "Even if I have to go back to earning my
+own living! Whatever pleasure in life could there be for me, knowing
+that at the back of all this there is that--what?"
+
+"Pratt!" answered Collingwood. "Pratt! He's the shadow--with his deep
+schemes. However, as I said--there may be--developing at this
+moment--another way of getting at Pratt. Gentlemen like Pratt, born
+schemers, invariably forget one very important factor in life--the
+unexpected! Even the cleverest and most subtle schemer may have his
+delicate machinery broken to pieces by a chance bit of mere dust getting
+into it at an unexpected turn of the wheels. And to turn to plainer
+language--I'm going back to Barford now to hear what another man has to
+say concerning certain of Pratt's recent movements."
+
+Eldrick was already waiting when Collingwood reached his chambers: Byner
+came there a few moments later. Within half an hour the barrister had
+told his story of Cobcroft, and the inquiry agent his of his visit to
+the _Green Man_ and the quarries. And the solicitor listened quietly and
+attentively to both, and in the end turned to Collingwood.
+
+"I'll withdraw my opinion about the nature of the document which Pratt
+got hold of," he said. "What he's got is what you think--John
+Mallathorpe's will!"
+
+"If I may venture an opinion," remarked Byner, "that's dead certain!"
+
+"And now," continued Eldrick, "we're faced with a nice situation! Don't
+either of you forget this fact. Not out of willingness on her part, but
+because she's got to do it, Mrs. Mallathorpe and Pratt are partners in
+that affair. He's got the will--but she knows its contents. She'll pay
+any price to Pratt to keep them from ever becoming known or operative.
+But, as I say, don't you forget something!"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick tapped the edge of the table, emphasizing his words as he spoke
+them.
+
+"They can destroy that will whenever they like!" he said. "And once
+destroyed, nothing can absolutely prove that it ever existed!"
+
+"The duplicate?" suggested Collingwood.
+
+"Nothing to give us the faintest idea as to its existence!" said
+Eldrick.
+
+"We might advertise," said Collingwood.
+
+"Lots of advertising was done when John Mallathorpe died," replied the
+solicitor. "No!--if any person had had it in possession, it would have
+turned up then. It may be--probably is--possibly must be--somewhere--and
+may yet come to light. But--there's another way of getting at Pratt.
+Through this Parrawhite affair. Pratt most likely had not the least
+notion that he would ever hear of Parrawhite again. He is going to hear
+of Parrawhite again! I am convinced now that Parrawhite knew something
+about this, and that Pratt squared him and got him away. Aren't you?" he
+asked, turning to Byner.
+
+But Byner smiled quietly and shook his head.
+
+"No!" he answered. "I am not, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"You're not?" exclaimed Eldrick, surprised and wondering that anybody
+could fail to agree with him.
+
+"Why not, then?"
+
+"Because," replied Byner. "I am certain that Pratt murdered Parrawhite
+on the night of November twenty-third last. That's why. He didn't square
+him. He didn't get him away. He killed him!"
+
+The effect of this straightforward pronouncement of opinion on the two
+men who heard it was strikingly different. Collingwood's face at once
+became cold and inscrutable; his lips fixed themselves sternly; his eyes
+looked hard into a problematic future. But Eldrick flushed as if a
+direct accusation had been levelled at himself, and he turned on the
+inquiry agent almost impatiently.
+
+"Murder!" he exclaimed. "Oh, come! I--really, that's rather a stiff
+order! I dare say Pratt's been up to all sorts of trickery, and even
+deviltry--but murder is quite another thing. You're pretty ready to
+accuse him!"
+
+Byner moved his head in Collingwood's direction--and Eldrick turned and
+looked anxiously at Collingwood, who, finding the eyes of both men on
+him, opened his hitherto tight-shut lips.
+
+"I think it quite likely!" he said.
+
+Byner laughed softly and looked at the solicitor.
+
+"Just listen to me a minute or two, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "I'll sum up
+my own ideas on this matter, got from the various details that have been
+supplied to me since I came to Barford. Just consider my points one by
+one. Let's take them separately--and see how they fit in.
+
+"1. Mr. Bartle is seen by his shop-boy to take a certain paper from a
+book which came from the late John Mallathorpe's office at Mallathorpe
+Mill. He puts that paper in his pocket.
+
+"2. Immediately afterwards Mr. Bartle goes to your office. Nobody is
+there but Pratt--as far as Pratt knows.
+
+"3. Bartle dies suddenly--after telling Pratt that the paper is John
+Mallathorpe's will. Pratt steals the will. And the probability is that
+Parrawhite, unknown to Pratt, was in that office, and saw him steal it.
+Why is that probable? Because--
+
+"4. Next night Parrawhite, who is being pressed for money by Pickard,
+tells Pickard that he can get it out of Pratt, over whom he has a hold.
+What hold? We can imagine what hold. Anyway--
+
+"5. Parrawhite leaves Pickard to meet Pratt. He did meet Pratt--in
+Stubbs' Lane. He was seen to go with Pratt into the disused quarry. And
+there, in my opinion, Pratt killed him--and disposed of his body.
+
+"6. What does Pratt do next? He goes to your office first thing next
+morning, and removes certain moneys which you say you carelessly left in
+your desk the night before, and tears out certain cheque forms from your
+book. When Parrawhite never turns up that morning, you--and
+Pratt--conclude that he's the thief, and that he's run away.
+
+"7. If you want some proof of the correctness of this last suggestion,
+you'll find it in the fact that no use has ever been made of those blank
+cheques, and that--in all probability--the stolen bank-notes have never
+reached the Bank of England. On that last point I'm making inquiry--but
+my feeling is that Pratt destroyed both cheques and bank-notes when he
+stole them.
+
+"8. This man Parrawhite out of the way, Pratt has a clear field. He's
+got the will. He's already acquainted Mrs. Mallathorpe with that fact,
+and with the terms of the will--whatever they may be. We may be sure,
+however, that they are of such a nature as to make her willing to agree
+to his demands upon her--and, accidentally, to go to any lengths--upon
+which we needn't touch, at present--towards getting possession of the
+will from him.
+
+"9. And the present situation--from Pratt's standpoint of yesterday--is
+this. He's so sure of his own safety that he doesn't mind revealing to
+the daughter that the mother's in his power. Why? Because Pratt, like
+most men of his sort, cannot believe that self-interest isn't paramount
+with everybody--it's beyond him to conceive it possible that Miss
+Mallathorpe would do anything that might lose her several thousands a
+year. He argued--'So long as I hold that will, nobody and nothing can
+make me give it up nor divulge its contents. But I can bind one person
+who benefits by it--Miss Mallathorpe, and for the mother's sake I can
+keep the daughter quiet!' Well--he hasn't kept the daughter quiet!
+She--spoke!
+
+"10. And last--in all such schemes as Pratt's, the schemer invariably
+forgets something. Pratt forgot that there might arise what actually has
+arisen--inquiry for Parrawhite. The search for Parrawhite is afoot--and
+if you want to get at Pratt, it will have to be through what I firmly
+believe to be a fact--his murder of Parrawhite and his disposal of
+Parrawhite's body.
+
+"That's all, Mr. Eldrick," concluded Byner who had spoken with much
+emphasis throughout. "It all seems very clear to me, and," he added,
+with a glance at Collingwood, "I think Mr. Collingwood is inclined to
+agree with most of what I've said."
+
+"Pretty nearly all--if not all," assented Collingwood. "I think you've
+put into clear language precisely what I feel. I don't believe there's a
+shadow of doubt that Pratt killed Parrawhite! And we can--and must--get
+at him in that way. What do you suggest?" he continued, turning to
+Byner. "You have some idea, of course?"
+
+"First of all," answered Byner, "we mustn't arouse any suspicion on
+Pratt's part. Let us work behind the screen. But I have an idea as to
+how he disposed of Parrawhite, and I'm going to follow it up this very
+day--my first duty, you know, is towards the people who want Parrawhite,
+or proof of his death. I propose to----"
+
+Just then Collingwood's clerk came in with a telegram.
+
+"Sent on from the _Central Hotel_, sir," he answered. "They said Mr.
+Black would be found here."
+
+"That's mine," said the inquiry agent. "I left word at the hotel that
+they were to send to your chambers if any wire came for me. Allow me."
+He opened the telegram, looked it over, and waiting until the clerk had
+gone, turned to his companions. "Here's a message from my partner, Mr.
+Halstead," he continued. "Listen to what he wires:
+
+ "'Wire just received from Murgatroyd, shipping agent, Peel Row,
+ Barford. He says Parrawhite left that town for America on
+ November 24th last and offers further information. Let me know
+ what to reply!'"
+
+Byner laid the message before Eldrick and Collingwood without further
+comment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+THE CAT'SPAW
+
+
+On the evening of the day whereon Nesta Mallathorpe had paid him the
+visit which had resulted in so much plain speech on both sides, Pratt
+employed his leisure in a calm review of the situation. He was by no
+means dissatisfied, it seemed to him that everything was going very well
+for his purposes. He was not at all sorry that Nesta had been to see
+him--far from it. He regretted nothing that he had said to her. In his
+desperate opinion, his own position was much stronger when she left
+him than it was when he opened his office door to her. She now knew,
+said Pratt, with what a strong and resourceful man she had to deal: she
+would respect him, and have a better idea of him, now that she was aware
+of his impregnable position.
+
+Herein Pratt's innate vanity and his ignorance showed themselves. He had
+little knowledge of modern young women, and few ideas about them; and
+such ideas as he possessed were usually mistaken ones. But one was that
+it is always necessary to keep a firm hand on women--let them see and
+feel your power, said Pratt. He had been secretly delighted to acquaint
+Nesta Mallathorpe with his power, to drive it into her that he had the
+whip hand of her mother, and through her mother, of Nesta herself. He
+had seen that Nesta was much upset and alarmed by what he told her. And
+though she certainly seemed to recover her spirits at the end of the
+interview, and even refused to shake hands with him, he cherished the
+notion that in the war of words he had come off a decided victor. He did
+not believe that Nesta would utter to any other soul one word of what
+had passed between them: she would be too much afraid of calling down
+his vengeance on her mother. What he did believe was that as time went
+by, and all progressed smoothly, Nesta would come to face and accept
+facts: she would find him honest and hardworking in his dealings with
+Mrs. Mallathorpe (as he fully intended to be, from purely personal and
+selfish motives) and she herself would begin to tolerate and then to
+trust him, and eventually--well, who knew what might or might not
+happen? What said the great Talleyrand?--WITH TIME AND PATIENCE, THE
+MULBERRY LEAF IS TURNED INTO SATIN.
+
+But Pratt's self-complacency received a shock next morning. If he had
+been a reader of London newspapers, it would have received a shock the
+day before. Pratt, however, was essentially parochial in his newspaper
+tastes--he never read anything but the Barford papers. And when he
+picked up the Barford morning journal and saw Eldrick's advertisement
+for Parrawhite in a prominent place, he literally started from sheer
+surprise--not unmingled with alarm. It was as if he were the occupant of
+a strong position, only fortified, who suddenly finds a shell dropped
+into his outworks from a totally unexpected quarter.
+
+Parrawhite! Advertised for by Eldrick! Why? For what reason? For what
+purpose? With what idea? Parrawhite!--of all men in the
+world--Parrawhite, of whom he had never wanted to hear again! And what
+on earth could Eldrick want with him, or with news of him? It would
+be--or might be--an uncommonly awkward thing for him, Pratt, if a really
+exhaustive search were made for Parrawhite. For nobody knew better than
+himself that one little thing leads to another, and--but he forbore to
+follow out what might have been his train of thought. Once he was
+tempted to make an excuse for going round to Eldrick & Pascoe's with the
+idea of fishing for information--but he refrained. Let things
+develop--that was a safer plan. Still, he was anxious and disturbed all
+day. Then, towards the end of the afternoon, he bought one of the
+Barford evening papers--and saw, in staring letters, the advertisement
+which Byner had caused to be inserted only a few hours previously. And
+at that, Pratt became afraid.
+
+Parrawhite wanted!--news of Parrawhite wanted!--and in two separate
+quarters. Wanted by Eldrick--wanted by some London people! What in the
+name of the devil did it mean? At any rate, he must see to himself. One
+thing was certain--no search for Parrawhite must be permitted in
+Barford.
+
+That evening, instead of going home to dinner, Pratt remained in town,
+and dined at a quiet restaurant. When he dined, he thought, and planned,
+and schemed--and after treating himself very well in the matter of food
+and drink, he lighted a cigar, returned to his new offices, opened a
+safe which he had just set up, and took from a drawer in it a hundred
+pounds in bank-notes. With these in his pocket-book he went off to a
+quiet part of the town--the part in which James Parrawhite had lodged
+during his stay in Barford.
+
+Pratt turned into a somewhat mean and shabby street--a street of small,
+poor-class shops. He went forward amongst them until he came to one
+which, if anything, was meaner and shabbier than the others and bore
+over its window the name Reuben Murgatroyd--Watchmaker and Jeweller.
+There were few signs of jewellery in Reuben Murgatroyd's window--some
+cheap clocks, some foreign-made watches of the five-shilling and
+seven-and-six variety, a selection of flashy rings and chains were
+spread on the shelves, equally cheap and flashy bangles, bracelets, and
+brooches lay in dust-covered trays on the sloping bench beneath them. At
+these things Pratt cast no more than a contemptuous glance. But he
+looked with interest at the upper part of the window, in which were
+displayed numerous gaily-coloured handbills and small posters relating
+to shipping--chiefly in the way of assisted passages to various parts of
+the globe. These set out that you could get an assisted passage to
+Canada for so much; to Australia for not much more--and if the bills and
+posters themselves did not tell you all you wanted to know, certain big
+letters at the foot of each invited you to apply for further information
+to Mr. R. Murgatroyd, agent, within. And Pratt pushed open the shop-door
+and walked inside.
+
+An untidily dressed, careworn, anxious-looking man came forward from a
+parlour at the rear of his shop. At sight of Pratt--who in the course of
+business had once served him with a writ--his pale face flushed, and
+then whitened, and Pratt hastened to assure him of his peaceful errand.
+
+"All right, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said. "Nothing to be alarmed about--I'm
+out of that line, now--no papers of that sort tonight. I've a bit of
+business I can put in your hands--profitable business. Look here!--have
+you got a quarter of an hour to spare?"
+
+Murgatroyd, who looked greatly relieved to find that his visitor had
+neither writ nor summons for him, glanced at his parlour door.
+
+"I was just going to put the shutters up, and sit down to a bite of
+supper, Mr. Pratt," he answered. "Will you come in, sir?"
+
+"No--you come out with me," said Pratt. "Come round to the _Coach and
+Horses_, and have a drink and we can talk. You'll have a better appetite
+for your supper when you come back," he added, with a wink. "I've a
+profitable job for you."
+
+"Glad to hear it, sir," replied Murgatroyd. "I can do with aught of that
+sort, I assure you!" He went into the parlour, said a word or two to
+some person within, and came out again. "Not much business doing at
+present, Mr. Pratt," he said, as he and his visitor turned into the
+street. "Gets slacker than ever."
+
+"Then you'll do with a slice of good luck," remarked Pratt. "It just
+happens that I can put a bit in your way."
+
+He led Murgatroyd to the end of the street, where stood a corner tavern,
+into a side-door of which Pratt turned as if he were well acquainted
+with the geography of the place. Walking down a narrow passage he
+conducted his companion into a small parlour, at that moment untenanted,
+pointed him to a seat in the corner, and rang the bell. Five minutes
+later, having provided Murgatroyd with rum and water and a cigar, he
+turned on him with a direct question.
+
+"Look here!" he said in a low voice. "Would a hundred pounds be any use
+to you?"
+
+Murgatroyd's cheeks flushed.
+
+"It 'ud be a fortune!" he answered with fervour. "A hundred pound! Lor'
+bless you, Mr. Pratt, it's many a year since I saw a hundred pound--of
+my own--all in one lump!"
+
+Pratt pulled out his roll of bank-notes, fluttered it in his companion's
+face, laid it on the table, and set an ashtray on it.
+
+"There's a hundred pounds there!" he said, "It's yours to pick up--if
+you'll do a little job for me. Easy job, too!--you'll never earn a
+hundred pounds so easy in your life!"
+
+Murgatroyd pricked up his ears. According to his ideas, money easily
+come by was seldom honestly earned. He stirred uncomfortably in his
+seat.
+
+"So long as it's a straight job," he muttered. "I don't want----"
+
+"Straight enough--as straight as it's easy," answered Pratt. "It may
+seem a bit mysterious, but there's reasons for that. I give you my word
+it's all right--all a mere bit of diplomacy--and that nobody'll ever
+know you're in it--that is, beyond a certain stage--and that there's no
+danger to you."
+
+"What is it?" asked Murgatroyd, still uneasy and doubtful.
+
+Pratt pulled the evening paper out of his pocket and showed Murgatroyd
+the advertisement signed Halstead & Byner.
+
+"You see that?" he said. "Information wanted about Parrawhite. Do you
+remember Parrawhite? He once served you with some papers in that affair
+in which we were against you."
+
+"I remember him," answered Murgatroyd. "I've seen him in here now and
+again. So he's wanted, is he? I didn't know he'd left the town."
+
+"Left last November," said Pratt. "And--there are folks--influential
+folks, as you can guess, seeing that they can throw a hundred pounds
+away!--who don't want any inquiries made for him in Barford. They don't
+mind--those folks--how many inquiries and searches are made for him
+anywhere else, but--not here!"
+
+"Well?" asked Murgatroyd anxiously.
+
+"This is it," replied Pratt. "You do a bit now and then as agent for
+some of these shipping lines. You book passages for emigrants--and for
+other people, going to New Zealand or Canada or Timbuctoo--never mind
+where. Now then--couldn't you remember--I'm sure you could--that you
+booked a passage for Parrawhite to America last November? Come! It's an
+easy matter to remember is that--for a hundred pounds."
+
+Murgatroyd's thin fingers trembled a little as he picked up his glass.
+"What do you want me to do--exactly?" he asked.
+
+"This!" said Pratt. "I want you, tomorrow morning, early, to send a
+telegram to these people, Halstead & Byner, St. Martin's Chambers,
+London, just saying that James Parrawhite left Barford for America on
+November 24th last, and that you can give further information if
+necessary."
+
+"And what if it is necessary?" inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"Then--in answer to any letter or telegram of inquiry--you'll just say
+that you knew Parrawhite by sight as a clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's in
+this town, that on November 23rd he told you that he was going to
+emigrate to America, that next day you booked him his passage, for which
+he paid you whatever it was, and that he thereupon set off for
+Liverpool. See?"
+
+"It's all lies, you know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Nobody can find 'em out, anyway," replied Pratt. "That's the one
+important thing to consider. You're safe! And if you're cursed with a
+conscience and it's tender--well, that'll make a good plaister for it!"
+
+He pointed to the little wad of bank-notes--and the man sitting at his
+side followed the pointing finger with hungry eyes. Murgatroyd wanted
+money badly. His business, always poor, was becoming worse: his shipping
+agency rarely produced any result: his rent was in arrears: he owed
+money to his neighbour-tradesmen: he had a wife and young children. To
+such a man, a hundred pounds meant relief, comfort, the lifting of
+pressure.
+
+"You're sure there's naught wrong in it, Mr. Pratt," he asked abruptly
+and assiduously. "It 'ud be a bad job for my family if anything happened
+to me, you know."
+
+"There's naught that will happen," answered Pratt confidently. "Who on
+earth can contradict you? Who knows what people you sell passages
+to--but yourself?"
+
+"There's the folks themselves," replied Murgatroyd. "Suppose Parrawhite
+turns up?"
+
+"He won't!" exclaimed Pratt.
+
+"You know where he is?" suggested Murgatroyd.
+
+"Not exactly," said Pratt, "But--he's left this country for
+another--further off than America. That's certain! And--the folks I
+referred to don't want any inquiry about him here."
+
+"If I am asked questions--later--am I to say he booked in his own name?"
+inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"No--name of Parsons," responded Pratt. "Here, I'll write down for you
+exactly what I want you to say in the telegram to Halstead & Byner, and
+I'll make a few memoranda for you--to post you up in case they write for
+further information."
+
+"I haven't said that I'll do it," remarked Murgatroyd. "I don't like the
+looks of it. It's all a pack of lies."
+
+Pratt paid no heed to this moral reflection. He found some loose paper
+in his pocket and scribbled on it for a while. Then, as if accidentally,
+he moved the ash-tray, and the bank-notes beneath it, all new, gave
+forth a crisp, rustling sound.
+
+"Here you are!" said Pratt, pushing notes and memoranda towards his
+companion. "Take the brass, man!--you don't get a job like that every
+day."
+
+And Murgatroyd put the money in his pocket, and presently went home,
+persuading himself that everything would be all right.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+
+Byner watched Eldrick and Collingwood inquisitively as they bent over
+Halstead's telegram. He was not surprised when Collingwood merely nodded
+in silence--nor when Eldrick turned excitedly in his own direction.
+
+"There!--what did I tell you?" he exclaimed. "There's been no murder!
+The man left the town. Probably, Pratt helped him off. Couldn't have
+better proof than that wire!"
+
+"What do you take that wire to prove, then, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Byner.
+
+"Take it to prove!" answered Eldrick. "Why, that Parrawhite booked a
+passage to America with this man Murgatroyd, last November. Clear
+enough, that!"
+
+"What do you take it to prove, Mr. Collingwood?" continued the inquiry
+agent, as he turned to the barrister with a smile.
+
+"Before I take it for anything," replied Collingwood, "I want to know
+who Murgatroyd is."
+
+Byner looked at Eldrick and laughed.
+
+"Precisely!" he said. "Who is Murgatroyd? Perhaps Mr. Eldrick knows."
+
+"I do just know that he's a man who carries on a small watch and clock
+business in a poorish part of the town, and that he has some sort of a
+shipping agency," answered Eldrick. "But--do you mean to imply that
+whatever message it is that he's sent to your partner in London this
+morning has not been sent in good faith?"
+
+"I don't imply anything," answered Byner. "All I say is--before I attach
+any value to his message I, like Collingwood, want to know something
+about the sender. He may have been put up to sending it. He may be in
+collusion with somebody. Now, Mr. Eldrick, you can come in
+here--strongly! I don't want to be seen in this affair--yet. Will you go
+and see Murgatroyd? Tell him his wire to Halstead & Byner in London has
+been communicated to you here. Ask him for further particulars--and then
+drop in on me at my hotel and tell me what you've learnt. I'll be found
+in the smoking-room there any time after two-thirty onward."
+
+Eldrick's intense curiosity in what was rapidly becoming a fascinating
+mystery to him, led him to accept this embassy. And a little before
+three o'clock he walked into the smoking-room at the _Central Hotel_ and
+discovered Byner in a comfortable corner.
+
+"I've seen Murgatroyd," he whispered, as he took an adjacent chair.
+"Decent honest enough man--very poor, I should say. He tells a plain
+enough story. Parrawhite, whom he knew as one of our clerks, told him,
+last November 23rd----"
+
+"He was exact about dates, then, was he?" interrupted Byner.
+
+"He mentioned them readily enough," replied the solicitor. "But to go
+on--Parrawhite mentioned to him, November 23rd last, that he wanted to
+go to America at once, Murgatroyd told him about bookings. Parrawhite
+called very early next morning, paid for his passage under the name of
+Parsons, and went off--en route for Liverpool, of course. So--there you
+are!"
+
+"That's all Murgatroyd could tell?" inquired Byner.
+
+"That's all he knows," answered Eldrick.
+
+"You say Murgatroyd knew Parrawhite as one of your clerks?" asked Byner
+after a moment's thought.
+
+"We had some process in hand against this man last autumn," replied
+Eldrick. "I dare say Parrawhite served him with papers."
+
+"Would he--Murgatroyd--be likely to know Pratt?" continued Byner.
+
+"He might--in the same connection," admitted Eldrick.
+
+Byner smoked in silence for a while.
+
+"Do you know what I think, Mr. Eldrick?" he said at last. "I think Pratt
+put up Murgatroyd to sending that telegram to us in London this
+morning."
+
+"You do!" exclaimed Eldrick.
+
+"Surely! And now," continued the inquiry agent, "if you will, you can do
+more--much more--without appearing to do anything. Pratt's office is
+only a few minutes away. Can you drop in there, making some excuse, and
+while there, mention, more or less casually, that Parrawhite, or
+information about him, is wanted; that you and a certain Halstead &
+Byner are advertising for him; that you've just seen Murgatroyd in
+respect of a communication which he wired to Halstead's this morning,
+and that--most important of all--a fortune of twenty thousand pounds is
+awaiting Parrawhite! Don't forget the last bit of news."
+
+"Why that particularly?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," answered Byner solemnly, "I want Pratt to know that the
+search for Parrawhite is going to be a thorough one!"
+
+Eldrick went off on his second mission, promising to return in due
+course. Within a few minutes he was in Pratt's office, talking over some
+unimportant matter of business which he had invented as he went along.
+It was not until he was on the point of departure that he referred to
+the real reason of his visit.
+
+"Did you notice that Parrawhite is being advertised for?" he asked,
+suddenly turning on his old clerk.
+
+Pratt was ready for this--had been ready ever since Eldrick walked in.
+He affected a fine surprise.
+
+"Parrawhite!" he exclaimed. "Why--who's advertising for him?"
+
+"Don't you see the newspapers?" asked Eldrick, pointing to some which
+lay about the room. "It's in there--there's an advertisement of mine,
+and one of Halstead & Byner's, of London."
+
+Pratt picked up a Barford paper and looked at the advertisements with a
+clever affectation of having never seen them before.
+
+"I haven't had much time for newspaper reading this last day or two," he
+remarked. "Advertisements for him--from two quarters!"
+
+"Acting together--acting together, you know!" replied Eldrick. "It's
+those people who really want him--Halstead & Byner, inquiry agents,
+working for a firm of City solicitors. I'm only local agent--as it
+were."
+
+"Had any response, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Pratt, throwing aside the paper.
+"Any one come forward?"
+
+"Yes," answered Eldrick, watching Pratt narrowly without seeming to do
+so. "This morning, a man named Murgatroyd, in Peel Row, who does a bit
+of shipping agency, wired to Halstead & Byner to say that he booked
+Parrawhite to New York last November. Of course, they at once
+communicated with me, and I've just been to see Murgatroyd. He's that
+man--watchmaker--we had some proceedings against last year."
+
+"Oh, that man!" said Pratt. "Thought the name was familiar. I remember
+him. And what does he say?"
+
+"Just about as much as--and little more than--he said in his wire to
+London," replied Eldrick. "Booked Parrawhite to America November 24th
+last, and believes he left for Liverpool there and then."
+
+"Ah!" remarked Pratt, "That explains it, then?"
+
+"Explains--what?" asked Eldrick.
+
+Pratt gave his old employer a look--confidential and significant.
+
+"Explains why he took that money out of your desk," he said. "You
+remember--forty odd pounds. He'd use some of that for his passage-money.
+America eh? Now--I suppose he's vanished for good, then--it's not very
+likely he'll ever be heard of from across there."
+
+Eldrick laughed--meaningly, of set purpose.
+
+"We don't know that he's gone there," he observed. "He mightn't get
+beyond Liverpool, you know. Anyhow, we're going to make a very good
+search for him here in Barford, first. We've nothing but Murgatroyd's
+word for his having set out for Liverpool."
+
+"What's he wanted for?" asked Pratt as unconcernedly as possible. "Been
+up to something?"
+
+"No," answered Eldrick, as he turned on his heel. "A relation has left
+him twenty thousand pounds. That's what he's wanted for--and why he must
+be found--or his death proved."
+
+He gave Pratt another quick glance and went off--to return to the hotel
+and Byner, to whom he at once gave a faithful account of what had just
+taken place.
+
+"And he didn't turn a hair," he remarked. "Cool as a cucumber, all
+through! If your theory is correct, Pratt's a cleverer hand than I ever
+took him for--and I've always said he was clever."
+
+"Didn't show anything when you mentioned Murgatroyd?" asked Byner.
+
+"Not a shred of a thing!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"Nor when you spoke of the twenty thousand pounds?"
+
+"No more than what you might call polite and interested surprise!"
+
+Byner laughed, threw away the end of a cigar, and rose out of his
+lounging posture.
+
+"Now, Mr. Eldrick," he said, leaning close to the solicitor, "between
+ourselves, do you know what I'm going to do--next--which means at once?"
+
+"No," replied Eldrick.
+
+"The police!" whispered Byner. "That's my next move. Just now! Within a
+few minutes. So--will you give me a couple of notes--one to the
+principal man here--chief constable, or police superintendent, or
+whatever he is; and another to the best detective there is here--in your
+opinion. They'll save me a lot of trouble."
+
+"Of course--if you wish it," answered Eldrick. "But you don't mean to
+say you're going to have Pratt arrested--on what you know up to now?"
+
+"Not at all!" replied Byner. "Much too soon! All I want is--detective
+help of the strictly professional kind. No--we'll give Mr. Pratt a
+little more rope yet--for another four-and-twenty-hours, say. But--it'll
+come! Now, who is the best local detective--a quiet, steady fellow who
+knows how to do his work unobtrusively?"
+
+"Prydale's the man!" said Eldrick "Detective-Sergeant Prydale--I've had
+reason to employ him, more than once. I'll give you a note to him, and
+one to Superintendent Waterson."
+
+He went over to a writing-table and scribbled a few lines on half-sheets
+of notepaper which he enclosed in envelopes and handed to Byner.
+
+"I don't know what line you're taking," he said, "nor where it's going
+to end--exactly. But I do know this--Pratt never turned a hair when I
+let out all that to him."
+
+But if Eldrick went away from his old clerk's fine new offices thinking
+that Pratt was quite unperturbed and unmoved by the news he had just
+acquired, he was utterly mistaken. Pratt was very much perturbed, deeply
+moved, not a little frightened. He had so schooled himself to keep a
+straight and ever blank expression of countenance in any sudden change
+of events that he had shown nothing to Eldrick--but he was none the less
+upset by the solicitor's last announcement. Twenty thousand pounds was
+lying to be picked up by Parrawhite--or by Parrawhite's next-of-kin!
+What an unhappy turn of fortune! For the next-of-kin would never rest
+until either Parrawhite came to light, or it was satisfactorily
+established that he was dead--and if search begun to be made in Barford,
+where might not that search end? Unmoved?--cool?--if Eldrick had turned
+back, he would have found that Pratt had suddenly given way to a fit of
+nerves.
+
+But that soon passed, and Pratt began to think. He left his office
+early, and betook himself to his favourite gymnasium. Exercise did him
+good--he thought a lot while he was exercising. And once more, instead
+of going home to dinner, he dined in town, and he sat late over his
+dinner in a snug corner of the restaurant, and he thought and planned
+and schemed--and after twilight had fallen on Barford, he went out and
+made his way to Peel Row. He must see Murgatroyd again--at once.
+
+Half-way along Peel Row, Pratt stopped, suddenly--and with sudden fear.
+Out of a side street emerged a man, a quiet ordinary-looking man whom he
+knew very well indeed--Detective-Sergeant Prydale. He was accompanied by
+a smart-looking, much younger man, whom Pratt remembered to have seen in
+Beck Street that afternoon--a stranger to him and to Barford. And as he
+watched, these two covered the narrow roadway, and walked into
+Murgatroyd's shop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+THE BETTER HALF
+
+
+Under the warming influence of two glasses of rum and water, and lulled
+by Pratt's assurance that all would be well, Murgatroyd had carried home
+his hundred pounds with pretty much the same feeling which permeates a
+man who, having been within measurable distance of drowning, suddenly
+finds a substantial piece of timber drifting his way, and takes a firm
+grip on it. After all, a hundred pounds was a hundred pounds. He would
+be able to pay his rent, and his rates, and give something to the grocer
+and the butcher and the baker and the milkman; the children should have
+some much-needed new clothes and boots--when all this was done, there
+would be a nice balance left over. And it was Pratt's affair, when all
+was said and done, and if any trouble arose, why, Pratt would have to
+settle it. So he ate his supper with the better appetite which Pratt had
+prophesied, and he slept more satisfactorily than usual, and next
+morning he went to the nearest telegraph office and sent off the
+stipulated telegram to Halstead & Byner in London, and hoped that there
+was the end of the matter as far as he was concerned. And then, shortly
+after noon, in walked Mr. Eldrick, one of the tribe which Murgatroyd
+dreaded, having had various dealings with solicitors, in the way of
+writs and summonses, and began to ask questions.
+
+Murgatroyd emerged from that ordeal very satisfactorily. Eldrick's
+questions were few, elementary, and easily answered. There were no signs
+of suspicion about him, and Murgatroyd breathed more freely when he was
+gone. It seemed to him that the solicitor's visit would certainly wind
+things up--for him. Eldrick asked all that could be asked, as far as he
+could see, and he had replied: now, he would probably be bothered no
+more. His spirits had assumed quite a cheerful tone by evening--but they
+received a rude shock when, summoned from his little workshop to the
+front premises, he found himself confronting one man whom he certainly
+knew to be a detective, and another who might be one. Do what he would
+he could not conceal some agitation, and Detective-Sergeant Prydale, a
+shrewdly observant man, noticed it--and affected not to.
+
+"Evening, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said cheerily. "We've come to see if you
+can give us a bit of information. You've had Mr. Eldrick, the lawyer,
+here today on the same business. You know--this affair of an old clerk
+of his--Parrawhite?"
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick all I know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Very likely," replied Prydale, "but there's a few questions this
+gentleman and myself would like to ask. Can we come in?"
+
+Murgatroyd fetched his wife to mind the shop, and took the callers into
+the parlour which she had unwillingly vacated. He knew Prydale by sight
+and reputation; about Byner he wondered. Finally he set him down as a
+detective from London--and was all the more afraid of him.
+
+"What do you want to know?" he asked, when the three men were alone. "I
+don't think there's anything that I didn't tell Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Oh, there's a great deal that Mr. Eldrick didn't ask," said Prydale.
+"Mr. Eldrick sort of just skirted round things, like. We want to know a
+bit more. This Parrawhite's got to be found, d'ye see, Mr. Murgatroyd,
+and as you seem to be the last man who had aught to do with him in
+Barford, why, naturally, we come to you. Now, to start with, you say he
+came to you about getting a passage to America? Just so--now, when would
+that be?"
+
+"Day before he did get it," answered Murgatroyd, rapidly thinking over
+the memoranda which Pratt had jotted down for his benefit.
+
+"That," said Prydale, "would be on the 23rd?"
+
+"Yes," replied Murgatroyd, "23rd November, of course."
+
+"What time, now, on the 23rd?" asked the detective.
+
+"Time?" said Murgatroyd. "Oh--in the evening."
+
+"Bit vague," remarked Prydale. "What time in the evening?"
+
+"As near as I can recollect," replied Murgatroyd, "it 'ud be just about
+half-past eight. I was thinking of closing."
+
+"Ah!" said Prydale, with a glance at Byner, who had already told him of
+Parrawhite's presence at the _Green Man_ on the other side of the town,
+a good two miles away, at the hour which Murgatroyd mentioned. "Ah!--he
+was here in your shop at half-past eight on the evening of November 23rd
+last? Asking about a ticket to America?"
+
+"New York," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"And he came next morning and bought one?" asked the detective.
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick that," said Murgatroyd, a little sullenly.
+
+"How much did it cost?" inquired Byner.
+
+"Eight pound ten," replied Murgatroyd. "Usual price."
+
+"What did he pay for it in?" continued Prydale.
+
+"He gave me a ten-pound note and I gave him thirty shillings change,"
+answered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Just so," assented Prydale. "Now what line might that be by?"
+
+Murgatroyd was becoming uneasy under all these questions, and his
+uneasiness was deepened by the way in which both his visitors watched
+him. He was a man who would have been a bad witness in any
+case--nervous, ill at ease, suspicious, inclined to boggle--and in this
+instance he was being forced to invent answers.
+
+"It was--oh, the Royal Atlantic!" he answered at last. "I've an agency
+for them."
+
+"So I noticed from the bills and placards in your window," observed the
+detective. "And of course you issue these tickets on their paper--I've
+seen 'em before. You fill up particulars on a form and a counterfoil,
+don't you? And you send a copy of those particulars to the Royal
+Atlantic offices at Liverpool?"
+
+Murgatroyd nodded silently--this was much more than he bargained for,
+and he did not know how much further it was going. And Prydale gave him
+a sudden searching look.
+
+"Can you show us the counterfoil in this instance?" he asked.
+
+Murgatroyd flushed. But he managed to get out a fairly quick reply. "No,
+I can't," he answered, "I sent that book back at the end of the year."
+
+"Oh, well--they'll have it at Liverpool," observed Prydale. "We can get
+at it there. Of course, they'll have your record of the entire
+transaction. He'd be down on their passenger list--under the name of
+Parsons, I think, Mr. Murgatroyd?"
+
+"He gave me that name," said Murgatroyd.
+
+Prydale gave Byner a look and both rose.
+
+"I think that's about all," said the detective. "Of course, our next
+inquiry will be at Liverpool---at the Royal Atlantic. Thank you, Mr.
+Murgatroyd--much obliged."
+
+Before the watchmaker could collect himself sufficiently to say or ask
+more, Prydale and his companion had walked out of the shop and gone
+away. And then Murgatroyd realized that he was in for--but he did not
+know what he was in for. What he did know was that if Prydale went or
+sent over to Liverpool the whole thing would burst like a bubble. For
+the Royal Atlantic people would tell the detectives at once that no
+passenger named Parsons had sailed under their auspices on November 24th
+last, and that he, Murgatroyd, had been telling a pack of lies.
+
+Mrs. Murgatroyd, a sharp-featured woman whose wits had been sharpened by
+a ten years' daily acquaintance with poverty, came out of the shop into
+the parlour and looked searchingly at her husband.
+
+"What did them fellows want?" she demanded. "I knew one of 'em--Prydale,
+the detective. Now what's up, Reuben? More trouble?"
+
+Murgatroyd hesitated a moment. Then he told his wife the whole story
+concealing nothing.
+
+"If they go to the Royal Atlantic, it'll all come out," he groaned. "I
+couldn't make any excuse or explanation--anyhow! What's to be done?"
+
+"You should ha' had naught to do wi' that Pratt!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd. "A scoundrelly fellow, to come and tempt poor folk to do his
+dirty work! Where's the money?"
+
+"Locked up!" answered Murgatroyd. "I haven't touched a penny of it. I
+thought I'd wait a bit and see if aught happened. But he assured me it
+was all right, and you know as well as I do that a hundred pound doesn't
+come our way every day. We want money!"
+
+"Not at that price!" said his wife. "You can pay too much for money, my
+lad! I wish you'd told me what that Pratt was after--he should have
+heard a bit o' my tongue! If I'd only known----"
+
+Just then the shop door opened, and Pratt walked in. He at once saw
+Murgatroyd and his wife standing between shop and parlour, and realized
+at a glance that his secret in this instance was his no longer.
+
+"Well?" he said, walking up to the watchmaker. "You've had Prydale
+here--and you'd Eldrick this morning. Of course, you knew what to say to
+both?"
+
+"I wish we'd never had you here last night, young man!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd fiercely. "What right have you to come here, making trouble
+for folk that's got plenty already? But at any rate, ours was honest
+trouble. Yours is like to land my husband in dishonesty--if it hasn't
+done so already! And if my husband had only spoken to me----"
+
+"Just let your husband speak a bit now," interrupted Pratt, almost
+insolently. "It's you that's making all the trouble or noise, anyhow!
+There's naught to fuss about, missis. What's upset you, Murgatroyd?"
+
+"They're going to the Royal Atlantic people," muttered the watchmaker.
+"Of course, it'll all come out, then. They know that I never booked any
+Parsons--nor anybody else for that matter--last November. You should ha'
+thought o' that!"
+
+Pratt realized that the man was right. He had never thought of
+that--never anticipated that inquiry would go beyond Murgatroyd. But his
+keen wits at once set to work.
+
+"What's the system?" he asked quickly. "Tell me--what's done when you
+book anybody like that? Come on!--explain, quick!"
+
+Murgatroyd turned to a drawer and pulled out a book and some papers.
+"It's simple enough," he said. "I've this book of forms, d'ye see? I
+fill up this form--sort of ticket or pass for the passenger, and hand it
+to him--it's a receipt as well, to him. Then I enter the same
+particulars on that counterfoil. Then I fill up one of these papers,
+giving just the same particulars, and post it at once to the Company
+with the passage money, less my commission. When one of these books is
+finished, I return the counterfoils to Liverpool--they check 'em.
+Prydale's up to all that. He asked to see the counterfoil in this case.
+I had to say I hadn't got it--I'd sent it to the Company. Of course,
+he'll find out that I didn't."
+
+"Lies!" said Mrs. Murgatroyd, vindictively. "And they didn't start wi'
+us neither!"
+
+"Who was that other man with Prydale?" asked Pratt.
+
+"London detective, I should say," answered the watchmaker. "And judging
+by the way he watched me, a sharp 'un, too!"
+
+"What impression did you get--altogether?" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Why!--that they're going to sift this affair--whatever it is--right
+down to the bottom!" exclaimed Murgatroyd. "They're either going to find
+Parrawhite or get to know what became of him. That's my impression. And
+what am I going to do, now! This'll lose me what bit of business I've
+done with yon shipping firm."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" answered Pratt scornfully. "Don't be a fool!
+You're all right. You listen to me. You write--straight off--to the
+Royal Atlantic. Tell 'em you had some inquiry made about a man named
+Parsons, who booked a passage with you for New York last November. Say
+that on looking up your books you found that you unaccountably forgot to
+send them the forms for him and his passage money. Make out a form for
+that date, and crumple it up--as if it had been left lying in a drawer.
+Enclose the money in it--here, I'll give you ten pounds to cover it," he
+went on, drawing a bank-note from his purse. "Get it off at once--you've
+time now--plenty--to catch the night-mail at the General. And then, d'ye
+see, you're all right. It's only a case then--as far as you're
+concerned--of forgetfulness. What's that?--we all forget something in
+business, now and then. They'll overlook that--when they get the money."
+
+"Aye, but you're forgetting something now!" remarked Murgatroyd. "You're
+forgetting this--no such passenger ever went! They'll know that by their
+passenger lists."
+
+"What the devil has that to do with it?" snarled Pratt impatiently.
+"What the devil do we care whether any such passenger went or not? All
+that you're concerned about is to prove that you issued a ticket to
+Parrawhite, under the name of Parsons. What's it matter to you where
+Parrawhite, _alias_ Parsons, went, when he'd once left your shop? You
+naturally thought he'd go straight to the Lancashire and Yorkshire
+Station, on his way to Liverpool and New York! But, for aught you know,
+he may have fallen down a drain pipe in the next street! Don't you see,
+man? There's nothing, there's nobody, not all the detectives in London
+and Barford, can prove that you didn't issue a ticket to Parrawhite on
+that date? It isn't up to you to prove that you did!--it's up to them to
+prove that you didn't! And--they can't. It's impossible. You get that
+letter off--at once--to Liverpool, with that money inside it, and you're
+as safe as houses--and your hundred pounds as well. Get it done! And if
+those chaps come asking any more questions, tell 'em you're not going to
+answer a single one! Mind you!--do what I tell you, and you're safe!"
+
+With that Pratt walked out of the shop and went off towards the centre
+of the town, inwardly raging and disturbed. It was very evident that
+these people meant to find Parrawhite, alive or dead; evident, too, that
+they had called in the aid of the Barford police. And in spite of all
+his assurances to the watchmaker and his suggestion for the next move,
+Pratt was far from easy about the whole matter. He would have been
+easier if he had known who Prydale's companion was--probably he was, as
+Murgatroyd had suggested, a London detective who might have been making
+inquiries in the town for some time and knew much more than he, Pratt,
+could surmise. That was the devil of the whole thing!--in Pratt's
+opinion. Adept himself in working underground, he feared people who
+adopted the same tactics. What was this stranger chap after? What did he
+know? What was he doing? Had he let Eldrick know anything? Was there a
+web of detectives already being spun around himself? Was that silly,
+unfortunate affair with Parrawhite being slowly brought to light--to
+wreck him on the very beginning of what he meant to be a brilliant
+career? He cursed Parrawhite again and again as he left Peel Row behind
+him.
+
+The events of the day had made Pratt cautious as well as anxious. He
+decided to keep away from his lodgings that night, and when he reached
+the centre of the town he took a room at a quiet hotel. He was up early
+next morning; he had breakfasted by eight o'clock; by half-past eight he
+was at his office. And in his letter-box he found one letter--a thickish
+package which had not come by post, but had been dropped in by hand, and
+was merely addressed to Mr. Pratt.
+
+Pratt tore that package open with a conviction of imminent disaster. He
+pulled out a sheet of cheap note-paper--and a wad of bank-notes. His
+face worked curiously as he read a few lines, scrawled in illiterate,
+female handwriting.
+
+ "MR PRATT,--My husband and me don't want any more to do with
+ either you or your money which it is enclosed. Been honest up to
+ now though poor, and intending to remain so our purpose is to
+ make a clean breast of everything to the police first thing
+ tomorrow morning for which you have nobody but yourself to blame
+ for wickedness in tempting poor people to do wrong.
+
+ "Yours, MRS. MURGATROYD."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+DRY SHERRY
+
+
+Pratt wasted no time in cursing Mrs. Murgatroyd. There would be plenty
+of opportunity for such relief to his feelings later on. Just then he
+had other matters to occupy him--fully. He tore the indignant letter to
+shreds; he hastily thrust the bank-notes into one pocket and drew his
+keys from another. Within five minutes he had taken from his safe a
+sealed packet, which he placed in an inside pocket of his coat, and had
+left his office--for the last time, as he knew very well. That part of
+the game was up--and it was necessary to be smart in entering on another
+phase of it.
+
+Since Eldrick's visit of the previous day, Pratt had been prepared for
+all eventuality. He had made ready for flight. And he was not going
+empty-handed. He had a considerable amount of Mrs. Mallathorpe's money
+in his possession; by obtaining her signature to one or two documents he
+could easily obtain much more in London, at an hour's notice. Those
+documents were all ready, and in the sealed packet which he had just
+taken from the safe; in it, too, were some other documents--John
+Mallathorpe's will; the letter which Mrs. Mallathorpe had written to him
+on the evening previous to her son's fatal accident; and the power of
+attorney which Pratt had obtained from her at his first interview after
+that occurrence. All was ready--and now there was nothing to do but to
+get to Normandale Grange, see Mrs. Mallathorpe, and--vanish. He had
+planned it all out, carefully, when he perceived the first danger
+signals, and knew that his other plans and schemes were doomed to
+failure. Half an hour at Normandale Grange--a journey to London--a
+couple of hours in the City--and then the next train to the Continent,
+on his way to regions much further off. Here, things had turned out
+badly, unexpectedly badly--but he would carry away considerable, easily
+transported wealth, to a new career in a new country.
+
+Pratt began his flight in methodical fashion. He locked up his office,
+and left the building by a back entrance which took him into a network
+of courts and alleys at the rear of the business part of Barford. He
+made his way in and out of these places until he reached a
+bicycle-dealer's shop in an obscure street, whereat he had left a
+machine of his own on the previous evening under the excuse of having it
+thoroughly cleaned and oiled. It was all ready for him on his arrival,
+and he presently mounted it and rode away through the outskirts of the
+town, carefully choosing the less frequented streets and roads. He rode
+on until he was clear of Barford: until, in fact, he was some miles from
+it, and had reached a village which was certainly not on the way to
+Normandale. And then, at the post-office he dismounted, and going
+inside, wrote out and dispatched a telegram. It was a brief message
+containing but three words--"One as usual"--and it was addressed Esther
+Mawson, The Grange, Normandale. This done, he remounted his bicycle,
+rode out of the village, and turned across country in quite a different
+direction. It was not yet ten o'clock--he had three hours to spare
+before the time came for keeping the appointment which he had just made.
+
+At an early stage of his operations, Pratt had found that even the
+cleverest of schemers cannot work unaided. It had been absolutely
+necessary to have some tool close at hand to Normandale Grange and its
+inhabitants; to have some person there upon whom he could depend for
+news. He had found that person, that tool, in Esther Mawson, who, as
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid, had opportunities which he at once recognized
+as being likely to be of the greatest value to him. The circumstances of
+Harper Mallathorpe's death had thrown Pratt and the maid together, and
+he had quickly discovered that she was to be bought, and would do
+anything for money. He had soon come to an understanding with her; soon
+bargained with her, and made her a willing accomplice in certain of his
+schemes, without letting her know their full meaning and extent: all,
+indeed, that she had learned from Pratt was that he had some
+considerable hold on her mistress.
+
+But it is dangerous work to play with edged tools, and if Pratt had only
+known it, he was running great risks in using Esther Mawson as a
+semi-accomplice. Esther Mawson was in constant touch with her mistress,
+and Mrs. Mallathorpe, afraid of her daughter, and not greatly in
+sympathy with her, badly needed a confidante. Little by little the
+mistress began to confide in the maid, and before long Esther Mawson
+knew the secret--and thenceforward she played a double game. Pratt found
+her useful in arranging meetings with Mrs. Mallathorpe unknown to Nesta,
+and he believed her to be devoted to him. But the truth was that Esther
+Mawson had only one object of devotion--herself--and she was waiting and
+watching for an opportunity to benefit that object--at Pratt's expense.
+
+Pratt knew nothing of this as he slowly made his way to Normandale that
+morning. Having plenty of time he went by devious and lonely roads and
+by-lanes. Eventually he came to the boundary of Normandale Park at a
+point far away from the Grange. There he dismounted, hid his bicycle in
+a coppice wherein he had often left it before, and went on towards the
+house through the woods and plantations. He knew every yard of the
+ground he traversed, and was skilled in taking cover if he saw any sign
+of woodman or gamekeeper. And in the end, just as one o'clock chimed
+from the clock over the stables, he came to a quiet spot in the
+shrubberies behind the Grange, and found Esther Mawson waiting for him
+in an old summer-house in which they had met on previous and similar
+occasions.
+
+Esther Mawson immediately realized that something unusual was in the
+air. Clever as Pratt was at concealing his feelings, she was cleverer in
+seeing small signs, and she saw that this was no ordinary visit.
+
+"Anything wrong?" she asked at once.
+
+"Bit of bother--nothing much--it'll blow over," answered Pratt, who knew
+that a certain amount of candour was necessary in dealing with this
+woman. "But--I shall have to be away for a bit--week or two, perhaps."
+
+"You want to see her?" inquired Esther.
+
+"Of course! I've some papers for her to sign," replied Pratt. "How do
+things stand? Coast clear?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe's going into Barford after lunch," answered Esther.
+"She'll be driving in about half-past two. I can manage it then. How
+long shall you want to be with her?"
+
+"Oh, a quarter of an hour'll do," said Pratt. "Ten minutes, if it comes
+to that."
+
+"And after that?" asked Esther.
+
+"Then I want to get a train at Scaleby," replied Pratt, mentioning a
+railway junction which lay ten miles across country in another
+direction. "So make it as soon after two-thirty as you can."
+
+"You can see her as soon as Miss Mallathorpe's gone," said Esther.
+"You'd better come into the house--I've got the key of the turret door,
+and all's clear--the servants are all at dinner."
+
+"I could do with something myself," observed Pratt, who, in his anxiety,
+had only made a light breakfast that morning. "Can it be managed?"
+
+"I'll manage it," she answered. "Come on--now."
+
+Behind the summer-house in which they had met a narrow path led through
+the shrubberies to an old part of the Grange which was never used, and
+was, in fact, partly ruinous. Esther Mawson led the way along this until
+she and Pratt came to a turret in the grey walls, in the lower story of
+which a massive oaken door, heavily clamped with iron, gave entrance to
+a winding stair, locked it from inside when she and Pratt had entered,
+and preceded her companion up the stair, and across one or two empty and
+dust-covered chambers to a small room in which a few pieces of ancient
+furniture were slowly dropping to decay. Pratt had taken refuge in this
+room before, and he sat down in one of the old chairs and mopped his
+forehead.
+
+"I want something to drink, above everything," he remarked. "What can
+you get?"
+
+"Nothing but wine," answered Esther Mawson. "As much as you like of
+that, because I've a stock that's kept up in Mrs. Mallathorpe's room. I
+couldn't get any ale without going to the butler. I can get wine and
+sandwiches without anybody knowing."
+
+"That'll do," said Pratt. "What sort of wine?"
+
+"Port, sherry, claret," she replied. "Whichever you like."
+
+"Sherry, then," answered Pratt. "Bring a bottle if you can get it--I
+want a good drink."
+
+The woman went away--through the disused part of the old house into the
+modern portion. She went straight to a certain store closet and took
+from it a bottle of old dry sherry which had been brought there from a
+bin in the cellars--it was part of a quantity of fine wine laid down by
+John Mallathorpe, years before, and its original owner would have been
+disgusted to think that it should ever be used for the mere purpose of
+quenching thirst. But Esther Mawson had another purpose in view, with
+respect to that bottle. Carrying it to her own sitting-room, she
+carefully cut off the thick mass of sealing-wax at its neck, drew the
+cork, and poured a little of the wine away. And that done, she unlocked
+a small box which stood on a corner of her dressing table, and took from
+it a glass phial, half full of a colourless liquid. With steady hands
+and sure fingers, she dropped some of that liquid into the wine,
+carefully counting the drops. Then she restored the phial to its
+hiding-place and re-locked the box--after which, taking up a spoon which
+lay on her table, she poured out a little of the sherry and smelled and
+tasted it. No smell--other than that which ought to be there; no
+taste--other than was proper. Pratt would suspect nothing even if he
+drunk the whole bottle.
+
+Esther Mawson had anticipated Pratt's desires in the way of refreshment,
+and she now went to a cupboard and took from it a plate of sandwiches,
+carefully swathed in a napkin. Carrying these in one hand, and the
+bottle of sherry and a glass in the other, she stole quietly back to the
+disused part of the house, and set her provender before its expectant
+consumer. Pratt poured out a glassful of the sherry, and drank it
+eagerly.
+
+"Good stuff that!" he remarked, smacking his lips. "Some of old John
+Mallathorpe's--no doubt."
+
+"It was here when we came, anyhow," replied Esther. "Well--I shall have
+to go. You'll be all right until I come back."
+
+"What time do you think it'll be?" asked Pratt. "Make it as soon as the
+coast's clear--I want to be off."
+
+"As soon as ever she's gone," agreed Esther. "I heard her order the
+carriage for half-past two."
+
+"And no fear of anybody else being about?" asked Pratt. "That butler
+man, for instance? Or servants?"
+
+"I'll see to it," replied Esther reassuringly. "I'll lock this door and
+take the key until I come back--make yourself comfortable."
+
+She locked Pratt in the old room and went off, and the willing prisoner
+ate his sandwiches and drank his sherry, and looked out of a mullioned
+window on the wide stretches of park and coppice and the breezy
+moorlands beyond. He indulged in some reflections--not wholly devoid of
+sentiment. He had cherished dreams of becoming the virtual owner of
+Normandale. Always confident in his own powers, he had believed that
+with time and patience he could have persuaded Nesta Mallathorpe to
+marry him--why not? Now--all owing to that cursed and unfortunate
+contretemps with Parrawhite, that seemed utterly impossible--all he
+could do now was to save himself--and to take as much as he could get.
+More than once that morning, as he made his way across country, he had
+remembered Parrawhite's advice to take cash and be done with
+it--perhaps, he reflected, it might have been better. Still--when he
+presently began his final retreat, he would carry away with him a lot of
+the Mallathorpe money.
+
+But before long Pratt indulged in no more reflections--sentiment or
+practical. He had eaten all his sandwiches; he had drunk three-quarters
+of the bottle of sherry. And suddenly he felt unusually drowsy, and he
+laid his head back in his big chair, and fell soundly asleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+
+If Pratt had only known what was going on in the old quarries at
+Whitcliffe, about the very time that he was riding slowly out to Barford
+on his bicycle, he would not only have accelerated his pace, but would
+have taken good care to have chosen another route: he would also have
+made haste to exchange bicycle for railway train as quickly as possible,
+and to have got himself far away before anybody could begin looking for
+him in his usual haunts, or at places wherein there was a possibility of
+his being found. But Pratt knew nothing of what Byner had done. He was
+conscious of Byner's visit to the _Green Man_. He did not know what
+Pickard had been told by Bill Thomson. He was unaware of anything which
+Pickard had told to Byner. If he had known that Byner, guided by
+Pickard, had been to the old quarries, had fixed his inquiring eye on
+the shaft which was filled to its brim with water, and had got certain
+ideas from the mere sight of it, Pratt would have hastened to put
+hundreds of miles between himself and Barford as quickly as possible.
+But all that Pratt knew was that there was a possibility of
+suspicion--which might materialize eventually, but not immediately.
+
+On the previous evening, Pratt--had he but known it--made a great
+mistake. Instead of going into Murgatroyd's shop after he had watched
+Byner and Prydale away from it--he should have followed those two astute
+and crafty persons, and have ascertained something of their movements.
+Had he done so, he would certainly not have troubled to return to Peel
+Row, nor to remain in Barford an hour longer than was absolutely
+necessary. For Pratt was sharp-witted enough when it came to a question
+of putting one and two together, and if he had tracked Prydale and the
+unknown man who was with him to a certain house whereto they repaired as
+soon as they quitted Murgatroyd's shop, he would have drawn an inference
+from the mere fact of their visit which would have thrown him into a
+cold sweat of fear. But Pratt, after all, was only one man, one brain,
+one body, and could not be in two places, nor go in two ways, at the
+same time. He took his own way--ignorant of his destruction.
+
+Byner also took a way of his own. As soon as he and Prydale left
+Murgatroyd's shop, they chartered the first cab they met with, and
+ordered its driver to go to Whitcliffe Moor.
+
+"It's the quickest thing to do--if my theory's correct," observed Byner,
+as they drove along, "Of course, it is all theory--mere theory! But I've
+grounds for it. The place--the time--mere lonely situation--that scrap
+iron lying about, which would be so useful in weighting a dead body!--I
+tell you, I shall be surprised if we don't find Parrawhite at the bottom
+of that water!"
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," agreed Prydale. "One thing's very certain, as we
+shall prove before we're through with it--Pratt's put that poor devil
+Murgatroyd up to this passage-to-America business. And a bit clumsily,
+too--fancy Murgatroyd being no better posted up than to tell me that
+Parrawhite called on him at a certain hour that night!"
+
+"But you've got to remember that Pratt didn't know of Parrawhite's
+affairs with Pickard, nor that he was at the _Green Man_ at that hour,"
+rejoined Byner. "My belief is that Pratt thinks himself safe--that he
+fancies he's provided for all contingencies. If things turn out as I
+think they will, I believe we shall find Pratt calmly seated at his desk
+tomorrow morning."
+
+"Well--if things do turn out as you expect, we'll lose no time in
+seeking him there!" observed Prydale dryly. "We'd better arrange to get
+the job done first thing."
+
+"This Mr. Shepherd'll make no objection, I suppose?" asked Byner.
+
+"Objection! Lor' bless you--he'll love it!" exclaimed Prydale. "It'll be
+a bit of welcome diversion to a man like him that's naught to do. He'll
+object none, not he!"
+
+Shepherd, a retired quarry-owner, who lived in a picturesque old stone
+house in the middle of Whitcliffe Moor, with nothing to occupy his
+attention but the growing of roses and vegetables, and an occasional
+glance at the local newspapers, listened to Prydale's request with
+gradually rising curiosity. Byner had at once seen that this call was
+welcome to this bluff and hearty Yorkshireman, who, without any question
+as to their business, had immediately welcomed them to his hearth and
+pressed liquor and cigars on them: he sized up Shepherd as a man to whom
+any sort of break in the placid course of retired life was a delightful
+event.
+
+"A dead man i' that old shaft i' one o' my worked out quarries!" he
+exclaimed. "Ye don't mean to say so! An' how long d'yer think he might
+ha' been there, now, Prydale?"
+
+"Some months, Mr. Shepherd," replied the detective.
+
+"Why, then it's high time he were taken out," said Shepherd. "When might
+you be thinkin' o' doin' t' job, like?"
+
+"As soon as possible," said Prydale. "Tomorrow morning, early, if that's
+convenient to you."
+
+"I'll tell you what I'll do," observed the retired quarry-owner. "You
+leave t' job to me. I'll get two or three men first thing tomorrow
+morning, and we'll do it reight. You be up there by half-past eight
+o'clock, and we'll soon satisfy you as to whether there's owt i' t'
+shape of a dead man or not i' t' pit. You hev' grounds for believin' 'at
+theer is----what?"
+
+"Strong grounds!" replied the detective, "and equally strong ones for
+believing the man came there by foul play, too."
+
+"Say no more!" said Shepherd. "T' mystery shall be cleared up. Deary me!
+An' to think 'at I've walked past yon theer pit many a dozen times
+within this last few o' months, and nivver dreamed 'at theer wor owt in
+it but watter! Howivver, gentlemen, ye can put yer minds at ease--we'll
+investigate the circumstances, as the sayin' goes, before noon
+tomorrow."
+
+"One other matter," remarked Prydale. "We want things kept quiet. We
+don't want all the folk of the neighbourhood round about, you know."
+
+"Leave it to me," answered Shepherd. "There'll be me, and these men, and
+yourselves--and a pair of grapplin' irons. We'll do it quiet and
+comfortable--and we'll do it reight."
+
+"Odd character!" remarked Byner, when he and Prydale went away.
+
+"Useful man--for a job of that sort," said the detective laconically.
+"Now then--are we going to let anybody else know what we're after--Mr.
+Eldrick or Mr. Collingwood, for instance? Do you want them, or either of
+them, to be present?"
+
+"No!" answered Byner, after a moment's reflection. "Let us see what
+results. We can let them know, soon enough, if we've anything to tell.
+But--what about Pratt?"
+
+"Keeping an eye on him--you mean?" said Prydale. "You said just now that
+in your opinion we should find him at his desk."
+
+"Just so--but that's no reason why he shouldn't be looked after tomorrow
+morning," answered Byner.
+
+"All right--I'll put a man on to shadow him, from the time he leaves his
+lodgings until--until we want him," said the detective. "That is--if we
+do want him."
+
+"It will be one of the biggest surprises I ever had in my life if we
+don't!" asserted Byner. "I never felt more certain of anything than I do
+of finding Parrawhite's body in that pit!"
+
+It was this certainty which made Byner appear extraordinarily cool and
+collected, when next day, about noon, he walked into Eldrick's private
+room, where Collingwood was at that moment asking the solicitor what was
+being done. The certainty was now established, and it seemed to Byner
+that it would have been a queer thing if he had not always had it. He
+closed the door and gave the two men an informing glance.
+
+"Parrawhite's body has been found," he said quietly.
+
+Eldrick started in his chair, and Collingwood looked a sharp inquiry.
+
+"Little doubt about his having been murdered, just as I conjectured,"
+continued Byner. "And his murderer had pretty cleverly weighted his body
+with scrap iron, before dropping it into a pit full of water, where it
+might have remained for a long time undiscovered. However--that's
+settled!"
+
+Eldrick got out the first question.
+
+"Pratt?"
+
+"Prydale's after him," answered Byner. "I expect we shall hear something
+in a few minutes--if he's in town. But I confess I'm a bit doubtful and
+anxious now, on that score. Because, when Prydale and I got down from
+Whitcliffe half an hour ago--where the body's now lying, at the _Green
+Man_, awaiting the inquest--we found Murgatroyd hanging about the police
+station. He'd come to make a clean breast of it--about Pratt. And it
+unfortunately turns out that Pratt saw Prydale and me go to Murgatroyd's
+shop last night, and afterwards went in there himself, and of course
+pumped Murgatroyd dry as to why we'd been."
+
+"Why unfortunately?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Because that would warn Pratt that something was afoot," said Byner.
+"And--he may have disappeared during the night. He----"
+
+But just then Prydale came in, shaking his head.
+
+"I'm afraid he's off!" he announced. "I'd a man watching for him outside
+his lodgings from an early hour this morning, but he never came out, and
+finally my man made an excuse and asked for him there, and then he heard
+that he'd never been home last night. And his office is closed."
+
+"What steps are you taking?" asked Byner.
+
+"I've got men all over the place already," replied Prydale. "But--if he
+got off in the night, as I'm afraid he did, we shan't find him in
+Barford. It's a most unlucky thing that he saw us go to Murgatroyd's
+last evening! That, of course, would set him off: he'd know things were
+reaching a crisis."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood had arranged to lunch together that day, and
+they presently went off, asking the detective to keep them informed of
+events. But up to half-past three o 'clock they heard no more--then, as
+they were returning along the street Byner came running up to them.
+
+"Prydale's just had a telephone message from the butler at Normandale!"
+he exclaimed. "Pratt is there!--and something extraordinary is going on:
+the butler wants the police. We're off at once--there's Prydale in a
+motor, waiting for me. Will you follow?"
+
+He darted away again, and Eldrick looking round for a car, suddenly
+recognized the Mallathorpe livery.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "There's Miss Mallathorpe--just driving in.
+Better tell her!"
+
+A moment later, he and Collingwood had joined Nesta in her carriage, and
+the horses' heads were turned in the direction towards which Byner and
+Prydale were already hastening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+
+Esther Mawson, leaving Pratt to enjoy his sherry and sandwiches at his
+leisure, went away through the house, out into the gardens, and across
+the shrubbery to the stables. The coachman and grooms were at
+dinner--with the exception of one man who lived in a cottage at the
+entrance to the stable-yard. This was the very man she wanted to see,
+and she found him in the saddle-room, and beckoned him to its door.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe wants me to go over to Scaleby on an errand for her
+this afternoon," she said. "Can you have the dog-cart ready, at the
+South Garden gate at three o'clock sharp? And--without saying anything
+to the coachman? It's a private errand."
+
+Of late this particular groom had received several commissions of this
+sort, and being a sharp fellow he had observed that they were generally
+given to him when Miss Mallathorpe was out.
+
+"All right," he answered. "The young missis is going out in the carriage
+at half-past two. South Garden gate--three sharp. Anybody but you?"
+
+"Only me," replied Esther. "Don't say anything to anybody about where
+we're going. Get the dog-cart ready after the carriage has gone."
+
+The groom nodded in comprehension, and Esther went back to the house and
+to her own room. She ought at that time of day to have been eating her
+dinner with the rest of the upper servants, but she had work to do which
+was of much more importance than the consumption of food and drink.
+There was going to be a flight that afternoon--but it would not be Pratt
+who would undertake it. Esther Mawson had carefully calculated all her
+chances as soon as Pratt told her that he was going to be away for a
+while. She knew that Pratt would not have left Barford for any
+indefinite period unless something had gone seriously wrong. But she
+knew more--by inference and intuition. If Pratt was going away--rather,
+since he was going away, he would have on his person things of
+value--documents, money. She meant to gain possession of everything that
+he had; she meant to have a brief interview with Mrs. Mallathorpe; then
+she meant to drive to Scaleby--and to leave that part of the country
+just as thoroughly and completely as Pratt had meant to leave it. And
+now in her own room she was completing her preparations. There was
+little to do. She knew that if her venture came off successfully, she
+could easily afford to leave her personal possessions behind her, and
+that she would be all the more free and unrestricted in her movements if
+she departed without as much as a change of clothes and linen. And so by
+two o'clock she had arrayed herself in a neat and unobtrusive
+tailor-made travelling costume, had put on an equally neat and plain
+hat, had rolled her umbrella, and laid it, her gloves, and a cloak where
+they could be readily picked up, and had attached to her slim waist a
+hand-bag--by means of a steel chain which she secured by a small padlock
+as soon as she had arranged it to her satisfaction. She was not the sort
+of woman to leave a hand-bag lying about in a railway carriage at any
+time, but in this particular instance she was not going to run any risk
+of even a moment's forgetfulness.
+
+Everything was in readiness by twenty minutes past two, and she took up
+her position in a window from which she could see the front door of the
+house. At half-past two the carriage and its two fine bay horses came
+round from the stables; a minute or two later Nesta Mallathorpe emerged
+from the hall; yet another minute and the carriage was whirling down the
+park in the direction of Barford. And then Esther moved from the window,
+picked up the umbrella, the cloak, the gloves, and went off in the
+direction of the room wherein she had left Pratt.
+
+No one ever went near those old rooms except on some special errand or
+business, and there was a dead silence all around her as she turned the
+key in the lock and slipped inside the door--to lock it again as soon as
+she had entered. There was an equally deep silence within the room--and
+for a moment she glanced a little fearfully at the recumbent figure in
+the old, deep-backed chair. Pratt had stretched himself fully in his
+easy quarters---his legs lay extended across the moth-eaten hearth-rug;
+his head and shoulders were thrown far back against the faded tapestry,
+and he was so still that he might have been supposed to be dead. But
+Esther Mawson had tried the effect of that particular drug on a good
+many people, and she knew that the victim in this instance was merely
+plunged in a sleep from which nothing whatever could wake him yet
+awhile. And after one searching glance at him, and one lifting of an
+eyelid by a practised finger, she went rapidly and thoroughly through
+Pratt's pockets, and within a few minutes of entering the room had
+cleared them of everything they contained. The sealed packet which he
+had taken from his safe that morning; the bank-notes which Mrs.
+Murgatroyd had returned in her indignant letter; another roll of notes,
+of considerable value, in a note-case; a purse containing notes and gold
+to a large amount--all those she laid one by one on a dust-covered
+table. And finally--and as calmly as if she were sorting linen--she
+swept bank-notes, gold, and purse into her steel-chained bag, and tore
+open the sealed envelope.
+
+There were five documents in that envelope--Esther examined each with
+meticulous care. The first was an authority to Linford Pratt to sell
+certain shares standing in the name of Ann Mallathorpe. The second was a
+similar document relating to other shares: each was complete, save for
+Ann Mallathorpe's signature. The third document was the power of
+attorney which Ann Mallathorpe had given to Linford Pratt: the fourth,
+the letter which she had written to him on the evening before the fatal
+accident to Harper. And the fifth was John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+At last she held in her hand the half-sheet of foolscap paper of which
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, driven to distraction, and knowing that she would get
+no sympathy from her own daughter, had told her. She was a woman of a
+quick and an understanding mind, and she had read the will through and
+grasped its significance as swiftly as her eyes ran over it. And those
+eyes turned to the unconscious Pratt with a flash of contempt--she, at
+any rate, would not follow his foolish example, and play for too high a
+stake--no, she would make hay while the sun shone its hottest! She was
+of the Parrawhite persuasion--better, far better one good bird in the
+hand than a score of possible birds in the bush.
+
+She presently restored the five documents to the stout envelope, picked
+up her other belongings, and without so much as a glance at Pratt, left
+the room. She turned the key in the door and took it away with her. And
+now she went straight to a certain sitting-room which Mrs. Mallathorpe
+had tenanted by day ever since her illness. The final and most important
+stage of Esther's venture was at hand.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat at an open window, wearily gazing out on the park.
+Ever since her son's death she had remained in a more or less torpid
+condition, rarely talking to any person except Esther Mawson: it had
+been manifest from the first that her daughter's presence distressed and
+irritated her, and by the doctor's advice Nesta had gone to her as
+little as possible, while taking every care to guard her and see to her
+comfort. All day long she sat brooding--and only Esther Mawson, now for
+some time in her full confidence, knew that her brooding was rapidly
+developing into a monomania. Mrs. Mallathorpe, indeed, had but one
+thought in her mind--the eventual circumventing of Pratt, and the
+destruction of John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+She turned slowly as the maid came in and carefully closed the door
+behind her, and her voice was irritable and querulous as she at once
+began to complain.
+
+"You've never been near me for two hours!" she said. "Your dinner time
+was over long since! I might have been wanting all sorts of things for
+aught you cared!"
+
+"I've had something else to do--for you!" retorted Esther, coming close
+to her mistress. "Listen, now!--I've got it!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's attitude and manner suddenly changed. She caught
+sight of the packet of papers in the woman's hand, and at once sprang to
+her feet, white and trembling. Instinctively she held out her own hands
+and moved a little nearer to the maid. And Esther quickly put the table
+between them, and shook her head.
+
+"No--no!" she exclaimed. "No handling of anything--yet! You keep your
+hands off! You were ready enough to bargain with Pratt--now you'll have
+to bargain with me. But I'm not such a fool as he was--I'll take cash
+down, and be done with it."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe rested her trembling hands on the table and bent
+forward across it.
+
+"Is it--is it--really--the will?" she whispered hoarsely.
+
+Instead of replying in words, Esther, taking care to keep at a safe
+distance behind the table, and with the door only a yard or two in her
+rear, drew out the documents one by one and held them up.
+
+"The will!" she said. "Your letter to Pratt. The power of attorney. Two
+papers that he brought for you to sign. That's the lot! And now, as I
+said, we'll bargain."
+
+"Where is--he?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. "How--how did you get them? Does
+he know--did he give them up?"
+
+"If you want to know, he's safe and sound asleep in one of the rooms in
+the old part of the house," answered Esther. "I drugged him. There's
+something afoot--something gone wrong with his schemes--at Barford, and
+he came here on his way--elsewhere. And so--I took the chance. Now
+then--what are you going to give me?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, whose nervous agitation was becoming more and more
+marked, wrung her hands.
+
+"I've nothing to give!" she cried. "You know very well he's had the
+management of everything--I don't know how things are----"
+
+"Stuff!" exclaimed Esther. "I know better than that. You've a lot of
+ready money in that desk there--you know you drew a lot out of the bank
+some time ago, and it's there now. You kept it for a contingency--the
+contingency's here. And--you've your rings--the diamond and ruby
+rings--I know what they're worth! Come on, now--I mean to have the whole
+lot, so it's no use hesitating."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at the maid's bold and resolute eyes--and then
+at the papers. And she glanced from eyes and papers to a bright fire
+which burned in the grate close by.
+
+"You'll give everything up?" she asked nervously.
+
+"Put those bank-notes that you've got in your desk, and those rings that
+are in your jewel-case, on the table between us," answered Esther, "and
+I'll hand over these papers on the instant! I'm not going to be such a
+fool as to keep them--not I! Come on, now!--isn't this the chance you've
+wanted?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a small bunch of keys from her gown, and went over
+to the desk which Esther had pointed to. Within a minute she was back
+again at the table, a roll of bank notes in one hand, half a dozen
+magnificent rings in the other. She put both hands halfway across and
+unclasped them. And Esther Mawson, with a light laugh, threw the papers
+over the table, and hastily swept their price into her handbag.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's nerves suddenly became steady. With a deep sigh she
+caught up the various documents and looked them quickly and thoroughly
+over. Then she tore them into fragments and flung the fragments in the
+fire--and as they blazed up, she turned and looked at Esther Mawson in a
+way which made Esther shrink a little. But she was already at the
+door--and she opened it and walked out and down the stair.
+
+She was half-way across the hall beneath, where the butler and one of
+the footmen were idly talking, when a sharp cry from above made her then
+look up. Mrs. Mallathorpe, suddenly restored to life and energy, was
+leaning over the balustrade.
+
+"Stop that woman, you men!" she said. "Seize her! Fasten her up!--lock
+the door wherever you put her! She's stolen my rings, and a lot of money
+out of my desk! And telephone instantly to Barford, and tell them to
+send the police here--at once!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, who had just arrived in Barford when Eldrick caught
+sight of her, was seriously startled as he and Collingwood came running
+up to her carriage. The solicitor entered it without ceremony or
+explanation, and turning to the coachman bade him drive back to
+Normandale as fast as he could make his horses go. Meanwhile Collingwood
+turned to Nesta. "Don't be alarmed!" he said. "Something is happening at
+the Grange--your mother has just telephoned to the police here to go
+there at once--there they are--in front of us, in that car!"
+
+"Did my mother say if she was in danger?" demanded Nesta.
+
+"She can't be!" exclaimed Eldrick, turning from the coachman, as the
+horses were whipped round and the carriage moved off. "She evidently
+gave orders for the message. No--Pratt's there! And--but of course, you
+don't know--the police want Pratt. They've been searching for him since
+noon. He's wanted for murder!"
+
+"Don't frighten Miss Mallathorpe," said Collingwood. "The murder has
+nothing to do with present events," he went on reassuringly. "It's
+something that happened some time ago. Don't be afraid about your
+mother--there are plenty of people round her, you know."
+
+"I can't help feeling anxious if Pratt is there," she answered. "How did
+he come to be there? It's not an hour since I left home. This is all
+some of Esther Mawson's work! And we shall have to wait nearly an hour
+before we know what is going on!--it's all uphill work to Normandale,
+and the horses can't do it in the time."
+
+"Eldrick!" said Collingwood, as the carriage came abreast of the Central
+Station and a long line of motorcars. "Stop the coachman! Let's get one
+of those cars--we shall get to Normandale twice as quickly. The main
+thing is to relieve Miss Mallathorpe of anxiety. Now!" he went on, as
+they hastily left the carriage and transferred themselves to a car
+quickly scented by Eldrick as the most promising of the lot. "Tell the
+driver to go as fast as he can--the other car's not very far in
+front--tell him to catch it up."
+
+Eldrick leaned over and gave his orders.
+
+"I've told him not only to catch him up, but to get in front of 'em," he
+said, settling down again in his seat. "This is a better car than
+theirs, and we shall be there first. Now, Miss Mallathorpe, don't you
+bother--this is probably going to be the clearing-up point of
+everything. One feels certain, at any rate--Pratt has reached the end of
+his tether!"
+
+"If I seem to bother," replied Nesta, "it's because I know that he and
+Esther Mawson are at Normandale--working mischief."
+
+"We shall be there in half an hour," said Collingwood, as their own car
+ran past that in which the detectives and Byner were seated. "They can't
+do much mischief in that time."
+
+None of the three spoke again until the car pulled up suddenly at the
+gates of Normandale Park. The lodge-keeper, an old man, coming out to
+open them, approached the door of the car on seeing Nesta within.
+
+"There's a young woman just gone up to the house that wants to see you
+very particular, miss," he said. "I tell'd her that you'd gone to
+Barford, but she said she'd come a long way, and she'd wait till you
+come back. She's going across the park there--crossin' yon path."
+
+He pointed over the level sward to the slight figure of a woman in
+black, who was obviously taking a near cut up to the Grange. Nesta
+looked wonderingly across the park as the car cleared the gate and went
+on up the drive.
+
+"Who can she be?" she said musingly. "A woman from a long way--to see
+me?"
+
+"She'll get to the house soon after we reach it," said Eldrick. "Let's
+attend to this more pressing business first. We should know what's afoot
+here in a minute or two."
+
+But it was somewhat difficult to make out or to discover what really was
+afoot. The car stopped at the hall door: the second car came close
+behind it; Nesta, Collingwood, Eldrick, Byner, and the detectives poured
+into the hall--encountered a much mystified-looking butler, a couple of
+footmen, and the groom whose services Esther Mawson had requisitioned,
+and who, weary of waiting for her, had come up to the house.
+
+"What's all this?" asked Eldrick, taking the situation into his own
+hands. "What's the matter? Why did you send for the police?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe's orders, sir," answered the butler, with an
+apologetic glance at his young mistress. "Really, sir, I don't
+know--exactly--what is the matter! We are all so confused! What happened
+was, that not very long after Miss Mallathorpe had left for town in the
+carriage, Esther Mawson, the maid, came downstairs from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's room, and was crossing the lower part of the hall, when
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly appeared up there and called to me and James
+to stop her and lock her up, as she'd stolen money and jewels! We were
+to lock her up and telephone for the police, sir, and to add that Mr.
+Pratt was here."
+
+"Well?" demanded Eldrick.
+
+"We did lock her up, sir! She's in my pantry," continued the butler,
+ruefully. "We've got her in there because there are bars to the
+windows--she can't get out of that. A terrible time we had, too,
+sir--she fought us like--like a maniac, protesting all the time that
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had given her what she had on her. Of course, sir, we
+don't know what she may have on her--we simply obeyed Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+"Where is Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked Collingwood. "Is she safe?"
+
+"Oh, quite safe, sir!" replied the butler. "She returned to her room
+after giving those orders. Mrs. Mallathorpe appeared to be--quite calm,
+sir."
+
+Prydale pushed himself forward--unceremoniously and insistently.
+
+"Keep that woman locked up!" he said. "First of all--where's Pratt?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe said he would be found in a room in the old part of
+the house," answered the butler, shaking his head as if he were
+thoroughly mystified. "She said you would find him fast asleep--Mawson
+had drugged him!"
+
+Prydale looked at Byner and at his fellow-detectives. Then he turned to
+the butler.
+
+"Come on!" he said brusquely. "Take us there at once!" He glanced at
+Eldrick. "I'm beginning to see through it, Mr. Eldrick!" he whispered.
+"This maid's caught Pratt for us. Let's hope he's still----"
+
+But before he could say more, and just as the butler opened a door which
+led into a corridor at the rear of the hall, a sharp crack which was
+unmistakably that of a revolver, rang through the house, waking equally
+sharp echoes in the silent room. And at that, Nesta hurried up the
+stairway to her mother's apartment, and the men, after a hurried glance
+at each other, ran along the corridor after the butler and the footmen.
+
+Pratt came out of his stupor much sooner than Esther Mawson had reckoned
+on. According to her previous experiments with the particular drug which
+she had administered to him, he ought to have remained in a profound and
+an undisturbed slumber until at least five o'clock. But he woke at
+four--woke suddenly, sharply, only conscious at first of a terrible pain
+in his head, which kept him groaning and moaning in his chair for a
+minute or two before he fairly realized where he was and what had
+happened. As the pain became milder and gave way to a dull throbbing and
+a general sense of discomfort, he looked round out of aching eyes and
+saw the bottle of sherry. And so dull were his wits that his only
+thought at first was that the wine had been far stronger than he had
+known, and that he had drunk far too much of it, and that it had sent
+him to sleep--and just then his wandering glance fell on some papers
+which Esther Mawson had taken from one of his pockets and thrown aside
+as of no value.
+
+He leapt to his feet, trembling and sweating. His hands, shaking as if
+smitten with a sudden palsy, went to his pockets--he tore off his coat
+and turned his pockets out, as if touch and feeling were not to be
+believed, and his eyes must see that there was really nothing there.
+Then he snatched up the papers on the floor and found nothing but
+letters, and odd scraps of unimportant memoranda. He stamped his feet on
+those things, and began to swear and curse, and finally to sob and
+whine. The shock of his discovery had driven all his stupefaction away
+by that time, and he knew what had happened. And his whining and sobbing
+was not that of despair, but the far worse and fiercer sobbing and
+whining of rage and terrible anger. If the woman who had tricked him had
+been there he would have torn her limb from limb, and have glutted
+himself with revenge. But--he was alone.
+
+And presently, after moving around his prison more like a wild beast
+than a human being, his senses having deserted him for a while, he
+regained some composure, and glanced about him for means of escape. He
+went to the door and tried it. But the old, substantial oak stood firm
+and fast--nothing but a crow-bar would break that door. And so he turned
+to the mullioned window, set in a deep recess.
+
+He knew that it was thirty or forty feet above the level of the
+ground--but there was much thick ivy growing on the walls of Normandale
+Grange, and it might be possible to climb down by its aid. With a great
+effort he forced open one of the dirt-encrusted sashes and looked
+out--and in the same instant he drew in his head with a harsh groan. The
+window commanded a full view of the hall door--and he had seen Prydale,
+and two other detectives, and the stranger from London whom he believed
+to be a detective, hurrying from their motorcar into the house.
+
+There was but one thing for it, now. Esther Mawson had robbed him of
+everything that was on him in the way of papers and money. But in his
+hip-pocket she had left a revolver which Pratt had carried, always
+loaded, for some time. And now, without the least hesitation, he drew it
+out and sent one of its bullets through his brain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, returning to the hall from the room in which
+they and the detectives had found Pratt's dead body, stood a little
+later in earnest conversation with Prydale, who had just come there from
+an interview with Esther Mawson. Nesta Mallathorpe suddenly called to
+them from the stairs, at the same time beckoning them to go up to her.
+
+"Will you come with me and speak to my mother?" she said. "She knows you
+are here, and she wants to say something about what has
+happened--something about that document which Pratt said he possessed."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood exchanged glances without speaking. They
+followed Nesta into her mother's sitting-room. And instead of the
+semi-invalid whom they had expected to find there, they saw a woman who
+had evidently regained not only her vivacity and her spirits but her
+sense of authority and her inclination to exercise it.
+
+"I am sorry that you gentlemen should have been drawn into all this
+wretched business!" she exclaimed, as she pointed the two men to chairs.
+"Everything must seem very strange, and indeed have seemed so for some
+time. But I have been the victim of as bad a scoundrel as ever
+lived--I'm not going to be so hypocritical as to pretend that I'm sorry
+he's dead--I'm not! I only wish he'd met his proper fate--on the
+scaffold. I don't know what you may have heard, or gathered--my daughter
+herself, from what she tells me, has only the vaguest notions--but I
+wanted to tell you, Mr. Eldrick, and you, Mr. Collingwood--seeing that
+you're one a solicitor and the other a barrister, that Pratt invented a
+most abominable plot against me, which, of course, hasn't a word of
+truth in it, yet was so clever that----"
+
+Eldrick suddenly raised his hand.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" he said quietly. "I think you had better let me
+speak before you go any further. Perhaps we--Mr. Collingwood and I--know
+more than you think. Don't trifle, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for your own and
+your daughter's sake! Tell the truth--and answer a plain question, which
+I assure you, is asked in your own interest. What have you done with
+John Mallathorpe's will?"
+
+Collingwood, anxious for Nesta, was watching her closely, and now he saw
+her turn a startled and inquiring look on her mother, who, in her turn,
+dashed a surprised glance at Eldrick. But if Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+surprised, she was also indignant, or she simulated indignation, and she
+replied to the solicitor's question with a sharp retort.
+
+"What do you mean?--John Mallathorpe's will!" she exclaimed. "What do I
+know of John Mallathorpe's will? There never was----"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" interrupted Eldrick. "Don't! I'm speaking in your
+interest, I tell you! There was a will! It was made on the morning of
+John Mallathorpe's death. It was found by Mr. Collingwood's late
+grandfather, Antony Bartle: when he died suddenly in my office, it fell
+into Pratt's hands. That is the document which Pratt held over you--and
+not an hour ago, Esther Mawson took it from Pratt, and she gave it to
+you. Again I ask you--what have you done with it?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated a moment. Then she suddenly faced Eldrick
+with a defiant look. "Let them--let everybody--do what they like!" she
+exclaimed. "It's burnt! I threw it in that fire as soon as I got it! And
+now----"
+
+Nesta interrupted her mother.
+
+"Does any one know the terms of that will?" she asked, looking at
+Eldrick. "Tell me!--if you know. Hush!" she went on, as Mrs. Mallathorpe
+tried to speak again. "I will know!"
+
+"Yes!" answered Eldrick. "Esther Mawson knows them. She read the will
+carefully. She told Prydale just now what they were. With the exception
+of three legacies of ten thousand pounds each to your mother, your
+brother, and yourself, John Mallathorpe left everything he possessed to
+the town of Barford for an educational trust."
+
+"Then," asked Nesta quietly, as she made a peremptory sign to her mother
+to be silent, "we--never had any right to be here--at all?"
+
+"I'm afraid not," replied Eldrick.
+
+"Then of course we shall go," said Nesta. "That's certain! Do you hear
+that, mother? That's my decision. It's final!"
+
+"You can do what you like," retorted Mrs. Mallathorpe sullenly. "I am
+not going to be frightened by anything that Esther Mawson says. Nor by
+what you say!" she continued, turning on Eldrick. "All that has got to
+be proved. Who can prove it? What can prove it? Do you think I am going
+to give up my rights without fighting for them? I shall swear that every
+word of Esther Mawson's is a lie! No one can bring forward a will that
+doesn't exist. And what concern is it of yours, Mr. Eldrick? What right
+have you?"
+
+"You are quite right, Mrs. Mallathorpe," said Eldrick. "It is no concern
+of mine. And so----"
+
+He turned to the door--and as he turned the door opened, to admit the
+old butler who looked apologetically but earnestly at Nesta as he
+stepped forward.
+
+"A Mrs. Gaukrodger wishes to see you on very particular business," he
+murmured. "She's been waiting some little time--something, she says,
+about some papers she has just found--belonging to the late Mr. John
+Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood, who was standing close to Nesta, caught all the butler
+said.
+
+"Gaukrodger!" he exclaimed, with a quick glance at Eldrick. "That was
+the name of the manager--a witness. See the woman at once," he whispered
+to Nesta.
+
+"Bring Mrs. Gaukrodger in, Dickenson," said Nesta. "Stay--I'll come with
+you, and bring her in myself."
+
+She returned a moment later with a slightly built, rather careworn woman
+dressed in deep mourning--the woman in black whom they had seen crossing
+the park--who looked nervously round her as she entered.
+
+"What is it you have for me, Mrs. Gaukrodger?" asked Nesta. "Papers
+belonging to the late Mr. John Mallathorpe? How--where did you get
+them?"
+
+Mrs. Gaukrodger drew a large envelope from under her cloak. "This,
+miss," she answered. "One paper--I only found it this morning. In this
+way," she went on, addressing herself to Nesta. "When my husband was
+killed, along with Mr. John Mallathorpe, they, of course, brought home
+the clothes he was wearing. There were a lot of papers in the pockets of
+the coat--two pockets full of them. And I hadn't heart or courage to
+look at them at that time, miss!--I couldn't, and I locked them up in a
+box. I never looked at them until this very day--but this morning I
+happened to open that box, and I saw them, and I thought I'd see what
+they were. And this was one--you see, it's in a plain envelope--it was
+sealed, but there's no writing on it. I cut the envelope open, and drew
+the paper out, and I saw at once it was Mr. John Mallathorpe's will--so
+I came straight to you with it."
+
+She handed the envelope over to Nesta, who at once gave it to Eldrick.
+The solicitor hastily drew out the enclosure, glanced it over, and
+turned sharply to Collingwood with a muttered exclamation.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "That man Cobcroft was right! There _was_ a
+duplicate! And here it is!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had come nearer. The sight of the half sheet of
+foolscap in Eldrick's hands seemed to fascinate her. And the expression
+of her face as she came close to his side was so curious that the
+solicitor involuntarily folded up the will and hastily put it behind his
+back--he had not only seen that expression but had caught sight of Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's twitching fingers.
+
+"Is--that--that--another will?" she whispered. "John Mallathorpe's?"
+
+"Precisely the same--another copy--duly signed and witnessed!" answered
+Eldrick firmly. "What you foolishly did was done for nothing. And--it's
+the most fortunate thing in the world, Mrs. Mallathorpe, that this has
+turned up!--most fortunate for you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe steadied herself on the edge of the table and looked at
+him fixedly. "Everything'll have to be given up?" she asked.
+
+"The terms of this will will be carried out," answered Eldrick.
+
+"Will--will they make me give up--what we've--saved?" she whispered.
+
+"Mother!" said Nesta appealingly. "Don't! Come away somewhere and let me
+talk to you--come!"
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shook off her daughter's hand and turned again to
+Eldrick.
+
+"Will they?" she demanded. "Answer!"
+
+"I don't think you'll find the trustees at all hard when it comes to a
+question of account," answered Eldrick. "They'll probably take matters
+over from now and ignore anything that's happened during the past two
+years."
+
+Again Nesta tried to lead her mother away, and again Mrs. Mallathorpe
+pushed the appealing hand from her. All her attention was fixed on
+Eldrick. "And--and will the police give me--now--what they found on that
+woman?" she whispered.
+
+"I have no doubt they will," replied Eldrick. "It's--yours."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a sigh of relief. She looked at the solicitor
+steadily for a moment--then without another word she turned and went
+away--to find Prydale.
+
+Eldrick turned to Nesta.
+
+"Don't forget," he said in a low voice, "it's a terrible blow to her,
+and she's been thinking of your interests! Leave her alone for a
+while--she'll get used to the altered circumstances. I'm sorry for
+her--and for you!"
+
+But Nesta made a sign of dissent.
+
+"There's no need to be sorry for me, Mr. Eldrick," she answered. "It's a
+greater relief than you can realize." She turned from him and went over
+to Mrs. Gaukrodger who had watched this scene without fully
+comprehending it. "Come with me," she said. "You look very tired and you
+must have some tea and rest awhile--come now."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, left alone, looked at each, other in silence
+for a moment. Then the solicitor shook his head expressively.
+
+"Well, that's over!" he exclaimed. "I must go back and hand this will
+over to the two trustees. But you, Collingwood--stay here a bit--if ever
+that girl needs company and help, it's now!"
+
+"I'm stopping," said Collingwood.
+
+He remained for a time where Eldrick left him; at last he went down to
+the hall and out into the gardens. And presently Nesta came to him
+there, and as if with a mutual understanding they walked away into the
+nearer stretches of the park. Normandale had never looked more beautiful
+than it did that afternoon, and in the midst of a silence which up to
+then neither of them had cared to break, Collingwood suddenly turned to
+the girl who had just lost it.
+
+"Are you sure that you won't miss all this--greatly?" he asked. "Just
+think!"
+
+"I'd rather lose more than this, however fond I'd got of it, than go
+through what I've gone through lately," she answered frankly. "Do you
+know what I want to do?"
+
+"No--I think not," he said. "What?"
+
+"If it's possible--to forget all about this," she replied. "And--if
+that's also possible--to help my mother to forget, too. Don't think too
+hardly of her--I don't suppose any of us know how much all this
+place--and the money--meant to her."
+
+"I've got no hard thoughts about her," said Collingwood. "I'm sorry for
+her. But--is it too soon to talk about the future?"
+
+Nesta looked at him in a way which showed him that she only half
+comprehended the question. But there was sufficient comprehension in her
+eyes to warrant him in taking her hands in his.
+
+"You know why I didn't go to India?" he said, bending his face to hers.
+
+"I--guessed!" she answered shyly.
+
+Then Collingwood, at this suddenly arrived supreme moment, became
+curiously bereft of speech. And after a period of silence, during which,
+being in the shadow of a grove of beech-trees which kindly concealed
+them from the rest of the world, they held each other's hands, all that
+he could find to say was one word.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Nesta laughed.
+
+"Well--what?" she whispered.
+
+Collingwood suddenly laughed too and put his arm round her.
+
+"It's no good!" he said. "I've often thought of what I'd to say to
+you--and now I've forgotten all. Shall I say it all at once!"
+
+"Wouldn't it be best?" she murmured with another laugh.
+
+"Then--you're going to marry me?" he asked.
+
+"Am I to answer--all at once?" she said.
+
+"One word will do!" he exclaimed, drawing her to him.
+
+"Ah!" she whispered as she lifted her face to his. "I couldn't say it
+all in one word. But--we've lots of time before us!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
+#3 in our series by J. S. Fletcher
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Talleyrand Maxim
+
+Author: J. S. Fletcher
+
+Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9834]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 22, 2003]
+[Date last updated: April 12, 2005]
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+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sandra Brown
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+BY J. S. FLETCHER
+
+
+1920
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER
+
+I DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+II IN TRUST
+
+III THE SHOP-BOY
+
+IV THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+V POINT-BLANK
+
+VI THE UNEXPECTED
+
+VII THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+VIII TERMS
+
+IX UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+X THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+XI THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+XII THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+XIII THE FIRST TRICK
+
+XIV CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+XV PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+XVI A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+XVII ADVERTISEMENT
+
+XVIII THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+XIX THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+XX THE _Green Man_
+
+XXI THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+XXII THE CAT'SPAW
+
+XXIII SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+XXIV THE BETTER HALF
+
+XXV DRY SHERRY
+
+XXVI THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+XXVII RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+XXVIII THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+
+Linford Pratt, senior clerk to Eldrick & Pascoe, solicitors, of Barford,
+a young man who earnestly desired to get on in life, by hook or by
+crook, with no objection whatever to crookedness, so long as it could be
+performed in safety and secrecy, had once during one of his periodical
+visits to the town Reference Library, lighted on a maxim of that other
+unscrupulous person, Prince Talleyrand, which had pleased him greatly.
+"With time and patience," said Talleyrand, "the mulberry leaf is turned
+into satin." This seemed to Linford Pratt one of the finest and soundest
+pieces of wisdom which he had ever known put into words.
+
+A mulberry leaf is a very insignificant thing, but a piece of satin is a
+highly marketable commodity, with money in it. Henceforth, he regarded
+himself as a mulberry leaf which his own wit and skill must transform
+into satin: at the same time he knew that there is another thing, in
+addition to time and patience, which is valuable to young men of his
+peculiar qualities, a thing also much beloved by Talleyrand--opportunity.
+He could find the patience, and he had the time--but it would give him
+great happiness if opportunity came along to help in the work. In
+everyday language, Linford Pratt wanted a chance--he waited the arrival
+of the tide in his affairs which would lead him on to fortune.
+
+Leave him alone--he said to himself--to be sure to take it at the flood.
+If Pratt had only known it, as he stood in the outer office of Eldrick &
+Pascoe at the end of a certain winter afternoon, opportunity was slowly
+climbing the staircase outside--not only opportunity, but temptation,
+both assisted by the Devil. They came at the right moment, for Pratt was
+alone; the partners had gone: the other clerks had gone: the office-boy
+had gone: in another minute Pratt would have gone, too: he was only
+looking round before locking up for the night. Then these things
+came--combined in the person of an old man, Antony Bartle, who opened
+the door, pushed in a queer, wrinkled face, and asked in a quavering
+voice if anybody was in.
+
+"I'm in, Mr. Bartle," answered Pratt, turning up a gas jet which he had
+just lowered. "Come in, sir. What can I do for you?"
+
+Antony Bartle came in, wheezing and coughing. He was a very, very old
+man, feeble and bent, with little that looked alive about him but his
+light, alert eyes. Everybody knew him--he was one of the institutions of
+Barford--as well known as the Town Hall or the Parish Church. For fifty
+years he had kept a second-hand bookshop in Quagg Alley, the narrow
+passage-way which connected Market Street with Beck Street. It was not
+by any means a common or ordinary second-hand bookshop: its proprietor
+styled himself an "antiquarian bookseller"; and he had a reputation in
+two Continents, and dealt with millionaire buyers and virtuosos in both.
+
+Barford people sometimes marvelled at the news that Mr. Antony Bartle
+had given two thousand guineas for a Book of Hours, and had sold a
+Missal for twice that amount to some American collector; and they got a
+hazy notion that the old man must be well-to-do--despite his snuffiness
+and shabbiness, and that his queer old shop, in the window of which
+there was rarely anything to be seen but a few ancient tomes, and two or
+three rare engravings, contained much that he could turn at an hour's
+notice into gold. All that was surmise--but Eldrick & Pascoe--which term
+included Linford Pratt--knew all about Antony Bartle, being his
+solicitors: his will was safely deposited in their keeping, and Pratt
+had been one of the attesting witnesses.
+
+The old man, having slowly walked into the outer office, leaned against
+a table, panting a little. Pratt hastened to open an inner door.
+
+"Come into Mr. Eldrick's room, Mr. Bartle," he said. "There's a nice
+easy chair there--come and sit down in it. Those stairs are a bit
+trying, aren't they? I often wish we were on the ground floor."
+
+He lighted the gas in the senior partner's room, and turning back, took
+hold of the visitor's arm, and helped him to the easy chair. Then,
+having closed the doors, he sat down at Eldrick's desk, put his fingers
+together and waited. Pratt knew from experience that old Antony Bartle
+would not have come there except on business: he knew also, having been
+at Eldrick & Pascoe's for many years, that the old man would confide in
+him as readily as in either of his principals.
+
+"There's a nasty fog coming on outside," said Bartle, after a fit of
+coughing. "It gets on my lungs, and then it makes my heart bad. Mr.
+Eldrick in?"
+
+"Gone," replied Pratt. "All gone, Mr. Bartle--only me here."
+
+"You'll do," answered the old bookseller. "You're as good as they are."
+He leaned forward from the easy chair, and tapped the clerk's arm with a
+long, claw-like finger. "I say," he continued, with a smile that was
+something between a wink and a leer, and suggestive of a pleased
+satisfaction. "I've had a find!"
+
+"Oh!" responded Pratt. "One of your rare books, Mr. Bartle? Got
+something for twopence that you'll sell for ten guineas? You're one of
+the lucky ones, you know, you are!"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" chuckled Bartle. "And I had to pay for my
+knowledge, young man, before I got it--we all have. No--but I've found
+something: not half an hour ago. Came straight here with it. Matters for
+lawyers, of course."
+
+"Yes?" said Pratt inquiringly. "And--what may it be?" He was expecting
+the visitor to produce something, but the old man again leaned forward,
+and dug his finger once more into the clerk's sleeve.
+
+"I say!" he whispered. "You remember John Mallathorpe and the affair
+of--how long is it since?"
+
+"Two years," answered Pratt promptly. "Of course I do. Couldn't very
+well forget it, or him."
+
+He let his mind go back for the moment to an affair which had provided
+Barford and the neighbourhood with a nine days' sensation. One winter
+morning, just two years previously, Mr. John Mallathorpe, one of the
+best-known manufacturers and richest men of the town, had been killed by
+the falling of his own mill-chimney. The condition of the chimney had
+been doubtful for some little time; experts had been examining it for
+several days: at the moment of the catastrophe, Mallathorpe himself,
+some of his principal managers, and a couple of professional
+steeple-jacks, were gathered at its base, consulting on a report. The
+great hundred-foot structure above them had collapsed without the
+slightest warning: Mallathorpe, his principal manager, and his cashier,
+had been killed on the spot: two other bystanders had subsequently died
+from injuries received. No such accident had occurred in Barford, nor in
+the surrounding manufacturing district, for many years, and there had
+been much interest in it, for according to the expert's conclusions the
+chimney was in no immediate danger.
+
+Other mill-owners then began to examine their chimneys, and for many
+weeks Barford folk had talked of little else than the danger of living
+in the shadows of these great masses of masonry.
+
+But there had soon been something else to talk of. It sprang out of the
+accident--and it was of particular interest to persons who, like Linford
+Pratt, were of the legal profession. John Mallathorpe, so far as anybody
+knew or could ascertain, had died intestate. No solicitor in the town
+had ever made a will for him. No solicitor elsewhere had ever made a
+will for him. No one had ever heard that he had made a will for himself.
+There was no will. Drastic search of his safes, his desks, his drawers
+revealed nothing--not even a memorandum. No friend of his had ever heard
+him mention a will. He had always been something of a queer man. He was
+a confirmed bachelor. The only relation he had in the world was his
+sister-in-law, the widow of his deceased younger brother, and her two
+children--a son and a daughter. And as soon as he was dead, and it was
+plain that he had died intestate, they put in their claim to his
+property.
+
+John Mallathorpe had left a handsome property. He had been making money
+all his life. His business was a considerable one--he employed two
+thousand workpeople. His average annual profit from his mills was
+reckoned in thousands--four or five thousands at least. And some years
+before his death, he had bought one of the finest estates in the
+neighbourhood, Normandale Grange, a beautiful old house, set amidst
+charming and romantic scenery in a valley, which, though within twelve
+miles of Barford, might have been in the heart of the Highlands.
+Therefore, it was no small thing that Mrs. Richard Mallathorpe and her
+two children laid claim to. Up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death,
+they had lived in very humble fashion--lived, indeed, on an allowance
+from their well-to-do kinsman--for Richard Mallathorpe had been as much
+of a waster as his brother had been of a money-getter. And there was no
+withstanding their claim when it was finally decided that John
+Mallathorpe had died intestate--no withstanding that, at any rate, of
+the nephew and niece. The nephew had taken all the real estate: he and
+his sister had shared the personal property. And for some months they
+and their mother had been safely installed at Normandale Grange, and in
+full possession of the dead man's wealth and business.
+
+All this flashed through Linford Pratt's mind in a few seconds--he knew
+all the story: he had often thought of the extraordinary good fortune of
+those young people. To be living on charity one week--and the next to be
+legal possessors of thousands a year!--oh, if only such luck would come
+his way!
+
+"Of course!" he repeated, looking thoughtfully at the old bookseller.
+"Not the sort of thing one does forget in a hurry, Mr. Bartle. What of
+it?"
+
+Antony Bartle leaned back in his easy chair and chuckled--something,
+some idea, seemed to be affording him amusement.
+
+"I'm eighty years old," he remarked. "No, I'm more, to be exact. I shall
+be eighty-two come February. When you've lived as long as that, young
+Mr. Pratt, you'll know that this life is a game of topsy-turvy--to some
+folks, at any rate. Just so!"
+
+"You didn't come here to tell me that, Mr. Bartle," said Pratt. He was
+an essentially practical young man who dined at half-past six every
+evening, having lunched on no more than bread-and-cheese and a glass of
+ale, and he also had his evenings well mapped out. "I know that already,
+sir."
+
+"Aye, aye, but you'll know more of it later on," replied Bartle.
+"Well--you know, too, no doubt, that the late John Mallathorpe was a
+bit--only a bit--of a book-collector; collected books and pamphlets
+relating to this district?"
+
+"I've heard of it," answered the clerk.
+
+"He had that collection in his private room at the mill," continued the
+old bookseller, "and when the new folks took hold, I persuaded them to
+sell it to me. There wasn't such a lot--maybe a hundred volumes
+altogether--but I wanted what there was. And as they were of no interest
+to them, they sold 'em. That's some months ago. I put all the books in a
+corner--and I never really examined them until this very afternoon.
+Then--by this afternoon's post--I got a letter from a Barford man who's
+now out in America. He wanted to know if I could supply him with a nice
+copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_. I knew there was one in that
+Mallathorpe collection, so I got it out, and examined it. And in the
+pocket inside, in which there's a map, I found--what d'ye think?"
+
+"Couldn't say," replied Pratt. He was still thinking of his dinner, and
+of an important engagement to follow it, and he had not the least idea
+that old Antony Bartle was going to tell him anything very important.
+"Letters? Bank-notes? Something of that sort?"
+
+The old bookseller leaned nearer, across the corner of the desk, until
+his queer, wrinkled face was almost close to Pratt's sharp, youthful
+one. Again he lifted the claw-like finger: again he tapped the clerk's
+arm.
+
+"I found John Mallathorpe's will!" he whispered. "His--will!"
+
+Linford Pratt jumped out of his chair. For a second he stared in
+speechless amazement at the old man; then he plunged his hands deep into
+his trousers' pockets, opened his mouth, and let out a sudden
+exclamation.
+
+"No!" he said. "No! John Mallathorpe's--will? His--will!"
+
+"Made the very day on which he died," answered Bartle, nodding
+emphatically.
+
+"Queer, wasn't it? He might have had some--premonition, eh?"
+
+Pratt sat down again.
+
+"Where is it?" he asked.
+
+"Here in my pocket," replied the old bookseller, tapping his rusty coat.
+"Oh, it's all right, I assure you. All duly made out, signed, and
+witnessed. Everything in order, I know!--because a long, a very long
+time ago, I was like you, an attorney's clerk. I've drafted many a will,
+and witnessed many a will, in my time. I've read this, every word of
+it--it's all right. Nothing can upset it."
+
+"Let's see it," said Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Well--I've no objection--I know you, of course," answered Bartle, "but
+I'd rather show it first to Mr. Eldrick. Couldn't you telephone up to
+his house and ask him to run back here?"
+
+"Certainly," replied Pratt. "He mayn't be there, though. But I can try.
+You haven't shown it to anybody else?"
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," said Bartle.
+"I tell you it's not much more than half an hour since I found it. It's
+not a long document. Do you know how it is that it's never come out?" he
+went on, turning eagerly to Pratt, who had risen again. "It's easily
+explained. The will's witnessed by those two men who were killed at the
+same time as John Mallathorpe! So, of course, there was nobody to say
+that it was in evidence. My notion is that he and those two
+men--Gaukrodger and Marshall, his manager and cashier--had signed it not
+long before the accident, and that Mallathorpe had popped it into the
+pocket of that book before going out into the yard. Eh? But see if you
+can get Mr. Eldrick down here, and we'll read it together. And I
+say--this office seems uncommonly stuffy--can you open the window a bit
+or something?--I feel oppressed, like."
+
+Pratt opened a window which looked out on the street. He glanced at the
+old man for a moment and saw that his face, always pallid, was even
+paler than usual.
+
+"You've been talking too much," he said. "Rest yourself, Mr. Bartle,
+while I ring up Mr. Eldrick's house. If he isn't there, I'll try his
+club--he often turns in there for an hour before going home."
+
+He went out by a private door to the telephone box, which stood in a
+lobby used by various occupants of the building. And when he had rung up
+Eldrick's private house and was waiting for the answer, he asked himself
+what this discovery would mean to the present holders of the Mallathorpe
+property, and his curiosity--a strongly developed quality in him--became
+more and more excited. If Eldrick was not at home, if he could not get
+in touch with him, he would persuade old Bartle to let him see his
+find--he would cheerfully go late to his dinner if he could only get a
+peep at this strangely discovered document. Romance! Why, this indeed
+was romance; and it might be--what else? Old Bartle had already chuckled
+about topsy-turvydom: did that mean that--
+
+The telephone bell rang: Eldrick had not yet reached his house. Pratt
+got on to the club: Eldrick had not been there. He rang off, and went
+back to the private room.
+
+"Can't get hold of him, Mr. Bartle," he began, as he closed the door.
+"He's not at home, and he's not at the club. I say!--you might as well
+let me have a look at----"
+
+Pratt suddenly stopped. There was a strange silence in the room: the old
+man's wheezy breathing was no longer heard. And the clerk moved forward
+quickly and looked round the high back of the easy chair....
+
+He knew at once what had happened--knew that old Bartle was dead before
+he laid a finger on the wasted hand which had dropped helplessly at his
+side. He had evidently died without a sound or a movement--died as
+quietly as he would have gone to sleep. Indeed, he looked as if he had
+just laid his old head against the padding of the chair and dropped
+asleep, and Pratt, who had seen death before, knew that he would never
+wake again. He waited a moment, listening in the silence. Once he
+touched the old man's hand; once, he bent nearer, still listening. And
+then, without hesitation, and with fingers that remained as steady as if
+nothing had happened, he unbuttoned Antony Bartle's coat, and drew a
+folded paper from the inner pocket.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+IN TRUST
+
+
+As quietly and composedly as if he were discharging the most ordinary of
+his daily duties, Pratt unfolded the document, and went close to the
+solitary gas jet above Eldrick's desk. What he held in his hand was a
+half-sheet of ruled foolscap paper, closely covered with writing, which
+he at once recognized as that of the late John Mallathorpe. He was
+familiar with that writing--he had often seen it. It was an
+old-fashioned writing--clear, distinct, with every letter well and fully
+formed.
+
+"Made it himself!" muttered Pratt. "Um!--looks as if he wanted to keep
+the terms secret. Well----"
+
+He read the will through--rapidly, but with care, murmuring the
+phraseology half aloud.
+
+"This is the last will of me, John Mallathorpe, of Normandale Grange, in
+the parish of Normandale, in the West Riding of the County of York. I
+appoint Martin William Charlesworth, manufacturer, of Holly Lodge,
+Barford, and Arthur James Wyatt, chartered accountant, of 65, Beck
+Street, Barford, executors and trustees of this my will. I give and
+devise all my estate and effects real and personal of which I may die
+possessed or entitled to unto the said Martin William Charlesworth and
+Arthur James Wyatt upon trust for the following purposes to be carried
+out by them under the following instructions, namely:--As soon after my
+death as is conveniently possible they will sell all my real estate,
+either by private treaty or by public auction; they shall sell all my
+personal property of any nature whatsoever; they shall sell my business
+at Mallathorpe's mill in Barford as a going concern to any private
+purchaser or to any company already in existence or formed for the
+purpose of acquiring it; and they shall collect all debts and moneys due
+to me. And having sold and disposed of all my property, real and
+personal, and brought all the proceeds of such sales and of such
+collection of debts and moneys into one common fund they shall first pay
+all debts owing by me and all legal duties and expenses arising out of
+my death and this disposition of my property and shall then distribute
+my estate as follows, namely: to each of themselves, Martin William
+Charlesworth and Arthur James Wyatt, they shall pay the sum of five
+thousand pounds; to my sister-in-law, Ann Mallathorpe, they shall pay
+the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my nephew, Harper John Mallathorpe,
+they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my niece, Nesta
+Mallathorpe, they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds. And as to
+the whole of the remaining residue they shall pay it in one sum to the
+Mayor and Corporation of the borough of Barford in the County of York to
+be applied by the said Mayor and Corporation at their own absolute
+discretion and in any manner which seems good to them to the
+establishment, furtherance and development of technical and commercial
+education in the said borough of Barford. Dated this sixteenth day of
+November, 1906.
+
+ Signed by the testator in
+ the presence of us both
+ present at the same
+ time who in his presence } JOHN MALLATHORPE
+ and in the presence
+ of each other
+ have hereunto set our
+ names as witnesses.
+
+ HENRY GAUKRODGER, 16, Florence Street,
+ Barford, Mill Manager.
+
+ CHARLES WATSON MARSHALL, 56, Laburnum Terrace,
+ Barford, Cashier."
+
+As the last word left his lips Pratt carefully folded up the will,
+slipped it into an inner pocket of his coat, and firmly buttoned the
+coat across his chest. Then, without as much as a glance at the dead
+man, he left the room, and again visited the telephone box. He was
+engaged in it for a few minutes. When he came out he heard steps coming
+up the staircase, and looking over the banisters he saw the senior
+partner, Eldrick, a middle-aged man. Eldrick looked up, and saw Pratt.
+
+"I hear you've been ringing me up at the club, Pratt," he said. "What is
+it?"
+
+Pratt waited until Eldrick had come up to the landing. Then he pointed
+to the door of the private room, and shook his head.
+
+"It's old Mr. Bartle, sir," he whispered. "He's in your room
+there--dead!"
+
+"Dead?" exclaimed Eldrick. "Dead!"
+
+Pratt shook his head again.
+
+"He came up not so long after you'd gone, sir," he said. "Everybody had
+gone but me--I was just going. Wanted to see you about something I don't
+know what. He was very tottery when he came in--complained of the stairs
+and the fog. I took him into your room, to sit down in the easy chair.
+And--he died straight off. Just," concluded Pratt, "just as if he was
+going quietly to sleep!"
+
+"You're sure he is dead?--not fainting?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"He's dead, sir--quite dead," replied Pratt. "I've rung up Dr.
+Melrose--he'll be here in a minute or two--and the Town Hall--the
+police--as well. Will you look at him, sir?"
+
+Eldrick silently motioned his clerk to open the door; together they
+walked into the room. And Eldrick looked at his quiet figure and wan
+face, and knew that Pratt was right.
+
+"Poor old chap!" he murmured, touching one of the thin hands. "He was a
+fine man in his time, Pratt; clever man! And he was very, very old--one
+of the oldest men in Barford. Well, we must wire to his grandson, Mr.
+Bartle Collingwood. You'll find his address in the book. He's the only
+relation the old fellow had."
+
+"Come in for everything, doesn't he, sir?" asked Pratt, as he took an
+address book from the desk, and picked up a sheaf of telegram forms.
+
+"Every penny!" murmured Eldrick. "Nice little fortune, too--a fine thing
+for a young fellow who's just been called to the Bar. As a matter of
+fact, he'll be fairly well independent, even if he never sees a brief in
+his life."
+
+"He has been called, has he, sir?" asked Pratt, laying a telegram form
+on Eldrick's writing pad and handing him a pen. "I wasn't aware of
+that."
+
+"Called this term--quite recently--at Gray's Inn," replied Eldrick, as
+he sat down. "Very promising, clever young man. Look here!--we'd better
+send two wires, one to his private address, and one to his chambers.
+They're both in that book. It's six o'clock, isn't it?--he might be at
+his chambers yet, but he may have gone home. I'll write both
+messages--you put the addresses on, and get the wire off--we must have
+him down here as soon as possible."
+
+"One address is 53x, Pump Court; the other's 96, Cloburn Square,"
+remarked Pratt consulting the book. "There's an express from King's
+Cross at 8.15 which gets here midnight."
+
+"Oh, it would do if he came down first thing in the morning--leave it to
+him," said Eldrick. "I say, Pratt, do you think an inquest will be
+necessary?"
+
+Pratt had not thought of that--he began to think. And while he was
+thinking, the doctor whom he had summoned came in. He looked at the dead
+man, asked the clerk a few questions, and was apparently satisfied. "I
+don't think there's any need for an inquest," he said in reply to
+Eldrick. "I knew the old man very well--he was much feebler than he
+would admit. The exertion of coming up these stairs of yours, and the
+coughing brought on by the fog outside--that was quite enough. Of
+course, the death will have to be reported in the usual way, but I have
+no hesitation in giving a certificate. You've let the Town Hall people
+know? Well, the body had better be removed to his rooms--we must send
+over and tell his housekeeper. He'd no relations in the town, had he?"
+
+"Only one in the world that he ever mentioned--his grandson--a young
+barrister in London," answered Eldrick. "We've just been wiring to him.
+Here, Pratt, you take these messages now, and get them off. Then we'll
+see about making all arrangements. By-the-by," he added, as Pratt moved
+towards the door, "you don't know what--what he came to see me about?"
+
+"Haven't the remotest idea, sir," answered Pratt, readily and glibly.
+"He died--just as I've told you--before he could tell me anything."
+
+He went downstairs, and out into the street, and away to the General
+Post Office, only conscious of one thing, only concerned about one
+thing--that he was now the sole possessor of a great secret. The
+opportunity which he had so often longed for had come. And as he hurried
+along through the gathering fog he repeated and repeated a fragment of
+the recent conversation between the man who was now dead, and
+himself--who remained very much alive.
+
+"You haven't shown it to anybody else?" Pratt had asked.
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," Antony Bartle
+had answered. So, in all that great town of Barford, he, Linford Pratt,
+he, alone out of a quarter of a million people, knew--what? The
+magnitude of what he knew not only amazed but exhilarated him. There
+were such possibilities for himself in that knowledge. He wanted to be
+alone, to think out those possibilities; to reckon up what they came to.
+Of one thing he was already certain--they should be, must be, turned to
+his own advantage.
+
+It was past eight o'clock before Pratt was able to go home to his
+lodgings. His landlady, meeting him in the hall, hoped that his dinner
+would not be spoiled: Pratt, who relied greatly on his dinner as his one
+great meal of the day, replied that he fervently hoped it wasn't, but
+that if it was it couldn't be helped, this time. For once he was
+thinking of something else than his dinner--as for his engagement for
+that evening, he had already thrown it over: he wanted to give all his
+energies and thoughts and time to his secret. Nevertheless, it was
+characteristic of him that he washed, changed his clothes, ate his
+dinner, and even glanced over the evening newspaper before he turned to
+the real business which was already deep in his brain. But at last, when
+the maid had cleared away the dinner things, and he was alone in his
+sitting-room, and had lighted his pipe, and mixed himself a drop of
+whisky-and-water--the only indulgence in such things that he allowed
+himself within the twenty-four hours--he drew John Mallathorpe's will
+from his pocket, and read it carefully three times. And then he began to
+think, closely and steadily.
+
+First of all, the will was a good will. Nothing could upset it. It was
+absolutely valid. It was not couched in the terms which a solicitor
+would have employed, but it clearly and plainly expressed John
+Mallathorpe's intentions and meanings in respect to the disposal of his
+property. Nothing could be clearer. The properly appointed trustees were
+to realize his estate. They were to distribute it according to his
+specified instructions. It was all as plain as a pikestaff. Pratt, who
+was a good lawyer, knew what the Probate Court would say to that will if
+it were ever brought up before it, as he did, a quite satisfactory will.
+And it was validly executed. Hundreds of people, competent to do so,
+could swear to John Mallathorpe's signature; hundreds to Gaukrodger's;
+thousands to Marshall's--who as cashier was always sending his signature
+broadcast. No, there was nothing to do but to put that into the hands of
+the trustees named in it, and then....
+
+Pratt thought next of the two trustees. They were well-known men in the
+town. They were comparatively young men--about forty. They were men of
+great energy. Their chief interests were in educational matters--that,
+no doubt, was why John Mallathorpe had appointed them trustees. Wyatt
+had been plaguing the town for two years to start commercial schools:
+Charlesworth was a devoted champion of technical schools. Pratt knew how
+the hearts of both would leap, if he suddenly told them that enormous
+funds were at their disposal for the furtherance of their schemes. And
+he also knew something else--that neither Charlesworth nor Wyatt had the
+faintest, remotest notion or suspicion that John Mallathorpe had ever
+made such a will, or they would have moved heaven and earth, pulled down
+Normandale Grange and Mallathorpe's Mill, in their efforts to find it.
+
+But the effect--the effect of producing the will--now? Pratt, like
+everybody else, had been deeply interested in the Mallathorpe affair.
+There was so little doubt that John Mallathorpe had died intestate, such
+absolute certainty that his only living relations were his deceased
+brother's two children and their mother, that the necessary proceedings
+for putting Harper Mallathorpe and his sister Nesta in possession of the
+property, real and personal, had been comparatively simple and speedy.
+But--what was it worth? What would the two trustees have been able to
+hand over to the Mayor and Corporation of Barford, if the will had been
+found as soon as John Mallathorpe died? Pratt, from what he remembered
+of the bulk and calculations at the time, made a rapid estimate. As near
+as he could reckon, the Mayor and Corporation would have got about
+L300,000.
+
+That, then--and this was what he wanted to get at--was what these young
+people would lose if he produced the will. Nay!--on second thoughts, it
+would be much more, very much more in some time; for the manufacturing
+business was being carried on by them, and was apparently doing as well
+as ever. It was really an enormous amount which they would lose--and
+they would get--what? Ten thousand apiece and their mother a like sum.
+Thirty thousand pounds in all--in comparison with hundreds of thousands.
+But they would have no choice in the matter. Nothing could upset that
+will.
+
+He began to think of the three people whom the production of this will
+would dispossess. He knew little of them beyond what common gossip had
+related at the time of John Mallathorpe's sudden death. They had lived
+in very quiet fashion, somewhere on the outskirts of the town, until
+this change in their fortunes. Once or twice Pratt had seen Mrs.
+Mallathorpe in her carriage in the Barford streets--somebody had pointed
+her out to him, and had observed sneeringly that folk can soon adapt
+themselves to circumstances, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe now gave herself
+all the airs of a duchess, though she had been no more than a hospital
+nurse before she married Richard Mallathorpe. And Pratt had also seen
+young Harper Mallathorpe now and then in the town--since the good
+fortune arrived--and had envied him: he had also thought what a strange
+thing it was that money went to young fellows who seemed to have no
+particular endowments of brain or energy. Harper was a very ordinary
+young man, not over intelligent in appearance, who, Pratt had heard, was
+often seen lounging about the one or two fashionable hotels of the
+place. As for the daughter, Pratt did not remember having ever set eyes
+on her--but he had heard that up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death
+she had earned her own living as a governess, or a nurse, or something
+of that sort.
+
+He turned from thinking of these three people to thoughts about himself.
+Pratt often thought about himself, and always in one direction--the
+direction of self-advancement. He was always wanting to get on. He had
+nobody to help him. He had kept himself since he was seventeen. His
+father and mother were dead; he had no brothers or sisters--the only
+relations he had, uncles and aunts, lived--some in London, some in
+Canada. He was now twenty-eight, and earning four pounds a week. He had
+immense confidence in himself, but he had never seen much chance of
+escaping from drudgery. He had often thought of asking Eldrick & Pascoe
+to give him his articles--but he had a shrewd idea that his request
+would be refused. No--it was difficult to get out of a rut. And yet--he
+was a clever fellow, a good-looking fellow, a sharp, shrewd, able--and
+here was a chance, such a chance as scarcely ever comes to a man. He
+would be a fool if he did not take it, and use it to his own best and
+lasting advantage.
+
+And so he locked up the will in a safe place, and went to bed, resolved
+to take a bold step towards fortune on the morrow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+THE SHOP-BOY
+
+
+When Pratt arrived at Eldrick & Pascoe's office at his usual hour of
+nine next morning, he found the senior partner already there. And with
+him was a young man whom the clerk at once set down as Mr. Bartle
+Collingwood, and looked at with considerable interest and curiosity. He
+had often heard of Mr. Bartle Collingwood, but had never seen him. He
+knew that he was the only son of old Antony Bartle's only child--a
+daughter who had married a London man; he knew, too, that Collingwood's
+parents were both dead, and that the old bookseller had left their son
+everything he possessed--a very nice little fortune, as Eldrick had
+observed last night. And since last night he had known that Collingwood
+had just been called to the Bar, and was on the threshold of what
+Eldrick, who evidently knew all about it, believed to be a promising
+career. Well, there he was in the flesh; and Pratt, who was a born
+observer of men and events, took a good look at him as he stood just
+within the private room, talking to Eldrick.
+
+A good-looking fellow; what most folk would call handsome; dark,
+clean-shaven, tall, with a certain air of reserve about his well-cut
+features, firm lips, and steady eyes that suggested strength and
+determination. He would look very well in wig and gown, decided Pratt,
+viewing matters from a professional standpoint; he was just the sort
+that clients would feel a natural confidence in, and that juries would
+listen to. Another of the lucky ones, too; for Pratt knew the contents
+of Antony Bartle's will, and that the young man at whom he was looking
+had succeeded to a cool five-and-twenty thousand pounds, at least,
+through his grandfather's death.
+
+"Here is Pratt," said Eldrick, glancing into the outer office as the
+clerk entered it. "Pratt, come in here--here is Mr. Bartle Collingwood,
+He would like you to tell him the facts about Mr. Bartle's death."
+
+Pratt walked in--armed and prepared. He was a clever hand at foreseeing
+things, and he had known all along that he would have to answer
+questions about the event of the previous night.
+
+"There's very little to tell, sir," he said, with a polite
+acknowledgment of Collingwood's greeting. "Mr. Bartle came up here just
+as I was leaving--everybody else had left. He wanted to see Mr. Eldrick.
+Why, he didn't say. He was coughing a good deal when he came in, and he
+complained of the fog outside, and of the stairs. He said
+something--just a mere mention--about his heart being bad. I lighted the
+gas in here, and helped him into the chair. He just sat down, laid his
+head back, and died."
+
+"Without saying anything further?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Not a word more, Mr. Collingwood," answered Pratt. "He--well, it was
+just as if he had dropped off to sleep. Of course, at first I thought
+he'd fainted, but I soon saw what it was--it so happens that I've seen a
+death just as sudden as that, once before--my landlady's husband died in
+a very similar fashion, in my presence. There was nothing I could do,
+Mr. Collingwood--except ring up Mr. Eldrick, and the doctor, and the
+police."
+
+"Mr. Pratt made himself very useful last night in making arrangements,"
+remarked Eldrick, looking at Collingwood. "As it is, there is very
+little to do. There will be no need for any inquest; Melrose has given
+his certificate. So--there are only the funeral arrangements. We can
+help you with that matter, of course. But first you'd no doubt like to
+go to your grandfather's place and look through his papers? We have his
+will here, you know--and I've already told you its effect."
+
+"I'm much obliged to you, Mr. Pratt," said Collingwood, turning to the
+clerk. He turned again to Eldrick. "All right," he went on. "I'll go
+over to Quagg Alley. Bye-the-bye, Mr. Pratt--my grandfather didn't tell
+you anything of the reason of his call here?"
+
+"Not a word, sir," replied Pratt. "Merely said he wanted Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Had he any legal business in process?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick and his clerk both shook their heads. No, Mr. Bartle had no
+business of that sort that they knew of. Nothing--but there again Pratt
+was prepared.
+
+"It might have been about the lease of that property in Horsebridge
+Land, sir," he said, glancing at his principal. "He did mention that,
+you know, when he was in here a few weeks ago."
+
+"Just so," agreed Eldrick. "Well, you'll let me know if we can be of
+use," he went on, as Collingwood turned away. "Pratt can be at your
+disposal, any time."
+
+Collingwood thanked him and went off. He had travelled down from London
+by the earliest morning train, and leaving his portmanteau at the hotel
+of the Barford terminus, had gone straight to Eldrick & Pascoe's office;
+accordingly this was his first visit to the shop in Quagg Alley. But he
+knew the shop and its surroundings well enough, though he had not been
+in Barford for some time; he also knew Antony Bartle's old housekeeper,
+Mrs. Clough, a rough and ready Yorkshirewoman, who had looked after the
+old man as long as he, Collingwood, could remember. She received him as
+calmly as if he had merely stepped across the street to inquire after
+his grandfather's health.
+
+"I thowt ye'd be down here first thing, Mestur Collingwood," she said,
+as he walked into the parlor at the back of the shop. "Of course,
+there's naught to be done except to see after yer grandfather's burying.
+I don't know if ye were surprised or no when t' lawyers tellygraphed to
+yer last night? I weren't surprised to hear what had happened. I'd been
+expecting summat o' that sort this last month or two."
+
+"You mean--he was failing?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"He were gettin' feebler and feebler every day," said the housekeeper.
+"But nobody dare say so to him, and he wouldn't admit it his-self. He
+were that theer high-spirited 'at he did things same as if he were a
+young man. But I knew how it 'ud be in the end--and so it has been--I
+knew he'd go off all of a sudden. And of course I had all in
+readiness--when they brought him back last night there was naught to do
+but lay him out. Me and Mrs. Thompson next door, did it, i' no time.
+Wheer will you be for buryin' him, Mestur Collingwood?"
+
+"We must think that over," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Well, an' theer's all ready for that, too," responded Mrs. Clough.
+"He's had his grave all ready i' the cemetery this three year--I
+remember when he bowt it--it's under a yew-tree, and he told me 'at he'd
+ordered his monnyment an' all. So yer an' t' lawyers'll have no great
+trouble about them matters. Mestur Eldrick, he gev' orders for t' coffin
+last night."
+
+Collingwood left these gruesome details--highly pleasing to their
+narrator--and went up to look at his dead grandfather. He had never seen
+much of him, but they had kept up a regular correspondence, and always
+been on terms of affection, and he was sorry that he had not been with
+the old man at the last. He remained looking at the queer, quiet, old
+face for a while; when he went down again, Mrs. Clough was talking to a
+sharp-looking lad, of apparently sixteen or seventeen years, who stood
+at the door leading into the shop, and who glanced at Collingwood with
+keen interest and speculation.
+
+"Here's Jabey Naylor wants to know if he's to do aught, Mestur," said
+the housekeeper. "Of course, I've telled him 'at we can't have the shop
+open till the burying's over--so I don't know what theer is that he can
+do."
+
+"Oh, well, let him come into the shop with me," answered Collingwood. He
+motioned the lad to follow him out of the parlour. "So you were Mr.
+Bartle's assistant, eh?" he asked. "Had he anybody else?"
+
+"Nobody but me, sir," replied the lad. "I've been with him a year."
+
+"And your name's what?" inquired Collingwood.
+
+"Jabez Naylor, sir, but everybody call me Jabey."
+
+"I see--Jabey for short, eh?" said Collingwood good-humouredly. He
+walked into the shop, followed by the boy, and closed the door. The
+outer door into Quagg Alley was locked: a light blind was drawn over the
+one window; the books and engravings on the shelves and in the presses
+were veiled in a half-gloom. "Well, as Mrs. Clough says, we can't do any
+business for a few days, Jabey--after that we must see what can be done.
+You shall have your wages just the same, of course, and you may look in
+every day to see if there's anything you can do. You were here
+yesterday, of course? Were you in the shop when Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the lad. "I'd been in with him all the afternoon. I
+was here when he went out--and here when they came to say he'd died at
+Mr. Eldrick's."
+
+Collingwood sat down in his grandfather's chair, at a big table, piled
+high with books and papers, which stood in the middle of the floor.
+
+"Did my grandfather seem at all unwell when he went out?" he asked.
+
+"No, sir. He had been coughing a bit more than usual--that was all.
+There was a fog came on about five o'clock, and he said it bothered
+him."
+
+"What had he been doing during the afternoon? Anything particular?"
+
+"Nothing at all particular before half-past four or so, sir."
+
+Collingwood took a closer look at Jabez Naylor. He saw that he was an
+observant lad, evidently of superior intelligence--a good specimen of
+the sharp town lad, well trained in a modern elementary school.
+
+"Oh?" he said. "Nothing particular before half-past four, eh? Did he do
+something particular after half-past four?"
+
+"There was a post came in just about then, sir," answered Jabey. "There
+was an American letter--that's it, sir--just in front of you. Mr. Bartle
+read it, and asked me if we'd got a good clear copy of Hopkinson's
+_History of Barford_. I reminded him that there was a copy amongst the
+books that had been bought from Mallathorpe's Mill some time ago."
+
+"Books that had belonged to Mr. John Mallathorpe, who was killed?" asked
+Collingwood, who was fully acquainted with the chimney accident.
+
+"Yes, sir, Mr. Bartle bought a lot of books that Mr. Mallathorpe had at
+the Mill--local books. They're there in that corner: they were put there
+when I fetched them, and he'd never looked over them since,
+particularly."
+
+"Well--and this _History of Barford_? You reminded him of it?"
+
+"I got it out for him, sir. He sat down--where you're sitting--and began
+to examine it. He said something about it being a nice copy, and he'd
+get it off that night--that's it, sir: I didn't read it, of course. And
+then he took some papers out of a pocket that's inside it, and I heard
+him say 'Bless my soul--who'd have thought it!'"
+
+Collingwood picked up the book which the boy indicated--a thick,
+substantially bound volume, inside one cover of which was a linen
+pocket, wherein were some loose maps and plans of Barford.
+
+"These what he took out?" he asked, holding them up.
+
+"Yes, sir, but there was another paper, with writing on it--a biggish
+sheet of paper--written all over."
+
+"Did you see what the writing was? Did you see any of it?"
+
+"No, sir--only that it was writing, I was dusting those shelves out,
+over there; when I heard Mr. Bartle say what he did. I just looked
+round, over my shoulder--that was all."
+
+"Was he reading this paper that you speak of?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he was holding it up to the gas, reading it."
+
+"Do you know what he did with it?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he folded it up and put it in his pocket."
+
+"Did he say any more--make any remark?"
+
+"No, sir. He wrote a letter then."
+
+"At once?"
+
+"Yes, sir--straight off. But he wasn't more than a minute writing it.
+Then he sent me to post it at the pillar-box, at the end of the Alley."
+
+"Did you read the address?"
+
+The lad turned to a book which stood with others in a rack over the
+chimney-piece, and tapped it with his finger.
+
+"Yes, sir--because Mr. Bartle gave orders when I first came here that a
+register of every letter sent out was to be kept--I've always entered
+them in this book."
+
+"And this letter you're talking about--to whom was it addressed?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe, Normandale Grange, sir."
+
+"You went and posted it at once?"
+
+"That very minute, sir."
+
+"Was it soon afterwards that Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"He went out as soon as I came back, sir."
+
+"And you never saw him again?"
+
+Jabey shook his head.
+
+"Not alive, sir," he answered. "I saw him when they brought him back."
+
+"How long had he been out when you heard he was dead?"
+
+"About an hour, sir--just after six it was when they told Mrs. Clough
+and me. He went out at ten minutes past five."
+
+Collingwood got up. He gave the lad's shoulder a friendly squeeze.
+
+"All right!" he said. "Now you seem a smart, intelligent lad--don't
+mention a word to any one of what we've been talking about. You have not
+mentioned it before, I suppose? Not a word? That's right--don't. Come in
+again tomorrow morning to see if I want you to be here as usual. I'm
+going to put a manager into this shop."
+
+When the boy had gone Collingwood locked up the shop from the house
+side, put the key in his pocket, and went into the kitchen.
+
+"Mrs. Clough," he said. "I want to see the clothes which my grandfather
+was wearing when he was brought home last night. Where are they?"
+
+"They're in that little room aside of his bed-chamber, Mestur
+Collingwood," replied the housekeeper. "I laid 'em all there, on the
+clothes-press, just as they were taken off of him, by Lawyer Eldrick's
+orders--he said they hadn't been examined, and wasn't to be, till you
+came. Nobody whatever's touched 'em since."
+
+Collingwood went upstairs and into the little room--a sort of box-room
+opening out of that in which the old man lay. There were the clothes; he
+went through the pockets of every garment. He found such things as keys,
+a purse, loose money, a memorandum book, a bookseller's catalogue or
+two, two or three letters of a business sort--but there was no big
+folded paper, covered with writing, such as Jabey Naylor had described.
+
+The mention of that paper had excited Collingwood's curiosity. He
+rapidly summed up what he had learned. His grandfather had found a
+paper, closely written upon, in a book which had been the property of
+John Mallathorpe, deceased. The discovery had surprised him, for he had
+given voice to an exclamation of what was evidently astonishment. He had
+put the paper in his pocket. Then he had written a letter--to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe of Normandale Grange. When his shop-boy had posted that
+letter, he himself had gone out--to his solicitor. What, asked
+Collingwood, was the reasonable presumption? The old man had gone to
+Eldrick to show him the paper which he had found.
+
+He lingered in the little room for a few minutes, thinking. No one but
+Pratt had been with Antony Bartle at the time of his seizure and sudden
+death. What sort of a fellow was Pratt? Was he honest? Was his word to
+be trusted? Had he told the precise truth about the old man's death? He
+was evidently a suave, polite, obliging sort of fellow, this clerk, but
+it was a curious thing that if Antony Bartle had that paper, whatever it
+was--in his pocket when he went to Eldrick's office it should not be in
+his pocket still--if his clothing had really remained untouched. Already
+suspicion was in Collingwood's mind--vague and indefinable, but there.
+
+He was half inclined to go straight back to Eldrick & Pascoe's and tell
+Eldrick what Jabey Naylor had just told him. But he reflected that while
+Naylor went out to post the letter, the old bookseller might have put
+the paper elsewhere; locked it up in his safe, perhaps. One thing,
+however, he, Collingwood, could do at once--he could ask Mrs.
+Mallathorpe if the letter referred to the paper. He was fully acquainted
+with all the facts of the Mallathorpe history; old Bartle, knowing they
+would interest his grandson, had sent him the local newspaper accounts
+of its various episodes. It was only twelve miles to Normandale
+Grange--a motor-car would carry him there within the hour. He glanced at
+his watch--just ten o 'clock.
+
+An hour later, Collingwood found himself standing in a fine oak-panelled
+room, the windows of which looked out on a romantic valley whose thickly
+wooded sides were still bright with the red and yellow tints of autumn.
+A door opened--he turned, expecting to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. Instead, he
+found himself looking at a girl, who glanced inquiringly at him, and
+from him to the card which he had sent in on his arrival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+
+Collingwood at once realized that he was in the presence of one of the
+two fortunate young people who had succeeded so suddenly--and, according
+to popular opinion, so unexpectedly--to John Mallathorpe's wealth. This
+was evidently Miss Nesta Mallathorpe, of whom he had heard, but whom he
+had never seen. She, however, was looking at him as if she knew him, and
+she smiled a little as she acknowledged his bow.
+
+"My mother is out in the grounds, with my brother," she said, motioning
+Collingwood towards a chair. "Won't you sit down, please?--I've sent for
+her; she will be here in a few minutes."
+
+Collingwood sat down; Nesta Mallathorpe sat down, too, and as they
+looked at each other she smiled again.
+
+"I have seen you before, Mr. Collingwood," she said. "I knew it must be
+you when they brought up your card."
+
+Collingwood used his glance of polite inquiry to make a closer
+inspection of his hostess. He decided that Nesta Mallathorpe was not so
+much pretty as eminently attractive--a tall, well-developed,
+warm-coloured young woman, whose clear grey eyes and red lips and
+general bearing indicated the possession of good health and spirits. And
+he was quite certain that if he had ever seen her before he would not
+have forgotten it.
+
+"Where have you seen me?" he asked, smiling back at her.
+
+"Have you forgotten the mock-trial--year before last?" she asked.
+
+Collingwood remembered what she was alluding to. He had taken part, in
+company with various other law students, in a mock-trial, a breach of
+promise case, for the benefit of a certain London hospital, to him had
+fallen one of the principal parts, that of counsel for the plaintiff.
+"When I saw your name, I remembered it at once," she went on. "I was
+there--I was a probationer at St. Chad's Hospital at that time."
+
+"Dear me!" said Collingwood, "I should have thought our histrionic
+efforts would have been forgotten. I'm afraid I don't remember much
+about them, except that we had a lot of fun out of the affair. So you
+were at St. Chad's?" he continued, with a reminiscence of the
+surroundings of the institution they were talking of. "Very different to
+Normandale!"
+
+"Yes," she replied. "Very--very different to Normandale. But when I was
+at St. Chad's, I didn't know that I--that we should ever come to
+Normandale."
+
+"And now that you are here?" he asked.
+
+The girl looked out through the big window on the valley which lay in
+front of the old house, and she shook her head a little.
+
+"It's very beautiful," she answered, "but I sometimes wish I was back at
+St. Chad's--with something to do. Here--there's nothing to do but to do
+nothing." Collingwood realized that this was not the complaint of the
+well-to-do young woman who finds time hang heavy--it was rather
+indicative of a desire for action.
+
+"I understand!" he said. "I think I should feel like that. One wants--I
+suppose--is it action, movement, what is it?"
+
+"Better call it occupation--that's a plain term," she answered. "We're
+both suffering from lack of occupation here, my brother and I. And it's
+bad for us--especially for him."
+
+Before Collingwood could think of any suitable reply to this remarkably
+fresh and candid statement, the door opened, and Mrs. Mallathorpe came
+in, followed by her son. And the visitor suddenly and immediately
+noticed the force and meaning of Nesta Mallathorpe's last remark. Harper
+Mallathorpe, a good-looking, but not remarkably intelligent appearing
+young man, of about Collingwood's own age, gave him the instant
+impression of being bored to death; the lack-lustre eye, the aimless
+lounge, the hands thrust into the pockets of his Norfolk jacket as if
+they took refuge there from sheer idleness--all these things told their
+tale. Here, thought Collingwood, was a fine example of how riches can be
+a curse--relieved of the necessity of having to earn his daily bread by
+labour, Harper Mallathorpe was finding life itself laborious.
+
+But there was nothing of aimlessness, idleness, or lack of vigour in
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. She was a woman of character, energy, of
+brains--Collingwood saw all that at one glance. A little, neat-figured,
+compact sort of woman, still very good-looking, still on the right side
+of fifty, with quick movements and sharp glances out of a pair of shrewd
+eyes: this, he thought, was one of those women who will readily
+undertake the control and management of big affairs. He felt, as Mrs.
+Mallathorpe turned inquiring looks on him, that as long as she was in
+charge of them the Mallathorpe family fortunes would be safe.
+
+"Mother," said Nesta, handing Collingwood's card to Mrs. Mallathorpe,
+"this gentleman is Mr. Bartle Collingwood. He's--aren't you?--yes, a
+barrister. He wants to see you. Why, I don't know. I have seen Mr.
+Collingwood before--but he didn't remember me. Now he'll tell you what
+he wants to see you about."
+
+"If you'll allow me to explain why I called on you, Mrs. Mallathorpe,"
+said Collingwood, "I don't suppose you ever heard of me--but you know,
+at any rate, the name of my grandfather, Mr. Antony Bartle, the
+bookseller, of Barford? My grandfather is dead--he died very suddenly
+last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe and Nesta murmured words of polite sympathy. Harper
+suddenly spoke--as if mere words were some relief to his obvious
+boredom.
+
+"I heard that, this morning," he said, turning to his mother. "Hopkins
+told me--he was in town last night. I meant to tell you."
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe, glancing at some letters which
+stood on a rack above the mantelpiece. "Why--I had a letter from Mr.
+Bartle this very morning!"
+
+"It is that letter that I have come to see you about," said Collingwood.
+"I only got down here from London at half-past eight this morning, and
+of course, I have made some inquiries about the circumstances of my
+grandfather's sudden death. He died very suddenly indeed at Mr.
+Eldrick's office. He had gone there on some business about which nobody
+knows nothing--he died before he could mention it. And according to his
+shop-boy, Jabey Naylor, the last thing he did was to write a letter to
+you. Now--I have reason for asking--would you mind telling me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe, what that letter was about?" Mrs. Mallathorpe moved over to
+the hearth, and took an envelope from the rack. She handed it to
+Collingwood, indicating that he could open it. And Collingwood drew out
+one of old Bartle's memorandum forms, and saw a couple of lines in the
+familiar crabbed handwriting:
+
+ "MRS. MALLATHORPE, Normandale Grange.
+
+ "Madam,--If you should drive into town tomorrow, will you kindly
+ give me a call? I want to see you particularly.
+
+ "Respectfully, A. BARTLE."
+
+Collingwood handed back the letter.
+
+"Have you any idea to what that refers?" he asked.
+
+"Well, I think I have--perhaps," answered Mrs. Mallathorpe. "Mr. Bartle
+persuaded us to sell him some books--local books--which my late
+brother-in-law had at his office in the mill. And since then he has been
+very anxious to buy more local books and pamphlets about this
+neighbourhood, and he had some which Mr. Bartle was very anxious indeed
+to get hold of. I suppose he wanted to see me about that." Collingwood
+made no remarks for the moment. He was wondering whether or not to tell
+what Jabey Naylor had told him about this paper taken from the linen
+pocket inside the _History of Barford_. But Mrs. Mallathorpe's ready
+explanation had given him a new idea, and he rose from his chair.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "I suppose that's it. You may think it odd that I
+wanted to know what he'd written about, but as it was certainly the last
+letter he wrote----"
+
+"Oh, I'm quite sure it must have been that!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+"And as I am going into Barford this afternoon, in any case, I meant to
+call at Mr. Bartle's. I'm sorry to hear of his death, poor old
+gentleman! But he was very old indeed, wasn't he?"
+
+"He was well over eighty," replied Collingwood. "Well, thank you
+again--and good-bye--I have a motorcar waiting outside there, and I have
+much to do in Barford when I get back."
+
+The two young people accompanied Collingwood into the hall. And Harper
+suddenly brightened.
+
+"I say!" he said. "Have a drink before you go. It's a long way in and
+out. Come into the dining-room."
+
+But Collingwood caught Nesta's eye, and he was quick to read a signal in
+it.
+
+"No, thanks awfully!" he answered. "I won't really--I must get
+back--I've such a lot of things to attend to. This is a very beautiful
+place of yours," he went on, as Harper, whose face had fallen at the
+visitor's refusal, followed with his sister to where the motor-car
+waited. "It might be a hundred miles from anywhere."
+
+"It's a thousand miles from anywhere!" muttered Harper. "Nothing to do
+here!"
+
+"No hunting, shooting, fishing?" asked Collingwood. "Get tired of 'em?
+Well, why not make a private golf-links in your park? You'd get a fine
+sporting course round there."
+
+"That's a good notion, Harper," observed Nesta, with some eagerness.
+"You could have it laid out this winter."
+
+Harper suddenly looked at Collingwood.
+
+"Going to stop in Barford?" he asked.
+
+"Till I settle my grandfather's affairs--yes," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Come and see us again," said Harper. "Come for the night--we've got a
+jolly good billiard table."
+
+"Do!" added Nesta heartily.
+
+"Since you're so kind, I will, then," replied Collingwood. "But not for
+a few days."
+
+He drove off--to wonder why he had visited Normandale Grange at all. For
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's explanation of the letter was doubtless the right
+one: Collingwood, little as he had seen of Antony Bartle, knew what a
+veritable sleuth-hound the old man was where rare books or engravings
+were concerned. Yet--why the sudden exclamation on finding that paper?
+Why the immediate writing of the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe? Why the
+setting off to Eldrick & Pascoe's office as soon as the letter was
+written? It all looked as if the old man had found some document, the
+contents of which related to the Mallathorpe family, and was anxious to
+communicate its nature to Mrs. Mallathorpe, and to his own solicitor, as
+soon as possible.
+
+"But that's probably only my fancy," he mused, as he sped back to
+Barford; "the real explanation is doubtless that suggested by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. Something made the old man think of the collection of local
+books at Normandale Grange--and he immediately wrote off to ask her to
+see him, with the idea of persuading her to let him have them. That's
+all there is in it--what a suspicious sort of party I must be getting!
+And suspicious of whom--and of what? Anyhow, I'm glad I went out
+there--and I'll certainly go again."
+
+On his way back to Barford he thought a good deal of the two young
+people he had just left. There was something of the irony of fate about
+their situation. There they were, in possession of money and luxury and
+youth--and already bored because they had nothing to do. He felt what
+closely approached a contemptuous pity for Harper--why didn't he turn to
+some occupation? There was their own business--why didn't he put in so
+many hours a day there, instead of leaving it to managers? Why didn't he
+interest himself in local affairs?--work at something? Already he had
+all the appearance of a man who is inclined to slackness--and in that
+case, mused Collingwood, his money would do him positive harm. But he
+had no thoughts of that sort about Nesta Mallathorpe: he had seen that
+she was of a different temperament.
+
+"She'll not stick there--idling," he said. "She'll break out and do
+something or other. What did she say? 'Suffering from lack of
+occupation'? A bad thing to suffer from, too--glad I'm not similarly
+afflicted!"
+
+There was immediate occupation for Collingwood himself when he reached
+the town. He had already made up his mind as to his future plans. He
+would sell his grandfather's business as soon as he could find a
+buyer--the old man had left a provision in his will, the gist of which
+Eldrick had already communicated to Collingwood, to the effect that his
+grandson could either carry on the business with the help of a competent
+manager until the stock was sold out, or could dispose of it as a going
+concern--Collingwood decided to sell it outright, and at once. But first
+it was necessary for him to look round the collection of valuable books
+and prints, and get an idea of what it was that he was about to sell.
+And when he had reached Barford again, and had lunched at his hotel, he
+went to Quagg Alley, and shut himself in the shop, and made a careful
+inspection of the treasures which old Bartle had raked up from many
+quarters.
+
+Within ten minutes of beginning his task Collingwood knew that he had
+gone out to Normandale Grange about a mere nothing. Picking up the
+_History of Barford_ which Jabey Naylor had spoken of, and turning over
+its leaves, two papers dropped out; one a half sheet of foolscap,
+folded; the other, a letter from some correspondent in the United
+States. Collingwood read the letter first--it was evidently that which
+Naylor had referred to as having been delivered the previous afternoon.
+It asked for a good, clear copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_--and
+then it went on, "If you should come across a copy of what is, I
+believe, a very rare tract or pamphlet, _Customs of the Court Leet of
+the Manor of Barford_, published, I think, about 1720, I should be glad
+to pay you any price you like to ask for it--in reason." So much for the
+letter--Collingwood turned from it to the folded paper. It was headed
+"List of Barford Tracts and Pamphlets in my box marked B.P. in the
+library at N Grange," and it was initialled at the foot J.M. Then
+followed the titles of some twenty-five or thirty works--amongst them
+was the very tract for which the American correspondent had inquired.
+And now Collingwood had what he believed to be a clear vision of what
+had puzzled him--his grandfather having just read the American buyer's
+request had found the list of these pamphlets inside the _History of
+Barford_, and in it the entry of the particular one he wanted, and at
+once he had written to Mrs. Mallathorpe in the hope of persuading her to
+sell what his American correspondent desired to buy. It was all quite
+plain--and the old man's visit to Eldrick & Pascoe's had nothing to do
+with the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Nor had he carried the folded paper
+in his pocket to Eldrick's--when Jabey Naylor went out to post the
+letter, Antony had placed the folded paper and the American letter
+together in the book and left them there. Quite, quite simple!--he had
+had his run to Normandale Grange and back all about nothing, and for
+nothing--except that he had met Nesta Mallathorpe, whom he was already
+sufficiently interested in to desire to see again. But having arrived at
+an explanation of what had puzzled him and made him suspicious, he
+dismissed that matter from his mind and thought no more of it.
+
+But across the street, all unknown to Collingwood, Linford Pratt was
+thinking a good deal. Collingwood had taken his car from a rank
+immediately opposite Eldrick & Pascoe's windows; Pratt, whose desk
+looked on to the street, had seen him drive away soon after ten o'clock
+and return about half-past twelve. Pratt, who knew everybody in the
+business centre of the town, knew the man who had driven Collingwood,
+and when he went out to his lunch he asked him where he had been that
+morning. The man, who knew no reason for secrecy, told him--and Pratt
+went off to eat his bread and cheese and drink his one glass of ale and
+to wonder why young Collingwood had been to Normandale Grange. He became
+slightly anxious and uneasy. He knew that Collingwood must have made
+some slight examination of old Bartle's papers. Was it--could it be
+possible that the old man, before going to Eldrick's, had left some
+memorandum of his discovery in his desk--or in a diary? He had said that
+he had not shown the will, nor mentioned the will, to a soul--but he
+might;--old men were so fussy about things--he might have set down in
+his diary that he had found it on such a day, and under such-and-such
+circumstances.
+
+However, there was one person who could definitely inform him of the
+reason of Collingwood's visit to Normandale Grange--Mrs. Mallathorpe. He
+would see her at once, and learn if he had any grounds for fear. And so
+it came about that at nine o'clock that evening, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for
+the second time that day, found herself asked to see a limb of the law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+POINT-BLANK
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was alone when Pratt's card was taken to her. Harper
+and Nesta were playing billiards in a distant part of the big house.
+Dinner had been over for an hour; Mrs. Mallathorpe, who had known what
+hard work and plenty of it was, in her time, was trifling over the
+newspapers--rest, comfort, and luxury were by no means boring to her.
+She looked at the card doubtfully--Pratt had pencilled a word or two on
+it: "Private and important business." Then she glanced at the butler--an
+elderly man who had been with John Mallathorpe many years before the
+catastrophe occurred.
+
+"Who is he, Dickenson?" she asked. "Do you know him?"
+
+"Clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's, in the town, ma'am," replied the butler.
+"I know the young man by sight."
+
+"Where is he?" inquired Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+
+"In the little morning room, at present, ma'am," said Dickenson.
+
+"Take him into the study," commanded Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I'll come to him
+presently." She was utterly at a loss to understand Pratt's presence
+there. Eldrick & Pascoe were not her solicitors, and she had no business
+of a legal nature in which they could be in any way concerned. But it
+suddenly struck her that that was the second time she had heard
+Eldrick's name mentioned that day--young Mr. Collingwood had said that
+his grandfather's death had taken place at Eldrick & Pascoe's office.
+Had this clerk come to see her about that?--and if so, what had she to
+do with it? Before she reached the room in which Pratt was waiting for
+her, Mrs. Mallathorpe was filled with curiosity. But in that curiosity
+there was not a trace of apprehension; nothing suggested to her that her
+visitor had called on any matter actually relating to herself or her
+family.
+
+The room into which Pratt had been taken was a small apartment opening
+out of the library--John Mallathorpe, when he bought Normandale Grange,
+had it altered and fitted to suit his own tastes, and Pratt, as soon as
+he entered it, saw that it was a place in which privacy and silence
+could be ensured. He noticed that it had double doors, and that there
+were heavy curtains before the window. And during the few minutes which
+elapsed between his entrance and Mrs. Mallathorpe's, he took the
+precaution to look behind those curtains, and to survey his
+surroundings--what he had to say was not to be overheard, if he could
+help it.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked her curiosity as soon as she came in. She did
+not remember that she had ever seen this young man before, but she
+recognized at once that he was a shrewd and sharp person, and she knew
+from his manner that he had news of importance to give her. She quietly
+acknowledged Pratt's somewhat elaborate bow, and motioned him to take a
+chair at the side of the big desk which stood before the fireplace--she
+herself sat down at the desk itself, in John Mallathorpe's old
+elbow-chair. And Pratt thought to himself that however much young Harper
+John Mallathorpe might be nominal master of Normandale Grange, the real
+master was there, in the self-evident, quiet-looking woman who turned to
+him in business-like fashion.
+
+"You want to see me?" said Mrs. Mallathorpe. "What is it?"
+
+"Business, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt. "As I said on my card--of a
+private and important sort."
+
+"To do with me?" she asked.
+
+"With you--and with your family," said Pratt. "And before we go any
+further, not a soul knows of it but--me."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe took another searching look at her visitor. Pratt was
+leaning over the corner of the desk, towards her; already he had lowered
+his tones to the mysterious and confidential note.
+
+"I don't know what you're talking about," she said. "Go on."
+
+Pratt bent a little nearer.
+
+"A question or two first, if you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe. And--answer
+them! They're for your own good. Young Mr. Collingwood called on you
+today."
+
+"Well--and what of it?"
+
+"What did he want?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated and frowned a little. And Pratt hastened to
+reassure her. "I'm using no idle words, Mrs. Mallathorpe, when I say
+it's for your own good. It is! What did he come for?"
+
+"He came to ask what there was in a letter which his grandfather wrote
+to me yesterday afternoon."
+
+"Antony Bartle had written to you, had he? And what did he say, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? For that is important!"
+
+"No more than that he wanted me to call on him today, if I happened to
+be in Barford."
+
+"Nothing more?"
+
+"Nothing more--not a word."
+
+"Nothing as to--why he wanted to see you?"
+
+"No! I thought that he probably wanted to see me about buying some books
+of the late Mr. Mallathorpe's."
+
+"Did you tell Collingwood that?" asked Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Yes--of course."
+
+"Did it satisfy him?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe frowned again.
+
+"Why shouldn't I?" she demanded. "It was the only explanation I could
+possibly give him. How do I know what the old man really wanted?"
+
+Pratt drew his chair still nearer to the desk. His voice dropped to a
+whisper and his eyes were full of meaning.
+
+"I'll tell you what he wanted!" he said speaking very slowly. "It's what
+I've come for. Listen! Antony Bartle came to our office soon after five
+yesterday afternoon. I was alone--everybody else had gone. I took him
+into Eldrick's room. He told me that in turning over one of the books
+which he had bought from Mallathorpe Mill, some short time ago, he had
+found--what do you think?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's cheek had flushed at the mention of the books from
+the Mill. Now, at Pratt's question, and under his searching eye, she
+turned very pale, and the clerk saw her fingers tighten on the arms of
+her chair.
+
+"What?" she asked. "What?"
+
+"John Mallathorpe's will!" he answered. "Do you understand? His--will!"
+
+The woman glanced quickly about her--at the doors, the uncurtained
+window.
+
+"Safe enough here," whispered Pratt. "I made sure of that. Don't be
+afraid--no one knows--but me."
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe seemed to find some difficulty in speaking, and
+when she at last got out a word her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Impossible!"
+
+"It's a fact!" said Pratt. "Nothing was ever more a fact as you'll see.
+But let me finish my story. The old man told me how he'd found the
+will--only half an hour before--and he asked me to ring up Eldrick, so
+that we might all read it together. I went to the telephone--when I came
+back, Bartle was dead--just dead. And--I took the will out of his
+pocket."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe made an involuntary gesture with her right hand. And
+Pratt smiled, craftily, and shook his head.
+
+"Much too valuable to carry about, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said. "I've got
+it--all safe--under lock and key. But as I've said--nobody knows of it
+but myself. Not a living soul. No one has any idea! No one can have any
+idea. I was a bit alarmed when I heard that young Collingwood had been
+to you, for I thought that the old man, though he didn't tell me of any
+such thing, might have dropped you a line saying what he'd found. But as
+he didn't--well, not one living soul knows that the will's in
+existence, except me--and you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was regaining her self-possession. She had had a great
+shock, but the worst of it was over. Already she knew, from Pratt's
+manner, insidious and suggesting, that the will was of a nature that
+would dispossess her and hers of this recently acquired wealth--the
+clerk had made that evident by look and tone. So--there was nothing but
+to face things.
+
+"What--what does it--say?" she asked, with an effort.
+
+Pratt unbuttoned his overcoat, plunged a hand into the inner pocket,
+drew out a sheet of paper, unfolded it and laid it on the desk.
+
+"An exact copy," he said tersely. "Read it for yourself."
+
+In spite of the determined effort which she made to be calm, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's fingers still trembled as she took up the sheet on which
+Pratt had made a fair copy of the will. The clerk watched her narrowly
+as she read. He knew that presently there would be a tussle between
+them: he knew, too, that she was a woman who would fight hard in defence
+of her own interest, and for the interests of her children.
+
+Always keeping his ears open to local gossip, especially where money was
+concerned, Pratt had long since heard that Mrs. Mallathorpe was a keen
+and sharp business woman. And now he was not surprised when, having
+slowly and carefully read the copy of the will from beginning to end,
+she laid it down, and turned to him with a business-like question.
+
+"The effect of that?" she asked. "What would it be--curtly?"
+
+"Precisely what it says," answered Pratt. "Couldn't be clearer!"
+
+"We--should lose all?" she demanded, almost angrily. "All?"
+
+"All--except what he says--there," agreed Pratt.
+
+"And that," she went on, drumming her fingers on the paper, "that--would
+stand?"
+
+"What it's a copy of would stand," said Pratt. "Oh, yes, don't you make
+any mistake about it, Mrs. Mallathorpe! Nothing can upset that will. It
+is plain as a pikestaff how it came to be made. Your late brother-in-law
+evidently wrote his will out--it's all in his own handwriting--and took
+it down to the Mill with him the very day of the chimney accident. Just
+as evidently he signed it in the presence of his manager, Gaukrodger,
+and his cashier, Marshall--they signed at the same time, as it says,
+there. Now I take it that very soon after that, Mr. Mallathorpe went out
+into his mill yard to have a look at the chimney--Gaukrodger and
+Marshall went with him. Before he went, he popped the will into the
+book, where old Bartle found it yesterday--such things are easily done.
+Perhaps he was reading the book--perhaps it lay handy--he slipped the
+will inside, anyway. And then--he was killed--and, what's more the two
+witnesses were killed with him. So there wasn't a man left who could
+tell of that will! But--there's half Barford could testify to these
+three signatures! Mrs. Mallathorpe, there's not a chance for you if I
+put that will into the hands of the two trustees!"
+
+He leaned back in his chair after that--nodding confidently, watching
+keenly. And now he saw that the trembling fingers were interlacing each
+other, twisting the rings on each other, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+thinking as she had most likely never thought in her life. After a
+moment's pause Pratt went on. "Perhaps you didn't understand," he said.
+"I mean, you don't know the effect. Those two trustees--Charlesworth &
+Wyatt--could turn you all clean out of this--tomorrow, in a way of
+speaking. Everything's theirs! They can demand an account of every penny
+that you've all had out of the estate and the business--from the time
+you all took hold. If anything's been saved, put aside, they can demand
+that. You're entitled to nothing but the three amounts of ten thousand
+each. Of course, thirty thousand is thirty thousand--it means, at five
+per cent., fifteen hundred a year--if you could get five per cent.
+safely. But--I should say your son and daughter are getting a few
+thousand a year each, aren't they, Mrs. Mallathorpe? It would be a nice
+come-down! Five hundred a year apiece--at the outside. A small house
+instead of Normandale Grange. Genteel poverty--comparatively
+speaking--instead of riches. That is--if I hand over the will to
+Charlesworth & Wyatt."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe slowly turned her eyes on Pratt. And Pratt suddenly
+felt a little afraid--there was anger in those eyes; anger of a curious
+sort. It might be against fate--against circumstance: it might not--why
+should it?--be against him personally, but it was there, and it was
+malign and almost evil, and it made him uncomfortable.
+
+"Where is the will!" she asked.
+
+"Safe! In my keeping," answered Pratt.
+
+She looked him all over--surmisingly.
+
+"You'll sell it to me?" she suggested. "You'll hand it over--and let me
+burn it--destroy it?"
+
+"No!" answered Pratt. "I shall not!"
+
+He saw that his answer produced personal anger at last. Mrs. Mallathorpe
+gave him a look which would have warned a much less observant man than
+Pratt. But he gave her back a look that was just as resolute.
+
+"I say no--and I mean no!" he continued. "I won't sell--but I'll
+bargain. Let's be plain with each other. You don't want that will to be
+handed over to the trustees named in it, Charlesworth & Wyatt?"
+
+"Do you think I'm a fool--man!" she flashed out.
+
+"I should be a fool myself if I did," replied Pratt calmly. "And I'm not
+a fool. Very well--then you'll square me. You'll buy me. Come to terms
+with me, and nobody shall ever know. I repeat to you what I've said
+before--not a soul knows now, no nor suspects! It's utterly impossible
+for anybody to find out. The testator's dead. The attesting witnesses
+are dead. The man who found this will is dead. No one but you and myself
+ever need know a word about all this. If--you make terms with me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe."
+
+"What do you want?" she asked sullenly. "You forget--I've nothing of my
+own. I didn't come into anything."
+
+"I've a pretty good notion who's real master here--and at Mallathorpe
+Mill, too," retorted Pratt. "I should say you're still in full control
+of your children, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and that you can do pretty well what
+you like with them."
+
+"With one of them perhaps," she said, still angry and sullen. "But--I
+tell you, for you may as well know--if my daughter knew of what you've
+told me, she'd go straight to these trustees and tell! That's a fact
+that you'd better realize. I can't control her."
+
+"Oh!" remarked Pratt. "Um!--then we must take care that she doesn't
+know. But we don't intend that anybody should know but you and me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. You needn't tell a soul--not even your son. You mustn't
+tell! Listen, now--I've thought out a good scheme which'll profit me,
+and make you safe. Do you know what you want on this estate?"
+
+She stared at him as if wondering what this question had to do with the
+matter which was of such infinite importance. And Pratt smiled, and
+hastened to enlighten her.
+
+"You want--a steward," he said. "A steward and estate agent. John
+Mallathorpe managed everything for himself, but your son can't, and
+pardon me if I say that you can't--properly. You need a man--you need
+me. You can persuade your son to that effect. Give me the job of steward
+here. I'll suggest to you how to do it in such a fashion that it'll
+arouse no suspicion, and look just like an ordinary--very
+ordinary--business job--at a salary and on conditions to be arranged,
+and--you're safe! Safe, Mrs. Mallathorpe--you know what that means!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly rose from her chair.
+
+"I know this!" she said. "I'll discuss nothing, and do nothing, till
+I've seen that will!"
+
+Pratt rose, too, nodding his head as if quite satisfied. He took up the
+copy, tore it in two pieces, and carefully dropped them into the glowing
+fire.
+
+"I shall be at my lodgings at any time after five-thirty tomorrow
+evening," he answered quietly. "Call there. You have the address. And
+you can then read the will with your own eyes. I shan't bring it here.
+The game's in my hands, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Within a few minutes he was out in the park again, and making his way to
+the little railway station in the valley below. He felt triumphant--he
+knew that the woman he had just left was at his mercy and would accede
+to his terms. And all the way back to town, and through the town to his
+lodgings, he considered and perfected the scheme he was going to suggest
+to Mrs. Mallathorpe on the morrow.
+
+Pratt lived in a little hamlet of old houses on the very outskirts of
+Barford--on the edge of a stretch of Country honeycombed by
+stone-quarries, some in use, some already worked out. It was a lonely
+neighbourhood, approached from the nearest tramway route by a narrow,
+high-walled lane. He was half-way along that lane when a stealthy foot
+stole to his side, and a hand was laid on his arm--just as stealthily
+came the voice of one of his fellow-clerks at Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"A moment, Pratt! I've been waiting for you. I want--a word or two--in
+private!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+THE UNEXPECTED
+
+
+Pratt started when he heard that voice and felt the arresting hand. He
+knew well enough to whom they belonged--they were those of one James
+Parrawhite, a little, weedy, dissolute chap who had been in Eldrick &
+Pascoe's employ for about a year. It had always been a mystery to him
+and the other clerks that Parrawhite had been there at all, and that
+being there he was allowed to stop. He was not a Barford man. Nobody
+knew anything whatever about him, though his occasional references to it
+seemed to indicate that he knew London pretty thoroughly. Pratt shrewdly
+suspected that he was a man whom Eldrick had known in other days,
+possibly a solicitor who had been struck off the rolls, and to whom
+Eldrick, for old times' sake, was disposed to extend a helping hand.
+
+All that any of them knew was that one morning some fifteen months
+previously, Parrawhite, a complete stranger, had walked into the office,
+asked to see Eldrick, had remained closeted with him half an hour, and
+had been given a job at two pounds a week, there and then. That he was a
+clever and useful clerk no one denied, but no one liked him.
+
+He was always borrowing half-crowns. He smelt of rum. He was altogether
+undesirable. It was plain to the clerks that Pascoe disliked him. But he
+was evidently under Eldrick's protection, and he did his work and did it
+well, and there was no doubt that he knew more law than either of the
+partners, and was better up in practice than Pratt himself. But--he was
+not desirable ... and Pratt never desired him less than on this
+occasion.
+
+"What are you after--coming on a man like that!" growled Pratt.
+
+"You," replied Parrawhite. "I knew you'd got to come up this lane, so I
+waited for you. I've something to say."
+
+"Get it said, then!" retorted Pratt.
+
+"Not here," answered Parrawhite. "Come down by the quarry--nobody about
+there."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Then you'll be very sorry for yourself--tomorrow," replied Parrawhite.
+"That's all!"
+
+Pratt had already realized that this fellow knew something. Parrawhite's
+manner was not only threatening but confident. He spoke as a man speaks
+who has got the whip hand. And so, still growling, and inwardly raging
+and anxious, he turned off with his companion into a track which lay
+amongst the stone quarries. It was a desolate, lonely place; no house
+was near; they were as much alone as if they had been in the middle of
+one of the great moors outside the town, the lights of which they could
+see in the valley below them. In the grey sky above, a waning moon gave
+them just sufficient light to see their immediate surroundings--a
+grass-covered track, no longer used, and the yawning mouths of the old
+quarries, no longer worked, the edges of which were thick with gorse and
+bramble. It was the very place for secret work, and Pratt was certain
+that secret work was at hand.
+
+"Now then!" he said, when they had walked well into the wilderness.
+"What is it? And no nonsense!"
+
+"You'll get no nonsense from me," sneered Parrawhite. "I'm not that
+sort. This is what I want to say. I was in Eldrick's office last night
+all the time you were there with old Bartle."
+
+This swift answer went straight through Pratt's defences. He was
+prepared to hear something unpleasant and disconcerting, but not that.
+And he voiced the first thought that occurred to him.
+
+"That's a lie!" he exclaimed. "There was nobody there!"
+
+"No lie," replied Parrawhite. "I was there. I was behind the curtain of
+that recess--you know. And since I know what you did, I don't mind
+telling you--we're in the same boat, my lad!--what I was going to do.
+You thought I'd gone--with the others. But I hadn't. I'd merely done
+what I've done several times without being found out--slipped in
+there--to wait until you'd gone. Why? Because friend Eldrick, as you
+know, is culpably careless about leaving loose cash in the unlocked
+drawer of his desk, culpably careless, too, about never counting it.
+And--a stray sovereign or half-sovereign is useful to a man who only
+gets two quid a week. Understand?"
+
+"So you're a thief?" said Pratt bitterly.
+
+"I'm precisely what you are--a thief!" retorted Parrawhite. "You stole
+John Mallathorpe's will last night. I heard everything, I tell you!--and
+saw everything. I heard the whole business--what the old man said--what
+you, later, said to Eldrick. I saw old Bartle die--I saw you take the
+will from his pocket, read it, and put it in your pocket. I know
+all!--except the terms of the will. But--I've a pretty good idea of what
+those terms are. Do you know why? Because I watched you set off to
+Normandale by the eight-twenty train tonight!"
+
+"Hang you for a dirty sneak!" growled Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite laughed, and flourished a heavy stick which he carried.
+
+"Not a bit of it!" he said, almost pleasantly. "I thought you were more
+of a philosopher--I fancied I'd seen gleams--mere gleams--of philosophy
+in you at times. Fortunes of war, my boy! Come now--you've seen enough
+of me to know I'm an adventurer. This is an adventure of the sort I
+love. Go into it heart and soul, man! Own up!--you've found out that the
+will leaves the property away from the present holders, and you've been
+to Normandale to--bargain? Come, now!"
+
+"What then!" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Then, of course, I come in at the bargaining," answered Parrawhite.
+"I'm going to have my share. That's a certainty. You'd better take my
+advice. Because you're absolutely in my power. I've nothing to do but to
+tell Eldrick tomorrow morning."
+
+"Suppose I tell Eldrick tomorrow morning of what you've told me?"
+interjected Pratt.
+
+"Eldrick will believe me before you," retorted Parrawhite,
+imperturbably. "I'm a much cleverer, more plausible man than you are, my
+friend--I've had an experience of the world which you haven't, I can
+easily invent a fine excuse for being in that room. For two pins I'll
+incriminate you! See? Be reasonable--for if it comes to a contest of
+brains, you haven't a rabbit's chance against a fox. Tell me all about
+the will--and what you've done. You've got to--for, by the Lord
+Harry!--I'm going to have my share. Come, now!"
+
+Pratt stood, in a little hollow wherein they had paused, and thought,
+rapidly and angrily. There was no doubt about it--he was trapped. This
+fearful scoundrel at his side, who boasted of his cleverness, would
+stick to him like a leach--he would have to share. All his own smart
+schemes for exploiting Mrs. Mallathorpe, for ensuring himself a
+competence for life, were knocked on the head. There was no helping
+it--he would have to tell--and to share. And so, sullenly, resentfully,
+he told.
+
+Parrawhite listened in silence, taking in every point. Pratt, knowing
+that concealment was useless, told the truth about everything,
+concisely, but omitting nothing.
+
+"All right!" remarked Parrawhite at the end, "Now, then, what terms do
+you mean to insist on?"
+
+"What's the good of going into that?" growled Pratt. "Now that you've
+stuck your foot in it, what do my terms matter?"
+
+"Quite right," agreed Parrawhite, "They don't. What matter is--our
+terms. Now let me suggest--no, insist on--what they must be. Cash! Do
+you know why I insist on that? No? Then I'll tell you. Because this
+young barrister chap, Collingwood, has evidently got some suspicion
+of--something."
+
+"I can't see it," said Pratt uneasily. "He was only curious to know what
+that letter was about."
+
+"Never mind," continued Parrawhite. "He had some suspicion--or he
+wouldn't have gone out there almost as soon as he reached Barford after
+his grandfather's death. And even if suspicion is put to sleep for
+awhile, it can easily be reawakened, so--cash! We must profit at
+once--before any future risk arises. But--what terms were you thinking
+of?"
+
+"Stewardship of this estate for life," muttered Pratt gloomily.
+
+"With the risk of some discovery being made, some time, any time!"
+sneered Parrawhite. "Where are your brains, man? The old fellow, John
+Mallathorpe, probably made a draft or two of that will before he did his
+fair copy--he may have left those drafts among his papers."
+
+"If he did, Mrs. Mallathorpe 'ud find 'em," said Pratt slowly. "I don't
+believe there's the slightest risk. I've figured everything out. I don't
+believe there's any danger from Collingwood or from anybody--it's
+impossible! And if we take cash now--we're selling for a penny what we
+ought to get pounds for."
+
+"The present is much more important than the future, my friend,"
+answered Parrawhite. "To me, at any rate. Now, then, this is my
+proposal. I'll be with you when this lady calls at your place tomorrow
+evening. We'll offer her the will, to do what she likes with, for ten
+thousand pounds. She can find that--quickly. When she pays--as she
+will!--we share, equally, and then--well, you can go to the devil! I
+shall go--somewhere else. So that's settled."
+
+"No!" said Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite turned sharply, and Pratt saw a sinister gleam in his eyes.
+
+"Did you say no?" he asked.
+
+"I said--no!" replied Pratt. "I'm not going to take five thousand pounds
+for a chance that's worth fifty thousand. Hang you!--if you hadn't been
+a black sneak-thief, as you are, I'd have had the whole thing to myself!
+And I don't know that I will give way to you. If it comes to it, my
+word's as good as yours--and I don't believe Eldrick would believe you
+before me. Pascoe wouldn't anyway. You've got a past!--in quod, I should
+think--my past's all right. I've a jolly good mind to let you do your
+worst--after all, I've got the will. And by george! now I come to think
+of it, you can do your worst! Tell what you like tomorrow morning. I
+shall tell 'em what you are--a scoundrel."
+
+He turned away at that--and as he turned, Parrawhite, with a queer cry
+of rage that might have come from some animal which saw its prey
+escaping, struck out at him with the heavy stick. The blow missed
+Pratt's head, but it grazed the tip of his ear, and fell slantingly on
+his left shoulder. And then the anger that had been boiling in Pratt
+ever since the touch on his arm in the dark lane, burst out in activity,
+and he turned on his assailant, gripped him by the throat before
+Parrawhite could move, and after choking and shaking him until his teeth
+rattled and his breath came in jerking sobs, flung him violently against
+the masses of stone by which they had been standing.
+
+Pratt was of considerable physical strength. He played cricket and
+football; he visited a gymnasium thrice a week. His hands had the grip
+of a blacksmith; his muscles were those of a prize-fighter. He had put
+more strength than he was aware of into his fierce grip on Parrawhite's
+throat; he had exerted far more force than he knew he was exerting, when
+he flung him away. He heard a queer cracking sound as the man struck
+something, and for the moment he took no notice of it--the pain of that
+glancing blow on his shoulder was growing acute, and he began to rub it
+with his free hand and to curse its giver.
+
+"Get up, you fool, and I'll give you some more!" he growled. "I'll teach
+you to----"
+
+He suddenly noticed the curiously still fashion in which Parrawhite was
+lying where he had flung him--noticed, too, as a cloud passed the moon
+and left it unveiled, how strangely white the man's face was. And just
+as suddenly Pratt forgot his own injury, and dropped on his knees beside
+his assailant. An instant later, and he knew that he was once more
+confronting death. For Parrawhite was as dead as Antony Bartle--violent
+contact of his head with a rock had finished what Pratt had nearly
+completed with that vicious grip. There was no questioning it, no
+denying it--Pratt was there in that lonely place, staring half
+consciously, half in terror, at a dead man.
+
+He stood up at last, cursing Parrawhite with the anger of despair. He
+had not one scrap of pity for him. All his pity was for himself. That he
+should have been brought into this!--that this vile little beast,
+perfect scum that he was, should have led him to what might be the utter
+ruin of his career!--it was shameful, it was abominable, it was cruel!
+He felt as if he could cheerfully tear Parrawhite's dead body to pieces.
+But even as these thoughts came, others of a more important nature
+crowded on them. For--there lay a dead man, who was not to be put in
+one's pocket, like a will. It was necessary to hide that thing from the
+light--ever that light. Within a few hours, morning would break, and
+lonely and deserted as that place was nowadays, some one might pass that
+way. Out of sight with him, then!--and quickly.
+
+Pratt was very well acquainted with the spot at which he stood. Those
+old quarries had a certain picturesqueness. They had become grass-grown;
+ivy, shrubs, trees had clustered about them--the people who lived in the
+few houses half a mile away, sometimes walked around them; the children
+made a playground of the place: Pratt himself had often gone into some
+quiet corner to read and smoke. And now his quick mind immediately
+suggested a safe hiding place for this thing that he could not carry
+away with him, and dare not leave to the morning sun--close by was a
+pit, formerly used for some quarrying purpose, which was filled, always
+filled, with water. It was evidently of considerable depth; the water
+was black in it; the mouth was partly obscured by a maze of shrub and
+bramble. It had been like that ever since Pratt came to lodge in that
+part of the district--ten or twelve years before; it would probably
+remain like that for many a long year to come. That bit of land was
+absolutely useless and therefore neglected, and as long as rain fell and
+water drained, that pit would always be filled to its brim.
+
+He remembered something else: also close by where he stood--a heap of
+old iron things--broken and disused picks, smashed rails, fragments
+thrown aside when the last of the limestone had been torn out of the
+quarries. Once more luck was playing into his hands--those odds and ends
+might have been put there for the very purpose to which he now meant to
+turn them. And being certain that he was alone, and secure, Pratt
+proceeded to go about his unpleasant task skilfully and methodically. He
+fetched a quantity of the iron, fastened it to the dead man's clothing,
+drew the body, thus weighted, to the edge of the pit, and prepared to
+slide it into the black water. But there an idea struck him. While he
+made these preparations he had had hosts of ideas as to his operations
+next morning--this idea was supplementary to them. Quickly and
+methodically he removed the contents of Parrawhite's pockets to his
+own--everything: money, watch and chain, even a ring which the dead man
+had been evidently vain of. Then he let Parrawhite glide into the
+water--and after him he sent the heavy stick, carefully fastened to a
+bar of iron.
+
+Five minutes later, the surface of the water in that pit was as calm and
+unruffled as ever--not a ripple showed that it had been disturbed. And
+Pratt made his way out of the wilderness, swearing that he would never
+enter it again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+
+Pratt was in Eldrick & Pascoe's office soon after half-past eight next
+morning, and for nearly forty minutes he had the place entirely to
+himself. But it took only a few of those minutes for him to do what he
+had carefully planned before he went to bed the previous night. Shutting
+himself into Eldrick's private room, and making sure that he was alone
+that time, he immediately opened the drawer in the senior partner's
+desk, wherein Eldrick, culpably enough, as Parrawhite had sneeringly
+remarked, was accustomed to put loose money. Eldrick was strangely
+careless in that way: he would throw money into that drawer in presence
+of his clerks--notes, gold, silver. If it happened to occur to him, he
+would take the money out at the end of the afternoon and hand it to
+Pratt to lock up in the safe; but as often as not, it did not occur.
+Pratt had more than once ventured on a hint which was almost a
+remonstrance, and Eldrick had paid no attention to him. He was a
+careless, easy-going man in many respects, Eldrick, and liked to do
+things in his own way. And after all, as Pratt had decided, when he
+found that his hints were not listened to, it was Eldrick's own affair
+if he liked to leave the money lying about.
+
+There was money lying about in that drawer when Pratt drew it open; it
+was never locked, day or night, or, if it was, the key was left in it.
+As soon as he opened it, he saw gold--two or three sovereigns--and
+silver--a little pile of it. And, under a letter weight, four banknotes
+of ten pounds each. But this was precisely what Pratt had expected to
+see; he himself had handed banknotes, gold, and silver to Eldrick the
+previous evening, just after receiving them from a client who had called
+to pay his bill. And he had seen Eldrick place them in the drawer, as
+usual, and soon afterwards Eldrick had walked out, saying he was going
+to the club, and he had never returned.
+
+What Pratt now did was done as the result of careful thought and
+deliberation. There was a cheque-book lying on top of some papers in the
+drawer; he took it up and tore three cheques out of it. Then he picked
+up the bank-notes, tore them and the abstracted blank cheques into
+pieces, and dropped the pieces in the fire recently lighted by the
+caretaker. He watched these fragments burn, and then he put the gold and
+silver in his hip-pocket, where he already carried a good deal of his
+own, and walked out.
+
+Nine o'clock brought the office-boy; a quarter-past nine brought the
+clerks; at ten o'clock Eldrick walked in. According to custom, Pratt
+went into Eldrick's room with the letters, and went through them with
+him. One of them contained a legal document over which the solicitor
+frowned a little.
+
+"Ask Parrawhite's opinion about that," he said presently, indicating a
+marked paragraph.
+
+"Parrawhite has not come in this morning, sir," observed Pratt,
+gathering up letters and papers. "I'll draw his attention to it when he
+arrives."
+
+He went into the outer office, only to be summoned back to Eldrick a few
+minutes later. The senior partner was standing by his desk, looking a
+little concerned, and, thought Pratt, decidedly uncomfortable. He
+motioned the clerk to close the door.
+
+"Has Parrawhite come?" he asked.
+
+"No," replied Pratt, "Not yet, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Is--is he usually late?" inquired Eldrick.
+
+"Usually quite punctual--half-past nine," said Pratt.
+
+Eldrick glanced at his watch; then at his clerk.
+
+"Didn't you give me some cash last night?" he asked.
+
+"Forty-three pounds nine," answered Pratt. "Thompson's bill of costs--he
+paid it yesterday afternoon."
+
+Eldrick looked more uncomfortable than ever.
+
+"Well--the fact is," he said, "I--I meant to hand it to you to put in
+the safe, Pratt, but I didn't come back from the club. And--it's gone!"
+
+Pratt simulated concern--but not astonishment. And Eldrick pulled open
+the drawer, and waved a hand over it.
+
+"I put it down there," he said. "Very careless of me, no doubt--but
+nothing of this sort has ever happened before, and--however, there's the
+unpleasant fact, Pratt. The money's gone!"
+
+Pratt, who had hastily turned over the papers and other contents of the
+drawer, shook his head and used his privilege as an old and confidential
+servant. "I've always said, sir, that it was a great mistake to leave
+loose money lying about," he remarked mournfully. "If there'd only been
+a practice of letting me lock anything of that sort up in the safe every
+night--and this chequebook, too, sir--then----"
+
+"I know--I know!" said Eldrick. "Very reprehensible on my part--I'm
+afraid I am careless--no doubt of it. But----"
+
+He in his turn was interrupted by Pratt, who was turning over the
+cheque-book.
+
+"Some cheque forms have been taken out of this," he said. "Three! at the
+end. Look there, sir!"
+
+Eldrick uttered an exclamation of intense annoyance and disgust. He
+looked at the despoiled cheque-book, and flung it into the drawer.
+
+"Pratt!" he said, turning half appealingly, half confidentially to the
+clerk. "Don't say a word of this--above all, don't mention it to Mr.
+Pascoe. It's my fault and I must make the forty-three pounds good.
+Pratt, I'm afraid this is Parrawhite's work. I--well, I may as well tell
+you--he'd been in trouble before he came here. I gave him another
+chance--I'd known him, years ago. I thought he'd go straight. But--I
+fear he's been tempted. He may have seen me leave money about. Was he in
+here last night?"
+
+Pratt pointed to a document which lay on Eldrick's desk.
+
+"He came in here to leave that for your perusal," he answered. "He was
+in here--alone--a minute or two before he left."
+
+All these lies came readily and naturally--and Eldrick swallowed each.
+He shook his head.
+
+"My fault--all my fault!" he said. "Look here--keep it quiet. But--do
+you know where Parrawhite has lived--lodged?"
+
+"No!" replied Pratt. "Some of the others may, though!"
+
+"Try to find out--quickly," continued Eldrick; "Then, make some excuse
+to go out--take papers somewhere, or something--and find if he's left
+his lodgings! I--I don't want to set the police on him. He was a decent
+fellow, once. See what you can make out, Pratt. In strict secrecy, you
+know---I do not want this to go further."
+
+Pratt could have danced for joy when he presently went out into the
+town. There would be no hue-and-cry after Parrawhite--none! Eldrick
+would accept the fact that Parrawhite had robbed him and flown--and
+Parrawhite would never be heard of--never mentioned again. It was the
+height of good luck for him. Already he had got rid of any small scraps
+of regret or remorse about the killing of his fellow-clerk. Why should
+he be sorry? The scoundrel had tried to murder him, thinking no doubt
+that he had the will on him. And he had not meant to kill him--what he
+had done, he had done in self-defence. No--everything was working most
+admirably--Parrawhite's previous bad record, Eldrick's carelessness and
+his desire to shut things up: it was all good. From that day forward,
+Parrawhite would be as if he had never been. Pratt was not even afraid
+of the body being discovered--though he believed that it would remain
+where it was for ever--for the probability was that the authorities
+would fill up that pit with earth and stones. But if it was brought to
+light? Why, the explanation was simple.
+
+Parrawhite, having robbed his employer, had been robbed himself,
+possibly by men with whom he had been drinking, and had been murdered in
+the bargain. No suspicion could attach to him, Pratt--he had nothing to
+fear--nothing!
+
+For the form of the thing, he called at the place whereat Parrawhite had
+lodged--they had seen nothing of him since the previous morning. They
+were poor, cheap lodgings in a mean street. The woman of the house said
+that Parrawhite had gone out as usual the morning before, and had never
+been in again. In order to find out all he could, Pratt asked if he had
+left much behind him in the way of belongings, and--just as he had
+expected--he learned that Parrawhite's personal property was remarkably
+limited: he possessed only one suit of clothes and not over much
+besides, said the landlady.
+
+"Is there aught wrong?" she asked, when Pratt had finished his
+questions. "Are you from where he worked?"
+
+"That's it," answered Pratt, "And he hasn't turned up this morning, and
+we think he's left the town. Owe you anything, missis?"
+
+"Nay, nothing much," she replied. "Ten shillings 'ud cover it, mister."
+
+Pratt gave her half a sovereign. It was not out of consideration for
+her, nor as a concession to Parrawhite's memory: it was simply to stop
+her from coming down to Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"Well, I don't think you'll see him again," he remarked. "And I dare say
+you won't care if you don't."
+
+He turned away then, but before he had gone far, the woman called him
+back.
+
+"What am I to do with his bits of things, mister, if he doesn't come
+back?" she asked.
+
+"Aught you please," answered Pratt, indifferently. "Throw 'em on the
+dust-heap."
+
+As he went back to the centre of the town, he occupied himself in
+considering his attitude to Mrs. Mallathorpe when she called on him that
+evening. In spite of his own previous notion, and of his
+carefully-worked-out scheme about the stewardship, he had been impressed
+by what Parrawhite has said as to the wisdom of selling the will for
+cash. Pratt did not believe that there was anything in the Collingwood
+suggestion--no doubt whatever, he had decided, that old Bartle had meant
+to tell Mrs. Mallathorpe of his discovery when she called in answer to
+his note, but as he had died before she could call, and as he had told
+nobody but him, Pratt, what possible danger could there be from
+Collingwood? And a stewardship for life appealed to him. He knew, from
+observation of the world, what a fine thing it is to have a certainty.
+
+Once he became steward and agent of the Normandale Grange estate, he
+would stick there, until he had saved a tidy heap of money. Then he
+would retire--with a pension and a handsome present--and enjoy himself.
+To be provided for, for life!--what more could a wise man want? And
+yet--there was something in what that devil Parrawhite had urged.
+
+For there was a risk--however small--of discovery, and if discovery were
+made, there would be a nice penalty to pay. It might, after all, be
+better to sell the will outright--for as much ready money as ever he
+could get, and to take his gains far away, and start out on a career
+elsewhere. After all, there was much to be said for the old proverb. The
+only question was--was the bird in hand worth the two; or the money,
+which he believed he would net in the bush?
+
+Pratt's doubts on this point were settled in a curious fashion. He had
+reached the centre of the town in his return to Eldrick's, and there, in
+the fashionable shopping street, he ran up against an acquaintance. He
+and the acquaintance stopped and chatted--about nothing. And as they
+lounged on the curb, a smart victoria drew up close by, and out of it,
+alone, stepped a girl who immediately attracted Pratt's eyes. He watched
+her across the pavement; he watched her into the shop. And his companion
+laughed.
+
+"That's the sort!" he remarked flippantly. "If you and I had one each,
+old man--what?"
+
+"Who is she?" demanded Pratt.
+
+The acquaintance stared at him in surprise.
+
+"What!" he exclaimed. "You don't know. That's Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I didn't know," said Pratt. "Fact!"
+
+He waited until Nesta Mallathorpe came out and drove away--so that he
+could get another and a closer look at her. And when she was gone, he
+went slowly back to the office, his mind made up. Risk or no risk, he
+would carry out his original notion. Whatever Mrs. Mallathorpe might
+offer, he would stick to his idea of close and intimate connection with
+Normandale Grange.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+TERMS
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, left to face the situation which Pratt had revealed to
+her in such sudden and startling fashion, had been quick to realize its
+seriousness. It had not taken much to convince her that the clerk knew
+what he was talking about. She had no doubt whatever that he was right
+when he said that the production of John Mallathorpe's will would mean
+dispossession to her children, and through them to herself. Nor had she
+any doubt, either, of Pratt's intention to profit by his discovery. She
+saw that he was a young man of determination, not at all scrupulous,
+eager to seize on anything likely to turn to his own advantage. She was,
+in short, at his mercy. And she had no one to turn to. Her son was weak,
+purposeless, almost devoid of character; he cared for nothing beyond
+ease and comfort, and left everything to her so long as he was allowed
+to do what he liked. She dared not confide in him--he was not fit to be
+entrusted with such a secret, nor endowed with the courage to carry it
+boldly and unflinchingly. Nor dare she confide it to her daughter--Nesta
+was as strong as her brother was weak: Mrs. Mallathorpe had only told
+the plain truth when she said to Pratt that if her daughter knew of the
+will she would go straight to the two trustees. No--she would have to do
+everything herself. And she could do nothing save under Pratt's
+dictation. So long as he had that will in his possession, he could make
+her agree to whatever terms he liked to insist upon.
+
+She spent a sleepless night, resolving all sorts of plans; she resolved
+more plans and schemes during the day which followed. But they all ended
+at the same point--Pratt. All the future depended upon--Pratt. And by
+the end of the day it had come to this--she must make a determined
+effort to buy Pratt clean out, so that she could get the will into her
+own possession and destroy it. She knew that she could easily find the
+necessary money--Harper Mallathorpe had such a natural dislike of all
+business matters and was so little fitted to attend to them that he was
+only too well content to leave everything relating to the estate and the
+mill at Barford to his mother. Up to that time Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+managed the affairs of both, and she had large sums at her disposal, out
+of which she could pay Pratt without even Harper being aware that she
+was paying him anything. And surely no young man in Pratt's position--a
+mere clerk, earning a few pounds a week--would refuse a big sum of ready
+money! It seemed incredible to her--and she went into Barford towards
+evening hoping that by the time she returned the will would have been
+burned to grey ashes.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe used some ingenuity in making her visit to Pratt.
+Giving out that she was going to see a friend in Barford, of whose
+illness she had just heard, she drove into the town, and on arriving
+near the Town Hall dismissed her carriage, with orders to the coachman
+to put up his horses at a certain livery stable, and to meet her at the
+same place at a specified time. Then she went away on foot, and drew a
+thick veil over her face before hiring a cab in which she drove up to
+the outskirt on which Pratt had his lodging. She was still veiled when
+Pratt's landlady showed her into the clerk's sitting-room.
+
+"Is it safe here?" she asked at once. "Is there no fear of anybody
+hearing what we may say?"
+
+"None!" answered Pratt reassuringly. "I know these folks--I've lived
+here several years. And nobody could hear however much they put their
+ears to the keyhole. Good thick old walls, these, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and
+a solid door. We're as safe here as we were in your study last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat down in the chair which Pratt politely drew near
+his fire. She raised her veil and looked at him, and the clerk saw at
+once how curious and eager she was.
+
+"That--will!" she said, in a low voice. "Let me see it--first."
+
+"One moment," answered Pratt. "First--you understand that I'm not going
+to let you handle it. I'll hold it before you, so you can read it.
+Second--you give me your promise--I'm trusting you--that you'll make no
+attempt to seize it. It's not going out of my hands."
+
+"I'm only a woman--and you're a strong man," she retorted sullenly.
+
+"Quite so," said Pratt. "But women have a trick of snatching at things.
+And--if you please--you'll do exactly what I tell you to do. Put your
+hands behind you! If I see you make the least movement with them--back
+goes the will into my pocket!"
+
+If Pratt had looked more closely at her just then, he would have taken
+warning from the sudden flash of hatred and resentment which swept
+across Mrs. Mallathorpe's face--it would have told him that he was
+dealing with a dangerous woman who would use her wits to circumvent and
+beat him--if not now, then later. But he was moving the gas bracket over
+the mantelpiece, and he did not see.
+
+"Very well--but I had no intention of touching it," said Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. "All I want is to see it--and read it."
+
+She obediently followed out Pratt's instructions, and standing in front
+of her he produced the will, unfolded it, and held it at a convenient
+distance before her eyes. He watched her closely, as she read it, and he
+saw her grow very pale.
+
+"Take your time--read it over two or three times," he said quietly. "Get
+it well into your mind, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+She nodded her head at last, and Pratt stepped back, folded up the will,
+and turning to a heavy box which lay open on the table, placed it
+within, under lock and key. And that done, he turned back and took a
+chair, close to his visitor.
+
+"Safe there, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said with a glance that was both
+reassuring and cunning. "But only for the night. I keep a few securities
+of my own at one of the banks in the town--never mind which--and that
+will shall be deposited with them tomorrow morning."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe shook her head.
+
+"No!" she said. "Because--you'll come to terms with me."
+
+Pratt shook his head, too, and he laughed.
+
+"Of course I shall come to terms with you," he answered. "But they'll be
+my terms--and they don't include any giving up of that document. That's
+flat, Mrs. Mallathorpe!"
+
+"Not if I make it worth your while?" she asked. "Listen!--you don't know
+what ready money I can command. Ready money, I tell you--cash down, on
+the spot!"
+
+"I've a pretty good notion," responded Pratt. "It's generally understood
+in the town that your son's a mere figure-head, and that you're the real
+boss of the whole show. I know that you're at the mill four times a
+week, and that the managers are under your thumb. I know that you manage
+everything connected with the estate. So, of course, I know you've lots
+of ready money at your disposal."
+
+"And I know that you don't earn more than four or five pounds a week, at
+the outside," said Mrs. Mallathorpe quietly. "Come, now--just think what
+a nice, convenient thing it would be to a young man of your age to
+have--a capital. Capital! It would be the making of you. You could go
+right away--to London, say, and start out on whatever you liked. Be
+sensible--sell me that paper--and be done with the whole thing."
+
+"No!" replied Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at him for a full moment. She was a shrewd judge
+of character, and she felt that Pratt was one of those men who are hard
+to stir from a position once adopted. But she had to make her
+effort--and she made it in what she thought the most effective way.
+
+"I'll give you five thousand pounds--cash--for it," she said. "Meet me
+with it tomorrow--anywhere you like in the town--any time you like--and
+I'll hand you the money--in notes."
+
+"No!" said Pratt. "No!"
+
+Once more she looked at him. And Pratt looked back--and smiled.
+
+"When I say no, I mean no," he went on. "And I never meant 'No' more
+firmly than I do now."
+
+"I don't believe you," she answered, affecting a doubt which she
+certainly did not feel. "You're only holding out for more money."
+
+"If I were holding out for more money, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt,
+"if I meant to sell you that will for cash payment, I should have stated
+my terms to you last night. I should have said precisely how much I
+wanted--and I shouldn't have budged from the amount. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe!--it's no good. I've got my own schemes, and my own
+ideas--and I'm going to carry 'em out. I want you to appoint me steward
+to your property, your affairs, for life."
+
+"Life!" she exclaimed. "Life!"
+
+"My life," answered Pratt. "And let me tell you--you'll find me a
+first-class man--a good, faithful, honest servant. I'll do well by you
+and yours. You'll never regret it as long as you live. It'll be the best
+day's work you've ever done. I'll look after your son's
+interests--everybody's interests--as if they were my own. As indeed," he
+added, with a sly glance, "they will be."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe realized the finality, the resolve, in all this--but
+she made one more attempt.
+
+"Ten thousand!" she said. "Come, now!--think what ten thousand pounds in
+cash would mean to you!"
+
+"No--nor twenty thousand," replied Pratt. "I've made up my mind. I'll
+have my own terms. It's no use--not one bit of use--haggling or
+discussing matters further. I'm in possession of the will--and therefore
+of the situation, Mrs. Mallathorpe, you've just got to do what I tell
+you!"
+
+He got up from his chair, and going over to a side-table took from it a
+blotting-pad, some writing paper and a pencil. For the moment his back
+was turned--and again he did not see the look of almost murderous hatred
+which came into his visitor's eyes; had he seen and understood it, he
+might even then have reconsidered matters and taken Mrs. Mallathorpe's
+last offer. But the look had gone when he turned again, and he noticed
+nothing as he handed over the writing materials.
+
+"What are these for?" she asked.
+
+"You'll see in a moment," replied Pratt, reseating himself, and drawing
+his chair a little nearer her own. "Now listen--because it's no good
+arguing any more. You're going to give me that stewardship and agency.
+You'll simply tell your son that it's absolutely necessary to have a
+steward. He'll agree. If he doesn't, no matter--you'll convince him.
+Now, then, we must do it in a fashion that won't excite any suspicion.
+Thus--in a few days--say next week--you'll insert in the Barford
+papers--all three of them--the advertisement I'm going to dictate to
+you. We'll put it in the usual, formal phraseology. Write this down, if
+you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+He dictated an advertisement, setting forth the requirements of which he
+had spoken, and Mrs. Mallathorpe obeyed him and wrote. She hated Pratt
+more than ever at that moment--there was a quiet, steadfast
+implacability about him that made her feel helpless. But she restrained
+all sign of it, and when she had done his bidding she looked at him as
+calmly as he looked at her.
+
+"I am to insert this in the Barford papers next week," she said.
+"And--what then?"
+
+"Then you'll get a lot of applications for the job," chuckled Pratt.
+"There'll be mine amongst them. You can throw most of 'em in the fire.
+Keep a few for form's sake. Profess to discuss them with Mr. Harper--but
+let the discussion be all on your side. I'll send two or three good
+testimonials--you'll incline to me from the first. You'll send for me.
+Your interview with me will be highly satisfactory. And you'll give me
+the appointment."
+
+"And--your terms?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. Now that her own scheme had
+failed, she seemed quite placable to all Pratt's proposals--a sure sign
+of danger to him if he had only known it. "Better let me know them
+now--and have done with it."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Pratt. "But first of all--can you keep this secret to
+yourself and me? The money part, any way?"
+
+"I can--and shall," she answered.
+
+"Good!" said Pratt. "Very well. I want a thousand a year. Also I want
+two rooms--and a business room--at the Grange. I shall not interfere
+with you or your family, or your domestic arrangements, but I shall
+expect to have all my meals served to me from your kitchen, and to have
+one of your servants at my disposal. I know the Grange--I've been over
+it more than once. There's much more room there than you can make use
+of. Give me the rooms I want in one of the wings. I shan't disturb any
+of you. You'll never see me except on business--and if you want to."
+
+Again the calm acquiescence which would have surprised some men. Why
+Pratt failed to be surprised by it was because he was just then feeling
+exceedingly triumphant--he believed that Mrs. Mallathorpe was,
+metaphorically, at his feet. He had more than a little vanity in him,
+and it pleased him greatly, that dictating of terms: he saw himself a
+conqueror, with his foot on the neck of his victim.
+
+"Is that all, then?" asked the visitor.
+
+"All!" answered Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe calmly folded up the draft advertisement and placed it
+in her purse. Then she rose and adjusted her veil.
+
+"Then--there is nothing to be done until I get your answer to this--your
+application?" she asked. "Very well."
+
+Pratt showed her out, and walked to the cab with her. He went back to
+his rooms highly satisfied--and utterly ignorant of what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was thinking as she drove away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+
+Within a week of his sudden death in Eldrick's private office, old
+Antony Bartle was safely laid in the tomb under the yew-tree of which
+Mrs. Clough had spoken with such appreciation, and his grandson had
+entered into virtual possession of all that he had left. Collingwood
+found little difficulty in settling his grandfather's affairs.
+Everything had been left to him: he was sole executor as well as sole
+residuary legatee. He found his various tasks made uncommonly easy.
+Another bookseller in the town hurried to buy the entire stock and
+business, goodwill, book debts, everything--Collingwood was free of all
+responsibility of the shop in Quagg Alley within a few days of the old
+man's funeral. And when he had made a handsome present to the
+housekeeper, a suitable one to the shop-boy, and paid his grandfather's
+last debts, he was free to depart--a richer man by some five-and-twenty
+thousand pounds than when he hurried down to Barford in response to
+Eldrick's telegram.
+
+He sat in Eldrick's office one afternoon, winding up his affairs with
+him. There were certain things that Eldrick & Pascoe would have to do;
+as for himself it was necessary for him to get back to London.
+
+"There's something I want to propose to you," said Eldrick, when they
+had finished the immediate business. "You're going to practise, of
+course?"
+
+"Of course!" replied Collingwood, with a laugh. "If I get the chance!"
+
+"You'll get the chance," said Eldrick. "What were you going in for?"
+
+"Commercial law--company law--as a special thing," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I'll tell you what it is," continued Eldrick eagerly. "There's a career
+for you if you'll take my advice. Leave London--come down here and take
+chambers in the town, and go the North-Eastern Circuit. I'll promise
+you--for our firm alone--plenty of work. You'll get more--there's lots
+of work waiting here for a good, smart young barrister. Ah!--you smile,
+but I know what I'm talking about. You don't know Barford men. They
+believe in the old adage that one should look at home before going
+abroad. They're terribly litigious, too, and if you were here, on the
+spot, they'd give you work. What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"That sounds very tempting. But I was thinking of sticking to London."
+
+"Not one hundredth part of the chance in London that there is here!"
+affirmed Eldrick. "We badly want two or three barristers in this place. A
+man who's really well up in commercial and company law would soon have
+his hands full. There's work, I tell you. Take my advice, and come!"
+
+"I couldn't come--in any case--for a few months," said Collingwood,
+musingly. "Of course, if you really think there's an opening----"
+
+"I know there is!" asserted Eldrick. "I'll guarantee you lots of
+work--our work. I'm sick of fetching men down all the way from town, or
+getting them from Leeds. Come!--and you'll see."
+
+"I might come in a few months' time, and try things for a year or two,"
+replied Collingwood. "But I'm off to India, you know, next week, and I
+shall be away until the end of spring--four months or so."
+
+"To India!" exclaimed Eldrick. "What are you going to do there?"
+
+"Sir John Standridge," said Collingwood, mentioning a famous legal
+luminary of the day, "is going out to Hyderabad to take certain
+evidence, and hold a sort of inquiry, in a big case, and I'm going with
+him as his secretary and assistant--I was in his chambers for two years,
+you know. We leave next week, and we shall not be back until the end of
+April."
+
+"Lucky man!" remarked the solicitor. "Well, when you return, don't
+forget what I've said. Come back!--you'll not regret it. Come and settle
+down. Bye-the-bye, you're not engaged, are you?"
+
+"Engaged?" said Collingwood. "To what--to whom--what do you mean?"
+
+"Engaged to be married," answered Eldrick coolly. "You're not? Good! If
+you want a wife, there's Miss Mallathorpe. Nice, clever girl, my
+boy--and no end of what Barford folk call brass. The very woman for
+you."
+
+"Do you Barford people ever think of anything else but what you call
+brass?" asked Collingwood, laughing.
+
+"Sometimes," replied Eldrick. "But it's generally of something that
+nothing but brass can bring or produce. After all, a rich wife isn't a
+despicable thing, nowadays. You've seen this young lady?"
+
+"I've been there once," asserted Collingwood.
+
+"Go again--before you leave," counselled Eldrick. "You're just the right
+man. Listen to the counsels of the wise! And while you're in India,
+think well over my other advice. I tell you there's a career for you,
+here in the North, that you'd never get in town."
+
+Collingwood left him and went out--to find a motorcar and drive off to
+Normandale Grange, not because Eldrick had advised him to go, but
+because of his promise to Harper and Nesta Mallathorpe. And once more he
+found Nesta alone, and though he had no spice of vanity in his
+composition it seemed to him that she was glad when he walked into the
+room in which they had first met.
+
+"My mother is out--gone to town--to the mill," she said. "And Harper is
+knocking around the park with a gun--killing rabbits--and time. He'll be
+in presently to tea--and he'll be delighted to see you. Are you going to
+stay in Barford much longer?"
+
+"I'm going up to town this evening--seven o'clock train," answered
+Collingwood, watching her keenly. "All my business is finished now--for
+the present."
+
+"But--you'll be coming back?" she asked.
+
+"Perhaps," he said. "I may come back--after a while."
+
+"When you do come back," she went on, a little hurriedly, "will you come
+and see us again? I--it's difficult to explain--but I do wish Harper
+knew more men--the right sort of men. Do you understand?"
+
+"You mean--he needs more company?"
+
+"More company of the right kind. He doesn't know many nice men. And he
+has so little to occupy him. He's no head for business--my mother
+attends to all that--and he doesn't care much about sport--and when he
+goes into Barford he only hangs about the club, and, I'm afraid, at two
+or three of the hotels there, and--it's not good for him."
+
+"Can't you get him interested in anything?" suggested Collingwood. "Is
+there nothing that he cares about?"
+
+"He never did care about anything," replied Nesta with a sigh. "He's
+apathetic! He just moves along. Sometimes I think he was born half
+asleep, and he's never been really awakened. Pity, isn't it?"
+
+"Considering everything--a great pity," agreed Collingwood. "But--he's
+provided for."
+
+Nesta gave him a swift glance.
+
+"It might have been a good deal better for him if he hadn't been
+provided for!" she said. "He'd have just had to do something, then.
+But--if you come back, you'll come here sometimes?"
+
+"Of course!" answered Collingwood. "And if I come back, it will probably
+be to stop here. Mr. Eldrick says there's a lot of work going begging in
+Barford--for a smart young barrister well up in commercial law. Perhaps
+I may try to come up to his standard--I'm certainly young, but I don't
+know whether I'm smart."
+
+"Better come and try," she said, smiling. "Don't forget that I've seen
+you look the part, anyway--your wig and gown suited you very well."
+
+"Theatrical properties," he replied, laughing. "The wig was too small,
+and the gown too long. Well--we'll see. But in the meantime, I'm going
+away for four months--to India."
+
+"To India--four months!" she exclaimed. "That sounds nice."
+
+"Legal business," said Collingwood. "I shall be back about the end of
+April--and then I shall probably come down here again, and seriously
+consider Eldrick's suggestion. I'm very much inclined to take it."
+
+"Then--you'd leave London?" she asked.
+
+"I've little to leave there," replied Collingwood. "My father and mother
+are dead, and I've no brothers, no sisters--no very near relations.
+Sounds lonely, doesn't it?"
+
+"One can feel lonely when one has relations," said Nesta.
+
+"Are you saying that from--experience?" he asked.
+
+"I often wish I had more to do," she answered frankly. "What's the use
+of denying it? I've next to nothing to do, here. I liked my work at the
+hospital--I was busy all day. Here----"
+
+"If I were you," interrupted Collingwood, "I'd set to work nursing in
+another fashion. Look after your brother! Get him going at
+something--even if it's playing golf. Play with him! It would do
+him--and you--all the good in the world if you got thoroughly infatuated
+with even a game. Don't you see?"
+
+"You mean--anything is better than nothing," she replied. "All
+right--I'll try that, anyway. For--I'm anxious about Harper. All this
+money!--and no occupation!"
+
+Collingwood, who was sitting near the windows, looked out across the
+park and into the valley beyond.
+
+"I should have thought that a man who had come into an estate like this
+would have found plenty of occupation," he remarked. "What is there,
+beside the house and this park?"
+
+Nesta, who had busied herself with some fancy-work since Collingwood's
+entrance, laid it down and came to the windows. She pointed to certain
+roofs and gables in the valley.
+
+"There's the whole village of Normandale," she said. "A busy place, no
+doubt, but it's all Harper's--he's lord of the manor. He's patron of the
+living, too. It's all his--farms, cottages, everything. And the woods,
+and the park, and this house, and a stretch of the moors, as well. Of
+course, he ought to find a lot to do--but he doesn't. Perhaps because my
+mother does everything. She really is a business woman."
+
+Collingwood looked out over the area which Nesta had indicated. Harper
+Mallathorpe, he calculated, must be possessed of some three or four
+thousand acres.
+
+"A fine property!" he said. "He's a very fortunate fellow!"
+
+Just then this very fortunate fellow came in. His face, dull enough as
+he entered, lighted up at sight of a visitor, and fell again when
+Collingwood explained that his visit was a mere flying one, and that he
+was returning to London that night. Collingwood led him on to the
+project which he had mentioned at his previous visit--the making of golf
+links in the park, and pointed out, as a devotee of the sport, what a
+fine course could be made. Before he left he had succeeded in arousing
+like interest in Harper--he promised to go into the matter, and to
+employ a man whom Collingwood recommended as an expert in laying out
+golf courses.
+
+"You'll have got your greens in something like order by this time next
+year, if you start operations soon," said Collingwood. "And then, if I
+settle down at Barford, I'll come out now and then, if you'll let me."
+
+"Let you!" exclaimed Harper. "By Jove!--we're only too glad to have
+anybody out here--aren't we, Nesta?"
+
+"We shall always be glad to see Mr. Collingwood," said Nesta.
+
+Collingwood went away with that last intimation warm in his memory. He
+had an idea that the girl meant what she said--and for a moment he was
+sorry that he was going to India. He might have settled down at Barford
+there and then, and--but at that he laughed at himself.
+
+"A young woman with several thousands a year of her own!" he said. "Of
+course, she'll marry some big pot in the county. They feel a little
+lonely, those two, just now, because everything's new to them, and
+they're new to their changed circumstances. But when I get back--ah!--I
+guess they'll have got plenty of people around them."
+
+And he determined, being a young man of sense, not to think any
+more--for already he had thought a good deal of Nesta Mallathorpe, until
+he returned from his Indian travels. Let him attend to his business, and
+leave possibilities until they came nearer.
+
+"All the same." he mused, as he drew near the town again, "I'm pretty
+sure I shall come back here next spring--I feel like it."
+
+He called in at Eldrick's office on his way to the hotel, to take some
+documents which had been preparing for him. It was then late in the
+afternoon, and no one but Pratt was there--Pratt, indeed, had been
+waiting until Collingwood called.
+
+"Going back to town, Mr. Collingwood?" asked Pratt as he handed over a
+big envelope. "When shall we have the pleasure of seeing you again,
+sir?"
+
+Something in the clerk's tone made Collingwood think--he could not tell
+why--that Pratt was fishing for information. And--also for reasons which
+he could not explain--Collingwood had taken a curious dislike to Pratt,
+and was not inclined to give him any confidence.
+
+"I don't know," he answered, a little icily. "I am leaving for India
+next week."
+
+He bade the clerk a formal farewell and went off, and Pratt locked the
+office door and slowly followed him downstairs.
+
+"To India!" he said to himself, watching the young barrister's
+retreating figure. "To India, eh? For a time--or for--what?"
+
+Anyway, that was good news, Pratt had seen in Collingwood a possible
+rival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+
+Collingwood's return to London was made on a Friday evening: next day he
+began the final preparations for his departure to India on the following
+Thursday. He was looking forward to his journey and his stay in India
+with keen expectation. He would have the society of a particularly
+clever and brilliant man; they were to break their journey in Italy and
+in Egypt; he would enjoy exceptional facilities for seeing the native
+life of India; he would gain valuable experience. It was a chance at
+which any young man would have jumped, and Collingwood had been greatly
+envied when it was known that Sir John Standridge had offered it to him.
+And yet he was conscious that if he could have done precisely what he
+desired, he would have stayed longer at Barford, in order to see more of
+Nesta Mallathorpe. Already it seemed a long time to the coming spring,
+when he would be back--and free to go North again.
+
+But Collingwood was fated to go North once more much sooner than he had
+dreamed of. As he sat at breakfast in his rooms on the Monday morning
+after his departure from Barford, turning over his newspaper with no
+particular aim or interest, his attention was suddenly and sharply
+arrested by a headline. Even that headline might not have led him to
+read what lay beneath. But in the same instant in which he saw it he
+also saw a name--Mallathorpe. In the next he knew that heavy trouble had
+fallen on Normandale Grange, the very day after he had left it.
+
+This is what Collingwood read as he sat, coffee-cup in one hand,
+newspaper in the other--staring at the lines of unleaded type:
+
+ TRAGIC FATE OF YOUNG YORKSHIRE SQUIRE
+
+ "A fatal accident, of a particularly sad and disturbing nature,
+ occurred near Barford, Yorkshire, on Saturday. About four
+ o'clock on Saturday afternoon, Mr. Linford Pratt, managing clerk
+ to Messrs. Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, of Barford, who was
+ crossing the grounds of Normandale Grange on his way to a
+ business appointment, discovered the dead body of Mr. H. J.
+ Mallathorpe, the owner of the Normandale Estate, lying in a
+ roadway which at that point is spanned, forty feet above, by a
+ narrow foot-bridge. The latter is an ancient construction of
+ wood, and there is no doubt that it was in extremely bad repair,
+ and had given way when the unfortunate young gentleman, who was
+ out shooting in his park, stepped upon it. Mr. Mallathorpe, who
+ was only twenty-four years of age, succeeded to the Normandale
+ estates, one of the finest properties in the neighbourhood of
+ Barford, about two years ago, under somewhat romantic--and also
+ tragic--circumstances, their previous owner, his uncle, Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe, a well-known Barford manufacturer, meeting a sudden
+ death by the falling of his mill chimney--a catastrophe which
+ also caused the deaths of several of his employees. Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe died intestate, and the estate at Normandale passed
+ to the young gentleman who met such a sad fate on Saturday
+ afternoon. Mr. H.J. Mallathorpe was unmarried, and it is
+ understood that Normandale (which includes the village of that
+ name, the advowson of the living, and about four thousand acres
+ of land) now becomes the property of his sister, Miss Nesta
+ Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood set down his cup, and dropped the newspaper. He was but half
+way through his breakfast, but all his appetite had vanished. All that
+he was conscious of was that here was trouble and grief for a girl in
+whom--it was useless to deny it--he had already begun to take a warm
+interest. And suddenly he started from his chair and snatched up a
+railway guide. As he turned over its pages, he thought rapidly. The
+preparations for his journey to India were almost finished--what was not
+done he could do in a few hours. He had no further appointment with Sir
+John Standridge until nine o'clock on Thursday morning, when he was to
+meet him at the train for Dover and Paris. Monday--Tuesday--Wednesday--he
+had three days--ample time to hurry down to Normandale, to do what he
+could to help there, and to get back in time to make his own last
+arrangements. He glanced at his watch--he had forty minutes in which to
+catch an express from King's Cross to Barford. Without further delay he
+picked up a suit-case which was already packed and set out for the
+station.
+
+He was in Barford soon after two o'clock--in Eldrick's office by
+half-past two. Eldrick shook his head at sight of him.
+
+"I can guess what's brought you down, Collingwood," he said. "Good of
+you, of course--I don't think they've many friends out there."
+
+"I can scarcely call myself that--yet," answered Collingwood. "But--I
+thought I might be of some use. I'll drive out there presently. But
+first--how was it?"
+
+Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"Don't know much more than what the papers say," he answered. "There's
+an old foot-bridge there that spans a road in the park--road cut through
+a ravine. They say it was absolutely rotten, and the poor chap's weight
+was evidently too much for it. And there was a drop of forty feet into a
+hard road. Extraordinary thing that nobody on the estate seems to have
+known of the dangerous condition of that bridge!--but they say it was
+little used--simply a link between one plantation and another.
+However;--it's done, now. Our clerk--Pratt, you know--found the body.
+Hadn't been dead five minutes, Pratt says."
+
+"What was Pratt doing there?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Oh, business of his own," replied Eldrick. "Not ours. There was an
+advertisement in Saturday's papers which set out that a steward was
+wanted for the Normandale estate, and Pratt mentioned it to me in the
+morning that he thought of applying for the job if we'd give him a good
+testimonial. I suppose he'd gone out there to see about the
+preliminaries. Anyway, he was walking through the park when he found
+young Mallathorpe's body. I understand he made himself very useful, too,
+and I've sent him out there again today, to do anything he can--smart
+chap, Pratt!"
+
+"Possibly, then, there is nothing I can do," remarked Collingwood.
+
+"I should say you'll do a lot by merely going there," answered Eldrick.
+"As I said just now, they've few friends, and no relations, and I hear
+that Mrs. Mallathorpe is absolutely knocked over. Go, by all means--a
+bit of sympathy goes a long way on these occasions. I say!--what a
+regular transformation an affair of this sort produces. Do you know,
+that young fellow, just like his uncle, had not made any will! Fact!--I
+had it from Robson, their solicitor, this very morning. The whole of the
+estate comes to the sister, of course--she and the mother will share the
+personal property. By that lad's death, Nesta Mallathorpe becomes one of
+the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!"
+
+Collingwood made no reply to this communication. But as he drove off to
+Normandale Grange, it was fresh in his mind. And it was not very
+pleasant to him. One of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!--and he
+was already realizing that he would like to make Nesta Mallathorpe his
+wife: it was because he felt what he did for her that he had rushed down
+to do anything he could that would be of help. Supposing--only
+supposing--that people--anybody--said that he was fortune-hunting!
+Somewhat unduly sensitive, proud, almost to a fault, he felt his cheek
+redden at the thought, and for a moment he wished that old John
+Mallathorpe's wealth had never passed to his niece. But then he sneered
+at himself for his presumption.
+
+"Ass!" he said. "She's never even thought of me--in that way, most
+likely! Anyway, I'm a stupid fool for thinking of these things at
+present."
+
+But he knew, within a few minutes of entering the big, desolate-looking
+house, that Nesta had been thinking of him. She came to him in the room
+where they had first met, and quietly gave him her hand.
+
+"I was not surprised when they told me you were here," she said. "I was
+thinking about you--or, rather, expecting to hear from you."
+
+"I came at once," answered Collingwood, who had kept her hand in his.
+"I--well, I couldn't stop away. I thought, perhaps, I could do
+something--be of some use."
+
+"It's a great deal of use to have just--come," she said. "Thank you!
+But--I suppose you'll have to go?"
+
+"Not for two days, anyway," he replied. "What can I do?"
+
+"I don't know that you can actually do anything," she answered.
+"Everything is being done. Mr. Eldrick sent his clerk, Mr. Pratt--who
+found Harper--he's been most kind and useful. He--and our own
+solicitor--are making all arrangements. There's got to be an inquest.
+No--I don't know that you can do actual things. But--while you're
+here--you can look in when you like. My mother is very ill--she has
+scarcely spoken since Saturday."
+
+"I'll tell you what I will do," said Collingwood determinedly. "I
+noticed in coming through the village just now that there's quite a
+decent inn there. I'll go down and arrange to stay there until Wednesday
+evening--then I shall be close by--if you should need me."
+
+He saw by her look of quick appreciation and relief that this suggestion
+pleased her. She pressed his hand and withdrew her own. "Thank you
+again!" she said. "Do you know--I can't quite explain--I should be glad
+if you were close at hand? Everybody has been very kind--but I do feel
+that there is nobody I can talk to. If you arrange this, will you come
+in again this evening?"
+
+"I shall arrange it," answered Collingwood. "I'll see to it now. Tell
+your people I am to be brought in whenever I call. And--I'll be close by
+whenever you want me."
+
+It seemed little to say, little to do, but he left her feeling that he
+was being of some use. And as he went off to make his arrangements at
+the inn he encountered Pratt, who was talking to the butler in the outer
+hall.
+
+The clerk looked at Collingwood with an unconcern and a composure which
+he was able to assume because he had already heard of his presence in
+the house. Inwardly, he was malignantly angry that the young barrister
+was there, but his voice was suave, and polite enough when he spoke.
+
+"Good afternoon, Mr. Collingwood," he said quietly. "Very sad occasion
+on which we meet again, sir. Come to offer your sympathy, Mr.
+Collingwood, of course--very kind of you."
+
+"I came," answered Collingwood, who was not inclined to bandy phrases
+with Pratt, "to see if I could be of any practical use."
+
+"Just so, sir," said Pratt. "Mr. Eldrick sent me here for the same
+purpose. There's really not much to do--beyond the necessary
+arrangements, which are already pretty forward. Going back to town,
+sir?" he went on, following Collingwood out to his motor-car, which
+stood waiting in the drive.
+
+"No!" replied Collingwood. "I'm going to send this man to Barford to
+fetch my bag to the inn down there in the village, where I'm going to
+stay for a few days. Did you hear that?" he continued, turning to the
+driver. "Go back to Barford--get my bag from the _Station Hotel_
+there--bring it to the _Normandale Arms_--I'll meet you there on your
+return."
+
+The car went off, and Collingwood, with a nod to Pratt, was about to
+turn down a side path towards the village. But Pratt stopped him.
+
+"Would you care to see the place where the accident happened, Mr.
+Collingwood?" he said. "It's close by--won't take five minutes."
+
+Collingwood hesitated a moment; then he turned back. It might be well,
+he reflected, if he made himself acquainted with all the circumstances
+of this case, simple as they seemed.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "If it's so near."
+
+"This way, sir," responded Pratt. He led his companion along the front
+of the house, through the shrubberies at the end of a wing, and into a
+plantation by a path thickly covered with pine needles. Presently they
+emerged upon a similar track, at right angles to that by which they had
+come, and leading into a denser part of the woods. And at the end of a
+hundred yards of it they came to a barricade, evidently of recent
+construction, over which Pratt stretched a hand. "There!" he said.
+"That's the bridge, sir." Collingwood looked over the barricade. He saw
+that he and Pratt were standing at the edge of one thick plantation of
+fir and pine; the edge of a similar plantation stretched before them
+some ten yards away. But between the two lay a deep, dark ravine, which,
+immediately in front of the temporary barricade, was spanned by a narrow
+rustic bridge--a fragile-looking thing of planks, railed in by boughs of
+trees. And in the middle was a jagged gap in both floor and side-rails,
+showing where the rotten wood had given way.
+
+"I'll explain, Mr. Collingwood," said the clerk presently. "I knew this
+park, sir--I knew it well, before the late Mr. John Mallathorpe bought
+the property. That path at the other end of the bridge makes a short cut
+down to the station in the valley--through the woods and the lower part
+of the park. I came up that path, from the station, on Saturday
+afternoon, intending to cross this bridge and go on to the house, where
+I had private business. When I got to the other end of the bridge,
+there, I saw the gap in the middle. And then I looked down into the
+cut--there's a road--a paved road--down there, and I saw--him! And so I
+made shift to scramble down--stiff job it was!--to get to him. But he
+was dead, Mr. Collingwood--stone dead, sir!--though I'm certain he
+hadn't been dead five minutes. And----"
+
+"Aye, an' he'd never ha' been dead at all, wouldn't young Squire, if
+only his ma had listened to what I telled her!" interrupted a voice
+behind them. "He'd ha' been alive at this minute, he would, if his ma
+had done what I said owt to be done--now then!"
+
+Collingwood turned sharply--to confront an old man, evidently one of the
+woodmen on the estate who had come up behind them unheard on the thick
+carpeting of pine needles. And Pratt turned, too--with a keen look and a
+direct question.
+
+"What do you mean?" he asked. "What are you talking about?"
+
+"I know what I'm talking about, young gentleman," said the man doggedly.
+"I ain't worked, lad and man, on this one estate nine-and-forty
+years--and happen more--wi'out knowin' all about it. I tell'd Mrs.
+Mallathorpe on Friday noon 'at that there owd brig 'ud fall in afore
+long if it worn't mended. I met her here, at this very place where we're
+standin', and I showed her 'at it worn't safe to cross it. I tell'd her
+'t she owt to have it fastened up theer an' then. It's been rottin' for
+many a year, has this owd brig--why, I mind when it wor last repaired,
+and that wor years afore owd Mestur Mallathorpe bowt this estate!"
+
+"When do you say you told Mrs. Mallathorpe all that?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Friday noon it were, sir," answered the woodman. "When I were on my way
+home--dinner time. 'Cause I met the missis here, and I made bold to tell
+her what I'd noticed. That there owd brig!--lor' bless yer, gentlemen!
+it were black rotten i' the middle, theer where poor young maister he
+fell through it. 'Ye mun hev' that seen to at once, missis,' I says.
+'Sartin sure, 'tain't often as it's used,' I says, 'but surely sartin
+'at if it ain't mended, or closed altogether,' I says, 'summun 'll be
+going through and brekkin' their necks,' I says. An' reight, too,
+gentlemen--forty feet it is down to that road. An' a mortal hard road,
+an' all, paved wi' granite stone all t' way to t' stable-yard."
+
+"You're sure it was Friday noon?" repeated Pratt.
+
+"As sure as that I see you," answered the woodman. "An' Mrs. Mallathorpe
+she said she'd hev it seen to. Dear-a-me!--it should ha' been closed!"
+
+The old man shook his head and went off amongst the trees, and Pratt,
+giving his vanishing figure a queer look, turned silently back along the
+path, followed by Collingwood. At the point where the other path led to
+the house, he glanced over his shoulder at the young barrister.
+
+"If you keep straight on, Mr. Collingwood," he said, "you'll get
+straight down to the village and the inn. I must go this way."
+
+He went off rapidly, and Collingwood walked on through the plantation
+towards the _Normandale Arms_--wondering, all the way, why Pratt was so
+anxious to know exactly when it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe had been
+warned about the old bridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+
+Until that afternoon Collingwood had never been in the village to which
+he was now bending his steps; on that and his previous visits to the
+Grange he had only passed the end of its one street. Now, descending
+into it from the slopes of the park, he found it to be little more than
+a hamlet--a church, a farmstead or two, a few cottages in their gardens,
+all clustering about a narrow stream spanned by a high-arched bridge of
+stone. The _Normandale Arms_, a roomy, old-fashioned place, stood at one
+end of the bridge, and from the windows of the room into which
+Collingwood was presently shown he could look out on the stream itself
+and on the meadows beyond it. A peaceful, pretty, quiet place--but the
+gloom which was heavy at the big house or the hill seemed to have spread
+to everybody that he encountered.
+
+"Bad job, this, sir!" said the landlord, an elderly, serious-faced man,
+to whom Collingwood had made known his wants, and who had quickly formed
+the opinion that his guest was of the legal profession. "And a queer
+one, too! Odd thing, sir, that our old squire, and now the young one,
+should both have met their deaths in what you might term violent
+fashion."
+
+"Accident--in both cases," remarked Collingwood.
+
+The landlord nodded his head--and then shook it in a manner which seemed
+to indicate that while he agreed with this proposition in one respect he
+entertained some sort of doubt about it in others.
+
+"Ay, well!" he answered. "Of course, a mill chimney falling, without
+notice, as it were, and a bridge giving way--them's accidents, to be
+sure. But it's a very strange thing about this foot-bridge, up yonder at
+the Grange--very strange indeed! There's queer talk about it, already."
+
+"What sort of talk?" asked Collingwood. Ever since the old woodman had
+come up to him and Pratt, as they stood looking at the foot-bridge, he
+had been aware of a curious sense of mystery, and the landlord's remark
+tended to deepen it. "What are people talking about?"
+
+"Nay--it's only one or two," replied the landlord. "There's been two men
+in here since the affair happened that crossed that bridge Friday
+afternoon--and both of 'em big, heavy men. According to what one can
+learn that there bridge wasn't used much by the Grange people--it led to
+nowhere in particular for them. But there is a right of way across that
+part of the park, and these two men as I'm speaking of--they made use of
+it on Friday--getting towards dark. I know 'em well--they'd both of 'em
+weigh four times as much--together--as young Squire Mallathorpe, and yet
+it didn't give way under them. And then--only a few hours later, as you
+might say, down it goes with him!"
+
+"I don't think you can form any opinion from that!" said Collingwood.
+"These things, these old structures, often give way quite suddenly and
+unexpectedly."
+
+"Ay, well, they did admit, these men too, that it seemed a bit tottery,
+like," remarked the landlord. "Talking it over, between themselves, in
+here, they agreed, to be sure, that it felt to give a bit. All the same,
+there's them as says that it's a queer thing it should ha' given
+altogether when young squire walked on it."
+
+Collingwood clinched matters with a straight question.
+
+"You don't mean to say that people are suggesting that the foot-bridge
+had been tampered with?" he asked.
+
+"There is them about as wouldn't be slow to say as much," answered the
+landlord. "Folks will talk! You see, sir--nobody saw what happened. And
+when country folk doesn't see what takes place, with their own eyes,
+then they----"
+
+"Make mysteries out of it," interrupted Collingwood, a little
+impatiently. "I don't think there's any mystery here, landlord--I
+understood that this foot-bridge was in a very unsafe condition. No! I'm
+afraid the whole affair was only too simple."
+
+But he was conscious, as he said this, that he was not precisely voicing
+his own sentiments. He himself was mystified. He was still wondering why
+Pratt had been so pertinacious in asking the old woodman when,
+precisely, he had told Mrs. Mallathorpe about the unsafe condition of
+the bridge--still wondering about a certain expression which had come
+into Pratt's face when the old man told them what he did--still
+wondering at the queer look which Pratt had given the information as he
+went off into the plantation. Was there, then, something--some secret
+which was being kept back by--somebody?
+
+He was still pondering over these things when he went back to the
+Grange, later in the evening--but he was resolved not to say anything
+about them to Nesta. And he saw Nesta only for a few minutes. Her
+mother, she said, was very ill indeed--the doctor was with her then, and
+she must go back to them. Since her son's death, Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+scarcely spoken, and the doctor, knowing that her heart was not strong,
+was somewhat afraid of a collapse.
+
+"If there is anything that I can do,--or if you should want me, during
+the night," said Collingwood, earnestly, "promise me that you'll send at
+once to the inn!"
+
+"Yes," answered Nesta. "I will. But--I don't think there will be any
+need. We have two nurses here, and the doctor will stop. There is
+something I should be glad if you would do tomorrow," she went on,
+looking at him a little wistfully, "You know about--the inquest?"
+
+"Yes," said Collingwood.
+
+"They say we--that is I, because, of course, my mother couldn't--that I
+need not be present," she continued. "Mr. Robson--our solicitor--says it
+will be a very short, formal affair. He will be there, of
+course,--but--would you mind being there, too!--so that you
+can--afterwards--tell me all about it?"
+
+"Will you tell me something--straight out?" answered Collingwood,
+looking intently at her. "Have you any doubt of any description about
+the accepted story of your brother's death? Be plain with me!"
+
+Nesta hesitated for awhile before answering.
+
+"Not of the actual circumstances," she replied at last,--"none at all of
+what you call the accepted story. The fact is, I'm not a good hand at
+explaining anything, and perhaps I can't convey to you what I mean. But
+I've a feeling--an impression--that there is--or was some mystery on
+Saturday which might have--and might not have--oh, I can't make it
+clear, even to myself.
+
+"If you would be at the inquest tomorrow, and listen carefully to
+everything--and then tell me afterwards--do you understand?"
+
+"I understand," answered Collingwood. "Leave it to me."
+
+Whether he expected to hear anything unusual at the inquest, whether he
+thought any stray word, hint, or suggestion would come up during the
+proceedings, Collingwood was no more aware than Nesta was certain of her
+vague ideas. But he was very soon assured that there was going to be
+nothing beyond brevity and formality. He had never previously been
+present at an inquest--his legal mind was somewhat astonished at the way
+in which things were done. It was quickly evident to him that the twelve
+good men and true of the jury--most of them cottagers and labourers
+living on the estate--were quite content to abide by the directions of
+the coroner, a Barford solicitor, whose one idea seemed to be to get
+through the proceedings as rapidly and smoothly as possible. And
+Collingwood felt bound to admit that, taking the evidence as it was
+brought forward, no simpler or more straightforward cause of
+investigation could be adduced. It was all very simple indeed--as it
+appeared there and then.
+
+The butler, a solemn-faced, respectable type of the old family
+serving-man, spoke as to his identification of the dead master's body,
+and gave his evidence in a few sentences. Mr. Mallathorpe, he said, had
+gone out of the front door of the Grange at half-past two on Saturday
+afternoon, carrying a gun, and had turned into the road leading towards
+the South Shrubbery. At about three o'clock Mr. Pratt had come running
+up the drive to the house, and told him and Miss Mallathorpe that he had
+just found Mr. Mallathorpe lying dead in the sunken cut between the
+South and North Shrubbery. Nobody had any question to ask the butler.
+Nor were any questions asked of Pratt--the one really important witness.
+
+Pratt gave his evidence tersely and admirably. On Saturday morning he
+had seen an advertisement in the Barford newspapers which stated that a
+steward and agent was wanted for the Normandale Estate, and all
+applications were to be made to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Desirous of applying
+for the post, he had written out a formal letter during Saturday
+morning, had obtained a testimonial from his present employers, Messrs.
+Eldrick & Pascoe, and, anxious to present his application as soon as
+possible, had decided to take it to Normandale Grange himself, that
+afternoon. He had left Barford by the two o'clock train, which arrived
+at Normandale at two-thirty-five. Knowing the district well, he had
+taken the path through the plantations. Arrived at the foot-bridge, he
+had at once noticed that part of it had fallen in. Looking into the
+cutting, he had seen a man lying in the roadway beneath--motionless. He
+had scrambled down the side of the cutting, discovered that the man was
+Mr. Harper Mallathorpe, and that he was dead, and had immediately
+hurried up the road to the house, where he had informed the last witness
+and Miss Mallathorpe.
+
+A quite plain story, evidently thought everybody--no questions needed.
+Nor were there any questions needed in the case of the only other
+witnesses--the estate carpenter who said that the foot-bridge was very
+old, but that he had not been aware that it was in quite so bad a
+condition, and who gave it as his opinion that the recent heavy rains
+had had something to do with the matter; and the doctor who testified
+that the victim had suffered injuries which would produce absolutely
+instantaneous death. A clear case--nothing could be clearer, said the
+coroner to his obedient jury, who presently returned the only
+verdict--one of accidental death--which, on the evidence, was possible.
+
+Collingwood heard no comments on the inquest from those who were
+present. But that evening, as he sat in his parlour at the _Normandale
+Arms_, the landlord, coming in on pretence of attending to the fire,
+approached him with an air of mystery and jerked his thumb in the
+direction of the regions which he had just quitted.
+
+"You remember what we were talking of this afternoon when you come in,
+sir?" he whispered. "There's some of 'em--regular nightly customers,
+village folk, you understand--talking of the same thing now, and of this
+here inquest. And if you'd like to hear a bit of what you may call local
+opinion--and especially one man's--I'll put you where you can hear it,
+without being seen. It's worth hearing, anyway."
+
+Collingwood, curious to know what the village wiseacres had to say,
+rose, and followed the landlord into a small room at the back of the
+bar-parlour.
+
+An open hatchment in the wall, covered by a thin curtain, allowed him to
+hear every word which came from what appeared to be a full company. But
+it was quickly evident that in that company there was one man who either
+was, or wished to be dictator and artifex--a man of loud voice and
+domineering tone, who was laying down the law to the accompaniment of
+vigorous thumpings of the table at which he sat. "What I say is--and I
+say it agen---I reckon nowt at all o' crowners' quests!" he was
+affirming, as Collingwood and his guide drew near the curtained opening.
+"What is a crowner's quest, anyway? It's nowt but formality--all form
+and show--it means nowt. All them 'at sits on t' jury does and says just
+what t' crowner tells 'em to say and do. They nivver ax no questions out
+o' their own mouths--they're as dumb as sheep--that's what yon jury wor
+this mornin'--now then!"
+
+"That's James Stringer, the blacksmith," whispered the landlord, coming
+close to Collingwood's elbow. "He thinks he knows everything!"
+
+"And pray, what would you ha' done, Mestur Stringer, if you'd been on
+yon jury?" inquired a milder voice. "I suppose ye'd ha' wanted to know a
+bit more, what?" "Mestur Stringer 'ud ha' wanted to know a deal more,"
+observed another voice. "He would do!"
+
+"There's a many things I want to know," continued the blacksmith, with a
+stout thump of the table. "They all tak' it for granted 'at young squire
+walked on to yon bridge, an' 'at it theer and then fell to pieces. Who
+see'd it fall to pieces? Who was theer to see what did happen?"
+
+"What else did happen or could happen nor what were testified to?" asked
+a new voice. "Theer wor what they call circumstantial evidence to show
+how all t' affair happened!"
+
+"Circumstantial evidence be blowed!" sneered the blacksmith heartily. "I
+reckon nowt o' circumstantial evidence! Look ye here! How do you
+know--how does anybody know 'at t' young squire worn't thrown off that
+bridge, and 'at t' bridge collapsed when he wor thrown? He might ha' met
+somebody on t' bridge, and quarrelled wi' 'em, and whoivver it wor might
+ha' been t' strongest man, and flung him into t' road beneath!"
+
+"Aye, but i' that case t' other feller--t' assailant--'ud ha' fallen wi'
+him," objected somebody.
+
+"Nowt o' t' sort!" retorted the blacksmith. "He'd be safe on t' sound
+part o' t' bridge--it's only a piece on 't that gave way. I say that
+theer idea wants in-quirin' into. An' theer's another thing--what wor
+that lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What
+reight had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and
+at that time? Come, now!--theer's a tickler for somebody."
+
+"He telled that," exclaimed several voices. "He had business i' t'
+place. He had some papers to 'liver."
+
+"Then why didn't he go t' nearest way to t' house t' 'liver 'em?"
+demanded Stringer. "T' shortest way to t' house fro' t' railway station
+is straight up t' carriage drive--not through them plantations. I ax
+agen--what wor that feller doin' theer? It's important."
+
+"Why, ye don't suspect him of owt, do yer, Mestur Stringer?" asked
+somebody. "A respectable young feller like that theer--come!"
+
+"I'm sayin' nowt about suspectin' nobody!" vociferated the blacksmith.
+"I'm doin' nowt but puttin' a case, as t' lawyers 'ud term it. I say 'at
+theer's a lot o' things 'at owt to ha' comed out. I'll tell ye one on
+'em--how is it 'at nowt--not a single word--wor said at yon inquest
+about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t' affair? Not one word!"
+
+A sudden silence fell on the company, and the landlord tapped
+Collingwood's arm and took the liberty of winking at him.
+
+"Why," inquired somebody, at last, "what about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t'
+affair? What had she to do wi' t' affair?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice became judicial in its solemnity.
+
+"Ye listen to me!" he said with emphasis. "I know what I'm talking
+about. Ye know what came out at t' inquest. When this here Pratt ran to
+tell t' news at t' house he returned to what they term t' fatal spot i'
+company wi' t' butler, and a couple of footmen, and Dan Scholes, one o'
+t' grooms. Now theer worn't a word said at t' inquest about what that
+lot--five on em, mind yer--found when they reached t' dead corpse--not
+one word! But I know--Dan Scholes tell'd me!"
+
+"What did they find, then, Mestur Stringer?" asked an eager member of
+the assemblage. "What wor it?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice sank to a mysterious whisper.
+
+"I'll tell yer!" he replied. "They found Mrs. Mallathorpe, lyin' i' a
+dead faint--close by! And they say 'at she's nivver done nowt but go out
+o' one faint into another, ivver since. So, of course, she's nivver been
+able to tell if she saw owt or knew owt! And what I say is," he
+concluded, with a heavy thump of the table, "that theer crowner's quest
+owt to ha' been what they term adjourned, until Mrs. Mallathorpe could
+tell if she did see owt, or if she knew owt, or heer'd owt! She mun ha'
+been close by--or else they wo'dn't ha' found her lyin' theer aside o'
+t' corpse. What did she see? What did she hear? Does she know owt? I
+tell ye 'at theer's questions 'at wants answerin'--and theer's trouble
+ahead for somebody if they aren't answered--now then!"
+
+Collingwood went away from his retreat, beckoning the landlord to
+follow. In the parlour he turned to him.
+
+"Have you heard anything of what Stringer said just now?" he asked. "I
+mean--about Mrs. Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Heard just the same--and from the same chap, Scholes, the groom, sir,"
+replied the landlord. "Oh, yes! Of course, people will wonder why they
+didn't get some evidence from Mrs. Mallathorpe--just as Stringer says."
+
+Collingwood sat a long time that night, thinking over the things he had
+heard. He came to the conclusion that the domineering blacksmith was
+right in one of his dogmatic assertions--there was trouble ahead. And
+next morning, before going up to the Grange, he went to the nearest
+telegraph office, and sent Sir John Standridge a lengthy message in
+which he resigned the appointment that would have taken him to India.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+
+Collingwood had many things to think over as he walked across Normandale
+Park that morning. He had deliberately given up his Indian appointment
+for Nesta's sake, so that he might be near her in case the trouble which
+he feared arose suddenly. But it was too soon yet to let her know that
+she was the cause of his altered arrangements--in any case, that was not
+the time to tell her that it was on her account that he had altered
+them.
+
+He must make some plausible excuse: then he must settle down in Barford,
+according to Eldrick's suggestion. He would then be near at hand--and if
+the trouble, whatever it might be, took tangible form, he would be able
+to help. But he was still utterly in the dark as to what that possible
+trouble might be--yet, of one thing he felt convinced--it would have
+some connection with Pratt.
+
+He remembered, as he walked along, that he had formed some queer, uneasy
+suspicion about Pratt when he first hurried down to Barford on hearing
+of Antony Bartle's death: that feeling, subsequently allayed to some
+extent, had been revived. There might be nothing in it, he said to
+himself, over and over again; everything that seemed strange might be
+easily explained; the evidence of Pratt at the inquest had appeared
+absolutely truthful and straightforward, and yet the blunt, rough,
+downright question of the blacksmith, crudely voiced as it was, found a
+ready agreement in Collingwood's mind. As he drew near the house he
+found himself repeating Stringer's broad Yorkshire--"What wor that
+lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What reight
+had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and at that
+time? Come, now--theer's a tickler for somebody!" And even as he smiled
+at the remembrance of the whole rustic conversation of the previous
+evening, and thought that the blacksmith's question certainly might be a
+ticklish one--for somebody--he looked up from the frosted grass at his
+feet, and saw Pratt.
+
+Pratt, a professional-looking bag in his hand, a morning newspaper under
+the other arm, was standing at the gate of one of the numerous
+shrubberies which flanked the Grange, talking to a woman who leaned over
+it. Collingwood recognized her as a person whom he had twice seen in the
+house during his visits on the day before---a middle-aged, slightly
+built woman, neatly dressed in black, and wearing a sort of nurse's cap
+which seemed to denote some degree of domestic servitude. She was a
+woman who had once been pretty, and who still retained much of her good
+looks; she was also evidently of considerable shrewdness and
+intelligence and possessed a pair of remarkably quick eyes--the sort of
+eyes, thought Collingwood, that see everything that happens within their
+range of vision. And she had a firm chin and a mouth which expressed
+determination; he had seen all that as she exchanged some conversation
+with the old butler in Collingwood's presence--a noticeable woman
+altogether. She was evidently in close conference with Pratt at that
+moment--but as Collingwood drew near she turned and went slowly in the
+direction of the house, while Pratt, always outwardly polite, stepped
+towards the interrupter of this meeting, and lifted his hat.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Collingwood," he said. "A fine, sharp morning, sir! I
+was just asking Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid how her mistress is this
+morning--she was very ill when I left last night. Better, sir, I'm glad
+to say--Mrs. Mallathorpe has had a much better night."
+
+"I'm very pleased to hear it," replied Collingwood. He was going towards
+the front of the Grange, and Pratt walked at his side, evidently in the
+same direction. "I am afraid she has had a great shock. You are still
+here, then?" he went on, feeling bound to make some remark, and saying
+the first obvious thing. "Still busy?"
+
+"Mr. Eldrick has lent me--so to speak--until the funeral's over,
+tomorrow," answered Pratt. "There are a lot of little things in which I
+can be useful, you know, Mr. Collingwood. I suppose your
+arrangements--you said you were sailing for India--won't permit of your
+being present tomorrow, sir?"
+
+Collingwood was not sure if the clerk was fishing for information.
+Pratt's manner was always polite, his questions so innocently put, that
+it was difficult to know what he was actually after. But he was not
+going to give him any information--either then, or at any time.
+
+"I don't quite know what my arrangements may be," he answered. And just
+then they came to the front entrance, and Collingwood was taken off in
+one direction by a footman, while Pratt, who already seemed to be fully
+acquainted with the house and its arrangements, took himself and his bag
+away in another.
+
+Nesta came to Collingwood looking less anxious than when he had left her
+at his last call the night before. He had already told her what his
+impressions of the inquest were, and he was now wondering whether to
+tell her of the things he had heard said at the village inn. But
+remembering that he was now going to stay in the neighbourhood, he
+decided to say nothing at that time--if there was anything in these
+vague feelings and suspicions it would come out, and could be dealt with
+when it arose. At present he had need of a little diplomacy.
+
+"Oh!--I wanted to tell you," he said, after talking to her awhile about
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I--there's a change in my arrangements, I'm not going
+to India, after all."
+
+He was not prepared for the sudden flush that came over the girl's face.
+It took him aback. It also told him a good deal that he was glad to
+know--and it was only by a strong effort of will that he kept himself
+from taking her hands and telling her the truth. But he affected not to
+see anything, and he went on talking rapidly. "Complete change in the
+arrangements at the last minute," he said. "I've just been writing about
+it. So--as that's off, I think I shall follow Eldrick's advice, and take
+chambers in Barford for a time, and see how things turn out. I'm going
+into Barford now, to see Eldrick about all that."
+
+Nesta, who was conscious of her betrayal of more than she cared to show
+just then, tried to speak calmly.
+
+"But--isn't it an awful disappointment?" she said. "You were looking
+forward so to going there, weren't you?"
+
+"Can't be helped," replied Collingwood. "All these affairs
+are--provisional. I thought I'd tell you at once, however--so that
+you'll know--if you ever want me--that I shall be somewhere round about.
+In fact, as it's quite comfortable there, I shall stop at the inn until
+I've got rooms in the town."
+
+Then, not trusting himself to remain longer, he went off to Barford,
+certain that he was now definitely pledged in his own mind to Nesta
+Mallathorpe, and not much less that when the right time came she would
+not be irresponsive to him. And on that, like a cold douche, came the
+remembrance of her actual circumstances--she was what Eldrick had said,
+one of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire. The thought of her
+riches made Collingwood melancholy for a while--he possessed a curious
+sort of pride which made him hate and loathe the notion of being taken
+for a fortune-hunter. But suddenly, and with a laugh, he remembered that
+he had certain possessions of his own--ability, knowledge, and
+perseverance. Before he reached Eldrick's office, he had had a vision of
+the Woolsack.
+
+Eldrick received Collingwood's news with evident gratification. He
+immediately suggested certain chambers in an adjacent building; he
+volunteered information as to where the best rooms in the town were to
+be had. And in proof of his practical interest in Collingwood's career,
+he there and then engaged his professional services for two cases which
+were to be heard at a local court within the following week.
+
+"Pratt shall deliver the papers to you at once," he said. "That is, as
+soon as he's back from Normandale this afternoon. I sent him there again
+to make himself useful."
+
+"I saw him this morning," remarked Collingwood. "He appears to be a very
+useful person."
+
+"Clever chap," asserted Eldrick, carelessly. "I don't know what'll be
+done about that stewardship that he was going to apply for. Everything
+will be altered now that young Mallathorpe's dead. Of course, I,
+personally, shouldn't have thought that Pratt would have done for a job
+like that, but Pratt has enough self-assurance and self-confidence for a
+dozen men, and he thought he would do, and I couldn't refuse him a
+testimonial. And as he's made himself very useful out there, it may be
+that if this steward business goes forward, Pratt will get the
+appointment. As I say, he's a smart chap."
+
+Collingwood offered no comment. But he was conscious that it would not
+be at all pleasing to him to know that Linford Pratt held any official
+position at Normandale. Foolish as it might be, mere inspiration though
+it probably was, he could not get over his impression that Eldrick's
+clerk was not precisely trustworthy. And yet, he reflected, he himself
+could do nothing--it would be utter presumption on his part to offer any
+gratuitous advice to Nesta Mallathorpe in business matters. He was very
+certain of what he eventually meant to say to her about his own personal
+hopes, some time hence, when all the present trouble was over, but in
+the meantime, as regarded anything else, he could only wait and watch,
+and be of service to her if she asked him to render any.
+
+Some time went by before Collingwood was asked to render service of any
+sort. At Normandale Grange, events progressed in apparently ordinary and
+normal fashion. Harper Mallathorpe was buried; his mother began to make
+some recovery from the shock of his death; the legal folk were busied in
+putting Nesta in possession of the estate, and herself and her mother in
+proprietorship of the mill and the personal property. In Barford, things
+went on as usual, too. Pratt continued his round of duties at Eldrick &
+Pascoe's; no more was heard--by outsiders, at any rate--of the
+stewardship at Normandale. As for Collingwood, he settled down in
+chambers and lodgings and, as Eldrick had predicted, found plenty of
+work. And he constantly went out to Normandale Grange, and often met
+Nesta elsewhere, and their knowledge of each other increased, and as the
+winter passed away and spring began to show on the Normandale woods and
+moors, Collingwood felt that the time was coming when he might speak. He
+was professionally engaged in London for nearly three weeks in the early
+part of that spring--when he returned, he had made up his mind to tell
+Nesta the truth, at once. He had faced it for himself--he was by that
+time so much in love with her that he was not going to let monetary
+considerations prevent him from telling her so.
+
+But Collingwood found something else than love to talk about when he
+presented himself at Normandale Grange on the morning after his arrival
+from his three weeks' absence in town. As soon as he met her, he saw
+that Nesta was not only upset and troubled, but angry.
+
+"I am glad you have come," she said, when they were alone. "I want some
+advice. Something has happened--something that bothers--and puzzles--me
+very, very much! I'm dreadfully bothered."
+
+"Tell me," suggested Collingwood.
+
+Nesta frowned--at some recollection or thought.
+
+"Yesterday afternoon," she answered, "I was obliged to go into Barford,
+on business. I left my mother fairly well---she has been recovering fast
+lately, and she only has one nurse now. Unfortunately, she, too, was out
+for the afternoon. I came back to find my mother ill and much
+upset---and there's no use denying it--she'd all the symptoms of having
+been--well, frightened. I can't think of any other term than
+that--frightened. And then I learned that, in my absence, Mr. Eldrick's
+clerk, Mr. Pratt--you know him--had been here, and had been with her for
+quite an hour. I am furiously angry!"
+
+Collingwood had expected this announcement as soon as she began to
+explain. So--the trouble was beginning!
+
+"How came Pratt to be admitted to your mother?" he asked.
+
+"That makes me angry, too," answered Nesta. "Though I confess I ought to
+be angry with myself for not giving stricter orders. I left the house
+about two--he came about three, and asked to see my mother's maid,
+Esther Mawson. He told her that it was absolutely necessary for him to
+see my mother on business, and she told my mother he was there. My
+mother consented to see him--and he was taken up. And as I say, I found
+her ill--and frightened--and that's not the worst of it!"
+
+"What is the worst of it?" asked Collingwood, anxiously. "Better tell
+me!--I may be able to do something."
+
+"The worst of it," she said, "is just this--my mother won't tell me what
+that man came about! She flatly refuses to tell me anything! She will
+only say that it was business of her own. She won't trust me with it,
+you see!--her own daughter! What business can that man have with
+her?--or she with him? Eldrick & Pascoe are not our solicitors! There's
+some secret and----"
+
+"Will you answer one or two questions?" said Collingwood quietly. He had
+never seen Nesta angry before, and he now realized that she had certain
+possibilities of temper and determination which would be formidable when
+roused. "First of all, is that maid you speak of, Esther Mawson,
+reliable?"
+
+"I don't know!" answered Nesta. "My mother has had her two years--she's
+a Barford woman. Sometimes I think she's sly and cunning. But I've given
+her such strict orders now that she'll never dare to let any one see my
+mother again without my consent."
+
+"The other question's this," said Collingwood. "Have you any idea, any
+suspicion of why Pratt wanted to see your mother?"
+
+"Not unless it was about that stewardship," replied Nesta. "But--how
+could that frighten her? Besides, all that's over. Normandale is
+mine!--and if I have a steward, or an estate agent, I shall see to the
+appointment myself. No!--I do not know why he should have come here!
+But--there's some mystery. The curious thing is----"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood, as she paused.
+
+"Why," she said, shaking her head wonderingly, "that I'm absolutely
+certain that my mother never even knew this man Pratt--I don't I think
+she even knew his name--until quite recently. I know when she got to
+know him, too. It was just about the time that you first called here--at
+the time of Mr. Bartle's death. Our butler told me this morning that
+Pratt came here late one evening--just about that time!--and asked to
+see my mother, and was with her for some time in the study. Oh! what is
+it all about?--and why doesn't she tell me?"
+
+Collingwood stood silently staring out of the window. At the time of
+Antony Bartle's death? An evening visit?--evidently of a secret nature.
+And why paid to Mrs. Mallathorpe at that particular time? He suddenly
+turned to Nesta.
+
+"What do you wish me to do?" he asked.
+
+"Will you speak to Mr. Eldrick?" she said. "Tell him that his clerk must
+not call upon, or attempt to see, my mother. I will not have it!"
+
+Collingwood went off to Barford, and straight to Eldrick's office. He
+noticed as he passed through the outer rooms that Pratt was not in his
+accustomed place--as a rule, it was impossible to get at either Eldrick
+or Pascoe without first seeing Pratt.
+
+"Hullo!" said Eldrick. "Just got in from town? That's lucky--I've got a
+big case for you."
+
+"I got in last night," replied Collingwood. "But I went out to
+Normandale first thing this morning: I've just come back from there. I
+say, Eldrick, here's an unpleasant matter to tell you of"; and he told
+the solicitor all that Nesta had just told him, and also of Pratt's
+visit to Mrs. Mallathorpe about the time of Antony Bartle's death.
+"Whatever it is," he concluded sternly, "it's got to stop! If you've any
+influence over your clerk----"
+
+Eldrick made a grimace and waved his hand.
+
+"He's our clerk no longer!" he said. "He left us the week after you went
+up to town, Collingwood. He was only a weekly servant, and he took
+advantage of that to give me a week's notice. Now, what game is Master
+Pratt playing? He's smart, and he's deep, too. He----"
+
+Just then an office-boy announced Mr. Robson, the Mallathorpe family
+solicitor, a bustling, rather rough-and-ready type of man, who came into
+Eldrick's room looking not only angry but astonished. He nodded to
+Collingwood, and flung himself into a chair at the side of Eldrick's
+desk.
+
+"Look here, Eldrick!" he exclaimed. "What on earth has that clerk of
+yours, Pratt, got to do with Mrs. Mallathorpe? Do you know what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has done? Hang it, she must be out of her senses,--or--or
+there's something I can't fathom. She's given your clerk, Linford Pratt,
+a power of attorney to deal with all her affairs and all her property!
+Oh, it's all right, I tell you! Pratt's been to my office, and exhibited
+it to me as if--as if he were the Lord Chancellor!"
+
+Eldrick turned to Collingwood, and Collingwood to Eldrick--and then both
+turned to Robson.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE FIRST TRICK
+
+
+The Mallathorpe family solicitor shook his head impatiently under those
+questioning glances.
+
+"It's not a bit of use appealing to me to know what it means!" he
+exclaimed. "I know no more than what I've told you. That chap walked
+into my office as bold as brass, half an hour ago, and exhibited to me a
+power of attorney, all duly drawn up and stamped, executed in his favour
+by Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday. And as Mrs. Mallathorpe is, as far as I
+know, in her senses,--why--there you are!"
+
+"What is it?" asked Eldrick. "A general power? Or a special?"
+
+"General!" answered Robson, with an air of disgust. "Authorizes him to
+act for her in all business matters. It means, of course, that that
+fellow now has full control over--why, a tremendous amount of money! The
+estate, of course, is Miss Mallathorpe's--he can't interfere with that.
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shares equally with her daughter as regards the
+personal property of Harper Mallathorpe--his share in the business, and
+all that he left, and what's more, Mrs. Mallathorpe is administratrix of
+the personal property. She's simply placed in Pratt's hands an enormous
+power! And--for what reason? Who on earth is Pratt--what right, title,
+age, or qualification, has he to be entrusted with such a big affair? I
+never knew of such a business in the whole course of my professional
+experiences!"
+
+"Nor I!" agreed Eldrick. "But there's one thing in which you're
+mistaken, Robson. You ask what qualification Pratt has for a post of
+that sort? Pratt's a very smart, clever, managing chap!"
+
+"Oh, of course! He's your clerk!" retorted Robson, a little sneeringly.
+"Naturally, you've a big idea of his abilities. But----"
+
+"He's not our clerk any longer," said Eldrick. "He left us about a week
+ago. I heard this morning that he's set up an office in Market
+Street--in the Atlas Building--and I wondered for what purpose."
+
+"Purpose of fleecing Mrs. Mallathorpe, I should say!" grumbled Robson.
+"Of course, everything of hers must pass through his hands. What on
+earth can her daughter have been thinking of to allow----"
+
+"Stop a bit!" interrupted Eldrick. "Collingwood came in to tell me about
+that--he's just come from Normandale Grange. Miss Mallathorpe complains
+that Pratt called there yesterday in her absence. That's probably when
+this power of attorney was signed. But Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know
+anything of it--she insists that Pratt shall not visit her mother."
+
+Robson stirred impatiently in his chair.
+
+"That's all bosh!" he said. "She can't prevent it. I saw Mrs.
+Mallathorpe myself three days ago--she's recovering very well, and she's
+in her right senses, and she's capable of doing business. Her daughter
+can't prevent her from doing anything she likes! And if she did what she
+liked yesterday when she signed that document--why, everybody's
+powerless--except Pratt."
+
+"There's the question of how the document was obtained," remarked
+Collingwood. "There may have been undue influence."
+
+The two solicitors looked at each other. Then Eldrick rose from his
+chair. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he said. "It's no affair of mine,
+but we employed Pratt for years, and he'll confide in me. I'll go and
+see him, and ask him what it's all about. Wait here a while, you two."
+
+He went out of his office and across into Market Street, where the Atlas
+Building, a modern range of offices and chambers, towered above the
+older structures at its foot. In the entrance hall a man was gilding the
+name of a new tenant on the address board--that name was Pratt's, and
+Eldrick presently found himself ascending in the lift to Pratt's
+quarters on the fifth floor. Within five minutes of leaving Collingwood
+and Robson, he was closeted with Pratt in a well-furnished and appointed
+little office of two rooms, the inner one of which was almost luxurious
+in its fittings. And Pratt himself looked extremely well satisfied, and
+confident--and quite at his ease. He wheeled forward an easy chair for
+his visitor, and pushed a box of cigarettes towards him.
+
+"Glad to see you, Mr. Eldrick," he said, with a cordial politeness which
+suggested, however, somehow, that he and the solicitor were no longer
+master and servant. "How do you like my little place of business?"
+
+"You're making a comfortable nest of it, anyhow, Pratt," answered
+Eldrick, looking round. "And--what sort of business are you going to do,
+pray?"
+
+"Agency," replied Pratt, promptly. "It struck me some little time ago
+that a smart man,--like myself, eh?--could do well here in Barford as an
+agent in a new sort of fashion--attending to things for people who
+aren't fitted or inclined to do 'em for themselves--or are rich enough
+to employ somebody to look after their affairs. Of course, that
+Normandale stewardship dropped out when young Harper died, and I don't
+suppose the notion 'll be revived now that his sister's come in. But
+I've got one good job to go on with---Mrs. Mallathorpe's given me her
+affairs to look after."
+
+Eldrick took one of the cigarettes and lighted it--as a sign of his
+peaceable and amicable intentions.
+
+"Pratt!" he said. "That's just what I've come to see you about.
+Unofficially, mind--in quite a friendly way. It's like this"; and he
+went on to tell Pratt of what had just occurred at his own office.
+"So--there you are," he concluded. "I'm saying nothing, you know, it's
+no affair of mine--but if these people begin to say that you've used any
+undue influence----"
+
+"Mr. Collingwood, and Mr. Robson, and Miss Mallathorpe--and anybody,"
+answered Pratt, slowly and firmly, "had better mind what they are
+saying, Mr. Eldrick. There's such a thing as slander, as you're well
+aware. I'm not the man to be slandered, or libelled, or to have my
+character defamed--without fighting for my rights. There has been no
+undue influence! I went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday at her own
+request. The arrangement between me and her is made with her approval
+and free will. If her daughter found her a bit upset, it's because she'd
+such a shock at the time of her son's death. I did nothing to frighten
+her, not I! The fact is, Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know that her mother
+and I have had a bit of business together of late. And all that Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has entrusted to me is the power to look after her affairs
+for her. And why not? You know that I'm a good man of business, a really
+good hand at commercial accountancy, and well acquainted with the trade
+of this town. You know too, Mr. Eldrick, that I'm scrupulously
+honest--I've had many and many a thousand pounds of yours and your
+partner's through my hands! Who's got anything to say against me? I'm
+only trying to earn an honest living."
+
+"Well, well!" said Eldrick, who, being an easy-going and
+kindly-dispositioned man, was somewhat inclined to side with his old
+clerk. "I suppose Mr. Robson thinks that if Mrs. Mallathorpe wished to
+put her affairs in anybody's hands, she should have put them in his.
+He's their family solicitor, you know, Pratt, while you're a young man
+with no claim on Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Pratt smiled--a queer, knowing smile--and reached out his hand to some
+papers which lay on his desk.
+
+"You're wrong there, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "But of course, you don't
+know. I didn't know myself, nor did Mrs. Mallathorpe, until lately. But
+I have a claim--and a good one--to get a business lift from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. I'm a relation."
+
+"What--of the Mallathorpe family?" exclaimed Eldrick, whose legal mind
+was at once bitten by notion of kinship and succession, and who knew
+that Harper Mallathorpe was supposed to have no male relatives at all,
+of any degree. "You don't mean it?"
+
+"No!--but of hers, Mrs. Mallathorpe," answered Pratt. "My mother was her
+cousin. I found that out by mere chance, and when I'd found it, I worked
+out the facts from our parish church register. They're all here--fairly
+copied--Mrs. Mallathorpe has seen them. So I have some claim--even if
+it's only that of a poor relation."
+
+Eldrick took the sheets of foolscap which Pratt handed to him, and
+looked them over with interest and curiosity. He was something of an
+expert in such matters, and had helped to edit a print more than once of
+the local parish registers. He soon saw from a hasty examination of the
+various entries of marriages and births that Pratt was quite right in
+what he said.
+
+"I call it a poor--and a mean--game," remarked Pratt, while his old
+master was thus occupied, "a very mean game indeed, of well-to-do folk
+like Mr. Collingwood and Mr. Robson to want to injure me in a matter
+which is no business of theirs. I shall do my duty by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe--you yourself know I'm fully competent to do it--and I shall
+fully earn the percentage that she'll pay me. What right have these
+people--what right has her daughter--to come between me and my living?"
+
+"Oh, well, well!" said Eldrick, as he handed back the papers and rose.
+"It's one of those matters that hasn't been understood. You made a
+mistake, you know, Pratt, when you went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday
+in her daughter's absence. You shouldn't have done that."
+
+Pratt pulled open a drawer and, after turning over some loose papers,
+picked out a letter.
+
+"Do you know Mrs. Mallathorpe's handwriting?" he asked. "Very
+well--there it is! Isn't that a request from her that I should call on
+her yesterday afternoon? Very well then!"
+
+Eldrick looked at the letter with some surprise. He had a good memory,
+and he remembered that Collingwood had told him that Nesta had said that
+Pratt had gone to Normandale Grange, seen Esther Mawson, and told her
+that it was absolutely necessary for him to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. And
+though Eldrick was naturally unsuspicious, an idea flashed across his
+mind--had Pratt got Mrs. Mallathorpe to write that letter while he was
+there--yesterday--and brought it away with him?
+
+"I think there's a good deal of misunderstanding," he said. "Mr.
+Collingwood says that you went there and told her maid that it was
+absolutely necessary for you to see her mistress--sort of forced
+yourself in, you see, Pratt."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" retorted Pratt. He flourished the letter in his
+hand. "Doesn't it say there, in Mrs. Mallathorpe's own handwriting, that
+she particularly desires to see me at three o'clock? It does! Then it
+was absolutely necessary for me to see her. Come, now! And Mr.
+Collingwood had best attend to his own business. What's he got to do
+with all this? After Miss Mallathorpe and her money, I should
+think!--that's about it!"
+
+Eldrick said another soothing word or two, and went back to his own
+office. He was considerably mystified by certain things, but inclined to
+be satisfied about others, and in giving an account of what had just
+taken place he unconsciously seemed to take Pratt's side--much to
+Robson's disgust, and to Collingwood's astonishment.
+
+"You can't get over this, you know, Robson," said Eldrick. "Pratt went
+there yesterday by appointment--went at Mrs. Mallathorpe's own express
+desire, made in her own handwriting. And it's quite certain that what he
+says about the relationship is true---I examined the proof myself. It's
+not unnatural that Mrs. Mallathorpe should desire to do something for
+her own cousin's son."
+
+"To that extent?" sneered Robson. "Bless me, you talk as if it were no
+more than presenting him with a twenty pound note, instead of its being
+what it is--giving him the practical control of many a thousand pounds
+every year. There'll be more heard of this--yet!"
+
+He went away angrier than when he came, and Eldrick looked at
+Collingwood and shook his head.
+
+"I don't see what more there is to do," he said. "So far as I can make
+out, or see, Pratt is within his rights. If Mrs. Mallathorpe liked to
+entrust her business to him, what is to prevent it? I see nothing at all
+strange in that. But there is a fact which does seem uncommonly strange
+to me! It's this--how is it that Mrs. Mallathorpe doesn't consult,
+hasn't consulted--doesn't inform, hasn't informed--her daughter about
+all this?"
+
+"That," answered Collingwood, "is precisely what strikes me--and I can't
+give any explanation. Nor, I believe, can Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+He felt obliged to go back to Normandale, and tell Nesta the result of
+the afternoon's proceedings. And having seen during his previous visit
+how angry she could be, he was not surprised to see her become angrier
+and more determined than ever.
+
+"I will not have Mr. Pratt coming here!" she exclaimed. "He shall not
+see my mother--under my roof, at any rate. I don't believe she sent for
+him."
+
+"Mr. Eldrick saw her letter!" interrupted Collingwood quietly.
+
+"Then that man made her write it while he was here!" exclaimed Nesta.
+"As to the relationship--it may be so. I never heard of it. But I don't
+care what relation he is to my mother--he is not going to interfere with
+her affairs!"
+
+"The strange thing," said Collingwood, as pointedly as was consistent
+with kindness, "is that your mother--just now, at any rate--doesn't seem
+to be taking you into her confidence."
+
+Nesta looked steadily at him for a moment, without speaking. When she
+did speak it was with decision.
+
+"Quite so!" she said. "She is keeping something from me! And if she
+won't tell me things--well, I must find them out for myself."
+
+She would say no more than that, and Collingwood left her. And as he
+went back to Barford he cursed Linford Pratt soundly for a deep and
+underhand rogue who was most certainly playing some fine game.
+
+But Pratt himself was quite satisfied--up to that point. He had won his
+first trick and he had splendid cards still left in his hand. And he was
+reckoning his chances on them one morning a little later when a ring at
+his bell summoned him to his office door--whereat stood Nesta
+Mallathorpe, alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+
+Had any third person been present, closely to observe the meeting of
+these two young people, he would have seen that the one to whom it was
+unexpected and a surprise was outwardly as calm and self-possessed as if
+the other had come there to keep an ordinary business appointment.
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, looking very dignified and almost stately in her
+mourning, was obviously angry, indignant, and agitated. But Pratt was as
+cool and as fully at his ease as if he were back in Eldrick's office,
+receiving the everyday ordinary client. He swept his door open and
+executed his politest bow--and was clever enough to pretend that he saw
+nothing of his visitor's agitation. Yet deep within himself he felt more
+tremors than one, and it needed all his powers of dissimulation to act
+and speak as if this were the most usual of occurrences.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "You wish to see me? Come
+into my private office, if you please. I haven't fixed on a clerk yet,"
+he went on, as he led his visitor through the outer room, and to the
+easy chair by his desk. "I have several applications from promising
+aspirants, but I have to be careful, you know, Miss Mallathorpe--it's a
+position of confidence. And now," he concluded, as he closed the door
+upon Nesta and himself, "how is Mrs. Mallathorpe today? Improving, I
+hope?"
+
+Nesta made no reply to these remarks, or to the question. And instead of
+taking the easy chair which Eldrick had found so comfortable, she went
+to one which stood against the wall opposite Pratt's desk and seated
+herself in it in as upright a position as the wall behind her.
+
+"I wish to speak to you--plainly!" she said, as Pratt, who now regarded
+her somewhat doubtfully, realizing that he was in for business of a
+serious nature, sat down at his desk. "I want to ask you a plain
+question--and I expect a plain answer. Why are you blackmailing my
+mother?"
+
+Pratt shook his head--as if he felt more sorrow than anger. He glanced
+deprecatingly at his visitor.
+
+"I think you'll be sorry--on reflection--that you said that, Miss
+Mallathorpe," he answered. "You're a little--shall we say--upset? A
+little--shall we say--angry? If you were calmer, you wouldn't say such
+things--you wouldn't use such a term as--blackmailing. It's--dear me, I
+dare say you don't know it!--it's actionable. If I were that sort of
+man, Miss Mallathorpe, and you said that of me before witnesses--ah! I
+don't know what mightn't happen. However--I'm not that sort of man.
+But--don't say it again, if you please!"
+
+"If you don't answer my question--and at once," said Nesta, whose cheeks
+were pale with angry determination, "I shall say it again in a fashion
+you won't like--not to you, but to the police!"
+
+Pratt smiled--a quiet, strange smile which made his visitor feel a
+sudden sense of fear. And again he shook his head, slowly and
+deprecatingly.
+
+"Oh, no!" he said gently. "That's a bigger mistake than the other, Miss
+Mallathorpe! The police! Oh, not the police, I think, Miss Mallathorpe.
+You see--other people than you might go to the police--about something
+else."
+
+Nesta's anger cooled down under that scarcely veiled threat. The sight
+of Pratt, of his self-assurance, his comfortable offices, his general
+atmosphere of almost sleek satisfaction, had roused her temper, already
+strained to breaking point. But that smile, and the quiet look which
+accompanied his last words, warned her that anger was mere foolishness,
+and that she was in the presence of a man who would have to be dealt
+with calmly if the dealings were to be successful. Yet--she repeated her
+words, but this time in a different tone.
+
+"I shall certainly go to the police authorities," she said, "unless I
+get some proper explanation from you. I shall have no option. You are
+forcing--or have forced--my mother to enter into some strange
+arrangements with you, and I can't think it is for anything but what I
+say--blackmail. You've got--or you think you've got--some hold on her.
+Now what is it? I mean to know, one way or another!"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," said Pratt. "You're taking a wrong course--with me.
+Now who advised you to come here and speak to me like this, as if I were
+a common criminal? Mr. Collingwood, no doubt? Or perhaps Mr. Robson? Now
+if either----"
+
+"Neither Mr. Robson nor Mr. Collingwood know anything whatever about my
+coming here!" retorted Nesta. "No one knows! I am quite competent to
+manage my own affairs--of this sort. I want to know why my mother has
+been forced into that arrangement with you--for I am sure you have
+forced her! If you will not tell me why--then I shall do what I said."
+
+"You'll go to the police authorities?" asked Pratt. "Ah!--but let us
+consider things a little, Miss Mallathorpe. Now, to start with, who says
+there has been any forcing? I know one person who won't say so--and
+that's your mother herself!"
+
+Nesta felt unable to answer that assertion. And Pratt smiled
+triumphantly and went on.
+
+"She'll tell you--Mrs. Mallathorpe'll tell you--that she's very pleased
+indeed to have my poor services," he said. "She knows that I shall serve
+her well. She's glad to do a kind service to a poor relation. And since
+I am your mother's relation, Miss Mallathorpe, I'm yours, too. I'm some
+degree of cousin to you. You might think rather better, rather more
+kindly, of me!"
+
+"Are you going to tell me anything more than that?" asked Nesta
+steadily. Pratt shrugged his shoulders and waved his hands.
+
+"What more can I tell?" he asked. "The fact is, there's a business
+arrangement between me and your mother--and you object to it. Well--I'm
+sorry, but I've my own interests to consider."
+
+"Are you going to tell me what it was that induced my mother to sign
+that paper you got from her the other day?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Can I say more than that it was--a business arrangement?" pleaded
+Pratt. "There's nothing unusual in one party in a business arrangement
+giving a power of attorney to another party. Nothing!"
+
+"Very well!" said Nesta, rising from the straight-backed chair, and
+looking very rigid herself as she stood up. "You won't tell me anything!
+So--I am now going to the police. I don't know what they'll do. I don't
+know what they can do. But--I can tell them what I think and feel about
+this, at any rate. For as sure as I am that I see you, there's something
+wrong! And I'll know what it is."
+
+Pratt recognized that she had passed beyond the stage of mere anger to
+one of calm determination. And as she marched towards the door he called
+her back--as the result of a second's swift thought on his part.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," he said. "Oblige me by sitting down again. I'm not
+in the least afraid of your going to the police. But my experience is
+that if one goes to them on errands of this sort, it sets all sorts of
+things going--scandal, and suspicion, and I don't know what! You don't
+want any scandal. Sit down, if you please, and let us think for a
+moment. And I'll see if I can tell you--what you want to know."
+
+Nesta already had a hand on the door. But after looking at him for a
+second or two, she turned back, and sat down in her old position. And
+Pratt, still seated at his desk, plunged his hands in his trousers
+pockets, tilted back his chair, and for five minutes stared with knitted
+brows at his blotting pad. A queer silence fell on the room. The windows
+were double-sashed; no sound came up from the busy street below. But on
+the mantelpiece a cheap Geneva clock ticked and ticked, and Nesta felt
+at last that if it went on much longer, without the accompaniment of a
+human voice, she should suddenly snatch it up, and hurl it--anywhere.
+
+Pratt was in the position of the card-player, who, confronted by a
+certain turn in the course of a game which he himself feels sure he is
+bound to win, wonders whether he had better not expedite matters by
+laying his cards on the table, and asking his opponent if he can
+possibly beat their values and combination. He had carefully reckoned up
+his own position more than once during the progress of recent events,
+and the more carefully he calculated it the more he felt convinced that
+he had nothing to fear. He had had to alter his ground in consequence of
+the death of Harper Mallathorpe, and he had known that he would have to
+fight Nesta. But he had not anticipated that hostilities would come so
+soon, or begin with such evident determination on her part. How would it
+be, then, at this first stage to make such a demonstration in force that
+she would recognize his strength?
+
+He looked up at last and saw Nesta regarding him sternly. But Pratt
+smiled--the quiet smile which made her uneasy.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "I was thinking of two things just then--a
+game at cards--and the science of warfare. In both it's a good thing
+sometimes to let your adversary see what a strong hand you've got. Now,
+then, a question, if you please--are you and I adversaries?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Nesta unflinchingly. "You're acting like an enemy--you
+are an enemy!"
+
+"I've hoped that you and I would be friends--good friends," said Pratt,
+with something like a sigh. "And if I may say so, I've no feeling of
+enmity towards you. When I speak of us being adversaries, I mean it
+in--well, let's say a sort of legal sense. But now I'll show you my
+hand--that is, as far as I please. Will you listen quietly to me?"
+
+"I've no choice," replied Nesta bluntly. "And I came here to know what
+you've got to say for yourself. Say it!"
+
+Pratt moved his chair a little nearer to his visitor.
+
+"Now," he said, speaking very quietly and deliberately, "I'll go through
+what I have to say to you carefully, point by point. I shall ask you to
+go back a little way. It is now some time since I discovered a secret
+about your mother, Mrs. Mallathorpe. Ah, you start!--it may be with
+indignation, but I assure you I'm telling you, and am going to tell you,
+the absolute truth. I say--a secret! No one knows it but myself--not one
+living soul! Except, of course, your mother. I shall not reveal it to
+you--under any consideration, or in any circumstances--but I can tell
+you this--if that secret were revealed, your mother would be ruined for
+life--and you yourself would suffer in more ways than one."
+
+Nesta looked at him incredulously--and yet she began to feel he was
+telling some truth. And Pratt shook his head at the incredulous
+expression.
+
+"It's quite so!" he said. "You'll begin to believe it---from other
+things. Now, it was in connection with this that I paid a visit to
+Normandale Grange one evening some months ago. Perhaps you never heard
+of that? I was alone with your mother for some time in the study."
+
+"I have heard of it," she answered.
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "But you haven't heard that your mother came to
+see me at my rooms here in Barford--my lodgings--the very next night! On
+the same business, of course. But she did--I know how she came, too.
+Secretly--heavily veiled--naturally, she didn't want anybody to know.
+Are you beginning to see something in it, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Go on with your--story," answered Nesta.
+
+"I go on, then, to the day before your brother's death," continued
+Pratt. "Namely, a certain Friday. Now, if you please, I'll invite you to
+listen carefully to certain facts--which are indisputable, which I can
+prove, easily. On that Friday, the day before your brother's death, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was in the shrubbery at Normandale Grange which is near the
+north end of the old foot-bridge. She was approached by Hoskins, an old
+woodman, who has been on the estate a great many years--you know him
+well enough. Hoskins told Mrs. Mallathorpe that the foot-bridge between
+the north and south shrubberies, spanning the cut which was made there a
+long time since so that a nearer road could be made to the stables, was
+in an extremely dangerous condition--so dangerous, in fact, that in his
+opinion, it would collapse under even a moderate weight. I impress this
+fact upon you strongly."
+
+"Well?" said Nesta.
+
+"Hoskins," Pratt went on, "urged upon Mrs. Mallathorpe the necessity of
+having the bridge closed at once, or barricaded. He pointed out to her
+from where they stood certain places in the bridge, and in the railing
+on one side of it, which already sagged in such a fashion, that he, as a
+man of experience, knew that planks and railings were literally rotten
+with damp. Now what did Mrs. Mallathorpe do? She said nothing to
+Hoskins, except that she'd have the thing seen to. But she immediately
+went to the estate carpenter's shop, and there she procured two short
+lengths of chain, and two padlocks, and she herself went back to the
+foot-bridge and secured its wicket gates at both ends. I beg you will
+bear that in mind, too, Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I am bearing everything in mind," said Nesta resolutely. "Don't be
+afraid that I shall forget one word that you say."
+
+"I hear that sneer in your voice," answered Pratt, as he turned,
+unlocked a drawer, and drew out some papers. "But I think you will soon
+learn that the sneer at what I'm telling you is foolish. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe had a set purpose in locking up those gates--as you will see
+presently. You will see it from what I am now going to tell you. Oblige
+me, if you please, by looking at that letter. Do you recognize your
+mother's handwriting?"
+
+"Yes!" admitted Nesta, with a sudden feeling of apprehension. "That is
+her writing."
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "Then before I read it to you, I'll just tell
+you what this letter is. It formed, when it was written, an invitation
+from Mrs. Mallathorpe to me--an invitation to walk, innocently, into
+what she knew--knew, mind you!--to be a death-trap! She meant _me_ to
+fall through the bridge!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+
+For a full moment of tense silence Nesta and Pratt looked at each other
+across the letter which he held in his outstretched hand--looked
+steadily and with a certain amount of stern inquiry. And it was Nesta's
+eyes which first gave way--beaten by the certainty in Pratt's. She
+looked aside; her cheeks flamed; she felt as if something were rising in
+her throat--to choke her.
+
+"I can't believe that!" she muttered. "You're--mistaken! Oh--utterly
+mistaken!"
+
+"No mistake!" said Pratt confidently. "I tell you your mother meant
+me--me!--to meet my death at that bridge. Here's the proof in this
+letter! I'll tell you, first, when I received it: then I'll read you
+what's in it, and if you doubt my reading of it, you shall read it
+yourself--but it won't go out of my hands! And first as to my getting
+it, for that's important. It reached me, by registered post, mind you,
+on the Saturday morning on which your brother met his death. It was
+handed in at Normandale village post-office for registration late on the
+Friday afternoon. And--by whom do you think?"
+
+"I--don't know!" replied Nesta faintly. This merciless piling up of
+details was beginning to frighten her--already she felt as if she
+herself were some criminal, forced to listen from the dock to the
+opening address of a prosecuting counsel. "How should I know?--how can I
+think?"
+
+"It was handed in for registration by your mother's maid, Esther
+Mawson," said Pratt with a dark look. "I've got her evidence, anyway!
+And that was all part of a plan--just as a certain something that was
+enclosed was a part of the same plan--a plot. And now I'll read you the
+letter--and you'll bear it in mind that I got it by first post that
+Saturday morning. This is what it--what your mother--says:--
+
+ "I particularly wish to see you again, at once, about the matter
+ between us and to have another look at _that document_. Can you
+ come here, bringing it with you, tomorrow, Saturday afternoon,
+ by the train which leaves soon after two o'clock? As I am most
+ anxious that your visit should be private and unknown to any one
+ here, do not come to the house. Take the path across the park to
+ the shrubberies near the house, so that if you are met people
+ would think you were taking a near cut to the village. I will
+ meet you in the shrubbery on the house side of the little
+ foot-bridge. The gates--'"
+
+Pratt suddenly paused, and before proceeding looked hard at his visitor.
+
+"Now listen to what follows--and bear in mind what your mother knew, and
+had done, at the time she wrote this letter. This is how the letter goes
+on---let every word fix itself in your mind, Miss Mallathorpe!"
+
+ "'The gates of the foot-bridge are locked, but the enclosed keys
+ will open them. I will meet you amongst the trees on the further
+ side. Be sure to come and to bring _that document_--I have
+ something to say about it on seeing it again.'"
+
+Pratt turned to the drawer from which he had taken the letter and took
+out two small keys, evidently belonging to patent padlocks. He held them
+up before Nesta.
+
+"There they are!" he said triumphantly. "Been in my possession ever
+since--and will remain there. Now--do you wish to read the letter? I've
+read it to you word for word. You don't? Very good--back it goes in
+there, with these keys. And now then," he continued, having replaced
+letter and keys in his drawer, and turned to her again, "now then, you
+see what a diabolical scheme it was that was in your mother's mind
+against me. She meant me to meet with the fate which overtook her own
+son! She meant me to fall through that bridge. Why? She hoped that I
+should break my neck--as he did! She wanted to silence me--but she also
+wanted more--she wanted to take from my dead body, or my unconscious
+body, the certain something which she was so anxious I should bring with
+me, which she referred to as _that document_. She was willing to risk
+anything--even to murder!--to get hold of that. And now you know why I
+went to Normandale Grange that Saturday--you know, now, the real reason.
+I told a deliberate lie at the inquest, for your mother's sake--for your
+sake, if you know it. I did not go there to hand in my application for
+the stewardship--I went in response to the letter I've just read. Is all
+this clear to you?"
+
+Nesta could only move her head in silent acquiescence. She was already
+convinced, that whether all this was entirely true or not, there was
+truth of some degree in what Pratt had told her. And she was thinking of
+her mother--and of the trap which she certainly appeared to have
+laid--and of her brother's fate--and for the moment she felt sick and
+beaten. But Pratt went on in that cold, calculating voice, telling his
+story point by point.
+
+"Now I come to what happened that Saturday afternoon," he said. "I may
+as well tell you that in my own interest I have carefully collected
+certain evidence which never came out at the inquest--which, indeed, has
+nothing to do with the exact matter of the inquest. Now, that Saturday,
+your mother and you had lunch together--your brother, as we shall see in
+a moment, being away--at your lunch time--a quarter to two. About twenty
+minutes past two your mother left the house. She went out into the
+gardens. She left the gardens for the shrubberies. And at twenty-five
+minutes to three, she was seen by one of your gardeners, Featherstone,
+in what was, of course, hiding, amongst the trees at the end of the
+north shrubbery. What was she doing there, Miss Mallathorpe? She was
+waiting!--waiting until a certain hoped-for accident happened--to me.
+Then she would come out of her hiding-place in the hope of getting that
+document from my pocket! Do you see how cleverly she'd laid her
+plans--murderous plans?"
+
+Nesta was making a great effort to be calm. She knew now that she was
+face to face with some awful mystery which could only be solved by
+patience and strenuous endeavour. She knew, too, that she must show no
+sign of fear before this man!
+
+"Will you finish your story, if you please?" she asked.
+
+"In my own way--in my own time," answered Pratt. "I now come to--your
+mother. On the Friday noon, the late Mr. Harper Mallathorpe went to
+Barford to visit a friend--young Stemthwaite, at the Hollies. He was to
+stay the night there, and was not expected home until Saturday evening.
+He did stay the night, and remained in Barford until noon on Saturday;
+but he--unexpectedly--returned to the house at half past two. And almost
+as soon as he'd got in, he picked up a gun and strolled out--into the
+gardens and the north shrubbery. And, as you know, he went to the
+foot-bridge. You see, Miss Mallathorpe, your mother, clever as she was,
+had forgotten one detail--the gates of that footbridge were merely low,
+four-barred things, and there was nothing to prevent an active young man
+from climbing them. She forgot another thing, too--that warning had not
+been given at the house that the bridge was dangerous. And, of course,
+she'd never, never calculated that your brother would return sooner than
+he was expected, or that, on his return, he'd go where he did. And
+so--but I'll spare you any reference to what happened. Only--you know
+now how it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe was found by her son's body. She'd
+been waiting about--for me! But--the fate she'd meant for me was dealt
+out to--him!"
+
+In spite of herself Nesta gave way to a slight cry.
+
+"I can't bear any more of that!" she said. "Have you finished?"
+
+"There's not much more to say--now at any rate," replied Pratt. "And
+what I have to say shall be to the point. I'm sorry enough to have been
+obliged to say all that I have said. But, you know, you forced me to it!
+You threatened me. The real truth, Miss Mallathorpe, is just this--you
+don't understand me at all. You come here--excuse my plain
+speech--hectoring and bullying me with talk about the police, and
+blackmail, and I don't know what! It's I who ought to go to the police!
+I could have your mother arrested, and put in the dock, on a charge of
+attempted murder, this very day! I've got all the proofs."
+
+"I suppose you held that out as a threat to her when you forced her to
+sign that power of attorney?" observed Nesta.
+
+For the first time since her arrival Pratt looked at his visitor in an
+unfriendly fashion. His expression changed and his face flushed a
+little.
+
+"You think that, do you?" he said. "Well, you're wrong. I'm not a fool.
+I held out no such threat. I didn't even tell your mother what I'd found
+out. I wasn't going to show her my hand all at once--though I've shown
+you a good deal of it."
+
+"Not all?" she asked quickly.
+
+"Not all," answered Pratt with a meaning glance. "To use more
+metaphors--I've several cards up my sleeve, Miss Mallathorpe. But you're
+utterly wrong about the threats. I'll tell you--I don't mind that--how I
+got the authority you're speaking about. Your mother had promised me
+that stewardship--for life. I'd have been a good steward. But we
+recognized that your brother's death had altered things--that you,
+being, as she said, a self-willed young woman--you see how plain I
+am--would insist on looking after your own affairs. So she gave
+me--another post. I'll discharge its duties honestly."
+
+"Yes," said Nesta, "but you've already told me that you'd a hold on my
+mother before any of these recent events happened, and that you possess
+some document which she was anxious to get into her hands. So it comes
+to this--you've a double hold on her, according to your story."
+
+"Just so," agreed Pratt. "You're right, I have--a double hold."
+
+Nesta looked at him silently for a while: Pratt looked at her.
+
+"Very well," she said at last. "How much do you want--to be bought out?"
+
+Pratt laughed.
+
+"I thought that would be the end of it!" he remarked. "Yes--I thought
+so!"
+
+"Name your price!" said Nesta.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" answered Pratt, bending forward and speaking with a
+new earnestness. "Just listen to me. It's no good. I'm not to be bought
+out. Your mother tried that game with me before. She offered me first
+five, then ten thousand pounds--cash down--for that document, when she
+came to see me at my rooms. I dare say she'd have gone to twenty
+thousand--and found the money there and then. But I said no then--and I
+say no to you! I'm not to be purchased in that way. I've my own ideas,
+my own plans, my own ambitions, my own--hopes. It's not any use at all
+for you to dangle your money before me. But--I'll suggest something
+else--that you can do."
+
+Nesta made no answer. She continued to look steadily at the man who
+evidently had her mother in his power, and Pratt, who was watching her
+intently, went on speaking quietly but with some intensity of tone.
+
+"You can do this," he said. "To start with--and it'll go a long
+way--just try and think better of me. I told you, you don't understand
+me. Try to! I'm not a bad lot. I've great abilities. I'm a hard worker.
+Eldrick & Pascoe could tell you that I'm scrupulously honest in money
+matters. You'll see that I'll look after your mother's affairs in a
+fashion that'll commend itself to any firm of auditors and accountants
+who may look into my accounts every year. I'm only taking the salary
+from her that I was to have had for the stewardship. So--why not leave
+it at that? Let things be! Perhaps--in time you'll come to see that--I'm
+to be trusted."
+
+"How can I trust a man who deliberately tells me that he holds a secret
+and a document over a woman's head?" demanded Nesta. "You've admitted a
+previous hold on my mother. You say you're in possession of a secret
+that would ruin her--quite apart from recent events. Is that honest?"
+
+"It was none of my seeking," retorted Pratt. "I gained the knowledge by
+accident."
+
+"You're giving yourself away," said Nesta. "Or you've some mental twist
+or defect which prevents you from seeing things straight. It's not how
+you got your knowledge, but the use you're making of it that's the
+important thing! You're using it to force my mother to----"
+
+"Excuse me!" interrupted Pratt with a queer smile. "It's you who don't
+see things straight. I'm using my knowledge to protect--all of you. Let
+your mind go back to what was said at first--to what I said at first. I
+said that I'd discovered a secret which, if revealed, would ruin your
+mother and injure--you! So it would--more than ever, now. So, you see,
+in keeping it, I'm taking care, not only of her interests, but
+of--yours!"
+
+Nesta rose. She realized that there was no more to be said--or done. And
+Pratt rose, too, and looked at her almost appealingly.
+
+"I wish you'd try to see things as I've put them, Miss Mallathorpe," he
+said. "I don't bear malice against your mother for that scheme she
+contrived--I'm willing to put it clear out of my head. Why not accept
+things as they are? I'll keep that secret for ever--no one shall ever
+know about it. Why not be friends, now--why not shake hands?"
+
+He held out his hand as he spoke. But Nesta drew back.
+
+"No!" she said. "My opinion is just what it was when I came here."
+
+Before Pratt could move she had turned swiftly to the door and let
+herself out, and in another minute she was amongst the crowds in the
+street below. For a few minutes she walked in the direction of Robson's
+offices, but when she had nearly reached them, she turned, and went
+deliberately to those of Eldrick & Pascoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+
+By the time she had been admitted to Eldrick's private room, Nesta had
+regained her composure; she had also had time to think, and her present
+action was the result of at any rate a part of her thoughts. She was
+calm and collected enough when she took the chair which the solicitor
+drew forward.
+
+"I called on you for two reasons, Mr. Eldrick," she said. "First, to
+thank you for your kindness and thoughtfulness at the time of my
+brother's death, in sending your clerk to help in making the
+arrangements."
+
+"Very glad he was of any assistance, Miss Mallathorpe," answered
+Eldrick. "I thought, of course, that as he had been on the spot, as it
+were, when the accident happened, he could do a few little things----"
+
+"He was very useful in that way," said Nesta. "And I was very much
+obliged to him. But the second reason for my call is--I want to speak to
+you about him."
+
+"Yes?" responded Eldrick. He had already formed some idea as to what was
+in his visitor's mind, and he was secretly glad of the opportunity of
+talking to her. "About Pratt, eh? What about him, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"He was with you for some years, I believe?" she asked.
+
+"A good many years," answered Eldrick. "He came to us as office-boy, and
+was head-clerk when he left us."
+
+"Then you ought to know him--well," she suggested.
+
+"As to that," replied Eldrick, "there are some people in this world whom
+other people never could know well--that's to say, really well. I know
+Pratt well enough for what he was--our clerk. Privately, I know little
+about him. He's clever--he's ability--he's a chap who reads a good
+deal--he's got ambitions. And I should say he is a bit--subtle."
+
+"Deceitful?" she asked.
+
+"I couldn't say that," replied Eldrick. "It wouldn't be true if I said
+so. I think he's possibilities of strategy in him. But so far as we're
+concerned, we found him hardworking, energetic, truthful, dependable and
+honest, and absolutely to be trusted in money matters. He's had many and
+many a thousand pounds of ours through his hands."
+
+"I believe you're unaware that my mother, for some reason or other,
+unknown to me, has put him in charge of her affairs?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Yes--Mr. Collingwood told me so," answered Eldrick. "So, too, did your
+own solicitor, Mr. Robson--who's very angry about it."
+
+"And you?" she said, putting a direct question. "What do you think? Do
+please, tell me!"
+
+"It's difficult to say, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, with a smile
+and a shake of the head. "If your mother--who, of course, is quite
+competent to decide for herself--wishes to have somebody to look after
+her affairs, I don't see what objection can be taken to her procedure.
+And if she chooses to put Linford Pratt in that position--why not? As I
+tell you, I, as his last--and only--employer, am quite convinced of his
+abilities and probity. I suppose that as your mother's agent, he'll
+supervise her property, collect money due to her, advise her in
+investments, and so on. Well, I should say--personally, mind--he's quite
+competent to do all that, and that he'll do it honestly, I should
+certainly say so."
+
+"But--why should he do it at all?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick waved his hands.
+
+"Ah!" he exclaimed. "Now you ask me a very different question! But--I
+understand--in fact, I know--that Pratt turns out to be a relation of
+yours--distant, but it's there. Perhaps your mother--who, of course, is
+much better off since your brother's sad death--is desirous of
+benefiting Pratt--as a relation."
+
+"Do you advise anything?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Well, you know, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, smiling. "I'm not
+your legal adviser. What about Mr. Robson?"
+
+"Mr. Robson is so very angry about all this--with my mother," said
+Nesta, "that I don't even want to ask his advice. What I really do want
+is the advice, counsel, of somebody--perhaps more as a friend than as a
+solicitor."
+
+"Delighted to give you any help I can--either professionally or as a
+friend," exclaimed Eldrick. "But--let me suggest something. And first of
+all--is there anything--something--in all this that you haven't told to
+anybody yet?"
+
+"Yes--much!" she answered. "A great deal!"
+
+"Then," said Eldrick, "let me advise a certain counsel. Two heads are
+better than one. Let me ask Mr. Collingwood to come here."
+
+He was watching his visitor narrowly as he said this, and he saw a faint
+rise of colour in her cheeks. But for the moment she did not answer, and
+Eldrick saw that she was thinking.
+
+"I can get him across from his chambers in a few minutes," he said.
+"He's sure to be in just now."
+
+"Can I have a few minutes to decide?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick jumped up.
+
+"Of course!" he said. "I'll leave you a while. It so happens I want to
+see my partner, I'll go up to his room, and return to you presently."
+
+Nesta, left alone, gave herself up to deep thought, and to a careful
+reckoning of her position. She was longing to confide in some
+trustworthy person or persons, for Pratt's revelations had plunged her
+into a maze of perplexity. But her difficulties were many. First of all,
+she would have to tell all about the terrible charge brought by Pratt
+against her mother. Then about the second which he professed to--or
+probably did--hold. What sort of a secret could it be? And supposing her
+advisers suggested strong measures against Pratt--what then, about the
+danger to her mother, in a twofold direction?
+
+Would it be better, wiser, if she kept all this to herself at present,
+and waited for events to develop? But at the mere thought of that, she
+shrank, feeling mentally and physically afraid--to keep all that
+knowledge to herself, to brood over it in secret, to wonder what it all
+meant, what lay beneath, what might develop, that was more than she felt
+able to bear. And when Eldrick came back she looked at him and nodded.
+
+"I should like to talk to you and Mr. Collingwood," she said quietly.
+
+Collingwood came across to Eldrick's office at once. And to these two
+Nesta unbosomed herself of every detail that she could remember of her
+interview with Pratt--and as she went on, from one thing to another, she
+saw the men's faces grow graver and graver, and realized that this was a
+more anxious matter than she had thought.
+
+"That's all," she said in the end. "I don't think I've forgotten
+anything. And even now, I don't know if I've done right to tell you all
+this. But--I don't think I could have faced it--alone!"
+
+"My dear Miss Mallathorpe!" said Eldrick earnestly. "You've done the
+wisest thing you probably ever did in your life! Now," he went on,
+looking at Collingwood, "just let us all three realize what is to me a
+more important fact. Nobody would be more astonished than Pratt to know
+that you have taken the wise step you have. You agree, Collingwood?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Collingwood, after a moment's reflection. "I think so."
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe doesn't quite see what we mean," said Eldrick, turning
+to Nesta. "We mean that Pratt firmly believed, when he told you what he
+did, that for your mother's sake and your own, you would keep his
+communication a dead secret. He firmly believed that you would never
+dare to tell anybody what he told you. Most people--in your
+position--wouldn't have told. They'd have let the secret eat their lives
+out. You're a wise and a sensible young woman! And the thing is--we
+must let Pratt remain under the impression that you are keeping your
+knowledge to yourself. Let him continue to believe that you'll remain
+silent under fear. And let us meet his secret policy with a secret
+strategy of our own!"
+
+Again he glanced at Collingwood, and again Collingwood nodded assent.
+
+"Now," continued Eldrick, "just let us consider matters for a few
+minutes from the position which has newly arisen. To begin with. Pratt's
+account of your mother's dealings about the foot-bridge is a very clever
+and plausible one. I can see quite well that it has caused you great
+pain; so before I go any further, just let me say this to you--don't you
+attach one word of importance to it!"
+
+Nesta uttered a heartfelt cry of relief.
+
+"Oh!" she exclaimed. "If you knew how thankful I should be to know that
+it's all lies--that he was lying! Can I really think that--after what I
+saw?"
+
+"I won't ask you to think that he's telling lies--just now," answered
+Eldrick, with a glance at Collingwood, "but I'll ask you to believe that
+your mother could put a totally different aspect and complexion on all
+her actions and words in connection with the entire affair. My
+impression, of course," he went on, with something very like a wink at
+Collingwood, "is that Mrs. Mallathorpe, when she wrote that letter to
+Pratt, intended to have the bridge mended first thing next morning, and
+that something prevented that being done, and that when she was seen
+about the shrubberies in the afternoon, she was on her way to meet Pratt
+before he could reach the dangerous point, so that she could warn him.
+What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"I should say," answered Collingwood, regarding the solicitor earnestly,
+and speaking with great gravity of manner, "that that would make an
+admirable line of defence to any charge which Pratt was wicked enough to
+prefer."
+
+"You don't think my mother meant--meant to----" exclaimed Nesta, eagerly
+turning from one man to the other. "You--don't?"
+
+"There is no evidence worth twopence against your mother!" replied
+Eldrick soothingly. "Put everything that Pratt has said against her
+clear out of your mind. Put all recent events out of your mind! Don't
+interfere with Pratt--just now. The thing to be done about Pratt is
+this--and it's the only thing. We must find out--exactly, as secretly as
+possible--what this secret is of which he speaks. What is this hold on
+Mrs. Mallathorpe? What is this document to which he refers? In other
+words, we must work back to some point which at present we can't see. At
+least, I can't see it. But--we may discover it. What do you say,
+Collingwood?"
+
+"I agree entirely," answered Collingwood. "Let Pratt rest in his fancied
+security. The thing is, certainly, to go back. But--to what point?"
+
+"That we must consider later," said Eldrick. "Now--for the present, Miss
+Mallathorpe,--you are, I suppose, going back home?"
+
+"Yes, at once," answered Nesta. "I have my car at the _Crown Hotel_."
+
+"I should just like to know something," continued Eldrick again, looking
+at Collingwood as if for approval. "That is--Mrs. Mallathorpe's present
+disposition towards affairs in general and Pratt in particular. Miss
+Mallathorpe!--just do something which I will now suggest to you. When
+you reach home, see your mother--she is still, I understand, an invalid,
+though evidently able to transact business. Just approach her gently and
+kindly, and tell her that you are a little--should we say
+uncomfortable?--about certain business arrangements which you hear she
+has made with Mr. Pratt, and ask her, if she won't talk them over with
+you, and give you her full confidence. It's now half-past twelve,"
+continued Eldrick, looking at his watch. "You'll be home before lunch.
+See your mother early in the afternoon, and then telephone, briefly, the
+result to me, here, at four o'clock. Then--Mr. Collingwood and I will
+have a consultation."
+
+He motioned Collingwood to remain where he was, and himself saw Nesta
+down to the street. When he came back to his room he shook his head at
+the young barrister.
+
+"Collingwood!" he said. "There's some dreadful business afloat in all
+this! And it's all the worse because of the fashion in which Pratt
+talked to that girl. She's evidently a very good memory--she narrated
+that conversation clearly and fully. Pratt must be very sure of his hand
+if he showed her his cards in that way--his very confidence in himself
+shows what a subtle network he's either made or is making. I question if
+he'd very much care if he knew that we know. But he mustn't know
+that--yet. We must reply to his mine with a counter-mine!"
+
+"What do you think of Pratt's charge against Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick made a wry face.
+
+"Looks bad!--very, very bad, Collingwood!" he answered. "Art and scheme
+of a desperate woman, of course. But--we mustn't let her daughter think
+we believe it. Let her stick to the suggestion I made--which, as you
+remarked, would certainly make a very good line of defence, supposing
+Pratt even did accuse her. But now--what on earth is this document
+that's been mentioned--this paper of which Pratt has possession? Has
+Mrs. Mallathorpe at some time committed forgery--or bigamy--or--what is
+it? One thing's sure, however--we've got to work quietly. We mustn't let
+Pratt know that we're working. I hope he doesn't know that Miss
+Mallathorpe came here. Will you come back about four and hear what
+message she sends me? After that, we could consult."
+
+Collingwood went away to his chambers. He was much occupied just then,
+and had little time to think of anything but the work in hand. But as he
+ate his lunch at the club which he had joined on settling in Barford, he
+tried to get at some notion of the state of things, and once more his
+mind reverted to the time of his grandfather's death, and his own
+suspicions about Pratt at that period. Clearly that was a point to which
+they must hark back--he himself must make more inquiries about the
+circumstances of Antony Bartle's last hours. For this affair would not
+have to rest where it was--it was intolerable that Nesta Mallathorpe
+should in any way be under Pratt's power. He went back to Eldrick at
+four o'clock with a suggestion or two in his mind. And at the sight of
+him Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"I've had that telephone message from Normandale," he said, "five
+minutes ago. Pretty much what I expected--at this juncture, anyway. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe absolutely declines to talk business with even her daughter
+at present--and earnestly desires that Mr. Linford Pratt may be left
+alone."
+
+"Well?" asked Collingwood after a pause. "What now?"
+
+"We must do what we can--secretly, privately, for the daughter's sake,"
+said Eldrick. "I confess I don't quite see a beginning, but----"
+
+Just then the private door opened, and Pascoe, a somewhat
+lackadaisical-mannered man, who always looked half-asleep, and was in
+reality remarkably wide-awake, lounged in, nodded to Collingwood, and
+threw a newspaper in front of his partner.
+
+"I say, Eldrick," he drawled, as he removed a newly-lighted cigar from
+his lips. "There's an advertisement here which seems to refer to that
+precious protege of yours, who left you with such scant ceremony. Same
+name, anyhow!"
+
+Eldrick snatched up the paper, glanced at it and read a few words aloud.
+
+"INFORMATION WANTED about James Parrawhite, at one time in practice as a
+solicitor."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT
+
+
+Eldrick looked up at his partner with a sharp, confirmatory glance.
+
+"That's our Parrawhite, of course!" he said. "Who's after him, now?" And
+he went on to read the rest of the advertisement, murmuring its
+phraseology half-aloud: "'in practice as a solicitor at Nottingham and
+who left that town six years ago. If the said James Parrawhite will
+communicate with the undersigned he will hear something greatly to his
+advantage. Any person able to give information as to his whereabouts
+will be suitably rewarded. Apply to Halstead & Byner, 56B, St. Martin's
+Chambers, London, W.C.' Um!--Pascoe, hand over that Law List."
+
+Collingwood looked on in silence while Eldrick turned over the pages of
+the big book which his partner took down from a shelf. He wondered at
+Eldrick's apparent and almost eager interest.
+
+"Halstead & Byner are not solicitors," announced Eldrick presently.
+"They must be inquiry agents or something of that sort. Anyway, I'll
+write to them, Pascoe, at once."
+
+"You don't know where the fellow is," said Pascoe. "What's the good?"
+
+"No--but we know where he last was," retorted Eldrick. He turned to
+Collingwood as the junior partner sauntered out of the room. "Rather odd
+that Pascoe should draw my attention to that just now," he remarked.
+"This man Parrawhite was, in a certain sense, mixed up with Pratt--at
+least, Pratt and I are the only two people who know the secret of
+Parrawhite's disappearance from these offices. That was just about the
+time of your grandfather's death."
+
+Collingwood immediately became attentive. His first suspicions of Pratt
+were formed at the time of which Eldrick spoke, and any reference to
+events contemporary excited his interest.
+
+"Who was or is--this man you're talking of?" he asked.
+
+"Bad lot--very!" answered Eldrick, shaking his head. "He and I were
+articled together, at the same time, to the same people: we saw a lot of
+each other as fellow articled clerks. He afterwards practised in
+Nottingham, and he held some good appointments. But he'd a perfect mania
+for gambling--the turf--and he went utterly wrong, and misappropriated
+clients' money, and in the end he got into prison, and was, of course,
+struck off the rolls. I never heard anything of him for years, and then
+one day, some time ago, he turned up here and begged me to give him a
+job. I did--and I'll do him the credit to say that he earned his money.
+But--in the end, his natural badness broke out. One afternoon--I'm
+careless about some things--I left some money lying in this
+drawer--about forty pounds in notes and gold--and next morning
+Parrawhite never came to business. We've never seen or heard of him
+since."
+
+"You mentioned Pratt," said Collingwood.
+
+"Only Pratt and I know--about the money," replied Eldrick. "We kept it
+secret--I didn't want Pascoe to know I'd been so careless. Pascoe didn't
+like Parrawhite--and he doesn't know his record. I only told him that
+Parrawhite was a chap I'd known in better circumstances and wanted to
+give a hand to."
+
+"You said it was about the time of my grandfather's death?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+"It was just about then--between his death and his funeral I should
+say," answered Eldrick, "The two events are associated in my mind.
+Anyway, I'd like to know what it is that these people want Parrawhite
+for. If it's money that's come to him, it'll be of no advantage--it'll
+only go where all the rest's gone."
+
+Collingwood lost interest in Parrawhite. Parrawhite appeared to have
+nothing to do with the affairs in which he was interested. He sat down
+and began to tell Eldrick about his own suspicions of Pratt at the time
+of Antony Bartle's death; of what Jabey Naylor had told him about the
+paper taken from the _History of Barford_; of the lad's account of the
+old man's doings immediately afterwards; and of his own proceedings
+which had led him to believe for the time being that his suspicions were
+groundless.
+
+"But now," he went on, "a new idea occurs to me. Suppose that that
+paper, found by my grandfather in a book which had certainly belonged to
+the late John Mallathorpe, was something important relating to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? Suppose that my grandfather brought it across here to you?
+Suppose that finding you out, he showed it to Pratt? As my grandfather
+died suddenly, with nobody but Pratt there, what was there to prevent
+Pratt from appropriating that paper if he saw that it would give him a
+hold over Mrs. Mallathorpe? We know now that he has some document in his
+possession which does give him a hold--may it not be that of which the
+boy Naylor told me?"
+
+"Might be," agreed Eldrick. "But--my opinion is, taking things all
+together, that the paper which Antony Bartle found was the one you
+yourself discovered later--the list of books. No--I'll tell you what I
+think. I believe that the document which Pratt told Miss Mallathorpe he
+holds, and to which her mother referred in the letter asking Pratt to
+meet her, is probably--most probably!--one which he discovered in
+searching out his relationship to Mrs. Mallathorpe. He's a cute
+chap--and he may have found some document which--well, I'll tell you
+what it might be--something which would upset the rights of Harper
+Mallathorpe to his uncle's estates. No other relatives came forward, or
+were heard of, or were discoverable when John Mallathorpe was killed in
+that chimney accident; but there may be some--there may be one in
+particular. That's my notion!--and I intend, in the first place, to make
+a personal search of the parish registers from which Pratt got his
+information. He may have discovered something there which he's keeping
+to himself."
+
+"You think that is the course to adopt?" asked Collingwood, after a
+moment's reflection.
+
+"At present--yes," replied Eldrick. "And while I'm making it--I'll do it
+myself--we'll just go on outwardly--as if nothing had happened. If I
+meet Pratt--as I shall--I shall not let him see that I know anything. Do
+you go on in just the usual way. Go out to Normandale Grange now and
+then--and tell Miss Mallathorpe to think no more of her interview with
+Pratt until we've something to talk to her about. You talk to her
+about--something else."
+
+When Collingwood had left him Eldrick laid a telegram form on his
+plotting pad, and after a brief interval of thought wrote out a message
+addressed to the people whose advertisement had attracted Pascoe's
+attention.
+
+ "HALSTEAD & BYNER, 56B, St. Martin's Chambers, London, W.C.
+
+ "I can give you definite information concerning James Parrawhite
+ if you will send representative to see me personally.
+
+ "CHARLES ELDRICK, Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford."
+
+After Eldrick had sent off a clerk with this message to the nearest
+telegraph office, he sat thinking for some time. And at the close of his
+meditations, and after some turning over of a diary which lay on his
+desk, he picked up pen and paper, and drafted an advertisement of his
+own.
+
+ "TEN POUNDS REWARD will be paid to any person who can give
+ reliable and useful information as to James Parrawhite, who
+ until November last was a clerk in the employ of Messrs. Eldrick
+ & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford, and who is believed to have left
+ the town on the evening of November 23.--Apply to Mr. CHARLES
+ ELDRICK, of the above firm."
+
+"Worth risking ten pounds on--anyway," muttered Eldrick. "Whether these
+London people will cover it or not. Here!" he went on, turning to a
+clerk who had just entered the room. "Make three copies of this
+advertisement, and take one to each of the three newspaper offices, and
+tell 'em to put it in their personal column tonight."
+
+He sat musing for some time after he was left alone again, and when he
+at last rose, it was with a shake of the head.
+
+"I wonder if Pratt told me the truth that morning?" he said to himself.
+"Anyway, he's now being proved to be even deeper than I'd ever
+considered him. Well--other folk than Pratt are possessed of pretty good
+wits."
+
+Before he left the office that evening Eldrick was handed a telegram
+from Messrs. Halstead & Byner, of St. Martin's Chambers, informing him
+that their Mr. Byner would travel to Barford by the first express next
+morning, and would call upon him at eleven o'clock.
+
+"Then they have some important news for Parrawhite," mused Eldrick, as
+he put the message in his pocket and went off to his club. "Inquiry
+agents don't set off on long journeys at a moment's notice for a matter
+of a trifling agency. But--where is Parrawhite?"
+
+He awaited the arrival of Mr. Byner next morning with considerable
+curiosity. And soon after eleven there was shown in to him, a smart,
+well-dressed, alert-looking young man, who, having introduced himself as
+Mr. Gerald Byner, immediately plunged into business.
+
+"You can tell me something of James Parrawhite, Mr. Eldrick?" he began.
+"We shall be glad--we've been endeavouring to trace him for some months.
+It's odd that you didn't see our advertisement before."
+
+"I don't look at that sort of advertisement," replied Eldrick. "I
+believe it was by mere accident that my partner saw yours yesterday
+afternoon. But now, a question or two first. What are you--inquiry
+agents?"
+
+"Just so, sir--inquiry agents--with a touch of private detective
+business," answered Mr. Gerald Byner with a smile. "We undertake to find
+people, to watch people, to recover lost property, and so on. In this
+case we're acting for Messrs. Vickers, Marshall & Hebbleton, Solicitors,
+of Cannon Street. They want James Parrawhite badly."
+
+"Why?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," replied Byner with a dry laugh, "there's about twenty
+thousand pounds waiting for him, in their hands."
+
+Eldrick whistled with astonishment.
+
+"Whew!" he said. "Twenty thousand--for Parrawhite! My good sir--if
+that's so, and if, as you say, you've been advertising----"
+
+"Advertising in several papers," interrupted Byner. "Dailies, weeklies,
+provincials. Never had one reply, till your wire."
+
+"Then--Parrawhite must be dead!" said Eldrick. "Or--in gaol, under
+another name. Twenty thousand pounds--waiting for Parrawhite! If
+Parrawhite was alive, man, or at liberty, he wouldn't let twenty
+thousand pence wait five minutes! I know him!"
+
+"What can you tell me, Mr. Eldrick?" asked the inquiry agent.
+
+Eldrick told all he knew--concealing nothing. And Byner listened
+silently and eagerly.
+
+"There's something strikes me at once," he said. "You say that with him
+disappeared three or four ten-pound notes of yours. Have you the numbers
+of those notes?"
+
+"I can't say," replied Eldrick, doubtfully. "I haven't, certainly.
+But--they were paid in to our head-clerk, Pratt, and I think he used to
+enter such things in a sort of day-ledger. I'll get it."
+
+He went into the clerks' office and presently returned with an oblong,
+marble-backed book which he began to turn over.
+
+"This may be what you ask about," he said at last. "Here, under date
+November 23, are some letters and figures which obviously refer to
+bank-notes. You can copy them if you like."
+
+"Another question, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner as he made a note of the
+entries. "You say some cheque forms were abstracted from a book of yours
+at the same time. Have you ever heard of any of these cheque forms being
+made use of?"
+
+"Never!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"No forgery of your name or anything?" suggested the caller.
+
+"No," said Eldrick. "There's been nothing of that sort."
+
+"I can soon ascertain if these bank-notes have reached the Bank of
+England," said Byner. "That's a simple matter. Now suppose they
+haven't!"
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"You know, of course," continued Byner, "that it doesn't take long for a
+Bank of England note, once issued, to get back to the Bank? You know,
+too, that it's never issued again. Now if those notes haven't been
+presented at the Bank--where are they? And if no use has been made of
+your stolen cheques--where are they?"
+
+"Good!" agreed Eldrick. "I see that you ought to do well in your special
+line of business. Now--are you going to pursue inquiries for Parrawhite
+here in Barford, after what I've told you?"
+
+"Certainly!" said Byner. "I came down prepared to stop awhile. It's
+highly important that this man should be found--highly important," he
+added smiling, "to other people than Parrawhite himself."
+
+"In what way?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Why," replied Byner, "if he's dead--as he may be--this money goes to
+somebody else--a relative. The relative would be very glad to hear he is
+dead! But--definite news will be welcome, in any case. Oh, yes, now that
+I've got down here, I shall do my best to trace him. You have the
+address of the woman he lodged with, you say. I shall go there first, of
+course. Then I must try to find out what he did with himself in his
+spare time. But, from all you tell me, it's my impression he's
+dead--unless, as you say, he's got into prison again--possibly under
+another name. It seems impossible that he should not have seen our
+advertisements."
+
+"You never advertised in any Yorkshire newspapers?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"No," said Byner. "Because we'd no knowledge of his having come so far
+North. We advertised in the Midland papers. But then, all the London
+papers, daily and weekly, that we used come down to Yorkshire."
+
+"Parrawhite," said Eldrick reflectively, "was a big newspaper reader. He
+used to go to the Free Library reading-room a great deal. I begin to
+think he must certainly be dead--or locked up. However, in supplement of
+your endeavours, I did a little work of my own last night. There you
+are!" he went on, picking up the local papers and handing them over. "I
+put that in--we'll see if any response comes. But now a word, Mr. Byner,
+since you've come to me. You have heard me mention my late
+clerk--Pratt?"
+
+"Yes," answered Byner.
+
+"Pratt has left us, and is in business as a sort of estate agent in the
+next street," continued Eldrick. "Now I have particular reasons--most
+particular reasons!--why Pratt should remain in absolute ignorance of
+your presence in the town. If you should happen to come across him--as
+you may, for though there are a quarter of a million of us here, it's a
+small place, compared with London--don't let him know your business."
+
+"I'm not very likely to do that, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner quietly.
+
+"Aye, but you don't take my meaning," said Eldrick eagerly. "I mean
+this--it's just possible that Pratt may see that advertisement of yours,
+and that he may write to your firm. In that case, as he's here, and
+you're here, your partner would send his letter to you. Don't deal with
+it--here. Don't--if you should come across Pratt, even let him know your
+name!"
+
+"When I've a job of this sort," replied Byner, "I don't let anybody know
+my name--except people like you. When I register at one of your hotels
+presently, I shall be Mr. Black of London. But--if this Pratt wanted to
+give any information about Parrawhite, he'd give it to you, surely, now
+that you've advertised."
+
+"No, he wouldn't!" asserted Eldrick. "Why? Because he's told me all he
+knows--or says he knows--already!"
+
+The inquiry agent looked keenly at the solicitor for a moment during
+which they both kept silence. Then Byner smiled.
+
+"You said--'or says he knows,'" he remarked. "Do you think he didn't
+tell the truth about Parrawhite?"
+
+"I should say--now--it's quite likely he didn't," answered Eldrick. "The
+truth is, I'm making some inquiry myself about Pratt--and I don't want
+this to interfere with it. You keep me informed of what you find out,
+and I'll help you all I can while you're here. It may be----"
+
+A clerk came into the room and looked at his master.
+
+"Mr. George Pickard, of the _Green Man_ at Whitcliffe, sir," he said.
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Wants to see you about that advertisement in the paper this morning,
+sir," continued the clerk.
+
+Eldrick looked at Byner and smiled significantly. Then he turned towards
+the door.
+
+"Bring Mr. Pickard in," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+
+The clerk presently ushered in a short, thick-set, round-faced man,
+apparently of thirty to thirty-five years of age, whose chief personal
+characteristics lay in a pair of the smallest eyes ever set in a human
+countenance and a mere apology for a nose. But both nose and eyes
+combined somehow to communicate an idea of profound inquiry as the round
+face in which they were placed turned from the solicitor to the man from
+London, and a podgy forefinger was lifted to a red forehead.
+
+"Servant, gentlemen," said the visitor. "Fine morning for the time of
+year!"
+
+"Take a chair, Mr. Pickard," replied Eldrick. "Let me see--from the
+_Green Man_, at Whitcliffe, I believe?"
+
+"Landlord, sir--had that house a many years," answered Pickard, as he
+took a seat near the wall. "Seven year come next Michaelmas, any road."
+
+"Just so--and you want to see me about the advertisement in this
+morning's paper?" continued Eldrick. "What about it--now?"
+
+The landlord looked at Eldrick and then at Eldrick's companion. The
+solicitor understood that look: it meant that what his caller had to say
+was of a private nature.
+
+"It's all right, Mr. Pickard," he remarked reassuringly. "This gentleman
+is here on just the same business--whatever you say will be treated as
+confidential--it'll go no further. You've something to tell about my
+late clerk, James Parrawhite."
+
+Pickard, who had been nervously fingering a white billycock hat, now put
+it down on the floor and thrust his hands into the pockets of his
+trousers as if to keep them safe while he talked.
+
+"It's like this here," he answered. "When I saw that there advertisement
+in the paper this mornin', says I to my missus, 'I'll away,' I says,
+'an' see Lawyer Eldrick about that there, this very day!' 'Cause you
+see, Mr. Eldrick, there is summat as I can tell about yon man 'at you
+mention--James Parrawhite. I've said nowt about it to nobody, up to now,
+'cause it were private business atween him and me, as it were, but I
+lost money over it, and of course, ten pound is ten pound, gentlemen."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Eldrick, "And you shall have your ten pounds if you
+can tell anything useful."
+
+"I don't know owt about it's being useful, sir, nor what use is to be
+made on it," said Pickard, "but I can tell you a bit o' truth, and you
+can do what you like wi' what I tell. But," he went on, lowering his
+voice and glancing at the door by which he had just entered, "there's
+another name 'at 'll have to be browt in--private, like. Name, as it so
+happens, o' one o' your clerks--t' head clerk, I'm given to
+understand--Mr. Pratt."
+
+Eldrick showed no sign of surprise. But he continued to look
+significantly at Byner as he turned to the landlord.
+
+"Mr. Pratt has left me," he said. "Left me three weeks ago. So you
+needn't be afraid, Mr. Pickard--say anything you like."
+
+"Oh, I didn't know," remarked Pickard. "It's not oft that I come down in
+t' town, and we don't hear much Barford news up our way. Well, it's this
+here, Mr. Eldrick--you know where my place is, of course?"
+
+Eldrick nodded, and turned to Byner.
+
+"I'd better explain to you," he said. "Whitcliffe is an outlying part of
+the town, well up the hills--a sort of wayside hamlet with a lot of our
+famous stone quarries in its vicinity. The _Green Man_, of which our
+friend here is the landlord, is an old-fashioned tavern by the
+roadside--where people are rather fond of dropping in on a Sunday, I
+fancy, eh, Mr. Pickard?"
+
+"You're right, sir," replied the landlord. "It makes a nice walk out on
+a Sunday. And it were on a Sunday, too, 'at I got to know this here
+James Parrawhite as you want to know summat about. He began coming to my
+place of a Sunday evenin', d'ye see, gentlemen?--he'd walk across t'
+valley up there to Whitcliffe and stop an hour or two, enjoyin' hisself.
+Well, now, as you're no doubt well aweer, Mr. Eldrick, he were a reight
+hand at talkin', were yon Parrawhite--he'd t' gift o' t' gab reight
+enough, and talked well an' all. And of course him an' me, we hed bits
+o' conversation at times, 'cause he come to t' house reg'lar and
+sometimes o' week-nights an' all. An' he tell'd me 'at he'd had a deal
+o' experience i' racin' matters--whether it were true or not, I couldn't
+say, but----"
+
+"True enough!" said Eldrick. "He had."
+
+"Well, so he said," continued Pickard, "and he was allus tellin' me 'at
+he could make a pile o' brass on t' turf if he only had capital. An' i'
+t' end, he persuaded me to start what he called investin' money with him
+i' that way--i' plain language, it meant givin' him brass to put on
+horses 'at he said was goin' to win, d'ye understand?"
+
+"Perfectly," replied Eldrick. "You gave him various amounts which he was
+to stake for you."
+
+"Just so, sir! And at first," said Pickard, with a shake of the head,
+"at first I'd no great reason to grumble. He cert'ny wor a good hand at
+spottin' a winner. But as time went on, I' t' greatest difficulty in
+gettin' a settlement wi' him, d'ye see? He wor just as good a hand at
+makin' excuses as he wor at pickin' out winners--better, I think! I
+nivver knew wheer I was wi' him--he'd pay up, and then he'd persuade me
+to go in for another do wi' t' brass I'd won, and happen we should lose
+that time, and then of course we had to hev another investment to get
+back what we'd dropped, and so it went on. But t' end wor this
+here--last November theer wor about fifty to sixty pound o' mine i' his
+hands, and I wanted it. I'd a spirit merchant's bill to settle, and I
+wanted t' brass badly for that. I knew Parrawhite had been paid, d'ye
+see, by t' turf agent, 'at he betted wi', and I plagued him to hand t'
+brass over to me. He made one excuse and then another--howsumivver, it
+come to that very day you're talkin' about i' your advertisement, Mr.
+Eldrick--the twenty-third o' November----"
+
+"Stop a minute, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Eldrick. "Now, how do you
+know--for a certainty--that this day you're going to talk about was the
+twenty-third of November?"
+
+The landlord, who had removed his hands from his pockets, and was now
+twiddling a pair of fat thumbs as he talked, chuckled slyly.
+
+"For a very good reason," he answered. "I had to pay that spirit bill I
+tell'd about just now on t' twenty-fourth, and that I'm going to tell
+you happened t' night afore t' twenty-fourth, so of course it were t'
+twenty-third. D'ye see?"
+
+"I see," asserted Eldrick. "That'll do! And now--what did happen?"
+
+"This here," replied Pickard. "On that night--t' twenty-third
+November--Parrawhite came into t' _Green Man_ at about, happen,
+half-past eight. He come into t' little private parlour to me, bold as
+brass--as indeed, he allers wor. 'Ye're a nice un!' I says. 'I've
+written yer three letters durin' t' last week, and ye've nivver answered
+one o' 'em!' 'I've come to answer i' person,' he says. 'There's nobbut
+one answer I want,' says I. 'Wheer's my money?' 'Now then, be quiet a
+bit,' he says. 'You shall have your money before the evening's over,' he
+says. 'Or, if not, as soon as t' banks is open tomorrow mornin',' he
+says. 'Wheer's it coomin' from?' says I. 'Now, never you mind,' he says.
+'It's safe!' 'I don't believe a word you're sayin',' says I. 'Ye're
+havin' me for t' mug!--that's about it.' An' I went on so at him, 'at i'
+t' end he tell'd me 'at he wor presently goin' to meet Pratt, and 'at he
+could get t' brass out o' Pratt an' as much more as iwer he liked to ax
+for. Well, I don't believe that theer, and I said so. 'What brass has
+Pratt?' says I. 'Pratt's nowt but a clerk, wi' happen three or four
+pound a week!' 'That's all you know,' he says. 'Pratt's become a gold
+mine, and I'm going to dig in it a bit. What's it matter to you,' he
+says, 'so long as you get your brass?' Well, of course, that wor true
+enough--all 'at I wanted just then were to handle my brass. And I tell'd
+him so. 'I'll brek thy neck, Parrawhite,' I says, 'if thou doesn't bring
+me that theer money eyther to-night or t' first thing tomorrow--so now!'
+'Don't talk rot!' he says. 'I've told you!' And he had money wi' him
+then--'nough to pay for drinks and cigars, any road, and we had a drink
+or two, and a smoke or two, and then he went out, sayin' he wor goin' to
+meet Pratt, and he'd be back at my place before closin' time wi' either
+t' cash or what 'ud be as good. An' I waited--and waited after closin'
+time, an' all. But I've nivver seen Parrawhite from that day to
+this---nor heerd tell on him neither!"
+
+Eldrick and Byner looked at each other for a moment. Then the solicitor
+spoke--quietly and with a significance which the agent understood.
+
+"Do you want to ask Mr. Pickard any questions?" he said.
+
+Byner nodded and turned to the landlord.
+
+"Did Parrawhite tell you where he was going to meet Pratt?" he asked.
+
+"He did," replied Pickard. "Near Pratt's lodgin' place."
+
+"Did--or does--Pratt live near you, then?"
+
+"Closish by--happen ten minutes' walk. There's few o' houses--a sort o'
+terrace, like, on t' edge o' what they call Whitcliffe Moor. Pratt
+lodged--lodges now for all I know to t' contrary--i' one o' them."
+
+"Did Parrawhite give you any idea that he was going to the house in
+which Pratt lodged?"
+
+"No! He were not goin' to t' house. I know he worn't. He tell'd me 'at
+he'd a good idea what time Pratt 'ud be home, 'cause he knew where he
+was that evening and he were goin' to meet him just afore Pratt got to
+his place. I know where he'd meet him."
+
+"Where?" asked Byner. "Tell me exactly. It's important."
+
+"Pratt 'ud come up fro' t' town i' t' tram," answered Pickard. "He'd
+approach this here terrace I tell'd you about by a narrow lane that runs
+off t' high road. He'd meet him there, would Parrawhite."
+
+"Did you ever ask any question of Pratt about Parrawhite?"
+
+"No--never! I'd no wish that Pratt should know owt about my dealin's
+with Parrawhite. When Parrawhite never come back--why, I kep' it all to
+myself, till now."
+
+"What do you think happened to Parrawhite, Mr. Pickard?" asked Byner.
+
+"Gow, I know what I think!" replied Pickard disgustedly. "I think 'at if
+he did get any brass out o' Pratt--which is what I know nowt about, and
+hewn't much belief in--he went straight away fro' t' town--vanished! I
+do know this--he nivver went back to his lodgin's that neet, 'cause I
+went theer mysen next day to inquire."
+
+Eldrick pricked up his ears at that. He remembered that he had sent
+Pratt to make inquiry at Parrawhite's lodgings on the morning whereon
+the money was missing.
+
+"What time of the day--on the twenty-fourth--was that, Mr. Pickard?" he
+asked.
+
+"Evenin', sir," replied the landlord. "They'd nivver seen naught of him
+since he went out the day before. Oh, he did me, did Parrawhite! Of
+course, I lost mi brass--fifty odd pounds!"
+
+Byner gave Eldrick a glance.
+
+"I think Mr. Pickard has earned the ten pounds you offered," he said.
+
+Eldrick took the hint and pulled out his cheque-book.
+
+"Of course, you're to keep all this private--strictly private, Mr.
+Pickard," he said as he wrote. "Not a word to a soul!"
+
+"Just as you order, sir," agreed Pickard. "I'll say nowt--to nobody."
+
+"And--perhaps tomorrow--perhaps this afternoon--you'll see me at the
+_Green Man_," remarked Byner. "I shall just drop in, you know. You
+needn't know me--if there's anybody about."
+
+"All right, sir--I understand," said Pickard.
+
+"Quiet's the word--what? Very good--much obliged to you, gentlemen."
+
+When the landlord had gone Eldrick motioned Byner to pick up his hat.
+"Come across the street with me," he said. "I want us to have a
+consultation with a friend of mine, a barrister, Mr. Collingwood. For
+this matter is assuming a very queer aspect, and we can't move too
+warily, nor consider all the features too thoroughly."
+
+Collingwood listened with deep interest to Eldrick's account of the
+morning's events. And once again he was struck by the fact that all
+these various happenings in connection with Pratt, and now with
+Parrawhite, took place at the time of Antony Bartle's death, and he said
+so.
+
+"True enough!" agreed Eldrick.
+
+"And once more," pointed out Collingwood. "We're hearing of a hold!
+Pratt claims to have a hold on Mrs. Mallathorpe--now it turns out that
+Parrawhite boasted of a hold on Pratt. Suppose all these things have a
+common origin? Suppose the hold which Parrawhite had--or has--on Pratt
+is part and parcel of the hold which Pratt has on Mrs. Mallathorpe? In
+that case--or cases--what is the best thing to do?"
+
+"Will you gentlemen allow me to suggest something?" said Byner. "Very
+well--find Parrawhite! Of all the people concerned in this, Parrawhite,
+from your account of him, anyway, Mr. Eldrick, is the likeliest person
+to extract the truth from."
+
+"There's a great deal in that suggestion," said Eldrick. "Do you know
+what I think?" he went on, turning to Collingwood, "Mr. Byner tells me
+he means to stay here until he has come across some satisfactory news of
+Parrawhite or solved the mystery of his disappearance. Well, now that
+we've found that there is some ground for believing that Parrawhite was
+in some fashion mixed up with Pratt about that time, why not place the
+whole thing in Mr. Byner's hands--let him in any case see what he can do
+about the Parrawhite-Pratt business of November twenty-third, eh?"
+
+"I take it," answered Collingwood, looking at the inquiry agent, "that
+Mr. Byner having heard what he has, would do that quite apart from us?"
+
+"Yes," said Byner. "Now that I've heard what Pickard had to say, I
+certainly shall follow that up."
+
+"I am following out something of my own," said Collingwood, turning to
+Eldrick. "I shall know more by this time tomorrow. Let us have a
+conference here--at noon."
+
+They separated on that understanding, and Byner went his own ways. His
+first proceeding was to visit, one after another, the Barford newspaper
+offices, and to order the insertion in large type, and immediately, of
+the Halstead-Byner advertisement for news of Parrawhite. His second was
+to seek the General Post Office, where he wrote out and dispatched a
+message to his partner in London. That message was in cypher--translated
+into English, it read as follows:--
+
+ "If person named Pratt sends any communication to us _re_
+ Parrawhite, on no account let him know I am in Barford, but
+ forward whatever he sends to me at once, addressed to H.D.
+ Black, Central Station Hotel."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+
+When Collingwood said that he was following out something of his own, he
+was thinking of an interesting discovery which he had made. It was one
+which might have no significance in relation to the present
+perplexities--on the other hand, out of it might come a good deal of
+illumination. Briefly, it was that on the evening before this
+consultation with Eldrick & Byner, he had found out that he was living
+in the house of a man who had actually witnessed the famous catastrophe
+at Mallathorpe's Mill, whereby John Mallathorpe, his manager, and his
+cashier, together with some other bystanders, had lost their lives.
+
+On settling down in Barford, Collingwood had spent a couple of weeks in
+looking about him for comfortable rooms of a sort that appealed to his
+love of quiet and retirement. He had found them at last in an old house
+on the outskirts of the town--a fine old stone house, once a farmstead,
+set in a large garden, and tenanted by a middle-aged couple, who having
+far more room than they needed for themselves, had no objection to
+letting part of it to a business gentleman. Collingwood fell in love
+with this place as soon as he saw it. The rooms were large and full of
+delightful nooks and corners; the garden was rich in old trees; from it
+there were fine views of the valley beneath, and the heather-clad hills
+in the distance; within two miles of the town and easily approached by a
+convenient tram-route, it was yet quite out in the country.
+
+He was just as much set up by his landlady--a comfortable, middle-aged
+woman, who fostered true Yorkshire notions about breakfast, and knew how
+to cook a good dinner at night. With her Collingwood had soon come to
+terms, and to his new abode had transferred a quantity of books and
+pictures from London. He soon became acquainted with the domestic
+menage. There was the landlady herself, Mrs. Cobcroft, who, having no
+children of her own, had adopted a niece, now grown up, and a teacher in
+an adjacent elementary school: there was a strapping, rosy-cheeked
+servant-maid, whose dialect was too broad for the lodger to understand
+more than a few words of it; finally there was Mr. Cobcroft, a
+mild-mannered, quiet man who disappeared early in the morning, and was
+sometimes seen by Collingwood returning home in the evening.
+
+Lately, with the advancing spring, this unobtrusive individual was seen
+about the garden at the end of the day: Collingwood had so seen him on
+the evening before the talk with Eldrick and Byner, busied in setting
+seeds in the flower-beds. And he had asked Mrs. Cobcroft, just then in
+his sitting-room, if her husband was fond of gardening.
+
+"It's a nice change for him, sir," answered the landlady. "He's kept
+pretty close at it all day in the office yonder at Mallathorpe's Mill,
+and it does him good to get a bit o' fresh air at nights, now that the
+fine weather's coming on. That was one reason why we took this old
+place--it's a deal better air here nor what it is in the town."
+
+"So your husband is at Mallathorpe's Mill, eh?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Been there--in the counting-house--boy and man, over thirty years,
+sir," replied Mrs. Cobcroft.
+
+"Did he see that terrible affair then--was it two years ago?"
+
+The landlady shook her head and let out a weighty sigh.
+
+"Aye, I should think he did!" she answered. "And a nice shock it gave
+him, too!--he actually saw that chimney fall--him and another clerk were
+looking out o' the counting-house window when it gave way."
+
+Collingwood said no more then--except to remark that such a sight must
+indeed have been trying to the nerves. But for purposes of his own he
+determined to have a talk with Cobcroft, and the next evening, seeing
+him in his garden again, he went out to him and got into conversation,
+and eventually led up to the subject of Mallathorpe's Mill, the new
+chimney of which could be seen from a corner of the garden.
+
+"Your wife tells me," observed Collingwood, "that you were present when
+the old chimney fell at the mill yonder?"
+
+Cobcroft, a quiet, unassuming man, usually of few words, looked along
+the hillside at the new chimney, and nodded his head. A curious,
+far-away look came into his eyes.
+
+"I was, sir!" he said. "And I hope I may never see aught o' that sort
+again, as long as ever I live. It was one o' those things a man can
+never forget!"
+
+"Don't talk about it if you don't want to," remarked Collingwood. "But
+I've heard so much about that affair that----"
+
+"Oh, I don't mind talking about it," replied Cobcroft. He leaned over
+the fence of his garden, still gazing at the mill in the distance.
+"There were others that saw it, of course: lots of 'em. But I was close
+at hand--our office was filled with the dust in a few seconds."
+
+"It was a sudden affair?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It was one of those affairs," answered Cobcroft slowly, "that some folk
+had been expecting for a long time--only nobody had the sense to see
+that it might happen at some unexpected minute. It was a very old
+chimney. It looked all right--stood plumb, and all that. But Mr.
+Mallathorpe--my old master, Mr. John Mallathorpe, I'm talking of--he got
+an idea from two or three little things, d'ye see, that it wasn't as
+safe as it ought to be. And he got a couple of these professional
+steeplejacks to examine it. They made a thorough examination, too--so
+far as one could tell by what they did. They'd been at the job several
+days when the accident happened. One of 'em had only just come down when
+the chimney fell. Mr. Mallathorpe, himself, and his manager, and his
+cashier, had just stepped out of the counting-house and crossed the yard
+to hear what this man had got to say when--down it came! Not the
+slightest warning at the time. It just--collapsed!"
+
+"You saw the actual collapse?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--didn't I?" exclaimed Cobcroft. "Another man and myself were
+looking out of the office window, right opposite. It fell in the
+queerest way--like this," he went on, holding up his garden-rake.
+"Supposing this shaft was the chimney--standing straight up. As we
+looked we saw it suddenly bulge out, on all sides--it was a square
+chimney, same size all the way up till you got to the cornice at the
+top--bulge out, d'ye see, just about half-way up--simultaneous, like.
+Then--down it came with a roar that they heard over half the town! O'
+course, there were some two or three thousands of tons of stuff in that
+chimney--and when the dust was cleared a bit there it was in one great
+heap, right across the yard. And it was a good job," concluded Cobcroft,
+reflectively, "that it fell straight--collapsed in itself, as you might
+say--for if it had fallen slanting either way, it 'ud ha' smashed right
+through some of the sheds, and there'd ha' been a terrible loss of
+life."
+
+"Mr. John Mallathorpe was killed on the spot, I believe?" suggested
+Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--and Gaukrodger, and Marshall, and the steeplejack that had just
+come down, and another or two," said Cobcroft. "They'd no chance--they
+were standing in a group at the very foot, talking. They were all killed
+there and then--instantaneous. Some others were struck and injured--one
+or two died. Yes, sir,--I'm not very like to forget that!"
+
+"A terrible experience!" agreed Collingwood. "It would naturally fix
+itself on your memory."
+
+"Aye--my memory's very keen about it," said Cobcroft. "I remember every
+detail of that morning. And," he continued, showing a desire to become
+reminiscent, "there was something happened that morning, before the
+accident, that I've oft thought over and has oft puzzled me. I've never
+said aught to anybody about it, because we Yorkshiremen we're not given
+to talking about affairs that don't concern us, and after all, it was
+none o' mine! But you're a law gentleman, and I dare say you get things
+told to you in confidence now and then, and, of course, this is between
+you and me. I'll not deny that I have oft thought that I would like to
+tell it to a lawyer of some sort, and find out how it struck him."
+
+"Anything that you like to tell me, Mr. Cobcroft, I shall treat as a
+matter of confidence--until you tell me it's no longer a secret,"
+answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why," continued Cobcroft, "it isn't what you rightly would call a
+secret--though I don't think anybody knows aught about it but myself! It
+was just this--and it may be there's naught in it but a mere fancy o'
+mine. That morning, before the accident happened, I was in and out of
+the private office a good deal--carrying in and out letters, and account
+books, and so on. Mr. John Mallathorpe's private office, ye'll
+understand, sir, opened out of our counting-house--as it does still--the
+present manager, Mr. Horsfall, has it, just as it was. Well, now, on one
+occasion, when I went in there, to take a ledger back to the safe, Mr.
+Mallathorpe had his manager and cashier, Gaukrodger and Marshall in with
+him. Mr. Mallathorpe, he always used a stand-up desk to write at--never
+wrote sitting down, though he had a big desk in the middle of the room
+that he used to sit at to look over accounts or talk to people. Now when
+I went in, he and Gaukrodger and Marshall were all at this stand-up
+desk--in the window-place--and they were signing some papers. At least
+Gaukrodger had just signed a paper, and Marshall was taking the pen from
+him. 'Sign there, Marshall,' says Mr. Mallathorpe. And then he went on,
+'Now we'll sign this other--it's well to have these things in duplicate,
+in case one gets lost.' And then--well, then, I went out, and--why, that
+was all."
+
+"You've some idea in your mind about that," said Collingwood, who had
+watched Cobcroft closely as he talked. "What is it?"
+
+Cobcroft smiled--and looked round as if to ascertain that they were
+alone. "Why!" he answered in a low voice. "I'll tell you what I did
+wonder--some time afterwards. I dare say you're aware--it was all in the
+papers--that Mr. John Mallathorpe died intestate?"
+
+"Yes," asserted Collingwood. "I know that."
+
+"I've oft wondered," continued Cobcroft, "if that could ha' been his
+will that they were signing! But then I reflected a bit on matters. And
+there were two or three things that made me say naught at all--not a
+word. First of all, I considered it a very unlikely thing that a rich
+man like Mr. John Mallathorpe would make a will for himself. Second--I
+remembered that very soon after I'd been in his private office Marshall
+came out into the counting-house and gave the office lad a lot of
+letters and documents to take to the post--some of 'em big
+envelopes--and I thought that what I'd seen signed was some agreement or
+other that was in one of them. And third--and most important--no will
+was ever found in any of Mr. John Mallathorpe's drawers or safes or
+anywhere, though they turned things upside down at the office, and, I
+heard, at his house as well. Of course, you see, sir, supposing that to
+have been a will--why, the only two men who could possibly have proved
+it was were dead and gone! They were killed with him. And of course, the
+young people, the nephew and niece, they came in for everything--so
+there was an end of it. But--I've oft wondered what those papers were.
+One thing is certain, anyway!" concluded Cobcroft, with a grim laugh,
+"when those three signed 'em, they were picking up their pens for the
+last time!"
+
+"How long was it--after you saw the signing of those papers--that the
+accident occurred?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It 'ud be twelve or fifteen minutes, as near as I can recollect,"
+replied Cobcroft. "A few minutes after I'd left the private office,
+Gaukrodger came out of it, alone, and stood at the door leading into the
+yard, looking up at the chimney. The steeple-jack was just coming down,
+and his mate was waiting for him at the bottom. Gaukrodger turned back
+to the private office and called Mr. Mallathorpe out. All three of 'em,
+Mallathorpe, Gaukrodger, Marshall, went out and walked across the yard
+to the chimney foot. They stood there talking a bit--and then--down it
+came!"
+
+Collingwood thought matters over. Supposing that the document which
+Cobcroft spoke of as being in process of execution before him were
+indeed duplicate copies of a will. What could have been done with them,
+in the few minutes which elapsed between the signing and the catastrophe
+to the chimney? It was scarcely likely that John Mallathorpe would have
+sent them away by post. If they had been deposited in his own pocket,
+they would have been found when his clothing was removed and examined.
+If they were in the private office when the three men left it----
+
+"You're sure the drawers, safe and so on in Mr. Mallathorpe's room were
+thoroughly searched--after his death?" he asked.
+
+"I should think they were!" answered Cobcroft laconically. "I helped at
+that, myself. There wasn't as much as an old invoice that was not well
+fingered and turned over. No!--I came to the conclusion that what I'd
+seen signed was some contract or something--sent off there and then by
+the lad to post."
+
+Collingwood made no further remark and asked no more questions. But he
+thought long and seriously that night, and he came to certain
+conclusions. First: what Cobcroft had seen signed was John Mallathorpe's
+will. Second: John Mallathorpe had made it himself and had taken the
+unusual course of making a duplicate copy. Third: John Mallathorpe had
+probably slipped the copy into the _History of Barford_ which was in his
+private office when he went out to speak to the steeple-jack. Fourth:
+that copy had come into Linford Pratt's hands through Antony Bartle.
+
+And now arose two big questions. What were the terms of that will?
+And--where was the duplicate copy? He was still putting these to himself
+when noon of the next day came and brought Eldrick and Byner for the
+promised serious consultation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE _GREEN MAN_
+
+
+Byner, in taking his firm's advertisement for Parrawhite to the three
+Barford newspaper offices, had done so with a special design--he wanted
+Pratt to see that a serious wish to discover Parrawhite was alive in
+more quarters than one. He knew that Pratt was almost certain to see
+Eldrick's advertisement in his own name; now he wanted Pratt to see
+another advertisement of the same nature in another name. Already he had
+some suspicion that Pratt had not told Eldrick the truth about
+Parrawhite, and that nothing would suit him so well as that Parrawhite
+should never be heard of or mentioned again: now he wished Pratt to
+learn that Parrawhite was much wanted, and was likely to be much
+mentioned--wherefore the supplementary advertisements with Halstead &
+Byner's name attached. It was extremely unlikely that Pratt could fail
+to see those advertisements.
+
+There were three newspapers in Barford: one a morning journal of large
+circulation throughout the county; the other two, evening journals,
+which usually appeared in three or four editions. As Byner stipulated
+for large type, and a prominent position, in the personal column of
+each, it was scarcely within the bounds of probability that a townsman
+like Pratt would miss seeing the advertisement. Most likely he would see
+it in all three newspapers. And if he had also seen Eldrick's similar
+advertisement, he would begin to think, and then----
+
+"Why, then," mused Byner, ruminating on his design, "then we will see
+what he will do!"
+
+Meanwhile, there was something he himself wanted to do, and on the
+morning following his arrival in the town, he set out to do it. Byner
+had been much struck by Pickard's account of his dealings with James
+Parrawhite on the evening which appeared to be the very last wherein
+Parrawhite was ever seen. He had watched the landlord of the _Green Man_
+closely as he told his story, and had set him down for an honest, if
+somewhat sly and lumpish soul, who was telling a plain tale to the best
+of his ability. Byner believed all the details of that story--he even
+believed that when Parrawhite told Pickard that he would find him fifty
+pounds that evening, or early next day, he meant to keep his word. In
+the circumstances--as far as Byner could reckon them up from what he had
+gathered--it would not have paid Parrawhite to do otherwise. Byner put
+the situation to himself in this fashion--Pratt had got hold of some
+secret which was being, or could be made to be, highly profitable to
+him. Parrawhite had discovered this, and was in a position to blackmail
+Pratt. Therefore Parrawhite would not wish to leave Pratt's
+neighbourhood--so long as there was money to be got out of Pratt,
+Parrawhite would stick to him like a leech. But if Parrawhite was to
+abide peaceably in Barford, he must pay Pickard that little matter of
+between fifty and sixty pounds. Accordingly, in Byner's opinion,
+Parrawhite had every honest intention of returning to the _Green Man_ on
+the evening of the twenty-third of November after having seen Pratt.
+And, in Byner's further--and very seriously considered--opinion, the
+whole problem for solution--possibly involving the solution of other and
+more important problems--was this: Did Parrawhite meet Pratt that night,
+and if he did what took place between them which prevented Parrawhite
+from returning to Pickard?
+
+It was in an endeavour to get at some first stage of a solution of this
+problem that Byner, having breakfasted at the _Central Hotel_ on his
+second day in the town, went out immediately afterwards, asked his way
+to Whitcliffe, and was directed to an electric tram which started from
+the Town Hall Square, and after running through a district of tall
+warehouses and squat weaving-sheds, began a long and steady climb to the
+heights along the town. When he left it, he found himself in a district
+eminently characteristic of that part of the country. The tram set him
+down at a cross-roads on a high ridge of land. Beneath him lay Barford,
+its towers and spires and the gables of its tall buildings showing
+amongst the smoke of its many chimneys. All about him lay open ground,
+broken by the numerous stone quarries of which Eldrick had spoken, and
+at a little distance along one of the four roads at the intersection of
+which he stood, he saw a few houses and cottages, one of which, taller
+and bigger than the rest, was distinguished by a pole, planted in front
+of its stone porch and bearing a swinging sign whereon was rudely
+painted the figure of a man in Lincoln green. Byner walked on to this,
+entered a flagged hall, and found himself confronting Pickard, who at
+sight of him, motioned him into a little parlour behind the bar.
+
+"Mornin', mister," said he. "You'll be all right in here--there's nobody
+about just now, and if my missis or any o' t' servant lasses sees yer,
+they'll tak' yer for a brewer's traveller, or summat o' that sort. Come
+to hev a look round, like--what?"
+
+"I want to have a look at the place where you told us Parrawhite was to
+meet Pratt that night," replied Byner. "I thought you would perhaps be
+kind enough to show me where it is."
+
+"I will, an' all--wi' pleasure," said the landlord, "but ye mun hev a
+drop o' summat first--try a glass o' our ale," he went on, with true
+Yorkshire hospitality. "I hev some bitter beer i' my cellar such as I'll
+lay owt ye couldn't get t' likes on down yonder i' Barford--no, nor i'
+London neyther!--I'll just draw a jug."
+
+Byner submitted to this evidence of friendliness, and Pickard, after
+disappearing into a dark archway and down some deeply worn stone steps,
+came back with a foaming jug, the sight of which seemed to give him
+great delight. He gazed admiringly at the liquor which he presently
+poured into two tumblers, and drew his visitor's attention to its
+colour.
+
+"Reight stuff that, mister--what?" he said. "I nobbut tapped that barril
+two days since, and I'd been keepin' it twelve month, so you've come in
+for it at what they call t' opportune moment. I say!" he went on, after
+pledging Byner and smacking his lips over the ale. "I heard summat last
+night 'at might be useful to you and Lawyer Eldrick--about this here
+Parrawhite affair."
+
+"Oh!" said Byner, at once interested. "What now?"
+
+"You'll ha' noticed, as you come along t' road just now, 'at there's a
+deal o' stone quarries i' this neighbourhood?" replied Pickard. "Well,
+now, of course, some o' t' quarry men comes in here. Last night theer
+wor sev'ral on 'em i' t' bar theer, talkin', and one on 'em wor readin'
+t' evenin' newspaper--t' _Barford Dispatch_. An' he read out that theer
+advertisement about Parrawhite--wi' your address i' London at t' foot on
+it. Well, theer wor nowt said, except summat about advertisin' for
+disappeared folk, but later on, one o' t' men, a young man, come to me,
+private like. 'I say, Pickard,' he says, 'between you an' me, worrn't t'
+name o' that man 'at used to come in here on a Sunday sometimes,
+Parrawhite? It runs a' my mind,' he says, ''at I've heerd you call him
+by that name.' 'Well, an' what if it wor?' I says. 'Nay, nowt much,' he
+says, 'but I see fro' t' _Dispatch_ 'at he's wanted, and I could tell a
+bit about him,' he says. 'What could ye tell?' says I--just like that
+theer. 'Why,' he says, 'this much--one night t' last back-end----'"
+
+"Stop a bit, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Byner. "What does that mean--that
+term 'back-end'?"
+
+"Why, it means t' end o' t' year!" answered the landlord. "What some
+folks call autumn, d'ye understand? 'One night t' last back-end,' says
+this young fellow, 'I wor hengin' about on t' quiet at t' end o' Stubbs'
+Lane,' he says: 'T' truth wor,' he says, 'I wor waitin' for a word wi' a
+young woman 'at lives i' that terrace at t' top o' Stubbs' Lane--she wor
+goin' to come out and meet me for half an hour or so. An,' he says, 'I
+see'd that theer feller 'at I think I've heerd you call Parrawhite, come
+out o' Stubbs' Lane wi' that lawyer chap 'at lives i' t' Terrace--Pratt.
+I know Pratt,' he says, ''cause them 'at he works for--Eldricks--once
+did a bit o' law business for me.' 'Where did you see 'em go to, then?'
+says I. 'I see'd 'em cross t' road into t' owd quarry ground,' he says.
+'I see'd 'em plain enough, tho' they didn't see me--I wor keepin' snug
+agen 't wall--it wor a moonlit night, that,' he says. 'Well,' I says,
+'an' what now?' 'Why,' he says, 'd'yer think I could get owt o' this
+reward for tellin that theer?' So I thowt pretty sharp then, d'ye see,
+mister. 'I'll tell yer what, mi lad,' I says. 'Say nowt to nobody--keep
+your tongue still--and I'll tell ye tomorrow night what ye can do--I
+shall see a man 'at's on that job 'tween now and then,' I says. So theer
+it is," concluded Pickard, looking hard at Byner. "D'yer think this
+chap's evidence 'ud be i' your line?"
+
+"Decidedly I do!" replied Byner. "Where is he to be found?"
+
+"I couldn't say wheer he lives," answered the landlord. "But it'll be
+somewhere close about; anyway, he'll be in here tonight. Bill Thomson t'
+feller's name is--decent young feller enough."
+
+"I must contrive to see him, certainly," said Byner. "Well, now, can you
+show me this Stubbs' Lane and the neighbourhood?"
+
+"Just step along t' road a bit and I'll join you in a few o' minutes,"
+assented Pickard. "We'd best not be seen leavin t' house together, or
+our folk'll think it's a put-up job. Walk forrard a piece."
+
+Byner strolled along the road a little way, and leaned over a wall until
+Mr. Pickard, wearing his white billycock hat and accompanied by a fine
+fox-terrier, lounged up with his thumbs in the armholes of his
+waistcoat. Together they went a little further along.
+
+"Now then!" said the landlord, crossing the road towards the entrance of
+a narrow lane which ran between two high stone walls. "This here is
+Stubbs' Lane--so called, I believe, 'cause an owd gentleman named
+similar used to hev a house here 'at's been pulled down. Ye see, it runs
+up fro' this high-road towards yon terrace o' houses. Folks hereabouts
+calls that terrace t' World's End, 'cause they're t' last houses afore
+ye get on to t' open moorlands. Now, that night 'at Parrawhite wor
+aimin' to meet Pratt, it wor i' this very lane. Pratt, when he left t'
+tram-car, t' other side o' my place, 'ud come up t' road, and up this
+lane. And it wor at t' top o' t' lane 'at Bill Thomson see'd Pratt and
+Parrawhite cross into what Bill called t' owd quarry ground."
+
+"Can we go into that?" asked Byner.
+
+"Nowt easier!" said Pickard. "It's a sort of open space where t' childer
+goes and plays about: they hev'n't worked no stone theer for many a long
+year--all t' stone's exhausted, like."
+
+He led Byner along the lane to its further end, pointed out the place
+where Thomson said he had seen Pratt and Parrawhite, and indicated the
+terrace of houses in which Pratt lived. Then he crossed towards the old
+quarries.
+
+"Don't know what they should want to come in here for--unless it wor to
+talk very confidential," said Pickard. "But lor bless yer!--it 'ud be
+quiet enough anywheer about this neighbourhood at that time o' neet.
+However, this is wheer Bill Thomson says he see'd 'em come."
+
+He led the way amongst the disused quarries, and Byner, following,
+climbed on a mound, now grown over with grass and weed, and looked about
+him. To his town eyes the place was something novel. He had never seen
+the like of it before. Gradually he began to understand it. The stone
+had been torn out of the earth, sometimes in square pits, sometimes in
+semi-circular ones, until the various veins and strata had become
+exhausted. Then, when men went away, Nature had stepped in to assert her
+rights. All over the despoiled region she had spread a new clothing of
+green. Turf had grown on the flooring of the quarries; ivy and bramble
+had covered the deep scars; bushes had sprung up; trees were already
+springing. And in one of the worn-out excavations some man had planted a
+kitchen-garden in orderly and formal rows and plots.
+
+"Dangerous place that there!" said Pickard suddenly. "If I'd known o'
+that, I shouldn't ha' let my young 'uns come to play about here. They
+might be tummlin' in and drownin' theirsens! I mun tell my missis to
+keep 'em away!"
+
+Byner turned--to find the landlord pointing at the old shaft which had
+gradually become filled with water. In the morning sunlight its surface
+glittered like a plane of burnished metal, but when the two men went
+nearer and gazed at it from its edge, the water was black and
+unfathomable to the eye.
+
+"Goodish thirty feet o' water in that there!" surmised Pickard. "It's
+none safe for childer to play about--theer's nowt to protect 'em. Next
+time I see Mestur Shepherd I shall mak' it my business to tell him so;
+he owt either to drain that watter off or put a fence around it."
+
+"Is Mr. Shepherd the property-owner?" asked Byner.
+
+"Aye!--it's all his, this land," answered Pickard. He pointed to a
+low-roofed house set amidst elms and chestnuts, some distance off across
+the moor. "Lives theer, does Mestur Shepherd--varry well-to-do man, he
+is."
+
+"How could that water be drained off?" asked Byner with assumed
+carelessness.
+
+"Easy enough!" replied Pickard. "Cut through yon ledge, and let it run
+into t' far quarry there. A couple o' men 'ud do that job in a day."
+
+Byner made no further remark. He and Pickard strolled back to the _Green
+Man_ together. And declining the landlord's invitation to step inside
+and take another glass, but promising to see him again very soon, the
+inquiry agent walked on to the tram-car and rode down to Barford to keep
+his appointment with Eldrick and Collingwood at the barrister's
+chambers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+
+While Byner was pursuing his investigations in the neighbourhood of the
+_Green Man_, Collingwood was out at Normandale Grange, discussing
+certain matters with Nesta Mallathorpe. He had not only thought long and
+deeply over his conversation with Cobcroft the previous evening, but had
+begun to think about the crucial point of the clerk's story as soon as
+he spoke in the morning, and the result of his meditations was that he
+rose early, intercepted Cobcroft before he started for Mallathorpe's
+Mill and asked his permission to re-tell the story to Miss Mallathorpe.
+Cobcroft raised no objection, and when Collingwood had been to his
+chambers and seen his letters, he chartered a car and rode out to
+Normandale where he told Nesta of what he had learned and of his own
+conclusions. And Nesta, having listened carefully to all he had to tell,
+put a direct question to him.
+
+"You think this document which Pratt told me he holds is my late uncle's
+will?" she said. "What do you suppose its terms to be?"
+
+"Frankly--these, or something like these," replied Collingwood. "And I
+get at my conclusions in this way. Your uncle died intestate--consequently,
+everything in the shape of real estate came to your brother and everything
+in personal property to your brother and yourself. Now, supposing that
+the document which Pratt boasts of holding is the will, one fact is very
+certain--the property, real or personal, is not disposed of in the way
+in which it became disposed of because of John Mallathorpe's intestacy.
+He probably disposed of it in quite another fashion. Why do I think that?
+Because the probability is that Pratt said to your mother, 'I have got
+John Mallathorpe's will! It doesn't leave his property to your son and
+daughter. Therefore, I have all of you at my mercy. Make it worth my
+while, or I will bring the will forward.' Do you see that situation?"
+
+"Then," replied Nesta, after a moment's reflection, "you do think that
+my mother was very anxious to get that document--a will--from Pratt?"
+
+Collingwood knew what she was thinking of--her mind was still uneasy
+about Pratt's account of the affair of the foot-bridge. But--the matter
+had to be faced.
+
+"I think your mother would naturally be very anxious to secure such a
+document," he said. "You must remember that according to Pratt's story
+to you, she tried to buy it from him--just as you did yourself, though
+you, of course, had no idea of what it was you wanted to buy."
+
+"What I wanted to buy," she answered readily, "was necessity from
+further interference! But--is there no way of compelling Pratt to give
+up that document--whatever it is? Can't he be made to give it up?"
+
+"A way is may be being made, just now--through another affair," replied
+Collingwood. "At present matters are vague. One couldn't go to Pratt and
+demand something at which one is, after all, only guessing. Your mother,
+of course, would deny that she knows what it is that Pratt holds.
+But--there is the possibility of the duplicate to which Cobcroft
+referred. Now, I want to put the question straight to you--supposing
+that duplicate will can be found--and supposing--to put it plainly---its
+terms dispossess you of all your considerable property--what then?"
+
+"Do you want the exact truth?" she asked. "Well, then, I should just
+welcome anything that cleared up all this mystery! What is it at
+present, this situation, but intolerable? I know that my
+mother is in Pratt's power, and likely to remain so as long as ever this
+goes on--probably for life. She will not give me her confidence. What is
+more, I am certain that she is giving it to Esther Mawson--who is most
+likely hand-in-glove with Pratt. Esther Mawson is always with her. I am
+almost sure that she communicates with Pratt through Esther Mawson. It
+is all what I say--intolerable! I had rather lose every penny that has
+come into my hands than have this go on."
+
+"Answer me a plain question," said Collingwood. "Is your mother fond of
+money, position--all that sort of thing?"
+
+"She is fond of power!" replied Nesta. "It pleased her greatly when we
+came into all this wealth to know that she was the virtual
+administrator. Even if she could only do it by collusion with Pratt, she
+would make a fight for all that she--and I--hold. It's useless to deny
+that. Don't forget," she added, looking appealingly at Collingwood,
+"don't forget that she has known what it was to be poor--and if one does
+come into money--I suppose one doesn't want to lose it again."
+
+"Oh, it's natural enough!" agreed Collingwood. "But--if things are as I
+think, Pratt would be an incubus, a mill-stone, for ever. Anyway, I came
+out to tell you what I've learned, and what I have an idea may be the
+truth, and above all, to get your definite opinion. You want the Pratt
+influence out of the way--at any cost?"
+
+"At any cost!" she affirmed. "Even if I have to go back to earning my
+own living! Whatever pleasure in life could there be for me, knowing
+that at the back of all this there is that--what?"
+
+"Pratt!" answered Collingwood. "Pratt! He's the shadow--with his deep
+schemes. However, as I said--there may be--developing at this
+moment--another way of getting at Pratt. Gentlemen like Pratt, born
+schemers, invariably forget one very important factor in life--the
+unexpected! Even the cleverest and most subtle schemer may have his
+delicate machinery broken to pieces by a chance bit of mere dust getting
+into it at an unexpected turn of the wheels. And to turn to plainer
+language--I'm going back to Barford now to hear what another man has to
+say concerning certain of Pratt's recent movements."
+
+Eldrick was already waiting when Collingwood reached his chambers: Byner
+came there a few moments later. Within half an hour the barrister had
+told his story of Cobcroft, and the inquiry agent his of his visit to
+the _Green Man_ and the quarries. And the solicitor listened quietly and
+attentively to both, and in the end turned to Collingwood.
+
+"I'll withdraw my opinion about the nature of the document which Pratt
+got hold of," he said. "What he's got is what you think--John
+Mallathorpe's will!"
+
+"If I may venture an opinion," remarked Byner, "that's dead certain!"
+
+"And now," continued Eldrick, "we're faced with a nice situation! Don't
+either of you forget this fact. Not out of willingness on her part, but
+because she's got to do it, Mrs. Mallathorpe and Pratt are partners in
+that affair. He's got the will--but she knows its contents. She'll pay
+any price to Pratt to keep them from ever becoming known or operative.
+But, as I say, don't you forget something!"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick tapped the edge of the table, emphasizing his words as he spoke
+them.
+
+"They can destroy that will whenever they like!" he said. "And once
+destroyed, nothing can absolutely prove that it ever existed!"
+
+"The duplicate?" suggested Collingwood.
+
+"Nothing to give us the faintest idea as to its existence!" said
+Eldrick.
+
+"We might advertise," said Collingwood.
+
+"Lots of advertising was done when John Mallathorpe died," replied the
+solicitor. "No!--if any person had had it in possession, it would have
+turned up then. It may be--probably is--possibly must be--somewhere--and
+may yet come to light. But--there's another way of getting at Pratt.
+Through this Parrawhite affair. Pratt most likely had not the least
+notion that he would ever hear of Parrawhite again. He is going to hear
+of Parrawhite again! I am convinced now that Parrawhite knew something
+about this, and that Pratt squared him and got him away. Aren't you?" he
+asked, turning to Byner.
+
+But Byner smiled quietly and shook his head.
+
+"No!" he answered. "I am not, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"You're not?" exclaimed Eldrick, surprised and wondering that anybody
+could fail to agree with him.
+
+"Why not, then?"
+
+"Because," replied Byner. "I am certain that Pratt murdered Parrawhite
+on the night of November twenty-third last. That's why. He didn't square
+him. He didn't get him away. He killed him!"
+
+The effect of this straightforward pronouncement of opinion on the two
+men who heard it was strikingly different. Collingwood's face at once
+became cold and inscrutable; his lips fixed themselves sternly; his eyes
+looked hard into a problematic future. But Eldrick flushed as if a
+direct accusation had been levelled at himself, and he turned on the
+inquiry agent almost impatiently.
+
+"Murder!" he exclaimed. "Oh, come! I--really, that's rather a stiff
+order! I dare say Pratt's been up to all sorts of trickery, and even
+deviltry--but murder is quite another thing. You're pretty ready to
+accuse him!"
+
+Byner moved his head in Collingwood's direction--and Eldrick turned and
+looked anxiously at Collingwood, who, finding the eyes of both men on
+him, opened his hitherto tight-shut lips.
+
+"I think it quite likely!" he said.
+
+Byner laughed softly and looked at the solicitor.
+
+"Just listen to me a minute or two, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "I'll sum up
+my own ideas on this matter, got from the various details that have been
+supplied to me since I came to Barford. Just consider my points one by
+one. Let's take them separately--and see how they fit in.
+
+"1. Mr. Bartle is seen by his shop-boy to take a certain paper from a
+book which came from the late John Mallathorpe's office at Mallathorpe
+Mill. He puts that paper in his pocket.
+
+"2. Immediately afterwards Mr. Bartle goes to your office. Nobody is
+there but Pratt--as far as Pratt knows.
+
+"3. Bartle dies suddenly--after telling Pratt that the paper is John
+Mallathorpe's will. Pratt steals the will. And the probability is that
+Parrawhite, unknown to Pratt, was in that office, and saw him steal it.
+Why is that probable? Because--
+
+"4. Next night Parrawhite, who is being pressed for money by Pickard,
+tells Pickard that he can get it out of Pratt, over whom he has a hold.
+What hold? We can imagine what hold. Anyway--
+
+"5. Parrawhite leaves Pickard to meet Pratt. He did meet Pratt--in
+Stubbs' Lane. He was seen to go with Pratt into the disused quarry. And
+there, in my opinion, Pratt killed him--and disposed of his body.
+
+"6. What does Pratt do next? He goes to your office first thing next
+morning, and removes certain moneys which you say you carelessly left in
+your desk the night before, and tears out certain cheque forms from your
+book. When Parrawhite never turns up that morning, you--and
+Pratt--conclude that he's the thief, and that he's run away.
+
+"7. If you want some proof of the correctness of this last suggestion,
+you'll find it in the fact that no use has ever been made of those blank
+cheques, and that--in all probability--the stolen bank-notes have never
+reached the Bank of England. On that last point I'm making inquiry--but
+my feeling is that Pratt destroyed both cheques and bank-notes when he
+stole them.
+
+"8. This man Parrawhite out of the way, Pratt has a clear field. He's
+got the will. He's already acquainted Mrs. Mallathorpe with that fact,
+and with the terms of the will--whatever they may be. We may be sure,
+however, that they are of such a nature as to make her willing to agree
+to his demands upon her--and, accidentally, to go to any lengths--upon
+which we needn't touch, at present--towards getting possession of the
+will from him.
+
+"9. And the present situation--from Pratt's standpoint of yesterday--is
+this. He's so sure of his own safety that he doesn't mind revealing to
+the daughter that the mother's in his power. Why? Because Pratt, like
+most men of his sort, cannot believe that self-interest isn't paramount
+with everybody--it's beyond him to conceive it possible that Miss
+Mallathorpe would do anything that might lose her several thousands a
+year. He argued--'So long as I hold that will, nobody and nothing can
+make me give it up nor divulge its contents. But I can bind one person
+who benefits by it--Miss Mallathorpe, and for the mother's sake I can
+keep the daughter quiet!' Well--he hasn't kept the daughter quiet!
+She--spoke!
+
+"10. And last--in all such schemes as Pratt's, the schemer invariably
+forgets something. Pratt forgot that there might arise what actually has
+arisen--inquiry for Parrawhite. The search for Parrawhite is afoot--and
+if you want to get at Pratt, it will have to be through what I firmly
+believe to be a fact--his murder of Parrawhite and his disposal of
+Parrawhite's body.
+
+"That's all, Mr. Eldrick," concluded Byner who had spoken with much
+emphasis throughout. "It all seems very clear to me, and," he added,
+with a glance at Collingwood, "I think Mr. Collingwood is inclined to
+agree with most of what I've said."
+
+"Pretty nearly all--if not all," assented Collingwood. "I think you've
+put into clear language precisely what I feel. I don't believe there's a
+shadow of doubt that Pratt killed Parrawhite! And we can--and must--get
+at him in that way. What do you suggest?" he continued, turning to
+Byner. "You have some idea, of course?"
+
+"First of all," answered Byner, "we mustn't arouse any suspicion on
+Pratt's part. Let us work behind the screen. But I have an idea as to
+how he disposed of Parrawhite, and I'm going to follow it up this very
+day--my first duty, you know, is towards the people who want Parrawhite,
+or proof of his death. I propose to----"
+
+Just then Collingwood's clerk came in with a telegram.
+
+"Sent on from the _Central Hotel_, sir," he answered. "They said Mr.
+Black would be found here."
+
+"That's mine," said the inquiry agent. "I left word at the hotel that
+they were to send to your chambers if any wire came for me. Allow me."
+He opened the telegram, looked it over, and waiting until the clerk had
+gone, turned to his companions. "Here's a message from my partner, Mr.
+Halstead," he continued. "Listen to what he wires:
+
+ "'Wire just received from Murgatroyd, shipping agent, Peel Row,
+ Barford. He says Parrawhite left that town for America on
+ November 24th last and offers further information. Let me know
+ what to reply!'"
+
+Byner laid the message before Eldrick and Collingwood without further
+comment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+THE CAT'SPAW
+
+
+On the evening of the day whereon Nesta Mallathorpe had paid him the
+visit which had resulted in so much plain speech on both sides, Pratt
+employed his leisure in a calm review of the situation. He was by no
+means dissatisfied, it seemed to him that everything was going very well
+for his purposes. He was not at all sorry that Nesta had been to see
+him--far from it. He regretted nothing that he had said to her. In his
+desperate opinion, his own position was much stronger when she left
+him than it was when he opened his office door to her. She now knew,
+said Pratt, with what a strong and resourceful man she had to deal: she
+would respect him, and have a better idea of him, now that she was aware
+of his impregnable position.
+
+Herein Pratt's innate vanity and his ignorance showed themselves. He had
+little knowledge of modern young women, and few ideas about them; and
+such ideas as he possessed were usually mistaken ones. But one was that
+it is always necessary to keep a firm hand on women--let them see and
+feel your power, said Pratt. He had been secretly delighted to acquaint
+Nesta Mallathorpe with his power, to drive it into her that he had the
+whip hand of her mother, and through her mother, of Nesta herself. He
+had seen that Nesta was much upset and alarmed by what he told her. And
+though she certainly seemed to recover her spirits at the end of the
+interview, and even refused to shake hands with him, he cherished the
+notion that in the war of words he had come off a decided victor. He did
+not believe that Nesta would utter to any other soul one word of what
+had passed between them: she would be too much afraid of calling down
+his vengeance on her mother. What he did believe was that as time went
+by, and all progressed smoothly, Nesta would come to face and accept
+facts: she would find him honest and hardworking in his dealings with
+Mrs. Mallathorpe (as he fully intended to be, from purely personal and
+selfish motives) and she herself would begin to tolerate and then to
+trust him, and eventually--well, who knew what might or might not
+happen? What said the great Talleyrand?--WITH TIME AND PATIENCE, THE
+MULBERRY LEAF IS TURNED INTO SATIN.
+
+But Pratt's self-complacency received a shock next morning. If he had
+been a reader of London newspapers, it would have received a shock the
+day before. Pratt, however, was essentially parochial in his newspaper
+tastes--he never read anything but the Barford papers. And when he
+picked up the Barford morning journal and saw Eldrick's advertisement
+for Parrawhite in a prominent place, he literally started from sheer
+surprise--not unmingled with alarm. It was as if he were the occupant of
+a strong position, only fortified, who suddenly finds a shell dropped
+into his outworks from a totally unexpected quarter.
+
+Parrawhite! Advertised for by Eldrick! Why? For what reason? For what
+purpose? With what idea? Parrawhite!--of all men in the
+world--Parrawhite, of whom he had never wanted to hear again! And what
+on earth could Eldrick want with him, or with news of him? It would
+be--or might be--an uncommonly awkward thing for him, Pratt, if a really
+exhaustive search were made for Parrawhite. For nobody knew better than
+himself that one little thing leads to another, and--but he forbore to
+follow out what might have been his train of thought. Once he was
+tempted to make an excuse for going round to Eldrick & Pascoe's with the
+idea of fishing for information--but he refrained. Let things
+develop--that was a safer plan. Still, he was anxious and disturbed all
+day. Then, towards the end of the afternoon, he bought one of the
+Barford evening papers--and saw, in staring letters, the advertisement
+which Byner had caused to be inserted only a few hours previously. And
+at that, Pratt became afraid.
+
+Parrawhite wanted!--news of Parrawhite wanted!--and in two separate
+quarters. Wanted by Eldrick--wanted by some London people! What in the
+name of the devil did it mean? At any rate, he must see to himself. One
+thing was certain--no search for Parrawhite must be permitted in
+Barford.
+
+That evening, instead of going home to dinner, Pratt remained in town,
+and dined at a quiet restaurant. When he dined, he thought, and planned,
+and schemed--and after treating himself very well in the matter of food
+and drink, he lighted a cigar, returned to his new offices, opened a
+safe which he had just set up, and took from a drawer in it a hundred
+pounds in bank-notes. With these in his pocket-book he went off to a
+quiet part of the town--the part in which James Parrawhite had lodged
+during his stay in Barford.
+
+Pratt turned into a somewhat mean and shabby street--a street of small,
+poor-class shops. He went forward amongst them until he came to one
+which, if anything, was meaner and shabbier than the others and bore
+over its window the name Reuben Murgatroyd--Watchmaker and Jeweller.
+There were few signs of jewellery in Reuben Murgatroyd's window--some
+cheap clocks, some foreign-made watches of the five-shilling and
+seven-and-six variety, a selection of flashy rings and chains were
+spread on the shelves, equally cheap and flashy bangles, bracelets, and
+brooches lay in dust-covered trays on the sloping bench beneath them. At
+these things Pratt cast no more than a contemptuous glance. But he
+looked with interest at the upper part of the window, in which were
+displayed numerous gaily-coloured handbills and small posters relating
+to shipping--chiefly in the way of assisted passages to various parts of
+the globe. These set out that you could get an assisted passage to
+Canada for so much; to Australia for not much more--and if the bills and
+posters themselves did not tell you all you wanted to know, certain big
+letters at the foot of each invited you to apply for further information
+to Mr. R. Murgatroyd, agent, within. And Pratt pushed open the shop-door
+and walked inside.
+
+An untidily dressed, careworn, anxious-looking man came forward from a
+parlour at the rear of his shop. At sight of Pratt--who in the course of
+business had once served him with a writ--his pale face flushed, and
+then whitened, and Pratt hastened to assure him of his peaceful errand.
+
+"All right, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said. "Nothing to be alarmed about--I'm
+out of that line, now--no papers of that sort tonight. I've a bit of
+business I can put in your hands--profitable business. Look here!--have
+you got a quarter of an hour to spare?"
+
+Murgatroyd, who looked greatly relieved to find that his visitor had
+neither writ nor summons for him, glanced at his parlour door.
+
+"I was just going to put the shutters up, and sit down to a bite of
+supper, Mr. Pratt," he answered. "Will you come in, sir?"
+
+"No--you come out with me," said Pratt. "Come round to the _Coach and
+Horses_, and have a drink and we can talk. You'll have a better appetite
+for your supper when you come back," he added, with a wink. "I've a
+profitable job for you."
+
+"Glad to hear it, sir," replied Murgatroyd. "I can do with aught of that
+sort, I assure you!" He went into the parlour, said a word or two to
+some person within, and came out again. "Not much business doing at
+present, Mr. Pratt," he said, as he and his visitor turned into the
+street. "Gets slacker than ever."
+
+"Then you'll do with a slice of good luck," remarked Pratt. "It just
+happens that I can put a bit in your way."
+
+He led Murgatroyd to the end of the street, where stood a corner tavern,
+into a side-door of which Pratt turned as if he were well acquainted
+with the geography of the place. Walking down a narrow passage he
+conducted his companion into a small parlour, at that moment untenanted,
+pointed him to a seat in the corner, and rang the bell. Five minutes
+later, having provided Murgatroyd with rum and water and a cigar, he
+turned on him with a direct question.
+
+"Look here!" he said in a low voice. "Would a hundred pounds be any use
+to you?"
+
+Murgatroyd's cheeks flushed.
+
+"It 'ud be a fortune!" he answered with fervour. "A hundred pound! Lor'
+bless you, Mr. Pratt, it's many a year since I saw a hundred pound--of
+my own--all in one lump!"
+
+Pratt pulled out his roll of bank-notes, fluttered it in his companion's
+face, laid it on the table, and set an ashtray on it.
+
+"There's a hundred pounds there!" he said, "It's yours to pick up--if
+you'll do a little job for me. Easy job, too!--you'll never earn a
+hundred pounds so easy in your life!"
+
+Murgatroyd pricked up his ears. According to his ideas, money easily
+come by was seldom honestly earned. He stirred uncomfortably in his
+seat.
+
+"So long as it's a straight job," he muttered. "I don't want----"
+
+"Straight enough--as straight as it's easy," answered Pratt. "It may
+seem a bit mysterious, but there's reasons for that. I give you my word
+it's all right--all a mere bit of diplomacy--and that nobody'll ever
+know you're in it--that is, beyond a certain stage--and that there's no
+danger to you."
+
+"What is it?" asked Murgatroyd, still uneasy and doubtful.
+
+Pratt pulled the evening paper out of his pocket and showed Murgatroyd
+the advertisement signed Halstead & Byner.
+
+"You see that?" he said. "Information wanted about Parrawhite. Do you
+remember Parrawhite? He once served you with some papers in that affair
+in which we were against you."
+
+"I remember him," answered Murgatroyd. "I've seen him in here now and
+again. So he's wanted, is he? I didn't know he'd left the town."
+
+"Left last November," said Pratt. "And--there are folks--influential
+folks, as you can guess, seeing that they can throw a hundred pounds
+away!--who don't want any inquiries made for him in Barford. They don't
+mind--those folks--how many inquiries and searches are made for him
+anywhere else, but--not here!"
+
+"Well?" asked Murgatroyd anxiously.
+
+"This is it," replied Pratt. "You do a bit now and then as agent for
+some of these shipping lines. You book passages for emigrants--and for
+other people, going to New Zealand or Canada or Timbuctoo--never mind
+where. Now then--couldn't you remember--I'm sure you could--that you
+booked a passage for Parrawhite to America last November? Come! It's an
+easy matter to remember is that--for a hundred pounds."
+
+Murgatroyd's thin fingers trembled a little as he picked up his glass.
+"What do you want me to do--exactly?" he asked.
+
+"This!" said Pratt. "I want you, tomorrow morning, early, to send a
+telegram to these people, Halstead & Byner, St. Martin's Chambers,
+London, just saying that James Parrawhite left Barford for America on
+November 24th last, and that you can give further information if
+necessary."
+
+"And what if it is necessary?" inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"Then--in answer to any letter or telegram of inquiry--you'll just say
+that you knew Parrawhite by sight as a clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's in
+this town, that on November 23rd he told you that he was going to
+emigrate to America, that next day you booked him his passage, for which
+he paid you whatever it was, and that he thereupon set off for
+Liverpool. See?"
+
+"It's all lies, you know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Nobody can find 'em out, anyway," replied Pratt. "That's the one
+important thing to consider. You're safe! And if you're cursed with a
+conscience and it's tender--well, that'll make a good plaister for it!"
+
+He pointed to the little wad of bank-notes--and the man sitting at his
+side followed the pointing finger with hungry eyes. Murgatroyd wanted
+money badly. His business, always poor, was becoming worse: his shipping
+agency rarely produced any result: his rent was in arrears: he owed
+money to his neighbour-tradesmen: he had a wife and young children. To
+such a man, a hundred pounds meant relief, comfort, the lifting of
+pressure.
+
+"You're sure there's naught wrong in it, Mr. Pratt," he asked abruptly
+and assiduously. "It 'ud be a bad job for my family if anything happened
+to me, you know."
+
+"There's naught that will happen," answered Pratt confidently. "Who on
+earth can contradict you? Who knows what people you sell passages
+to--but yourself?"
+
+"There's the folks themselves," replied Murgatroyd. "Suppose Parrawhite
+turns up?"
+
+"He won't!" exclaimed Pratt.
+
+"You know where he is?" suggested Murgatroyd.
+
+"Not exactly," said Pratt, "But--he's left this country for
+another--further off than America. That's certain! And--the folks I
+referred to don't want any inquiry about him here."
+
+"If I am asked questions--later--am I to say he booked in his own name?"
+inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"No--name of Parsons," responded Pratt. "Here, I'll write down for you
+exactly what I want you to say in the telegram to Halstead & Byner, and
+I'll make a few memoranda for you--to post you up in case they write for
+further information."
+
+"I haven't said that I'll do it," remarked Murgatroyd. "I don't like the
+looks of it. It's all a pack of lies."
+
+Pratt paid no heed to this moral reflection. He found some loose paper
+in his pocket and scribbled on it for a while. Then, as if accidentally,
+he moved the ash-tray, and the bank-notes beneath it, all new, gave
+forth a crisp, rustling sound.
+
+"Here you are!" said Pratt, pushing notes and memoranda towards his
+companion. "Take the brass, man!--you don't get a job like that every
+day."
+
+And Murgatroyd put the money in his pocket, and presently went home,
+persuading himself that everything would be all right.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+
+Byner watched Eldrick and Collingwood inquisitively as they bent over
+Halstead's telegram. He was not surprised when Collingwood merely nodded
+in silence--nor when Eldrick turned excitedly in his own direction.
+
+"There!--what did I tell you?" he exclaimed. "There's been no murder!
+The man left the town. Probably, Pratt helped him off. Couldn't have
+better proof than that wire!"
+
+"What do you take that wire to prove, then, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Byner.
+
+"Take it to prove!" answered Eldrick. "Why, that Parrawhite booked a
+passage to America with this man Murgatroyd, last November. Clear
+enough, that!"
+
+"What do you take it to prove, Mr. Collingwood?" continued the inquiry
+agent, as he turned to the barrister with a smile.
+
+"Before I take it for anything," replied Collingwood, "I want to know
+who Murgatroyd is."
+
+Byner looked at Eldrick and laughed.
+
+"Precisely!" he said. "Who is Murgatroyd? Perhaps Mr. Eldrick knows."
+
+"I do just know that he's a man who carries on a small watch and clock
+business in a poorish part of the town, and that he has some sort of a
+shipping agency," answered Eldrick. "But--do you mean to imply that
+whatever message it is that he's sent to your partner in London this
+morning has not been sent in good faith?"
+
+"I don't imply anything," answered Byner. "All I say is--before I attach
+any value to his message I, like Collingwood, want to know something
+about the sender. He may have been put up to sending it. He may be in
+collusion with somebody. Now, Mr. Eldrick, you can come in
+here--strongly! I don't want to be seen in this affair--yet. Will you go
+and see Murgatroyd? Tell him his wire to Halstead & Byner in London has
+been communicated to you here. Ask him for further particulars--and then
+drop in on me at my hotel and tell me what you've learnt. I'll be found
+in the smoking-room there any time after two-thirty onward."
+
+Eldrick's intense curiosity in what was rapidly becoming a fascinating
+mystery to him, led him to accept this embassy. And a little before
+three o'clock he walked into the smoking-room at the _Central Hotel_ and
+discovered Byner in a comfortable corner.
+
+"I've seen Murgatroyd," he whispered, as he took an adjacent chair.
+"Decent honest enough man--very poor, I should say. He tells a plain
+enough story. Parrawhite, whom he knew as one of our clerks, told him,
+last November 23rd----"
+
+"He was exact about dates, then, was he?" interrupted Byner.
+
+"He mentioned them readily enough," replied the solicitor. "But to go
+on--Parrawhite mentioned to him, November 23rd last, that he wanted to
+go to America at once, Murgatroyd told him about bookings. Parrawhite
+called very early next morning, paid for his passage under the name of
+Parsons, and went off--en route for Liverpool, of course. So--there you
+are!"
+
+"That's all Murgatroyd could tell?" inquired Byner.
+
+"That's all he knows," answered Eldrick.
+
+"You say Murgatroyd knew Parrawhite as one of your clerks?" asked Byner
+after a moment's thought.
+
+"We had some process in hand against this man last autumn," replied
+Eldrick. "I dare say Parrawhite served him with papers."
+
+"Would he--Murgatroyd--be likely to know Pratt?" continued Byner.
+
+"He might--in the same connection," admitted Eldrick.
+
+Byner smoked in silence for a while.
+
+"Do you know what I think, Mr. Eldrick?" he said at last. "I think Pratt
+put up Murgatroyd to sending that telegram to us in London this
+morning."
+
+"You do!" exclaimed Eldrick.
+
+"Surely! And now," continued the inquiry agent, "if you will, you can do
+more--much more--without appearing to do anything. Pratt's office is
+only a few minutes away. Can you drop in there, making some excuse, and
+while there, mention, more or less casually, that Parrawhite, or
+information about him, is wanted; that you and a certain Halstead &
+Byner are advertising for him; that you've just seen Murgatroyd in
+respect of a communication which he wired to Halstead's this morning,
+and that--most important of all--a fortune of twenty thousand pounds is
+awaiting Parrawhite! Don't forget the last bit of news."
+
+"Why that particularly?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," answered Byner solemnly, "I want Pratt to know that the
+search for Parrawhite is going to be a thorough one!"
+
+Eldrick went off on his second mission, promising to return in due
+course. Within a few minutes he was in Pratt's office, talking over some
+unimportant matter of business which he had invented as he went along.
+It was not until he was on the point of departure that he referred to
+the real reason of his visit.
+
+"Did you notice that Parrawhite is being advertised for?" he asked,
+suddenly turning on his old clerk.
+
+Pratt was ready for this--had been ready ever since Eldrick walked in.
+He affected a fine surprise.
+
+"Parrawhite!" he exclaimed. "Why--who's advertising for him?"
+
+"Don't you see the newspapers?" asked Eldrick, pointing to some which
+lay about the room. "It's in there--there's an advertisement of mine,
+and one of Halstead & Byner's, of London."
+
+Pratt picked up a Barford paper and looked at the advertisements with a
+clever affectation of having never seen them before.
+
+"I haven't had much time for newspaper reading this last day or two," he
+remarked. "Advertisements for him--from two quarters!"
+
+"Acting together--acting together, you know!" replied Eldrick. "It's
+those people who really want him--Halstead & Byner, inquiry agents,
+working for a firm of City solicitors. I'm only local agent--as it
+were."
+
+"Had any response, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Pratt, throwing aside the paper.
+"Any one come forward?"
+
+"Yes," answered Eldrick, watching Pratt narrowly without seeming to do
+so. "This morning, a man named Murgatroyd, in Peel Row, who does a bit
+of shipping agency, wired to Halstead & Byner to say that he booked
+Parrawhite to New York last November. Of course, they at once
+communicated with me, and I've just been to see Murgatroyd. He's that
+man--watchmaker--we had some proceedings against last year."
+
+"Oh, that man!" said Pratt. "Thought the name was familiar. I remember
+him. And what does he say?"
+
+"Just about as much as--and little more than--he said in his wire to
+London," replied Eldrick. "Booked Parrawhite to America November 24th
+last, and believes he left for Liverpool there and then."
+
+"Ah!" remarked Pratt, "That explains it, then?"
+
+"Explains--what?" asked Eldrick.
+
+Pratt gave his old employer a look--confidential and significant.
+
+"Explains why he took that money out of your desk," he said. "You
+remember--forty odd pounds. He'd use some of that for his passage-money.
+America eh? Now--I suppose he's vanished for good, then--it's not very
+likely he'll ever be heard of from across there."
+
+Eldrick laughed--meaningly, of set purpose.
+
+"We don't know that he's gone there," he observed. "He mightn't get
+beyond Liverpool, you know. Anyhow, we're going to make a very good
+search for him here in Barford, first. We've nothing but Murgatroyd's
+word for his having set out for Liverpool."
+
+"What's he wanted for?" asked Pratt as unconcernedly as possible. "Been
+up to something?"
+
+"No," answered Eldrick, as he turned on his heel. "A relation has left
+him twenty thousand pounds. That's what he's wanted for--and why he must
+be found--or his death proved."
+
+He gave Pratt another quick glance and went off--to return to the hotel
+and Byner, to whom he at once gave a faithful account of what had just
+taken place.
+
+"And he didn't turn a hair," he remarked. "Cool as a cucumber, all
+through! If your theory is correct, Pratt's a cleverer hand than I ever
+took him for--and I've always said he was clever."
+
+"Didn't show anything when you mentioned Murgatroyd?" asked Byner.
+
+"Not a shred of a thing!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"Nor when you spoke of the twenty thousand pounds?"
+
+"No more than what you might call polite and interested surprise!"
+
+Byner laughed, threw away the end of a cigar, and rose out of his
+lounging posture.
+
+"Now, Mr. Eldrick," he said, leaning close to the solicitor, "between
+ourselves, do you know what I'm going to do--next--which means at once?"
+
+"No," replied Eldrick.
+
+"The police!" whispered Byner. "That's my next move. Just now! Within a
+few minutes. So--will you give me a couple of notes--one to the
+principal man here--chief constable, or police superintendent, or
+whatever he is; and another to the best detective there is here--in your
+opinion. They'll save me a lot of trouble."
+
+"Of course--if you wish it," answered Eldrick. "But you don't mean to
+say you're going to have Pratt arrested--on what you know up to now?"
+
+"Not at all!" replied Byner. "Much too soon! All I want is--detective
+help of the strictly professional kind. No--we'll give Mr. Pratt a
+little more rope yet--for another four-and-twenty-hours, say. But--it'll
+come! Now, who is the best local detective--a quiet, steady fellow who
+knows how to do his work unobtrusively?"
+
+"Prydale's the man!" said Eldrick "Detective-Sergeant Prydale--I've had
+reason to employ him, more than once. I'll give you a note to him, and
+one to Superintendent Waterson."
+
+He went over to a writing-table and scribbled a few lines on half-sheets
+of notepaper which he enclosed in envelopes and handed to Byner.
+
+"I don't know what line you're taking," he said, "nor where it's going
+to end--exactly. But I do know this--Pratt never turned a hair when I
+let out all that to him."
+
+But if Eldrick went away from his old clerk's fine new offices thinking
+that Pratt was quite unperturbed and unmoved by the news he had just
+acquired, he was utterly mistaken. Pratt was very much perturbed, deeply
+moved, not a little frightened. He had so schooled himself to keep a
+straight and ever blank expression of countenance in any sudden change
+of events that he had shown nothing to Eldrick--but he was none the less
+upset by the solicitor's last announcement. Twenty thousand pounds was
+lying to be picked up by Parrawhite--or by Parrawhite's next-of-kin!
+What an unhappy turn of fortune! For the next-of-kin would never rest
+until either Parrawhite came to light, or it was satisfactorily
+established that he was dead--and if search begun to be made in Barford,
+where might not that search end? Unmoved?--cool?--if Eldrick had turned
+back, he would have found that Pratt had suddenly given way to a fit of
+nerves.
+
+But that soon passed, and Pratt began to think. He left his office
+early, and betook himself to his favourite gymnasium. Exercise did him
+good--he thought a lot while he was exercising. And once more, instead
+of going home to dinner, he dined in town, and he sat late over his
+dinner in a snug corner of the restaurant, and he thought and planned
+and schemed--and after twilight had fallen on Barford, he went out and
+made his way to Peel Row. He must see Murgatroyd again--at once.
+
+Half-way along Peel Row, Pratt stopped, suddenly--and with sudden fear.
+Out of a side street emerged a man, a quiet ordinary-looking man whom he
+knew very well indeed--Detective-Sergeant Prydale. He was accompanied by
+a smart-looking, much younger man, whom Pratt remembered to have seen in
+Beck Street that afternoon--a stranger to him and to Barford. And as he
+watched, these two covered the narrow roadway, and walked into
+Murgatroyd's shop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+THE BETTER HALF
+
+
+Under the warming influence of two glasses of rum and water, and lulled
+by Pratt's assurance that all would be well, Murgatroyd had carried home
+his hundred pounds with pretty much the same feeling which permeates a
+man who, having been within measurable distance of drowning, suddenly
+finds a substantial piece of timber drifting his way, and takes a firm
+grip on it. After all, a hundred pounds was a hundred pounds. He would
+be able to pay his rent, and his rates, and give something to the grocer
+and the butcher and the baker and the milkman; the children should have
+some much-needed new clothes and boots--when all this was done, there
+would be a nice balance left over. And it was Pratt's affair, when all
+was said and done, and if any trouble arose, why, Pratt would have to
+settle it. So he ate his supper with the better appetite which Pratt had
+prophesied, and he slept more satisfactorily than usual, and next
+morning he went to the nearest telegraph office and sent off the
+stipulated telegram to Halstead & Byner in London, and hoped that there
+was the end of the matter as far as he was concerned. And then, shortly
+after noon, in walked Mr. Eldrick, one of the tribe which Murgatroyd
+dreaded, having had various dealings with solicitors, in the way of
+writs and summonses, and began to ask questions.
+
+Murgatroyd emerged from that ordeal very satisfactorily. Eldrick's
+questions were few, elementary, and easily answered. There were no signs
+of suspicion about him, and Murgatroyd breathed more freely when he was
+gone. It seemed to him that the solicitor's visit would certainly wind
+things up--for him. Eldrick asked all that could be asked, as far as he
+could see, and he had replied: now, he would probably be bothered no
+more. His spirits had assumed quite a cheerful tone by evening--but they
+received a rude shock when, summoned from his little workshop to the
+front premises, he found himself confronting one man whom he certainly
+knew to be a detective, and another who might be one. Do what he would
+he could not conceal some agitation, and Detective-Sergeant Prydale, a
+shrewdly observant man, noticed it--and affected not to.
+
+"Evening, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said cheerily. "We've come to see if you
+can give us a bit of information. You've had Mr. Eldrick, the lawyer,
+here today on the same business. You know--this affair of an old clerk
+of his--Parrawhite?"
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick all I know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Very likely," replied Prydale, "but there's a few questions this
+gentleman and myself would like to ask. Can we come in?"
+
+Murgatroyd fetched his wife to mind the shop, and took the callers into
+the parlour which she had unwillingly vacated. He knew Prydale by sight
+and reputation; about Byner he wondered. Finally he set him down as a
+detective from London--and was all the more afraid of him.
+
+"What do you want to know?" he asked, when the three men were alone. "I
+don't think there's anything that I didn't tell Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Oh, there's a great deal that Mr. Eldrick didn't ask," said Prydale.
+"Mr. Eldrick sort of just skirted round things, like. We want to know a
+bit more. This Parrawhite's got to be found, d'ye see, Mr. Murgatroyd,
+and as you seem to be the last man who had aught to do with him in
+Barford, why, naturally, we come to you. Now, to start with, you say he
+came to you about getting a passage to America? Just so--now, when would
+that be?"
+
+"Day before he did get it," answered Murgatroyd, rapidly thinking over
+the memoranda which Pratt had jotted down for his benefit.
+
+"That," said Prydale, "would be on the 23rd?"
+
+"Yes," replied Murgatroyd, "23rd November, of course."
+
+"What time, now, on the 23rd?" asked the detective.
+
+"Time?" said Murgatroyd. "Oh--in the evening."
+
+"Bit vague," remarked Prydale. "What time in the evening?"
+
+"As near as I can recollect," replied Murgatroyd, "it 'ud be just about
+half-past eight. I was thinking of closing."
+
+"Ah!" said Prydale, with a glance at Byner, who had already told him of
+Parrawhite's presence at the _Green Man_ on the other side of the town,
+a good two miles away, at the hour which Murgatroyd mentioned. "Ah!--he
+was here in your shop at half-past eight on the evening of November 23rd
+last? Asking about a ticket to America?"
+
+"New York," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"And he came next morning and bought one?" asked the detective.
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick that," said Murgatroyd, a little sullenly.
+
+"How much did it cost?" inquired Byner.
+
+"Eight pound ten," replied Murgatroyd. "Usual price."
+
+"What did he pay for it in?" continued Prydale.
+
+"He gave me a ten-pound note and I gave him thirty shillings change,"
+answered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Just so," assented Prydale. "Now what line might that be by?"
+
+Murgatroyd was becoming uneasy under all these questions, and his
+uneasiness was deepened by the way in which both his visitors watched
+him. He was a man who would have been a bad witness in any
+case--nervous, ill at ease, suspicious, inclined to boggle--and in this
+instance he was being forced to invent answers.
+
+"It was--oh, the Royal Atlantic!" he answered at last. "I've an agency
+for them."
+
+"So I noticed from the bills and placards in your window," observed the
+detective. "And of course you issue these tickets on their paper--I've
+seen 'em before. You fill up particulars on a form and a counterfoil,
+don't you? And you send a copy of those particulars to the Royal
+Atlantic offices at Liverpool?"
+
+Murgatroyd nodded silently--this was much more than he bargained for,
+and he did not know how much further it was going. And Prydale gave him
+a sudden searching look.
+
+"Can you show us the counterfoil in this instance?" he asked.
+
+Murgatroyd flushed. But he managed to get out a fairly quick reply. "No,
+I can't," he answered, "I sent that book back at the end of the year."
+
+"Oh, well--they'll have it at Liverpool," observed Prydale. "We can get
+at it there. Of course, they'll have your record of the entire
+transaction. He'd be down on their passenger list--under the name of
+Parsons, I think, Mr. Murgatroyd?"
+
+"He gave me that name," said Murgatroyd.
+
+Prydale gave Byner a look and both rose.
+
+"I think that's about all," said the detective. "Of course, our next
+inquiry will be at Liverpool---at the Royal Atlantic. Thank you, Mr.
+Murgatroyd--much obliged."
+
+Before the watchmaker could collect himself sufficiently to say or ask
+more, Prydale and his companion had walked out of the shop and gone
+away. And then Murgatroyd realized that he was in for--but he did not
+know what he was in for. What he did know was that if Prydale went or
+sent over to Liverpool the whole thing would burst like a bubble. For
+the Royal Atlantic people would tell the detectives at once that no
+passenger named Parsons had sailed under their auspices on November 24th
+last, and that he, Murgatroyd, had been telling a pack of lies.
+
+Mrs. Murgatroyd, a sharp-featured woman whose wits had been sharpened by
+a ten years' daily acquaintance with poverty, came out of the shop into
+the parlour and looked searchingly at her husband.
+
+"What did them fellows want?" she demanded. "I knew one of 'em--Prydale,
+the detective. Now what's up, Reuben? More trouble?"
+
+Murgatroyd hesitated a moment. Then he told his wife the whole story
+concealing nothing.
+
+"If they go to the Royal Atlantic, it'll all come out," he groaned. "I
+couldn't make any excuse or explanation--anyhow! What's to be done?"
+
+"You should ha' had naught to do wi' that Pratt!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd. "A scoundrelly fellow, to come and tempt poor folk to do his
+dirty work! Where's the money?"
+
+"Locked up!" answered Murgatroyd. "I haven't touched a penny of it. I
+thought I'd wait a bit and see if aught happened. But he assured me it
+was all right, and you know as well as I do that a hundred pound doesn't
+come our way every day. We want money!"
+
+"Not at that price!" said his wife. "You can pay too much for money, my
+lad! I wish you'd told me what that Pratt was after--he should have
+heard a bit o' my tongue! If I'd only known----"
+
+Just then the shop door opened, and Pratt walked in. He at once saw
+Murgatroyd and his wife standing between shop and parlour, and realized
+at a glance that his secret in this instance was his no longer.
+
+"Well?" he said, walking up to the watchmaker. "You've had Prydale
+here--and you'd Eldrick this morning. Of course, you knew what to say to
+both?"
+
+"I wish we'd never had you here last night, young man!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd fiercely. "What right have you to come here, making trouble
+for folk that's got plenty already? But at any rate, ours was honest
+trouble. Yours is like to land my husband in dishonesty--if it hasn't
+done so already! And if my husband had only spoken to me----"
+
+"Just let your husband speak a bit now," interrupted Pratt, almost
+insolently. "It's you that's making all the trouble or noise, anyhow!
+There's naught to fuss about, missis. What's upset you, Murgatroyd?"
+
+"They're going to the Royal Atlantic people," muttered the watchmaker.
+"Of course, it'll all come out, then. They know that I never booked any
+Parsons--nor anybody else for that matter--last November. You should ha'
+thought o' that!"
+
+Pratt realized that the man was right. He had never thought of
+that--never anticipated that inquiry would go beyond Murgatroyd. But his
+keen wits at once set to work.
+
+"What's the system?" he asked quickly. "Tell me--what's done when you
+book anybody like that? Come on!--explain, quick!"
+
+Murgatroyd turned to a drawer and pulled out a book and some papers.
+"It's simple enough," he said. "I've this book of forms, d'ye see? I
+fill up this form--sort of ticket or pass for the passenger, and hand it
+to him--it's a receipt as well, to him. Then I enter the same
+particulars on that counterfoil. Then I fill up one of these papers,
+giving just the same particulars, and post it at once to the Company
+with the passage money, less my commission. When one of these books is
+finished, I return the counterfoils to Liverpool--they check 'em.
+Prydale's up to all that. He asked to see the counterfoil in this case.
+I had to say I hadn't got it--I'd sent it to the Company. Of course,
+he'll find out that I didn't."
+
+"Lies!" said Mrs. Murgatroyd, vindictively. "And they didn't start wi'
+us neither!"
+
+"Who was that other man with Prydale?" asked Pratt.
+
+"London detective, I should say," answered the watchmaker. "And judging
+by the way he watched me, a sharp 'un, too!"
+
+"What impression did you get--altogether?" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Why!--that they're going to sift this affair--whatever it is--right
+down to the bottom!" exclaimed Murgatroyd. "They're either going to find
+Parrawhite or get to know what became of him. That's my impression. And
+what am I going to do, now! This'll lose me what bit of business I've
+done with yon shipping firm."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" answered Pratt scornfully. "Don't be a fool!
+You're all right. You listen to me. You write--straight off--to the
+Royal Atlantic. Tell 'em you had some inquiry made about a man named
+Parsons, who booked a passage with you for New York last November. Say
+that on looking up your books you found that you unaccountably forgot to
+send them the forms for him and his passage money. Make out a form for
+that date, and crumple it up--as if it had been left lying in a drawer.
+Enclose the money in it--here, I'll give you ten pounds to cover it," he
+went on, drawing a bank-note from his purse. "Get it off at once--you've
+time now--plenty--to catch the night-mail at the General. And then, d'ye
+see, you're all right. It's only a case then--as far as you're
+concerned--of forgetfulness. What's that?--we all forget something in
+business, now and then. They'll overlook that--when they get the money."
+
+"Aye, but you're forgetting something now!" remarked Murgatroyd. "You're
+forgetting this--no such passenger ever went! They'll know that by their
+passenger lists."
+
+"What the devil has that to do with it?" snarled Pratt impatiently.
+"What the devil do we care whether any such passenger went or not? All
+that you're concerned about is to prove that you issued a ticket to
+Parrawhite, under the name of Parsons. What's it matter to you where
+Parrawhite, _alias_ Parsons, went, when he'd once left your shop? You
+naturally thought he'd go straight to the Lancashire and Yorkshire
+Station, on his way to Liverpool and New York! But, for aught you know,
+he may have fallen down a drain pipe in the next street! Don't you see,
+man? There's nothing, there's nobody, not all the detectives in London
+and Barford, can prove that you didn't issue a ticket to Parrawhite on
+that date? It isn't up to you to prove that you did!--it's up to them to
+prove that you didn't! And--they can't. It's impossible. You get that
+letter off--at once--to Liverpool, with that money inside it, and you're
+as safe as houses--and your hundred pounds as well. Get it done! And if
+those chaps come asking any more questions, tell 'em you're not going to
+answer a single one! Mind you!--do what I tell you, and you're safe!"
+
+With that Pratt walked out of the shop and went off towards the centre
+of the town, inwardly raging and disturbed. It was very evident that
+these people meant to find Parrawhite, alive or dead; evident, too, that
+they had called in the aid of the Barford police. And in spite of all
+his assurances to the watchmaker and his suggestion for the next move,
+Pratt was far from easy about the whole matter. He would have been
+easier if he had known who Prydale's companion was--probably he was, as
+Murgatroyd had suggested, a London detective who might have been making
+inquiries in the town for some time and knew much more than he, Pratt,
+could surmise. That was the devil of the whole thing!--in Pratt's
+opinion. Adept himself in working underground, he feared people who
+adopted the same tactics. What was this stranger chap after? What did he
+know? What was he doing? Had he let Eldrick know anything? Was there a
+web of detectives already being spun around himself? Was that silly,
+unfortunate affair with Parrawhite being slowly brought to light--to
+wreck him on the very beginning of what he meant to be a brilliant
+career? He cursed Parrawhite again and again as he left Peel Row behind
+him.
+
+The events of the day had made Pratt cautious as well as anxious. He
+decided to keep away from his lodgings that night, and when he reached
+the centre of the town he took a room at a quiet hotel. He was up early
+next morning; he had breakfasted by eight o'clock; by half-past eight he
+was at his office. And in his letter-box he found one letter--a thickish
+package which had not come by post, but had been dropped in by hand, and
+was merely addressed to Mr. Pratt.
+
+Pratt tore that package open with a conviction of imminent disaster. He
+pulled out a sheet of cheap note-paper--and a wad of bank-notes. His
+face worked curiously as he read a few lines, scrawled in illiterate,
+female handwriting.
+
+ "MR PRATT,--My husband and me don't want any more to do with
+ either you or your money which it is enclosed. Been honest up to
+ now though poor, and intending to remain so our purpose is to
+ make a clean breast of everything to the police first thing
+ tomorrow morning for which you have nobody but yourself to blame
+ for wickedness in tempting poor people to do wrong.
+
+ "Yours, MRS. MURGATROYD."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+DRY SHERRY
+
+
+Pratt wasted no time in cursing Mrs. Murgatroyd. There would be plenty
+of opportunity for such relief to his feelings later on. Just then he
+had other matters to occupy him--fully. He tore the indignant letter to
+shreds; he hastily thrust the bank-notes into one pocket and drew his
+keys from another. Within five minutes he had taken from his safe a
+sealed packet, which he placed in an inside pocket of his coat, and had
+left his office--for the last time, as he knew very well. That part of
+the game was up--and it was necessary to be smart in entering on another
+phase of it.
+
+Since Eldrick's visit of the previous day, Pratt had been prepared for
+all eventuality. He had made ready for flight. And he was not going
+empty-handed. He had a considerable amount of Mrs. Mallathorpe's money
+in his possession; by obtaining her signature to one or two documents he
+could easily obtain much more in London, at an hour's notice. Those
+documents were all ready, and in the sealed packet which he had just
+taken from the safe; in it, too, were some other documents--John
+Mallathorpe's will; the letter which Mrs. Mallathorpe had written to him
+on the evening previous to her son's fatal accident; and the power of
+attorney which Pratt had obtained from her at his first interview after
+that occurrence. All was ready--and now there was nothing to do but to
+get to Normandale Grange, see Mrs. Mallathorpe, and--vanish. He had
+planned it all out, carefully, when he perceived the first danger
+signals, and knew that his other plans and schemes were doomed to
+failure. Half an hour at Normandale Grange--a journey to London--a
+couple of hours in the City--and then the next train to the Continent,
+on his way to regions much further off. Here, things had turned out
+badly, unexpectedly badly--but he would carry away considerable, easily
+transported wealth, to a new career in a new country.
+
+Pratt began his flight in methodical fashion. He locked up his office,
+and left the building by a back entrance which took him into a network
+of courts and alleys at the rear of the business part of Barford. He
+made his way in and out of these places until he reached a
+bicycle-dealer's shop in an obscure street, whereat he had left a
+machine of his own on the previous evening under the excuse of having it
+thoroughly cleaned and oiled. It was all ready for him on his arrival,
+and he presently mounted it and rode away through the outskirts of the
+town, carefully choosing the less frequented streets and roads. He rode
+on until he was clear of Barford: until, in fact, he was some miles from
+it, and had reached a village which was certainly not on the way to
+Normandale. And then, at the post-office he dismounted, and going
+inside, wrote out and dispatched a telegram. It was a brief message
+containing but three words--"One as usual"--and it was addressed Esther
+Mawson, The Grange, Normandale. This done, he remounted his bicycle,
+rode out of the village, and turned across country in quite a different
+direction. It was not yet ten o'clock--he had three hours to spare
+before the time came for keeping the appointment which he had just made.
+
+At an early stage of his operations, Pratt had found that even the
+cleverest of schemers cannot work unaided. It had been absolutely
+necessary to have some tool close at hand to Normandale Grange and its
+inhabitants; to have some person there upon whom he could depend for
+news. He had found that person, that tool, in Esther Mawson, who, as
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid, had opportunities which he at once recognized
+as being likely to be of the greatest value to him. The circumstances of
+Harper Mallathorpe's death had thrown Pratt and the maid together, and
+he had quickly discovered that she was to be bought, and would do
+anything for money. He had soon come to an understanding with her; soon
+bargained with her, and made her a willing accomplice in certain of his
+schemes, without letting her know their full meaning and extent: all,
+indeed, that she had learned from Pratt was that he had some
+considerable hold on her mistress.
+
+But it is dangerous work to play with edged tools, and if Pratt had only
+known it, he was running great risks in using Esther Mawson as a
+semi-accomplice. Esther Mawson was in constant touch with her mistress,
+and Mrs. Mallathorpe, afraid of her daughter, and not greatly in
+sympathy with her, badly needed a confidante. Little by little the
+mistress began to confide in the maid, and before long Esther Mawson
+knew the secret--and thenceforward she played a double game. Pratt found
+her useful in arranging meetings with Mrs. Mallathorpe unknown to Nesta,
+and he believed her to be devoted to him. But the truth was that Esther
+Mawson had only one object of devotion--herself--and she was waiting and
+watching for an opportunity to benefit that object--at Pratt's expense.
+
+Pratt knew nothing of this as he slowly made his way to Normandale that
+morning. Having plenty of time he went by devious and lonely roads and
+by-lanes. Eventually he came to the boundary of Normandale Park at a
+point far away from the Grange. There he dismounted, hid his bicycle in
+a coppice wherein he had often left it before, and went on towards the
+house through the woods and plantations. He knew every yard of the
+ground he traversed, and was skilled in taking cover if he saw any sign
+of woodman or gamekeeper. And in the end, just as one o'clock chimed
+from the clock over the stables, he came to a quiet spot in the
+shrubberies behind the Grange, and found Esther Mawson waiting for him
+in an old summer-house in which they had met on previous and similar
+occasions.
+
+Esther Mawson immediately realized that something unusual was in the
+air. Clever as Pratt was at concealing his feelings, she was cleverer in
+seeing small signs, and she saw that this was no ordinary visit.
+
+"Anything wrong?" she asked at once.
+
+"Bit of bother--nothing much--it'll blow over," answered Pratt, who knew
+that a certain amount of candour was necessary in dealing with this
+woman. "But--I shall have to be away for a bit--week or two, perhaps."
+
+"You want to see her?" inquired Esther.
+
+"Of course! I've some papers for her to sign," replied Pratt. "How do
+things stand? Coast clear?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe's going into Barford after lunch," answered Esther.
+"She'll be driving in about half-past two. I can manage it then. How
+long shall you want to be with her?"
+
+"Oh, a quarter of an hour'll do," said Pratt. "Ten minutes, if it comes
+to that."
+
+"And after that?" asked Esther.
+
+"Then I want to get a train at Scaleby," replied Pratt, mentioning a
+railway junction which lay ten miles across country in another
+direction. "So make it as soon after two-thirty as you can."
+
+"You can see her as soon as Miss Mallathorpe's gone," said Esther.
+"You'd better come into the house--I've got the key of the turret door,
+and all's clear--the servants are all at dinner."
+
+"I could do with something myself," observed Pratt, who, in his anxiety,
+had only made a light breakfast that morning. "Can it be managed?"
+
+"I'll manage it," she answered. "Come on--now."
+
+Behind the summer-house in which they had met a narrow path led through
+the shrubberies to an old part of the Grange which was never used, and
+was, in fact, partly ruinous. Esther Mawson led the way along this until
+she and Pratt came to a turret in the grey walls, in the lower story of
+which a massive oaken door, heavily clamped with iron, gave entrance to
+a winding stair, locked it from inside when she and Pratt had entered,
+and preceded her companion up the stair, and across one or two empty and
+dust-covered chambers to a small room in which a few pieces of ancient
+furniture were slowly dropping to decay. Pratt had taken refuge in this
+room before, and he sat down in one of the old chairs and mopped his
+forehead.
+
+"I want something to drink, above everything," he remarked. "What can
+you get?"
+
+"Nothing but wine," answered Esther Mawson. "As much as you like of
+that, because I've a stock that's kept up in Mrs. Mallathorpe's room. I
+couldn't get any ale without going to the butler. I can get wine and
+sandwiches without anybody knowing."
+
+"That'll do," said Pratt. "What sort of wine?"
+
+"Port, sherry, claret," she replied. "Whichever you like."
+
+"Sherry, then," answered Pratt. "Bring a bottle if you can get it--I
+want a good drink."
+
+The woman went away--through the disused part of the old house into the
+modern portion. She went straight to a certain store closet and took
+from it a bottle of old dry sherry which had been brought there from a
+bin in the cellars--it was part of a quantity of fine wine laid down by
+John Mallathorpe, years before, and its original owner would have been
+disgusted to think that it should ever be used for the mere purpose of
+quenching thirst. But Esther Mawson had another purpose in view, with
+respect to that bottle. Carrying it to her own sitting-room, she
+carefully cut off the thick mass of sealing-wax at its neck, drew the
+cork, and poured a little of the wine away. And that done, she unlocked
+a small box which stood on a corner of her dressing table, and took from
+it a glass phial, half full of a colourless liquid. With steady hands
+and sure fingers, she dropped some of that liquid into the wine,
+carefully counting the drops. Then she restored the phial to its
+hiding-place and re-locked the box--after which, taking up a spoon which
+lay on her table, she poured out a little of the sherry and smelled and
+tasted it. No smell--other than that which ought to be there; no
+taste--other than was proper. Pratt would suspect nothing even if he
+drunk the whole bottle.
+
+Esther Mawson had anticipated Pratt's desires in the way of refreshment,
+and she now went to a cupboard and took from it a plate of sandwiches,
+carefully swathed in a napkin. Carrying these in one hand, and the
+bottle of sherry and a glass in the other, she stole quietly back to the
+disused part of the house, and set her provender before its expectant
+consumer. Pratt poured out a glassful of the sherry, and drank it
+eagerly.
+
+"Good stuff that!" he remarked, smacking his lips. "Some of old John
+Mallathorpe's--no doubt."
+
+"It was here when we came, anyhow," replied Esther. "Well--I shall have
+to go. You'll be all right until I come back."
+
+"What time do you think it'll be?" asked Pratt. "Make it as soon as the
+coast's clear--I want to be off."
+
+"As soon as ever she's gone," agreed Esther. "I heard her order the
+carriage for half-past two."
+
+"And no fear of anybody else being about?" asked Pratt. "That butler
+man, for instance? Or servants?"
+
+"I'll see to it," replied Esther reassuringly. "I'll lock this door and
+take the key until I come back--make yourself comfortable."
+
+She locked Pratt in the old room and went off, and the willing prisoner
+ate his sandwiches and drank his sherry, and looked out of a mullioned
+window on the wide stretches of park and coppice and the breezy
+moorlands beyond. He indulged in some reflections--not wholly devoid of
+sentiment. He had cherished dreams of becoming the virtual owner of
+Normandale. Always confident in his own powers, he had believed that
+with time and patience he could have persuaded Nesta Mallathorpe to
+marry him--why not? Now--all owing to that cursed and unfortunate
+contretemps with Parrawhite, that seemed utterly impossible--all he
+could do now was to save himself--and to take as much as he could get.
+More than once that morning, as he made his way across country, he had
+remembered Parrawhite's advice to take cash and be done with
+it--perhaps, he reflected, it might have been better. Still--when he
+presently began his final retreat, he would carry away with him a lot of
+the Mallathorpe money.
+
+But before long Pratt indulged in no more reflections--sentiment or
+practical. He had eaten all his sandwiches; he had drunk three-quarters
+of the bottle of sherry. And suddenly he felt unusually drowsy, and he
+laid his head back in his big chair, and fell soundly asleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+
+If Pratt had only known what was going on in the old quarries at
+Whitcliffe, about the very time that he was riding slowly out to Barford
+on his bicycle, he would not only have accelerated his pace, but would
+have taken good care to have chosen another route: he would also have
+made haste to exchange bicycle for railway train as quickly as possible,
+and to have got himself far away before anybody could begin looking for
+him in his usual haunts, or at places wherein there was a possibility of
+his being found. But Pratt knew nothing of what Byner had done. He was
+conscious of Byner's visit to the _Green Man_. He did not know what
+Pickard had been told by Bill Thomson. He was unaware of anything which
+Pickard had told to Byner. If he had known that Byner, guided by
+Pickard, had been to the old quarries, had fixed his inquiring eye on
+the shaft which was filled to its brim with water, and had got certain
+ideas from the mere sight of it, Pratt would have hastened to put
+hundreds of miles between himself and Barford as quickly as possible.
+But all that Pratt knew was that there was a possibility of
+suspicion--which might materialize eventually, but not immediately.
+
+On the previous evening, Pratt--had he but known it--made a great
+mistake. Instead of going into Murgatroyd's shop after he had watched
+Byner and Prydale away from it--he should have followed those two astute
+and crafty persons, and have ascertained something of their movements.
+Had he done so, he would certainly not have troubled to return to Peel
+Row, nor to remain in Barford an hour longer than was absolutely
+necessary. For Pratt was sharp-witted enough when it came to a question
+of putting one and two together, and if he had tracked Prydale and the
+unknown man who was with him to a certain house whereto they repaired as
+soon as they quitted Murgatroyd's shop, he would have drawn an inference
+from the mere fact of their visit which would have thrown him into a
+cold sweat of fear. But Pratt, after all, was only one man, one brain,
+one body, and could not be in two places, nor go in two ways, at the
+same time. He took his own way--ignorant of his destruction.
+
+Byner also took a way of his own. As soon as he and Prydale left
+Murgatroyd's shop, they chartered the first cab they met with, and
+ordered its driver to go to Whitcliffe Moor.
+
+"It's the quickest thing to do--if my theory's correct," observed Byner,
+as they drove along, "Of course, it is all theory--mere theory! But I've
+grounds for it. The place--the time--mere lonely situation--that scrap
+iron lying about, which would be so useful in weighting a dead body!--I
+tell you, I shall be surprised if we don't find Parrawhite at the bottom
+of that water!"
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," agreed Prydale. "One thing's very certain, as we
+shall prove before we're through with it--Pratt's put that poor devil
+Murgatroyd up to this passage-to-America business. And a bit clumsily,
+too--fancy Murgatroyd being no better posted up than to tell me that
+Parrawhite called on him at a certain hour that night!"
+
+"But you've got to remember that Pratt didn't know of Parrawhite's
+affairs with Pickard, nor that he was at the _Green Man_ at that hour,"
+rejoined Byner. "My belief is that Pratt thinks himself safe--that he
+fancies he's provided for all contingencies. If things turn out as I
+think they will, I believe we shall find Pratt calmly seated at his desk
+tomorrow morning."
+
+"Well--if things do turn out as you expect, we'll lose no time in
+seeking him there!" observed Prydale dryly. "We'd better arrange to get
+the job done first thing."
+
+"This Mr. Shepherd'll make no objection, I suppose?" asked Byner.
+
+"Objection! Lor' bless you--he'll love it!" exclaimed Prydale. "It'll be
+a bit of welcome diversion to a man like him that's naught to do. He'll
+object none, not he!"
+
+Shepherd, a retired quarry-owner, who lived in a picturesque old stone
+house in the middle of Whitcliffe Moor, with nothing to occupy his
+attention but the growing of roses and vegetables, and an occasional
+glance at the local newspapers, listened to Prydale's request with
+gradually rising curiosity. Byner had at once seen that this call was
+welcome to this bluff and hearty Yorkshireman, who, without any question
+as to their business, had immediately welcomed them to his hearth and
+pressed liquor and cigars on them: he sized up Shepherd as a man to whom
+any sort of break in the placid course of retired life was a delightful
+event.
+
+"A dead man i' that old shaft i' one o' my worked out quarries!" he
+exclaimed. "Ye don't mean to say so! An' how long d'yer think he might
+ha' been there, now, Prydale?"
+
+"Some months, Mr. Shepherd," replied the detective.
+
+"Why, then it's high time he were taken out," said Shepherd. "When might
+you be thinkin' o' doin' t' job, like?"
+
+"As soon as possible," said Prydale. "Tomorrow morning, early, if that's
+convenient to you."
+
+"I'll tell you what I'll do," observed the retired quarry-owner. "You
+leave t' job to me. I'll get two or three men first thing tomorrow
+morning, and we'll do it reight. You be up there by half-past eight
+o'clock, and we'll soon satisfy you as to whether there's owt i' t'
+shape of a dead man or not i' t' pit. You hev' grounds for believin' 'at
+theer is----what?"
+
+"Strong grounds!" replied the detective, "and equally strong ones for
+believing the man came there by foul play, too."
+
+"Say no more!" said Shepherd. "T' mystery shall be cleared up. Deary me!
+An' to think 'at I've walked past yon theer pit many a dozen times
+within this last few o' months, and nivver dreamed 'at theer wor owt in
+it but watter! Howivver, gentlemen, ye can put yer minds at ease--we'll
+investigate the circumstances, as the sayin' goes, before noon
+tomorrow."
+
+"One other matter," remarked Prydale. "We want things kept quiet. We
+don't want all the folk of the neighbourhood round about, you know."
+
+"Leave it to me," answered Shepherd. "There'll be me, and these men, and
+yourselves--and a pair of grapplin' irons. We'll do it quiet and
+comfortable--and we'll do it reight."
+
+"Odd character!" remarked Byner, when he and Prydale went away.
+
+"Useful man--for a job of that sort," said the detective laconically.
+"Now then--are we going to let anybody else know what we're after--Mr.
+Eldrick or Mr. Collingwood, for instance? Do you want them, or either of
+them, to be present?"
+
+"No!" answered Byner, after a moment's reflection. "Let us see what
+results. We can let them know, soon enough, if we've anything to tell.
+But--what about Pratt?"
+
+"Keeping an eye on him--you mean?" said Prydale. "You said just now that
+in your opinion we should find him at his desk."
+
+"Just so--but that's no reason why he shouldn't be looked after tomorrow
+morning," answered Byner.
+
+"All right--I'll put a man on to shadow him, from the time he leaves his
+lodgings until--until we want him," said the detective. "That is--if we
+do want him."
+
+"It will be one of the biggest surprises I ever had in my life if we
+don't!" asserted Byner. "I never felt more certain of anything than I do
+of finding Parrawhite's body in that pit!"
+
+It was this certainty which made Byner appear extraordinarily cool and
+collected, when next day, about noon, he walked into Eldrick's private
+room, where Collingwood was at that moment asking the solicitor what was
+being done. The certainty was now established, and it seemed to Byner
+that it would have been a queer thing if he had not always had it. He
+closed the door and gave the two men an informing glance.
+
+"Parrawhite's body has been found," he said quietly.
+
+Eldrick started in his chair, and Collingwood looked a sharp inquiry.
+
+"Little doubt about his having been murdered, just as I conjectured,"
+continued Byner. "And his murderer had pretty cleverly weighted his body
+with scrap iron, before dropping it into a pit full of water, where it
+might have remained for a long time undiscovered. However--that's
+settled!"
+
+Eldrick got out the first question.
+
+"Pratt?"
+
+"Prydale's after him," answered Byner. "I expect we shall hear something
+in a few minutes--if he's in town. But I confess I'm a bit doubtful and
+anxious now, on that score. Because, when Prydale and I got down from
+Whitcliffe half an hour ago--where the body's now lying, at the _Green
+Man_, awaiting the inquest--we found Murgatroyd hanging about the police
+station. He'd come to make a clean breast of it--about Pratt. And it
+unfortunately turns out that Pratt saw Prydale and me go to Murgatroyd's
+shop last night, and afterwards went in there himself, and of course
+pumped Murgatroyd dry as to why we'd been."
+
+"Why unfortunately?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Because that would warn Pratt that something was afoot," said Byner.
+"And--he may have disappeared during the night. He----"
+
+But just then Prydale came in, shaking his head.
+
+"I'm afraid he's off!" he announced. "I'd a man watching for him outside
+his lodgings from an early hour this morning, but he never came out, and
+finally my man made an excuse and asked for him there, and then he heard
+that he'd never been home last night. And his office is closed."
+
+"What steps are you taking?" asked Byner.
+
+"I've got men all over the place already," replied Prydale. "But--if he
+got off in the night, as I'm afraid he did, we shan't find him in
+Barford. It's a most unlucky thing that he saw us go to Murgatroyd's
+last evening! That, of course, would set him off: he'd know things were
+reaching a crisis."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood had arranged to lunch together that day, and
+they presently went off, asking the detective to keep them informed of
+events. But up to half-past three o 'clock they heard no more--then, as
+they were returning along the street Byner came running up to them.
+
+"Prydale's just had a telephone message from the butler at Normandale!"
+he exclaimed. "Pratt is there!--and something extraordinary is going on:
+the butler wants the police. We're off at once--there's Prydale in a
+motor, waiting for me. Will you follow?"
+
+He darted away again, and Eldrick looking round for a car, suddenly
+recognized the Mallathorpe livery.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "There's Miss Mallathorpe--just driving in.
+Better tell her!"
+
+A moment later, he and Collingwood had joined Nesta in her carriage, and
+the horses' heads were turned in the direction towards which Byner and
+Prydale were already hastening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+
+Esther Mawson, leaving Pratt to enjoy his sherry and sandwiches at his
+leisure, went away through the house, out into the gardens, and across
+the shrubbery to the stables. The coachman and grooms were at
+dinner--with the exception of one man who lived in a cottage at the
+entrance to the stable-yard. This was the very man she wanted to see,
+and she found him in the saddle-room, and beckoned him to its door.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe wants me to go over to Scaleby on an errand for her
+this afternoon," she said. "Can you have the dog-cart ready, at the
+South Garden gate at three o'clock sharp? And--without saying anything
+to the coachman? It's a private errand."
+
+Of late this particular groom had received several commissions of this
+sort, and being a sharp fellow he had observed that they were generally
+given to him when Miss Mallathorpe was out.
+
+"All right," he answered. "The young missis is going out in the carriage
+at half-past two. South Garden gate--three sharp. Anybody but you?"
+
+"Only me," replied Esther. "Don't say anything to anybody about where
+we're going. Get the dog-cart ready after the carriage has gone."
+
+The groom nodded in comprehension, and Esther went back to the house and
+to her own room. She ought at that time of day to have been eating her
+dinner with the rest of the upper servants, but she had work to do which
+was of much more importance than the consumption of food and drink.
+There was going to be a flight that afternoon--but it would not be Pratt
+who would undertake it. Esther Mawson had carefully calculated all her
+chances as soon as Pratt told her that he was going to be away for a
+while. She knew that Pratt would not have left Barford for any
+indefinite period unless something had gone seriously wrong. But she
+knew more--by inference and intuition. If Pratt was going away--rather,
+since he was going away, he would have on his person things of
+value--documents, money. She meant to gain possession of everything that
+he had; she meant to have a brief interview with Mrs. Mallathorpe; then
+she meant to drive to Scaleby--and to leave that part of the country
+just as thoroughly and completely as Pratt had meant to leave it. And
+now in her own room she was completing her preparations. There was
+little to do. She knew that if her venture came off successfully, she
+could easily afford to leave her personal possessions behind her, and
+that she would be all the more free and unrestricted in her movements if
+she departed without as much as a change of clothes and linen. And so by
+two o'clock she had arrayed herself in a neat and unobtrusive
+tailor-made travelling costume, had put on an equally neat and plain
+hat, had rolled her umbrella, and laid it, her gloves, and a cloak where
+they could be readily picked up, and had attached to her slim waist a
+hand-bag--by means of a steel chain which she secured by a small padlock
+as soon as she had arranged it to her satisfaction. She was not the sort
+of woman to leave a hand-bag lying about in a railway carriage at any
+time, but in this particular instance she was not going to run any risk
+of even a moment's forgetfulness.
+
+Everything was in readiness by twenty minutes past two, and she took up
+her position in a window from which she could see the front door of the
+house. At half-past two the carriage and its two fine bay horses came
+round from the stables; a minute or two later Nesta Mallathorpe emerged
+from the hall; yet another minute and the carriage was whirling down the
+park in the direction of Barford. And then Esther moved from the window,
+picked up the umbrella, the cloak, the gloves, and went off in the
+direction of the room wherein she had left Pratt.
+
+No one ever went near those old rooms except on some special errand or
+business, and there was a dead silence all around her as she turned the
+key in the lock and slipped inside the door--to lock it again as soon as
+she had entered. There was an equally deep silence within the room--and
+for a moment she glanced a little fearfully at the recumbent figure in
+the old, deep-backed chair. Pratt had stretched himself fully in his
+easy quarters---his legs lay extended across the moth-eaten hearth-rug;
+his head and shoulders were thrown far back against the faded tapestry,
+and he was so still that he might have been supposed to be dead. But
+Esther Mawson had tried the effect of that particular drug on a good
+many people, and she knew that the victim in this instance was merely
+plunged in a sleep from which nothing whatever could wake him yet
+awhile. And after one searching glance at him, and one lifting of an
+eyelid by a practised finger, she went rapidly and thoroughly through
+Pratt's pockets, and within a few minutes of entering the room had
+cleared them of everything they contained. The sealed packet which he
+had taken from his safe that morning; the bank-notes which Mrs.
+Murgatroyd had returned in her indignant letter; another roll of notes,
+of considerable value, in a note-case; a purse containing notes and gold
+to a large amount--all those she laid one by one on a dust-covered
+table. And finally--and as calmly as if she were sorting linen--she
+swept bank-notes, gold, and purse into her steel-chained bag, and tore
+open the sealed envelope.
+
+There were five documents in that envelope--Esther examined each with
+meticulous care. The first was an authority to Linford Pratt to sell
+certain shares standing in the name of Ann Mallathorpe. The second was a
+similar document relating to other shares: each was complete, save for
+Ann Mallathorpe's signature. The third document was the power of
+attorney which Ann Mallathorpe had given to Linford Pratt: the fourth,
+the letter which she had written to him on the evening before the fatal
+accident to Harper. And the fifth was John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+At last she held in her hand the half-sheet of foolscap paper of which
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, driven to distraction, and knowing that she would get
+no sympathy from her own daughter, had told her. She was a woman of a
+quick and an understanding mind, and she had read the will through and
+grasped its significance as swiftly as her eyes ran over it. And those
+eyes turned to the unconscious Pratt with a flash of contempt--she, at
+any rate, would not follow his foolish example, and play for too high a
+stake--no, she would make hay while the sun shone its hottest! She was
+of the Parrawhite persuasion--better, far better one good bird in the
+hand than a score of possible birds in the bush.
+
+She presently restored the five documents to the stout envelope, picked
+up her other belongings, and without so much as a glance at Pratt, left
+the room. She turned the key in the door and took it away with her. And
+now she went straight to a certain sitting-room which Mrs. Mallathorpe
+had tenanted by day ever since her illness. The final and most important
+stage of Esther's venture was at hand.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat at an open window, wearily gazing out on the park.
+Ever since her son's death she had remained in a more or less torpid
+condition, rarely talking to any person except Esther Mawson: it had
+been manifest from the first that her daughter's presence distressed and
+irritated her, and by the doctor's advice Nesta had gone to her as
+little as possible, while taking every care to guard her and see to her
+comfort. All day long she sat brooding--and only Esther Mawson, now for
+some time in her full confidence, knew that her brooding was rapidly
+developing into a monomania. Mrs. Mallathorpe, indeed, had but one
+thought in her mind--the eventual circumventing of Pratt, and the
+destruction of John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+She turned slowly as the maid came in and carefully closed the door
+behind her, and her voice was irritable and querulous as she at once
+began to complain.
+
+"You've never been near me for two hours!" she said. "Your dinner time
+was over long since! I might have been wanting all sorts of things for
+aught you cared!"
+
+"I've had something else to do--for you!" retorted Esther, coming close
+to her mistress. "Listen, now!--I've got it!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's attitude and manner suddenly changed. She caught
+sight of the packet of papers in the woman's hand, and at once sprang to
+her feet, white and trembling. Instinctively she held out her own hands
+and moved a little nearer to the maid. And Esther quickly put the table
+between them, and shook her head.
+
+"No--no!" she exclaimed. "No handling of anything--yet! You keep your
+hands off! You were ready enough to bargain with Pratt--now you'll have
+to bargain with me. But I'm not such a fool as he was--I'll take cash
+down, and be done with it."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe rested her trembling hands on the table and bent
+forward across it.
+
+"Is it--is it--really--the will?" she whispered hoarsely.
+
+Instead of replying in words, Esther, taking care to keep at a safe
+distance behind the table, and with the door only a yard or two in her
+rear, drew out the documents one by one and held them up.
+
+"The will!" she said. "Your letter to Pratt. The power of attorney. Two
+papers that he brought for you to sign. That's the lot! And now, as I
+said, we'll bargain."
+
+"Where is--he?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. "How--how did you get them? Does
+he know--did he give them up?"
+
+"If you want to know, he's safe and sound asleep in one of the rooms in
+the old part of the house," answered Esther. "I drugged him. There's
+something afoot--something gone wrong with his schemes--at Barford, and
+he came here on his way--elsewhere. And so--I took the chance. Now
+then--what are you going to give me?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, whose nervous agitation was becoming more and more
+marked, wrung her hands.
+
+"I've nothing to give!" she cried. "You know very well he's had the
+management of everything--I don't know how things are----"
+
+"Stuff!" exclaimed Esther. "I know better than that. You've a lot of
+ready money in that desk there--you know you drew a lot out of the bank
+some time ago, and it's there now. You kept it for a contingency--the
+contingency's here. And--you've your rings--the diamond and ruby
+rings--I know what they're worth! Come on, now--I mean to have the whole
+lot, so it's no use hesitating."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at the maid's bold and resolute eyes--and then
+at the papers. And she glanced from eyes and papers to a bright fire
+which burned in the grate close by.
+
+"You'll give everything up?" she asked nervously.
+
+"Put those bank-notes that you've got in your desk, and those rings that
+are in your jewel-case, on the table between us," answered Esther, "and
+I'll hand over these papers on the instant! I'm not going to be such a
+fool as to keep them--not I! Come on, now!--isn't this the chance you've
+wanted?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a small bunch of keys from her gown, and went over
+to the desk which Esther had pointed to. Within a minute she was back
+again at the table, a roll of bank notes in one hand, half a dozen
+magnificent rings in the other. She put both hands halfway across and
+unclasped them. And Esther Mawson, with a light laugh, threw the papers
+over the table, and hastily swept their price into her handbag.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's nerves suddenly became steady. With a deep sigh she
+caught up the various documents and looked them quickly and thoroughly
+over. Then she tore them into fragments and flung the fragments in the
+fire--and as they blazed up, she turned and looked at Esther Mawson in a
+way which made Esther shrink a little. But she was already at the
+door--and she opened it and walked out and down the stair.
+
+She was half-way across the hall beneath, where the butler and one of
+the footmen were idly talking, when a sharp cry from above made her then
+look up. Mrs. Mallathorpe, suddenly restored to life and energy, was
+leaning over the balustrade.
+
+"Stop that woman, you men!" she said. "Seize her! Fasten her up!--lock
+the door wherever you put her! She's stolen my rings, and a lot of money
+out of my desk! And telephone instantly to Barford, and tell them to
+send the police here--at once!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, who had just arrived in Barford when Eldrick caught
+sight of her, was seriously startled as he and Collingwood came running
+up to her carriage. The solicitor entered it without ceremony or
+explanation, and turning to the coachman bade him drive back to
+Normandale as fast as he could make his horses go. Meanwhile Collingwood
+turned to Nesta. "Don't be alarmed!" he said. "Something is happening at
+the Grange--your mother has just telephoned to the police here to go
+there at once--there they are--in front of us, in that car!"
+
+"Did my mother say if she was in danger?" demanded Nesta.
+
+"She can't be!" exclaimed Eldrick, turning from the coachman, as the
+horses were whipped round and the carriage moved off. "She evidently
+gave orders for the message. No--Pratt's there! And--but of course, you
+don't know--the police want Pratt. They've been searching for him since
+noon. He's wanted for murder!"
+
+"Don't frighten Miss Mallathorpe," said Collingwood. "The murder has
+nothing to do with present events," he went on reassuringly. "It's
+something that happened some time ago. Don't be afraid about your
+mother--there are plenty of people round her, you know."
+
+"I can't help feeling anxious if Pratt is there," she answered. "How did
+he come to be there? It's not an hour since I left home. This is all
+some of Esther Mawson's work! And we shall have to wait nearly an hour
+before we know what is going on!--it's all uphill work to Normandale,
+and the horses can't do it in the time."
+
+"Eldrick!" said Collingwood, as the carriage came abreast of the Central
+Station and a long line of motorcars. "Stop the coachman! Let's get one
+of those cars--we shall get to Normandale twice as quickly. The main
+thing is to relieve Miss Mallathorpe of anxiety. Now!" he went on, as
+they hastily left the carriage and transferred themselves to a car
+quickly scented by Eldrick as the most promising of the lot. "Tell the
+driver to go as fast as he can--the other car's not very far in
+front--tell him to catch it up."
+
+Eldrick leaned over and gave his orders.
+
+"I've told him not only to catch him up, but to get in front of 'em," he
+said, settling down again in his seat. "This is a better car than
+theirs, and we shall be there first. Now, Miss Mallathorpe, don't you
+bother--this is probably going to be the clearing-up point of
+everything. One feels certain, at any rate--Pratt has reached the end of
+his tether!"
+
+"If I seem to bother," replied Nesta, "it's because I know that he and
+Esther Mawson are at Normandale--working mischief."
+
+"We shall be there in half an hour," said Collingwood, as their own car
+ran past that in which the detectives and Byner were seated. "They can't
+do much mischief in that time."
+
+None of the three spoke again until the car pulled up suddenly at the
+gates of Normandale Park. The lodge-keeper, an old man, coming out to
+open them, approached the door of the car on seeing Nesta within.
+
+"There's a young woman just gone up to the house that wants to see you
+very particular, miss," he said. "I tell'd her that you'd gone to
+Barford, but she said she'd come a long way, and she'd wait till you
+come back. She's going across the park there--crossin' yon path."
+
+He pointed over the level sward to the slight figure of a woman in
+black, who was obviously taking a near cut up to the Grange. Nesta
+looked wonderingly across the park as the car cleared the gate and went
+on up the drive.
+
+"Who can she be?" she said musingly. "A woman from a long way--to see
+me?"
+
+"She'll get to the house soon after we reach it," said Eldrick. "Let's
+attend to this more pressing business first. We should know what's afoot
+here in a minute or two."
+
+But it was somewhat difficult to make out or to discover what really was
+afoot. The car stopped at the hall door: the second car came close
+behind it; Nesta, Collingwood, Eldrick, Byner, and the detectives poured
+into the hall--encountered a much mystified-looking butler, a couple of
+footmen, and the groom whose services Esther Mawson had requisitioned,
+and who, weary of waiting for her, had come up to the house.
+
+"What's all this?" asked Eldrick, taking the situation into his own
+hands. "What's the matter? Why did you send for the police?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe's orders, sir," answered the butler, with an
+apologetic glance at his young mistress. "Really, sir, I don't
+know--exactly--what is the matter! We are all so confused! What happened
+was, that not very long after Miss Mallathorpe had left for town in the
+carriage, Esther Mawson, the maid, came downstairs from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's room, and was crossing the lower part of the hall, when
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly appeared up there and called to me and James
+to stop her and lock her up, as she'd stolen money and jewels! We were
+to lock her up and telephone for the police, sir, and to add that Mr.
+Pratt was here."
+
+"Well?" demanded Eldrick.
+
+"We did lock her up, sir! She's in my pantry," continued the butler,
+ruefully. "We've got her in there because there are bars to the
+windows--she can't get out of that. A terrible time we had, too,
+sir--she fought us like--like a maniac, protesting all the time that
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had given her what she had on her. Of course, sir, we
+don't know what she may have on her--we simply obeyed Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+"Where is Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked Collingwood. "Is she safe?"
+
+"Oh, quite safe, sir!" replied the butler. "She returned to her room
+after giving those orders. Mrs. Mallathorpe appeared to be--quite calm,
+sir."
+
+Prydale pushed himself forward--unceremoniously and insistently.
+
+"Keep that woman locked up!" he said. "First of all--where's Pratt?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe said he would be found in a room in the old part of
+the house," answered the butler, shaking his head as if he were
+thoroughly mystified. "She said you would find him fast asleep--Mawson
+had drugged him!"
+
+Prydale looked at Byner and at his fellow-detectives. Then he turned to
+the butler.
+
+"Come on!" he said brusquely. "Take us there at once!" He glanced at
+Eldrick. "I'm beginning to see through it, Mr. Eldrick!" he whispered.
+"This maid's caught Pratt for us. Let's hope he's still----"
+
+But before he could say more, and just as the butler opened a door which
+led into a corridor at the rear of the hall, a sharp crack which was
+unmistakably that of a revolver, rang through the house, waking equally
+sharp echoes in the silent room. And at that, Nesta hurried up the
+stairway to her mother's apartment, and the men, after a hurried glance
+at each other, ran along the corridor after the butler and the footmen.
+
+Pratt came out of his stupor much sooner than Esther Mawson had reckoned
+on. According to her previous experiments with the particular drug which
+she had administered to him, he ought to have remained in a profound and
+an undisturbed slumber until at least five o'clock. But he woke at
+four--woke suddenly, sharply, only conscious at first of a terrible pain
+in his head, which kept him groaning and moaning in his chair for a
+minute or two before he fairly realized where he was and what had
+happened. As the pain became milder and gave way to a dull throbbing and
+a general sense of discomfort, he looked round out of aching eyes and
+saw the bottle of sherry. And so dull were his wits that his only
+thought at first was that the wine had been far stronger than he had
+known, and that he had drunk far too much of it, and that it had sent
+him to sleep--and just then his wandering glance fell on some papers
+which Esther Mawson had taken from one of his pockets and thrown aside
+as of no value.
+
+He leapt to his feet, trembling and sweating. His hands, shaking as if
+smitten with a sudden palsy, went to his pockets--he tore off his coat
+and turned his pockets out, as if touch and feeling were not to be
+believed, and his eyes must see that there was really nothing there.
+Then he snatched up the papers on the floor and found nothing but
+letters, and odd scraps of unimportant memoranda. He stamped his feet on
+those things, and began to swear and curse, and finally to sob and
+whine. The shock of his discovery had driven all his stupefaction away
+by that time, and he knew what had happened. And his whining and sobbing
+was not that of despair, but the far worse and fiercer sobbing and
+whining of rage and terrible anger. If the woman who had tricked him had
+been there he would have torn her limb from limb, and have glutted
+himself with revenge. But--he was alone.
+
+And presently, after moving around his prison more like a wild beast
+than a human being, his senses having deserted him for a while, he
+regained some composure, and glanced about him for means of escape. He
+went to the door and tried it. But the old, substantial oak stood firm
+and fast--nothing but a crow-bar would break that door. And so he turned
+to the mullioned window, set in a deep recess.
+
+He knew that it was thirty or forty feet above the level of the
+ground--but there was much thick ivy growing on the walls of Normandale
+Grange, and it might be possible to climb down by its aid. With a great
+effort he forced open one of the dirt-encrusted sashes and looked
+out--and in the same instant he drew in his head with a harsh groan. The
+window commanded a full view of the hall door--and he had seen Prydale,
+and two other detectives, and the stranger from London whom he believed
+to be a detective, hurrying from their motorcar into the house.
+
+There was but one thing for it, now. Esther Mawson had robbed him of
+everything that was on him in the way of papers and money. But in his
+hip-pocket she had left a revolver which Pratt had carried, always
+loaded, for some time. And now, without the least hesitation, he drew it
+out and sent one of its bullets through his brain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, returning to the hall from the room in which
+they and the detectives had found Pratt's dead body, stood a little
+later in earnest conversation with Prydale, who had just come there from
+an interview with Esther Mawson. Nesta Mallathorpe suddenly called to
+them from the stairs, at the same time beckoning them to go up to her.
+
+"Will you come with me and speak to my mother?" she said. "She knows you
+are here, and she wants to say something about what has
+happened--something about that document which Pratt said he possessed."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood exchanged glances without speaking. They
+followed Nesta into her mother's sitting-room. And instead of the
+semi-invalid whom they had expected to find there, they saw a woman who
+had evidently regained not only her vivacity and her spirits but her
+sense of authority and her inclination to exercise it.
+
+"I am sorry that you gentlemen should have been drawn into all this
+wretched business!" she exclaimed, as she pointed the two men to chairs.
+"Everything must seem very strange, and indeed have seemed so for some
+time. But I have been the victim of as bad a scoundrel as ever
+lived--I'm not going to be so hypocritical as to pretend that I'm sorry
+he's dead--I'm not! I only wish he'd met his proper fate--on the
+scaffold. I don't know what you may have heard, or gathered--my daughter
+herself, from what she tells me, has only the vaguest notions--but I
+wanted to tell you, Mr. Eldrick, and you, Mr. Collingwood--seeing that
+you're one a solicitor and the other a barrister, that Pratt invented a
+most abominable plot against me, which, of course, hasn't a word of
+truth in it, yet was so clever that----"
+
+Eldrick suddenly raised his hand.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" he said quietly. "I think you had better let me
+speak before you go any further. Perhaps we--Mr. Collingwood and I--know
+more than you think. Don't trifle, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for your own and
+your daughter's sake! Tell the truth--and answer a plain question, which
+I assure you, is asked in your own interest. What have you done with
+John Mallathorpe's will?"
+
+Collingwood, anxious for Nesta, was watching her closely, and now he saw
+her turn a startled and inquiring look on her mother, who, in her turn,
+dashed a surprised glance at Eldrick. But if Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+surprised, she was also indignant, or she simulated indignation, and she
+replied to the solicitor's question with a sharp retort.
+
+"What do you mean?--John Mallathorpe's will!" she exclaimed. "What do I
+know of John Mallathorpe's will? There never was----"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" interrupted Eldrick. "Don't! I'm speaking in your
+interest, I tell you! There was a will! It was made on the morning of
+John Mallathorpe's death. It was found by Mr. Collingwood's late
+grandfather, Antony Bartle: when he died suddenly in my office, it fell
+into Pratt's hands. That is the document which Pratt held over you--and
+not an hour ago, Esther Mawson took it from Pratt, and she gave it to
+you. Again I ask you--what have you done with it?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated a moment. Then she suddenly faced Eldrick
+with a defiant look. "Let them--let everybody--do what they like!" she
+exclaimed. "It's burnt! I threw it in that fire as soon as I got it! And
+now----"
+
+Nesta interrupted her mother.
+
+"Does any one know the terms of that will?" she asked, looking at
+Eldrick. "Tell me!--if you know. Hush!" she went on, as Mrs. Mallathorpe
+tried to speak again. "I will know!"
+
+"Yes!" answered Eldrick. "Esther Mawson knows them. She read the will
+carefully. She told Prydale just now what they were. With the exception
+of three legacies of ten thousand pounds each to your mother, your
+brother, and yourself, John Mallathorpe left everything he possessed to
+the town of Barford for an educational trust."
+
+"Then," asked Nesta quietly, as she made a peremptory sign to her mother
+to be silent, "we--never had any right to be here--at all?"
+
+"I'm afraid not," replied Eldrick.
+
+"Then of course we shall go," said Nesta. "That's certain! Do you hear
+that, mother? That's my decision. It's final!"
+
+"You can do what you like," retorted Mrs. Mallathorpe sullenly. "I am
+not going to be frightened by anything that Esther Mawson says. Nor by
+what you say!" she continued, turning on Eldrick. "All that has got to
+be proved. Who can prove it? What can prove it? Do you think I am going
+to give up my rights without fighting for them? I shall swear that every
+word of Esther Mawson's is a lie! No one can bring forward a will that
+doesn't exist. And what concern is it of yours, Mr. Eldrick? What right
+have you?"
+
+"You are quite right, Mrs. Mallathorpe," said Eldrick. "It is no concern
+of mine. And so----"
+
+He turned to the door--and as he turned the door opened, to admit the
+old butler who looked apologetically but earnestly at Nesta as he
+stepped forward.
+
+"A Mrs. Gaukrodger wishes to see you on very particular business," he
+murmured. "She's been waiting some little time--something, she says,
+about some papers she has just found--belonging to the late Mr. John
+Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood, who was standing close to Nesta, caught all the butler
+said.
+
+"Gaukrodger!" he exclaimed, with a quick glance at Eldrick. "That was
+the name of the manager--a witness. See the woman at once," he whispered
+to Nesta.
+
+"Bring Mrs. Gaukrodger in, Dickenson," said Nesta. "Stay--I'll come with
+you, and bring her in myself."
+
+She returned a moment later with a slightly built, rather careworn woman
+dressed in deep mourning--the woman in black whom they had seen crossing
+the park--who looked nervously round her as she entered.
+
+"What is it you have for me, Mrs. Gaukrodger?" asked Nesta. "Papers
+belonging to the late Mr. John Mallathorpe? How--where did you get
+them?"
+
+Mrs. Gaukrodger drew a large envelope from under her cloak. "This,
+miss," she answered. "One paper--I only found it this morning. In this
+way," she went on, addressing herself to Nesta. "When my husband was
+killed, along with Mr. John Mallathorpe, they, of course, brought home
+the clothes he was wearing. There were a lot of papers in the pockets of
+the coat--two pockets full of them. And I hadn't heart or courage to
+look at them at that time, miss!--I couldn't, and I locked them up in a
+box. I never looked at them until this very day--but this morning I
+happened to open that box, and I saw them, and I thought I'd see what
+they were. And this was one--you see, it's in a plain envelope--it was
+sealed, but there's no writing on it. I cut the envelope open, and drew
+the paper out, and I saw at once it was Mr. John Mallathorpe's will--so
+I came straight to you with it."
+
+She handed the envelope over to Nesta, who at once gave it to Eldrick.
+The solicitor hastily drew out the enclosure, glanced it over, and
+turned sharply to Collingwood with a muttered exclamation.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "That man Cobcroft was right! There _was_ a
+duplicate! And here it is!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had come nearer. The sight of the half sheet of
+foolscap in Eldrick's hands seemed to fascinate her. And the expression
+of her face as she came close to his side was so curious that the
+solicitor involuntarily folded up the will and hastily put it behind his
+back--he had not only seen that expression but had caught sight of Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's twitching fingers.
+
+"Is--that--that--another will?" she whispered. "John Mallathorpe's?"
+
+"Precisely the same--another copy--duly signed and witnessed!" answered
+Eldrick firmly. "What you foolishly did was done for nothing. And--it's
+the most fortunate thing in the world, Mrs. Mallathorpe, that this has
+turned up!--most fortunate for you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe steadied herself on the edge of the table and looked at
+him fixedly. "Everything'll have to be given up?" she asked.
+
+"The terms of this will will be carried out," answered Eldrick.
+
+"Will--will they make me give up--what we've--saved?" she whispered.
+
+"Mother!" said Nesta appealingly. "Don't! Come away somewhere and let me
+talk to you--come!"
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shook off her daughter's hand and turned again to
+Eldrick.
+
+"Will they?" she demanded. "Answer!"
+
+"I don't think you'll find the trustees at all hard when it comes to a
+question of account," answered Eldrick. "They'll probably take matters
+over from now and ignore anything that's happened during the past two
+years."
+
+Again Nesta tried to lead her mother away, and again Mrs. Mallathorpe
+pushed the appealing hand from her. All her attention was fixed on
+Eldrick. "And--and will the police give me--now--what they found on that
+woman?" she whispered.
+
+"I have no doubt they will," replied Eldrick. "It's--yours."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a sigh of relief. She looked at the solicitor
+steadily for a moment--then without another word she turned and went
+away--to find Prydale.
+
+Eldrick turned to Nesta.
+
+"Don't forget," he said in a low voice, "it's a terrible blow to her,
+and she's been thinking of your interests! Leave her alone for a
+while--she'll get used to the altered circumstances. I'm sorry for
+her--and for you!"
+
+But Nesta made a sign of dissent.
+
+"There's no need to be sorry for me, Mr. Eldrick," she answered. "It's a
+greater relief than you can realize." She turned from him and went over
+to Mrs. Gaukrodger who had watched this scene without fully
+comprehending it. "Come with me," she said. "You look very tired and you
+must have some tea and rest awhile--come now."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, left alone, looked at each, other in silence
+for a moment. Then the solicitor shook his head expressively.
+
+"Well, that's over!" he exclaimed. "I must go back and hand this will
+over to the two trustees. But you, Collingwood--stay here a bit--if ever
+that girl needs company and help, it's now!"
+
+"I'm stopping," said Collingwood.
+
+He remained for a time where Eldrick left him; at last he went down to
+the hall and out into the gardens. And presently Nesta came to him
+there, and as if with a mutual understanding they walked away into the
+nearer stretches of the park. Normandale had never looked more beautiful
+than it did that afternoon, and in the midst of a silence which up to
+then neither of them had cared to break, Collingwood suddenly turned to
+the girl who had just lost it.
+
+"Are you sure that you won't miss all this--greatly?" he asked. "Just
+think!"
+
+"I'd rather lose more than this, however fond I'd got of it, than go
+through what I've gone through lately," she answered frankly. "Do you
+know what I want to do?"
+
+"No--I think not," he said. "What?"
+
+"If it's possible--to forget all about this," she replied. "And--if
+that's also possible--to help my mother to forget, too. Don't think too
+hardly of her--I don't suppose any of us know how much all this
+place--and the money--meant to her."
+
+"I've got no hard thoughts about her," said Collingwood. "I'm sorry for
+her. But--is it too soon to talk about the future?"
+
+Nesta looked at him in a way which showed him that she only half
+comprehended the question. But there was sufficient comprehension in her
+eyes to warrant him in taking her hands in his.
+
+"You know why I didn't go to India?" he said, bending his face to hers.
+
+"I--guessed!" she answered shyly.
+
+Then Collingwood, at this suddenly arrived supreme moment, became
+curiously bereft of speech. And after a period of silence, during which,
+being in the shadow of a grove of beech-trees which kindly concealed
+them from the rest of the world, they held each other's hands, all that
+he could find to say was one word.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Nesta laughed.
+
+"Well--what?" she whispered.
+
+Collingwood suddenly laughed too and put his arm round her.
+
+"It's no good!" he said. "I've often thought of what I'd to say to
+you--and now I've forgotten all. Shall I say it all at once!"
+
+"Wouldn't it be best?" she murmured with another laugh.
+
+"Then--you're going to marry me?" he asked.
+
+"Am I to answer--all at once?" she said.
+
+"One word will do!" he exclaimed, drawing her to him.
+
+"Ah!" she whispered as she lifted her face to his. "I couldn't say it
+all in one word. But--we've lots of time before us!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
+#3 in our series by J. S. Fletcher
+
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+Title: The Talleyrand Maxim
+
+Author: J. S. Fletcher
+
+Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9834]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 22, 2003]
+[Date last updated: April 12, 2005]
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+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sandra Brown
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+BY J. S. FLETCHER
+
+
+1920
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER
+
+I DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+II IN TRUST
+
+III THE SHOP-BOY
+
+IV THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+V POINT-BLANK
+
+VI THE UNEXPECTED
+
+VII THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+VIII TERMS
+
+IX UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+X THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+XI THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+XII THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+XIII THE FIRST TRICK
+
+XIV CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+XV PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+XVI A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+XVII ADVERTISEMENT
+
+XVIII THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+XIX THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+XX THE _Green Man_
+
+XXI THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+XXII THE CAT'SPAW
+
+XXIII SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+XXIV THE BETTER HALF
+
+XXV DRY SHERRY
+
+XXVI THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+XXVII RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+XXVIII THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+DEATH BRINGS OPPORTUNITY
+
+
+Linford Pratt, senior clerk to Eldrick & Pascoe, solicitors, of Barford,
+a young man who earnestly desired to get on in life, by hook or by
+crook, with no objection whatever to crookedness, so long as it could be
+performed in safety and secrecy, had once during one of his periodical
+visits to the town Reference Library, lighted on a maxim of that other
+unscrupulous person, Prince Talleyrand, which had pleased him greatly.
+"With time and patience," said Talleyrand, "the mulberry leaf is turned
+into satin." This seemed to Linford Pratt one of the finest and soundest
+pieces of wisdom which he had ever known put into words.
+
+A mulberry leaf is a very insignificant thing, but a piece of satin is a
+highly marketable commodity, with money in it. Henceforth, he regarded
+himself as a mulberry leaf which his own wit and skill must transform
+into satin: at the same time he knew that there is another thing, in
+addition to time and patience, which is valuable to young men of his
+peculiar qualities, a thing also much beloved by Talleyrand--opportunity.
+He could find the patience, and he had the time--but it would give him
+great happiness if opportunity came along to help in the work. In
+everyday language, Linford Pratt wanted a chance--he waited the arrival
+of the tide in his affairs which would lead him on to fortune.
+
+Leave him alone--he said to himself--to be sure to take it at the flood.
+If Pratt had only known it, as he stood in the outer office of Eldrick &
+Pascoe at the end of a certain winter afternoon, opportunity was slowly
+climbing the staircase outside--not only opportunity, but temptation,
+both assisted by the Devil. They came at the right moment, for Pratt was
+alone; the partners had gone: the other clerks had gone: the office-boy
+had gone: in another minute Pratt would have gone, too: he was only
+looking round before locking up for the night. Then these things
+came--combined in the person of an old man, Antony Bartle, who opened
+the door, pushed in a queer, wrinkled face, and asked in a quavering
+voice if anybody was in.
+
+"I'm in, Mr. Bartle," answered Pratt, turning up a gas jet which he had
+just lowered. "Come in, sir. What can I do for you?"
+
+Antony Bartle came in, wheezing and coughing. He was a very, very old
+man, feeble and bent, with little that looked alive about him but his
+light, alert eyes. Everybody knew him--he was one of the institutions of
+Barford--as well known as the Town Hall or the Parish Church. For fifty
+years he had kept a second-hand bookshop in Quagg Alley, the narrow
+passage-way which connected Market Street with Beck Street. It was not
+by any means a common or ordinary second-hand bookshop: its proprietor
+styled himself an "antiquarian bookseller"; and he had a reputation in
+two Continents, and dealt with millionaire buyers and virtuosos in both.
+
+Barford people sometimes marvelled at the news that Mr. Antony Bartle
+had given two thousand guineas for a Book of Hours, and had sold a
+Missal for twice that amount to some American collector; and they got a
+hazy notion that the old man must be well-to-do--despite his snuffiness
+and shabbiness, and that his queer old shop, in the window of which
+there was rarely anything to be seen but a few ancient tomes, and two or
+three rare engravings, contained much that he could turn at an hour's
+notice into gold. All that was surmise--but Eldrick & Pascoe--which term
+included Linford Pratt--knew all about Antony Bartle, being his
+solicitors: his will was safely deposited in their keeping, and Pratt
+had been one of the attesting witnesses.
+
+The old man, having slowly walked into the outer office, leaned against
+a table, panting a little. Pratt hastened to open an inner door.
+
+"Come into Mr. Eldrick's room, Mr. Bartle," he said. "There's a nice
+easy chair there--come and sit down in it. Those stairs are a bit
+trying, aren't they? I often wish we were on the ground floor."
+
+He lighted the gas in the senior partner's room, and turning back, took
+hold of the visitor's arm, and helped him to the easy chair. Then,
+having closed the doors, he sat down at Eldrick's desk, put his fingers
+together and waited. Pratt knew from experience that old Antony Bartle
+would not have come there except on business: he knew also, having been
+at Eldrick & Pascoe's for many years, that the old man would confide in
+him as readily as in either of his principals.
+
+"There's a nasty fog coming on outside," said Bartle, after a fit of
+coughing. "It gets on my lungs, and then it makes my heart bad. Mr.
+Eldrick in?"
+
+"Gone," replied Pratt. "All gone, Mr. Bartle--only me here."
+
+"You'll do," answered the old bookseller. "You're as good as they are."
+He leaned forward from the easy chair, and tapped the clerk's arm with a
+long, claw-like finger. "I say," he continued, with a smile that was
+something between a wink and a leer, and suggestive of a pleased
+satisfaction. "I've had a find!"
+
+"Oh!" responded Pratt. "One of your rare books, Mr. Bartle? Got
+something for twopence that you'll sell for ten guineas? You're one of
+the lucky ones, you know, you are!"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" chuckled Bartle. "And I had to pay for my
+knowledge, young man, before I got it--we all have. No--but I've found
+something: not half an hour ago. Came straight here with it. Matters for
+lawyers, of course."
+
+"Yes?" said Pratt inquiringly. "And--what may it be?" He was expecting
+the visitor to produce something, but the old man again leaned forward,
+and dug his finger once more into the clerk's sleeve.
+
+"I say!" he whispered. "You remember John Mallathorpe and the affair
+of--how long is it since?"
+
+"Two years," answered Pratt promptly. "Of course I do. Couldn't very
+well forget it, or him."
+
+He let his mind go back for the moment to an affair which had provided
+Barford and the neighbourhood with a nine days' sensation. One winter
+morning, just two years previously, Mr. John Mallathorpe, one of the
+best-known manufacturers and richest men of the town, had been killed by
+the falling of his own mill-chimney. The condition of the chimney had
+been doubtful for some little time; experts had been examining it for
+several days: at the moment of the catastrophe, Mallathorpe himself,
+some of his principal managers, and a couple of professional
+steeple-jacks, were gathered at its base, consulting on a report. The
+great hundred-foot structure above them had collapsed without the
+slightest warning: Mallathorpe, his principal manager, and his cashier,
+had been killed on the spot: two other bystanders had subsequently died
+from injuries received. No such accident had occurred in Barford, nor in
+the surrounding manufacturing district, for many years, and there had
+been much interest in it, for according to the expert's conclusions the
+chimney was in no immediate danger.
+
+Other mill-owners then began to examine their chimneys, and for many
+weeks Barford folk had talked of little else than the danger of living
+in the shadows of these great masses of masonry.
+
+But there had soon been something else to talk of. It sprang out of the
+accident--and it was of particular interest to persons who, like Linford
+Pratt, were of the legal profession. John Mallathorpe, so far as anybody
+knew or could ascertain, had died intestate. No solicitor in the town
+had ever made a will for him. No solicitor elsewhere had ever made a
+will for him. No one had ever heard that he had made a will for himself.
+There was no will. Drastic search of his safes, his desks, his drawers
+revealed nothing--not even a memorandum. No friend of his had ever heard
+him mention a will. He had always been something of a queer man. He was
+a confirmed bachelor. The only relation he had in the world was his
+sister-in-law, the widow of his deceased younger brother, and her two
+children--a son and a daughter. And as soon as he was dead, and it was
+plain that he had died intestate, they put in their claim to his
+property.
+
+John Mallathorpe had left a handsome property. He had been making money
+all his life. His business was a considerable one--he employed two
+thousand workpeople. His average annual profit from his mills was
+reckoned in thousands--four or five thousands at least. And some years
+before his death, he had bought one of the finest estates in the
+neighbourhood, Normandale Grange, a beautiful old house, set amidst
+charming and romantic scenery in a valley, which, though within twelve
+miles of Barford, might have been in the heart of the Highlands.
+Therefore, it was no small thing that Mrs. Richard Mallathorpe and her
+two children laid claim to. Up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death,
+they had lived in very humble fashion--lived, indeed, on an allowance
+from their well-to-do kinsman--for Richard Mallathorpe had been as much
+of a waster as his brother had been of a money-getter. And there was no
+withstanding their claim when it was finally decided that John
+Mallathorpe had died intestate--no withstanding that, at any rate, of
+the nephew and niece. The nephew had taken all the real estate: he and
+his sister had shared the personal property. And for some months they
+and their mother had been safely installed at Normandale Grange, and in
+full possession of the dead man's wealth and business.
+
+All this flashed through Linford Pratt's mind in a few seconds--he knew
+all the story: he had often thought of the extraordinary good fortune of
+those young people. To be living on charity one week--and the next to be
+legal possessors of thousands a year!--oh, if only such luck would come
+his way!
+
+"Of course!" he repeated, looking thoughtfully at the old bookseller.
+"Not the sort of thing one does forget in a hurry, Mr. Bartle. What of
+it?"
+
+Antony Bartle leaned back in his easy chair and chuckled--something,
+some idea, seemed to be affording him amusement.
+
+"I'm eighty years old," he remarked. "No, I'm more, to be exact. I shall
+be eighty-two come February. When you've lived as long as that, young
+Mr. Pratt, you'll know that this life is a game of topsy-turvy--to some
+folks, at any rate. Just so!"
+
+"You didn't come here to tell me that, Mr. Bartle," said Pratt. He was
+an essentially practical young man who dined at half-past six every
+evening, having lunched on no more than bread-and-cheese and a glass of
+ale, and he also had his evenings well mapped out. "I know that already,
+sir."
+
+"Aye, aye, but you'll know more of it later on," replied Bartle.
+"Well--you know, too, no doubt, that the late John Mallathorpe was a
+bit--only a bit--of a book-collector; collected books and pamphlets
+relating to this district?"
+
+"I've heard of it," answered the clerk.
+
+"He had that collection in his private room at the mill," continued the
+old bookseller, "and when the new folks took hold, I persuaded them to
+sell it to me. There wasn't such a lot--maybe a hundred volumes
+altogether--but I wanted what there was. And as they were of no interest
+to them, they sold 'em. That's some months ago. I put all the books in a
+corner--and I never really examined them until this very afternoon.
+Then--by this afternoon's post--I got a letter from a Barford man who's
+now out in America. He wanted to know if I could supply him with a nice
+copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_. I knew there was one in that
+Mallathorpe collection, so I got it out, and examined it. And in the
+pocket inside, in which there's a map, I found--what d'ye think?"
+
+"Couldn't say," replied Pratt. He was still thinking of his dinner, and
+of an important engagement to follow it, and he had not the least idea
+that old Antony Bartle was going to tell him anything very important.
+"Letters? Bank-notes? Something of that sort?"
+
+The old bookseller leaned nearer, across the corner of the desk, until
+his queer, wrinkled face was almost close to Pratt's sharp, youthful
+one. Again he lifted the claw-like finger: again he tapped the clerk's
+arm.
+
+"I found John Mallathorpe's will!" he whispered. "His--will!"
+
+Linford Pratt jumped out of his chair. For a second he stared in
+speechless amazement at the old man; then he plunged his hands deep into
+his trousers' pockets, opened his mouth, and let out a sudden
+exclamation.
+
+"No!" he said. "No! John Mallathorpe's--will? His--will!"
+
+"Made the very day on which he died," answered Bartle, nodding
+emphatically.
+
+"Queer, wasn't it? He might have had some--premonition, eh?"
+
+Pratt sat down again.
+
+"Where is it?" he asked.
+
+"Here in my pocket," replied the old bookseller, tapping his rusty coat.
+"Oh, it's all right, I assure you. All duly made out, signed, and
+witnessed. Everything in order, I know!--because a long, a very long
+time ago, I was like you, an attorney's clerk. I've drafted many a will,
+and witnessed many a will, in my time. I've read this, every word of
+it--it's all right. Nothing can upset it."
+
+"Let's see it," said Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Well--I've no objection--I know you, of course," answered Bartle, "but
+I'd rather show it first to Mr. Eldrick. Couldn't you telephone up to
+his house and ask him to run back here?"
+
+"Certainly," replied Pratt. "He mayn't be there, though. But I can try.
+You haven't shown it to anybody else?"
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," said Bartle.
+"I tell you it's not much more than half an hour since I found it. It's
+not a long document. Do you know how it is that it's never come out?" he
+went on, turning eagerly to Pratt, who had risen again. "It's easily
+explained. The will's witnessed by those two men who were killed at the
+same time as John Mallathorpe! So, of course, there was nobody to say
+that it was in evidence. My notion is that he and those two
+men--Gaukrodger and Marshall, his manager and cashier--had signed it not
+long before the accident, and that Mallathorpe had popped it into the
+pocket of that book before going out into the yard. Eh? But see if you
+can get Mr. Eldrick down here, and we'll read it together. And I
+say--this office seems uncommonly stuffy--can you open the window a bit
+or something?--I feel oppressed, like."
+
+Pratt opened a window which looked out on the street. He glanced at the
+old man for a moment and saw that his face, always pallid, was even
+paler than usual.
+
+"You've been talking too much," he said. "Rest yourself, Mr. Bartle,
+while I ring up Mr. Eldrick's house. If he isn't there, I'll try his
+club--he often turns in there for an hour before going home."
+
+He went out by a private door to the telephone box, which stood in a
+lobby used by various occupants of the building. And when he had rung up
+Eldrick's private house and was waiting for the answer, he asked himself
+what this discovery would mean to the present holders of the Mallathorpe
+property, and his curiosity--a strongly developed quality in him--became
+more and more excited. If Eldrick was not at home, if he could not get
+in touch with him, he would persuade old Bartle to let him see his
+find--he would cheerfully go late to his dinner if he could only get a
+peep at this strangely discovered document. Romance! Why, this indeed
+was romance; and it might be--what else? Old Bartle had already chuckled
+about topsy-turvydom: did that mean that--
+
+The telephone bell rang: Eldrick had not yet reached his house. Pratt
+got on to the club: Eldrick had not been there. He rang off, and went
+back to the private room.
+
+"Can't get hold of him, Mr. Bartle," he began, as he closed the door.
+"He's not at home, and he's not at the club. I say!--you might as well
+let me have a look at----"
+
+Pratt suddenly stopped. There was a strange silence in the room: the old
+man's wheezy breathing was no longer heard. And the clerk moved forward
+quickly and looked round the high back of the easy chair....
+
+He knew at once what had happened--knew that old Bartle was dead before
+he laid a finger on the wasted hand which had dropped helplessly at his
+side. He had evidently died without a sound or a movement--died as
+quietly as he would have gone to sleep. Indeed, he looked as if he had
+just laid his old head against the padding of the chair and dropped
+asleep, and Pratt, who had seen death before, knew that he would never
+wake again. He waited a moment, listening in the silence. Once he
+touched the old man's hand; once, he bent nearer, still listening. And
+then, without hesitation, and with fingers that remained as steady as if
+nothing had happened, he unbuttoned Antony Bartle's coat, and drew a
+folded paper from the inner pocket.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+IN TRUST
+
+
+As quietly and composedly as if he were discharging the most ordinary of
+his daily duties, Pratt unfolded the document, and went close to the
+solitary gas jet above Eldrick's desk. What he held in his hand was a
+half-sheet of ruled foolscap paper, closely covered with writing, which
+he at once recognized as that of the late John Mallathorpe. He was
+familiar with that writing--he had often seen it. It was an
+old-fashioned writing--clear, distinct, with every letter well and fully
+formed.
+
+"Made it himself!" muttered Pratt. "Um!--looks as if he wanted to keep
+the terms secret. Well----"
+
+He read the will through--rapidly, but with care, murmuring the
+phraseology half aloud.
+
+"This is the last will of me, John Mallathorpe, of Normandale Grange, in
+the parish of Normandale, in the West Riding of the County of York. I
+appoint Martin William Charlesworth, manufacturer, of Holly Lodge,
+Barford, and Arthur James Wyatt, chartered accountant, of 65, Beck
+Street, Barford, executors and trustees of this my will. I give and
+devise all my estate and effects real and personal of which I may die
+possessed or entitled to unto the said Martin William Charlesworth and
+Arthur James Wyatt upon trust for the following purposes to be carried
+out by them under the following instructions, namely:--As soon after my
+death as is conveniently possible they will sell all my real estate,
+either by private treaty or by public auction; they shall sell all my
+personal property of any nature whatsoever; they shall sell my business
+at Mallathorpe's mill in Barford as a going concern to any private
+purchaser or to any company already in existence or formed for the
+purpose of acquiring it; and they shall collect all debts and moneys due
+to me. And having sold and disposed of all my property, real and
+personal, and brought all the proceeds of such sales and of such
+collection of debts and moneys into one common fund they shall first pay
+all debts owing by me and all legal duties and expenses arising out of
+my death and this disposition of my property and shall then distribute
+my estate as follows, namely: to each of themselves, Martin William
+Charlesworth and Arthur James Wyatt, they shall pay the sum of five
+thousand pounds; to my sister-in-law, Ann Mallathorpe, they shall pay
+the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my nephew, Harper John Mallathorpe,
+they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds; to my niece, Nesta
+Mallathorpe, they shall pay the sum of ten thousand pounds. And as to
+the whole of the remaining residue they shall pay it in one sum to the
+Mayor and Corporation of the borough of Barford in the County of York to
+be applied by the said Mayor and Corporation at their own absolute
+discretion and in any manner which seems good to them to the
+establishment, furtherance and development of technical and commercial
+education in the said borough of Barford. Dated this sixteenth day of
+November, 1906.
+
+ Signed by the testator in
+ the presence of us both
+ present at the same
+ time who in his presence } JOHN MALLATHORPE
+ and in the presence
+ of each other
+ have hereunto set our
+ names as witnesses.
+
+ HENRY GAUKRODGER, 16, Florence Street,
+ Barford, Mill Manager.
+
+ CHARLES WATSON MARSHALL, 56, Laburnum Terrace,
+ Barford, Cashier."
+
+As the last word left his lips Pratt carefully folded up the will,
+slipped it into an inner pocket of his coat, and firmly buttoned the
+coat across his chest. Then, without as much as a glance at the dead
+man, he left the room, and again visited the telephone box. He was
+engaged in it for a few minutes. When he came out he heard steps coming
+up the staircase, and looking over the banisters he saw the senior
+partner, Eldrick, a middle-aged man. Eldrick looked up, and saw Pratt.
+
+"I hear you've been ringing me up at the club, Pratt," he said. "What is
+it?"
+
+Pratt waited until Eldrick had come up to the landing. Then he pointed
+to the door of the private room, and shook his head.
+
+"It's old Mr. Bartle, sir," he whispered. "He's in your room
+there--dead!"
+
+"Dead?" exclaimed Eldrick. "Dead!"
+
+Pratt shook his head again.
+
+"He came up not so long after you'd gone, sir," he said. "Everybody had
+gone but me--I was just going. Wanted to see you about something I don't
+know what. He was very tottery when he came in--complained of the stairs
+and the fog. I took him into your room, to sit down in the easy chair.
+And--he died straight off. Just," concluded Pratt, "just as if he was
+going quietly to sleep!"
+
+"You're sure he is dead?--not fainting?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"He's dead, sir--quite dead," replied Pratt. "I've rung up Dr.
+Melrose--he'll be here in a minute or two--and the Town Hall--the
+police--as well. Will you look at him, sir?"
+
+Eldrick silently motioned his clerk to open the door; together they
+walked into the room. And Eldrick looked at his quiet figure and wan
+face, and knew that Pratt was right.
+
+"Poor old chap!" he murmured, touching one of the thin hands. "He was a
+fine man in his time, Pratt; clever man! And he was very, very old--one
+of the oldest men in Barford. Well, we must wire to his grandson, Mr.
+Bartle Collingwood. You'll find his address in the book. He's the only
+relation the old fellow had."
+
+"Come in for everything, doesn't he, sir?" asked Pratt, as he took an
+address book from the desk, and picked up a sheaf of telegram forms.
+
+"Every penny!" murmured Eldrick. "Nice little fortune, too--a fine thing
+for a young fellow who's just been called to the Bar. As a matter of
+fact, he'll be fairly well independent, even if he never sees a brief in
+his life."
+
+"He has been called, has he, sir?" asked Pratt, laying a telegram form
+on Eldrick's writing pad and handing him a pen. "I wasn't aware of
+that."
+
+"Called this term--quite recently--at Gray's Inn," replied Eldrick, as
+he sat down. "Very promising, clever young man. Look here!--we'd better
+send two wires, one to his private address, and one to his chambers.
+They're both in that book. It's six o'clock, isn't it?--he might be at
+his chambers yet, but he may have gone home. I'll write both
+messages--you put the addresses on, and get the wire off--we must have
+him down here as soon as possible."
+
+"One address is 53x, Pump Court; the other's 96, Cloburn Square,"
+remarked Pratt consulting the book. "There's an express from King's
+Cross at 8.15 which gets here midnight."
+
+"Oh, it would do if he came down first thing in the morning--leave it to
+him," said Eldrick. "I say, Pratt, do you think an inquest will be
+necessary?"
+
+Pratt had not thought of that--he began to think. And while he was
+thinking, the doctor whom he had summoned came in. He looked at the dead
+man, asked the clerk a few questions, and was apparently satisfied. "I
+don't think there's any need for an inquest," he said in reply to
+Eldrick. "I knew the old man very well--he was much feebler than he
+would admit. The exertion of coming up these stairs of yours, and the
+coughing brought on by the fog outside--that was quite enough. Of
+course, the death will have to be reported in the usual way, but I have
+no hesitation in giving a certificate. You've let the Town Hall people
+know? Well, the body had better be removed to his rooms--we must send
+over and tell his housekeeper. He'd no relations in the town, had he?"
+
+"Only one in the world that he ever mentioned--his grandson--a young
+barrister in London," answered Eldrick. "We've just been wiring to him.
+Here, Pratt, you take these messages now, and get them off. Then we'll
+see about making all arrangements. By-the-by," he added, as Pratt moved
+towards the door, "you don't know what--what he came to see me about?"
+
+"Haven't the remotest idea, sir," answered Pratt, readily and glibly.
+"He died--just as I've told you--before he could tell me anything."
+
+He went downstairs, and out into the street, and away to the General
+Post Office, only conscious of one thing, only concerned about one
+thing--that he was now the sole possessor of a great secret. The
+opportunity which he had so often longed for had come. And as he hurried
+along through the gathering fog he repeated and repeated a fragment of
+the recent conversation between the man who was now dead, and
+himself--who remained very much alive.
+
+"You haven't shown it to anybody else?" Pratt had asked.
+
+"Neither shown it to anybody, nor mentioned it to a soul," Antony Bartle
+had answered. So, in all that great town of Barford, he, Linford Pratt,
+he, alone out of a quarter of a million people, knew--what? The
+magnitude of what he knew not only amazed but exhilarated him. There
+were such possibilities for himself in that knowledge. He wanted to be
+alone, to think out those possibilities; to reckon up what they came to.
+Of one thing he was already certain--they should be, must be, turned to
+his own advantage.
+
+It was past eight o'clock before Pratt was able to go home to his
+lodgings. His landlady, meeting him in the hall, hoped that his dinner
+would not be spoiled: Pratt, who relied greatly on his dinner as his one
+great meal of the day, replied that he fervently hoped it wasn't, but
+that if it was it couldn't be helped, this time. For once he was
+thinking of something else than his dinner--as for his engagement for
+that evening, he had already thrown it over: he wanted to give all his
+energies and thoughts and time to his secret. Nevertheless, it was
+characteristic of him that he washed, changed his clothes, ate his
+dinner, and even glanced over the evening newspaper before he turned to
+the real business which was already deep in his brain. But at last, when
+the maid had cleared away the dinner things, and he was alone in his
+sitting-room, and had lighted his pipe, and mixed himself a drop of
+whisky-and-water--the only indulgence in such things that he allowed
+himself within the twenty-four hours--he drew John Mallathorpe's will
+from his pocket, and read it carefully three times. And then he began to
+think, closely and steadily.
+
+First of all, the will was a good will. Nothing could upset it. It was
+absolutely valid. It was not couched in the terms which a solicitor
+would have employed, but it clearly and plainly expressed John
+Mallathorpe's intentions and meanings in respect to the disposal of his
+property. Nothing could be clearer. The properly appointed trustees were
+to realize his estate. They were to distribute it according to his
+specified instructions. It was all as plain as a pikestaff. Pratt, who
+was a good lawyer, knew what the Probate Court would say to that will if
+it were ever brought up before it, as he did, a quite satisfactory will.
+And it was validly executed. Hundreds of people, competent to do so,
+could swear to John Mallathorpe's signature; hundreds to Gaukrodger's;
+thousands to Marshall's--who as cashier was always sending his signature
+broadcast. No, there was nothing to do but to put that into the hands of
+the trustees named in it, and then....
+
+Pratt thought next of the two trustees. They were well-known men in the
+town. They were comparatively young men--about forty. They were men of
+great energy. Their chief interests were in educational matters--that,
+no doubt, was why John Mallathorpe had appointed them trustees. Wyatt
+had been plaguing the town for two years to start commercial schools:
+Charlesworth was a devoted champion of technical schools. Pratt knew how
+the hearts of both would leap, if he suddenly told them that enormous
+funds were at their disposal for the furtherance of their schemes. And
+he also knew something else--that neither Charlesworth nor Wyatt had the
+faintest, remotest notion or suspicion that John Mallathorpe had ever
+made such a will, or they would have moved heaven and earth, pulled down
+Normandale Grange and Mallathorpe's Mill, in their efforts to find it.
+
+But the effect--the effect of producing the will--now? Pratt, like
+everybody else, had been deeply interested in the Mallathorpe affair.
+There was so little doubt that John Mallathorpe had died intestate, such
+absolute certainty that his only living relations were his deceased
+brother's two children and their mother, that the necessary proceedings
+for putting Harper Mallathorpe and his sister Nesta in possession of the
+property, real and personal, had been comparatively simple and speedy.
+But--what was it worth? What would the two trustees have been able to
+hand over to the Mayor and Corporation of Barford, if the will had been
+found as soon as John Mallathorpe died? Pratt, from what he remembered
+of the bulk and calculations at the time, made a rapid estimate. As near
+as he could reckon, the Mayor and Corporation would have got about
+£300,000.
+
+That, then--and this was what he wanted to get at--was what these young
+people would lose if he produced the will. Nay!--on second thoughts, it
+would be much more, very much more in some time; for the manufacturing
+business was being carried on by them, and was apparently doing as well
+as ever. It was really an enormous amount which they would lose--and
+they would get--what? Ten thousand apiece and their mother a like sum.
+Thirty thousand pounds in all--in comparison with hundreds of thousands.
+But they would have no choice in the matter. Nothing could upset that
+will.
+
+He began to think of the three people whom the production of this will
+would dispossess. He knew little of them beyond what common gossip had
+related at the time of John Mallathorpe's sudden death. They had lived
+in very quiet fashion, somewhere on the outskirts of the town, until
+this change in their fortunes. Once or twice Pratt had seen Mrs.
+Mallathorpe in her carriage in the Barford streets--somebody had pointed
+her out to him, and had observed sneeringly that folk can soon adapt
+themselves to circumstances, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe now gave herself
+all the airs of a duchess, though she had been no more than a hospital
+nurse before she married Richard Mallathorpe. And Pratt had also seen
+young Harper Mallathorpe now and then in the town--since the good
+fortune arrived--and had envied him: he had also thought what a strange
+thing it was that money went to young fellows who seemed to have no
+particular endowments of brain or energy. Harper was a very ordinary
+young man, not over intelligent in appearance, who, Pratt had heard, was
+often seen lounging about the one or two fashionable hotels of the
+place. As for the daughter, Pratt did not remember having ever set eyes
+on her--but he had heard that up to the time of John Mallathorpe's death
+she had earned her own living as a governess, or a nurse, or something
+of that sort.
+
+He turned from thinking of these three people to thoughts about himself.
+Pratt often thought about himself, and always in one direction--the
+direction of self-advancement. He was always wanting to get on. He had
+nobody to help him. He had kept himself since he was seventeen. His
+father and mother were dead; he had no brothers or sisters--the only
+relations he had, uncles and aunts, lived--some in London, some in
+Canada. He was now twenty-eight, and earning four pounds a week. He had
+immense confidence in himself, but he had never seen much chance of
+escaping from drudgery. He had often thought of asking Eldrick & Pascoe
+to give him his articles--but he had a shrewd idea that his request
+would be refused. No--it was difficult to get out of a rut. And yet--he
+was a clever fellow, a good-looking fellow, a sharp, shrewd, able--and
+here was a chance, such a chance as scarcely ever comes to a man. He
+would be a fool if he did not take it, and use it to his own best and
+lasting advantage.
+
+And so he locked up the will in a safe place, and went to bed, resolved
+to take a bold step towards fortune on the morrow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+THE SHOP-BOY
+
+
+When Pratt arrived at Eldrick & Pascoe's office at his usual hour of
+nine next morning, he found the senior partner already there. And with
+him was a young man whom the clerk at once set down as Mr. Bartle
+Collingwood, and looked at with considerable interest and curiosity. He
+had often heard of Mr. Bartle Collingwood, but had never seen him. He
+knew that he was the only son of old Antony Bartle's only child--a
+daughter who had married a London man; he knew, too, that Collingwood's
+parents were both dead, and that the old bookseller had left their son
+everything he possessed--a very nice little fortune, as Eldrick had
+observed last night. And since last night he had known that Collingwood
+had just been called to the Bar, and was on the threshold of what
+Eldrick, who evidently knew all about it, believed to be a promising
+career. Well, there he was in the flesh; and Pratt, who was a born
+observer of men and events, took a good look at him as he stood just
+within the private room, talking to Eldrick.
+
+A good-looking fellow; what most folk would call handsome; dark,
+clean-shaven, tall, with a certain air of reserve about his well-cut
+features, firm lips, and steady eyes that suggested strength and
+determination. He would look very well in wig and gown, decided Pratt,
+viewing matters from a professional standpoint; he was just the sort
+that clients would feel a natural confidence in, and that juries would
+listen to. Another of the lucky ones, too; for Pratt knew the contents
+of Antony Bartle's will, and that the young man at whom he was looking
+had succeeded to a cool five-and-twenty thousand pounds, at least,
+through his grandfather's death.
+
+"Here is Pratt," said Eldrick, glancing into the outer office as the
+clerk entered it. "Pratt, come in here--here is Mr. Bartle Collingwood,
+He would like you to tell him the facts about Mr. Bartle's death."
+
+Pratt walked in--armed and prepared. He was a clever hand at foreseeing
+things, and he had known all along that he would have to answer
+questions about the event of the previous night.
+
+"There's very little to tell, sir," he said, with a polite
+acknowledgment of Collingwood's greeting. "Mr. Bartle came up here just
+as I was leaving--everybody else had left. He wanted to see Mr. Eldrick.
+Why, he didn't say. He was coughing a good deal when he came in, and he
+complained of the fog outside, and of the stairs. He said
+something--just a mere mention--about his heart being bad. I lighted the
+gas in here, and helped him into the chair. He just sat down, laid his
+head back, and died."
+
+"Without saying anything further?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Not a word more, Mr. Collingwood," answered Pratt. "He--well, it was
+just as if he had dropped off to sleep. Of course, at first I thought
+he'd fainted, but I soon saw what it was--it so happens that I've seen a
+death just as sudden as that, once before--my landlady's husband died in
+a very similar fashion, in my presence. There was nothing I could do,
+Mr. Collingwood--except ring up Mr. Eldrick, and the doctor, and the
+police."
+
+"Mr. Pratt made himself very useful last night in making arrangements,"
+remarked Eldrick, looking at Collingwood. "As it is, there is very
+little to do. There will be no need for any inquest; Melrose has given
+his certificate. So--there are only the funeral arrangements. We can
+help you with that matter, of course. But first you'd no doubt like to
+go to your grandfather's place and look through his papers? We have his
+will here, you know--and I've already told you its effect."
+
+"I'm much obliged to you, Mr. Pratt," said Collingwood, turning to the
+clerk. He turned again to Eldrick. "All right," he went on. "I'll go
+over to Quagg Alley. Bye-the-bye, Mr. Pratt--my grandfather didn't tell
+you anything of the reason of his call here?"
+
+"Not a word, sir," replied Pratt. "Merely said he wanted Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Had he any legal business in process?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick and his clerk both shook their heads. No, Mr. Bartle had no
+business of that sort that they knew of. Nothing--but there again Pratt
+was prepared.
+
+"It might have been about the lease of that property in Horsebridge
+Land, sir," he said, glancing at his principal. "He did mention that,
+you know, when he was in here a few weeks ago."
+
+"Just so," agreed Eldrick. "Well, you'll let me know if we can be of
+use," he went on, as Collingwood turned away. "Pratt can be at your
+disposal, any time."
+
+Collingwood thanked him and went off. He had travelled down from London
+by the earliest morning train, and leaving his portmanteau at the hotel
+of the Barford terminus, had gone straight to Eldrick & Pascoe's office;
+accordingly this was his first visit to the shop in Quagg Alley. But he
+knew the shop and its surroundings well enough, though he had not been
+in Barford for some time; he also knew Antony Bartle's old housekeeper,
+Mrs. Clough, a rough and ready Yorkshirewoman, who had looked after the
+old man as long as he, Collingwood, could remember. She received him as
+calmly as if he had merely stepped across the street to inquire after
+his grandfather's health.
+
+"I thowt ye'd be down here first thing, Mestur Collingwood," she said,
+as he walked into the parlor at the back of the shop. "Of course,
+there's naught to be done except to see after yer grandfather's burying.
+I don't know if ye were surprised or no when t' lawyers tellygraphed to
+yer last night? I weren't surprised to hear what had happened. I'd been
+expecting summat o' that sort this last month or two."
+
+"You mean--he was failing?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"He were gettin' feebler and feebler every day," said the housekeeper.
+"But nobody dare say so to him, and he wouldn't admit it his-self. He
+were that theer high-spirited 'at he did things same as if he were a
+young man. But I knew how it 'ud be in the end--and so it has been--I
+knew he'd go off all of a sudden. And of course I had all in
+readiness--when they brought him back last night there was naught to do
+but lay him out. Me and Mrs. Thompson next door, did it, i' no time.
+Wheer will you be for buryin' him, Mestur Collingwood?"
+
+"We must think that over," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Well, an' theer's all ready for that, too," responded Mrs. Clough.
+"He's had his grave all ready i' the cemetery this three year--I
+remember when he bowt it--it's under a yew-tree, and he told me 'at he'd
+ordered his monnyment an' all. So yer an' t' lawyers'll have no great
+trouble about them matters. Mestur Eldrick, he gev' orders for t' coffin
+last night."
+
+Collingwood left these gruesome details--highly pleasing to their
+narrator--and went up to look at his dead grandfather. He had never seen
+much of him, but they had kept up a regular correspondence, and always
+been on terms of affection, and he was sorry that he had not been with
+the old man at the last. He remained looking at the queer, quiet, old
+face for a while; when he went down again, Mrs. Clough was talking to a
+sharp-looking lad, of apparently sixteen or seventeen years, who stood
+at the door leading into the shop, and who glanced at Collingwood with
+keen interest and speculation.
+
+"Here's Jabey Naylor wants to know if he's to do aught, Mestur," said
+the housekeeper. "Of course, I've telled him 'at we can't have the shop
+open till the burying's over--so I don't know what theer is that he can
+do."
+
+"Oh, well, let him come into the shop with me," answered Collingwood. He
+motioned the lad to follow him out of the parlour. "So you were Mr.
+Bartle's assistant, eh?" he asked. "Had he anybody else?"
+
+"Nobody but me, sir," replied the lad. "I've been with him a year."
+
+"And your name's what?" inquired Collingwood.
+
+"Jabez Naylor, sir, but everybody call me Jabey."
+
+"I see--Jabey for short, eh?" said Collingwood good-humouredly. He
+walked into the shop, followed by the boy, and closed the door. The
+outer door into Quagg Alley was locked: a light blind was drawn over the
+one window; the books and engravings on the shelves and in the presses
+were veiled in a half-gloom. "Well, as Mrs. Clough says, we can't do any
+business for a few days, Jabey--after that we must see what can be done.
+You shall have your wages just the same, of course, and you may look in
+every day to see if there's anything you can do. You were here
+yesterday, of course? Were you in the shop when Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the lad. "I'd been in with him all the afternoon. I
+was here when he went out--and here when they came to say he'd died at
+Mr. Eldrick's."
+
+Collingwood sat down in his grandfather's chair, at a big table, piled
+high with books and papers, which stood in the middle of the floor.
+
+"Did my grandfather seem at all unwell when he went out?" he asked.
+
+"No, sir. He had been coughing a bit more than usual--that was all.
+There was a fog came on about five o'clock, and he said it bothered
+him."
+
+"What had he been doing during the afternoon? Anything particular?"
+
+"Nothing at all particular before half-past four or so, sir."
+
+Collingwood took a closer look at Jabez Naylor. He saw that he was an
+observant lad, evidently of superior intelligence--a good specimen of
+the sharp town lad, well trained in a modern elementary school.
+
+"Oh?" he said. "Nothing particular before half-past four, eh? Did he do
+something particular after half-past four?"
+
+"There was a post came in just about then, sir," answered Jabey. "There
+was an American letter--that's it, sir--just in front of you. Mr. Bartle
+read it, and asked me if we'd got a good clear copy of Hopkinson's
+_History of Barford_. I reminded him that there was a copy amongst the
+books that had been bought from Mallathorpe's Mill some time ago."
+
+"Books that had belonged to Mr. John Mallathorpe, who was killed?" asked
+Collingwood, who was fully acquainted with the chimney accident.
+
+"Yes, sir, Mr. Bartle bought a lot of books that Mr. Mallathorpe had at
+the Mill--local books. They're there in that corner: they were put there
+when I fetched them, and he'd never looked over them since,
+particularly."
+
+"Well--and this _History of Barford_? You reminded him of it?"
+
+"I got it out for him, sir. He sat down--where you're sitting--and began
+to examine it. He said something about it being a nice copy, and he'd
+get it off that night--that's it, sir: I didn't read it, of course. And
+then he took some papers out of a pocket that's inside it, and I heard
+him say 'Bless my soul--who'd have thought it!'"
+
+Collingwood picked up the book which the boy indicated--a thick,
+substantially bound volume, inside one cover of which was a linen
+pocket, wherein were some loose maps and plans of Barford.
+
+"These what he took out?" he asked, holding them up.
+
+"Yes, sir, but there was another paper, with writing on it--a biggish
+sheet of paper--written all over."
+
+"Did you see what the writing was? Did you see any of it?"
+
+"No, sir--only that it was writing, I was dusting those shelves out,
+over there; when I heard Mr. Bartle say what he did. I just looked
+round, over my shoulder--that was all."
+
+"Was he reading this paper that you speak of?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he was holding it up to the gas, reading it."
+
+"Do you know what he did with it?"
+
+"Yes, sir--he folded it up and put it in his pocket."
+
+"Did he say any more--make any remark?"
+
+"No, sir. He wrote a letter then."
+
+"At once?"
+
+"Yes, sir--straight off. But he wasn't more than a minute writing it.
+Then he sent me to post it at the pillar-box, at the end of the Alley."
+
+"Did you read the address?"
+
+The lad turned to a book which stood with others in a rack over the
+chimney-piece, and tapped it with his finger.
+
+"Yes, sir--because Mr. Bartle gave orders when I first came here that a
+register of every letter sent out was to be kept--I've always entered
+them in this book."
+
+"And this letter you're talking about--to whom was it addressed?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe, Normandale Grange, sir."
+
+"You went and posted it at once?"
+
+"That very minute, sir."
+
+"Was it soon afterwards that Mr. Bartle went out?"
+
+"He went out as soon as I came back, sir."
+
+"And you never saw him again?"
+
+Jabey shook his head.
+
+"Not alive, sir," he answered. "I saw him when they brought him back."
+
+"How long had he been out when you heard he was dead?"
+
+"About an hour, sir--just after six it was when they told Mrs. Clough
+and me. He went out at ten minutes past five."
+
+Collingwood got up. He gave the lad's shoulder a friendly squeeze.
+
+"All right!" he said. "Now you seem a smart, intelligent lad--don't
+mention a word to any one of what we've been talking about. You have not
+mentioned it before, I suppose? Not a word? That's right--don't. Come in
+again tomorrow morning to see if I want you to be here as usual. I'm
+going to put a manager into this shop."
+
+When the boy had gone Collingwood locked up the shop from the house
+side, put the key in his pocket, and went into the kitchen.
+
+"Mrs. Clough," he said. "I want to see the clothes which my grandfather
+was wearing when he was brought home last night. Where are they?"
+
+"They're in that little room aside of his bed-chamber, Mestur
+Collingwood," replied the housekeeper. "I laid 'em all there, on the
+clothes-press, just as they were taken off of him, by Lawyer Eldrick's
+orders--he said they hadn't been examined, and wasn't to be, till you
+came. Nobody whatever's touched 'em since."
+
+Collingwood went upstairs and into the little room--a sort of box-room
+opening out of that in which the old man lay. There were the clothes; he
+went through the pockets of every garment. He found such things as keys,
+a purse, loose money, a memorandum book, a bookseller's catalogue or
+two, two or three letters of a business sort--but there was no big
+folded paper, covered with writing, such as Jabey Naylor had described.
+
+The mention of that paper had excited Collingwood's curiosity. He
+rapidly summed up what he had learned. His grandfather had found a
+paper, closely written upon, in a book which had been the property of
+John Mallathorpe, deceased. The discovery had surprised him, for he had
+given voice to an exclamation of what was evidently astonishment. He had
+put the paper in his pocket. Then he had written a letter--to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe of Normandale Grange. When his shop-boy had posted that
+letter, he himself had gone out--to his solicitor. What, asked
+Collingwood, was the reasonable presumption? The old man had gone to
+Eldrick to show him the paper which he had found.
+
+He lingered in the little room for a few minutes, thinking. No one but
+Pratt had been with Antony Bartle at the time of his seizure and sudden
+death. What sort of a fellow was Pratt? Was he honest? Was his word to
+be trusted? Had he told the precise truth about the old man's death? He
+was evidently a suave, polite, obliging sort of fellow, this clerk, but
+it was a curious thing that if Antony Bartle had that paper, whatever it
+was--in his pocket when he went to Eldrick's office it should not be in
+his pocket still--if his clothing had really remained untouched. Already
+suspicion was in Collingwood's mind--vague and indefinable, but there.
+
+He was half inclined to go straight back to Eldrick & Pascoe's and tell
+Eldrick what Jabey Naylor had just told him. But he reflected that while
+Naylor went out to post the letter, the old bookseller might have put
+the paper elsewhere; locked it up in his safe, perhaps. One thing,
+however, he, Collingwood, could do at once--he could ask Mrs.
+Mallathorpe if the letter referred to the paper. He was fully acquainted
+with all the facts of the Mallathorpe history; old Bartle, knowing they
+would interest his grandson, had sent him the local newspaper accounts
+of its various episodes. It was only twelve miles to Normandale
+Grange--a motor-car would carry him there within the hour. He glanced at
+his watch--just ten o 'clock.
+
+An hour later, Collingwood found himself standing in a fine oak-panelled
+room, the windows of which looked out on a romantic valley whose thickly
+wooded sides were still bright with the red and yellow tints of autumn.
+A door opened--he turned, expecting to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. Instead, he
+found himself looking at a girl, who glanced inquiringly at him, and
+from him to the card which he had sent in on his arrival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+THE FORTUNATE POSSESSORS
+
+
+Collingwood at once realized that he was in the presence of one of the
+two fortunate young people who had succeeded so suddenly--and, according
+to popular opinion, so unexpectedly--to John Mallathorpe's wealth. This
+was evidently Miss Nesta Mallathorpe, of whom he had heard, but whom he
+had never seen. She, however, was looking at him as if she knew him, and
+she smiled a little as she acknowledged his bow.
+
+"My mother is out in the grounds, with my brother," she said, motioning
+Collingwood towards a chair. "Won't you sit down, please?--I've sent for
+her; she will be here in a few minutes."
+
+Collingwood sat down; Nesta Mallathorpe sat down, too, and as they
+looked at each other she smiled again.
+
+"I have seen you before, Mr. Collingwood," she said. "I knew it must be
+you when they brought up your card."
+
+Collingwood used his glance of polite inquiry to make a closer
+inspection of his hostess. He decided that Nesta Mallathorpe was not so
+much pretty as eminently attractive--a tall, well-developed,
+warm-coloured young woman, whose clear grey eyes and red lips and
+general bearing indicated the possession of good health and spirits. And
+he was quite certain that if he had ever seen her before he would not
+have forgotten it.
+
+"Where have you seen me?" he asked, smiling back at her.
+
+"Have you forgotten the mock-trial--year before last?" she asked.
+
+Collingwood remembered what she was alluding to. He had taken part, in
+company with various other law students, in a mock-trial, a breach of
+promise case, for the benefit of a certain London hospital, to him had
+fallen one of the principal parts, that of counsel for the plaintiff.
+"When I saw your name, I remembered it at once," she went on. "I was
+there--I was a probationer at St. Chad's Hospital at that time."
+
+"Dear me!" said Collingwood, "I should have thought our histrionic
+efforts would have been forgotten. I'm afraid I don't remember much
+about them, except that we had a lot of fun out of the affair. So you
+were at St. Chad's?" he continued, with a reminiscence of the
+surroundings of the institution they were talking of. "Very different to
+Normandale!"
+
+"Yes," she replied. "Very--very different to Normandale. But when I was
+at St. Chad's, I didn't know that I--that we should ever come to
+Normandale."
+
+"And now that you are here?" he asked.
+
+The girl looked out through the big window on the valley which lay in
+front of the old house, and she shook her head a little.
+
+"It's very beautiful," she answered, "but I sometimes wish I was back at
+St. Chad's--with something to do. Here--there's nothing to do but to do
+nothing." Collingwood realized that this was not the complaint of the
+well-to-do young woman who finds time hang heavy--it was rather
+indicative of a desire for action.
+
+"I understand!" he said. "I think I should feel like that. One wants--I
+suppose--is it action, movement, what is it?"
+
+"Better call it occupation--that's a plain term," she answered. "We're
+both suffering from lack of occupation here, my brother and I. And it's
+bad for us--especially for him."
+
+Before Collingwood could think of any suitable reply to this remarkably
+fresh and candid statement, the door opened, and Mrs. Mallathorpe came
+in, followed by her son. And the visitor suddenly and immediately
+noticed the force and meaning of Nesta Mallathorpe's last remark. Harper
+Mallathorpe, a good-looking, but not remarkably intelligent appearing
+young man, of about Collingwood's own age, gave him the instant
+impression of being bored to death; the lack-lustre eye, the aimless
+lounge, the hands thrust into the pockets of his Norfolk jacket as if
+they took refuge there from sheer idleness--all these things told their
+tale. Here, thought Collingwood, was a fine example of how riches can be
+a curse--relieved of the necessity of having to earn his daily bread by
+labour, Harper Mallathorpe was finding life itself laborious.
+
+But there was nothing of aimlessness, idleness, or lack of vigour in
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. She was a woman of character, energy, of
+brains--Collingwood saw all that at one glance. A little, neat-figured,
+compact sort of woman, still very good-looking, still on the right side
+of fifty, with quick movements and sharp glances out of a pair of shrewd
+eyes: this, he thought, was one of those women who will readily
+undertake the control and management of big affairs. He felt, as Mrs.
+Mallathorpe turned inquiring looks on him, that as long as she was in
+charge of them the Mallathorpe family fortunes would be safe.
+
+"Mother," said Nesta, handing Collingwood's card to Mrs. Mallathorpe,
+"this gentleman is Mr. Bartle Collingwood. He's--aren't you?--yes, a
+barrister. He wants to see you. Why, I don't know. I have seen Mr.
+Collingwood before--but he didn't remember me. Now he'll tell you what
+he wants to see you about."
+
+"If you'll allow me to explain why I called on you, Mrs. Mallathorpe,"
+said Collingwood, "I don't suppose you ever heard of me--but you know,
+at any rate, the name of my grandfather, Mr. Antony Bartle, the
+bookseller, of Barford? My grandfather is dead--he died very suddenly
+last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe and Nesta murmured words of polite sympathy. Harper
+suddenly spoke--as if mere words were some relief to his obvious
+boredom.
+
+"I heard that, this morning," he said, turning to his mother. "Hopkins
+told me--he was in town last night. I meant to tell you."
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe, glancing at some letters which
+stood on a rack above the mantelpiece. "Why--I had a letter from Mr.
+Bartle this very morning!"
+
+"It is that letter that I have come to see you about," said Collingwood.
+"I only got down here from London at half-past eight this morning, and
+of course, I have made some inquiries about the circumstances of my
+grandfather's sudden death. He died very suddenly indeed at Mr.
+Eldrick's office. He had gone there on some business about which nobody
+knows nothing--he died before he could mention it. And according to his
+shop-boy, Jabey Naylor, the last thing he did was to write a letter to
+you. Now--I have reason for asking--would you mind telling me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe, what that letter was about?" Mrs. Mallathorpe moved over to
+the hearth, and took an envelope from the rack. She handed it to
+Collingwood, indicating that he could open it. And Collingwood drew out
+one of old Bartle's memorandum forms, and saw a couple of lines in the
+familiar crabbed handwriting:
+
+ "MRS. MALLATHORPE, Normandale Grange.
+
+ "Madam,--If you should drive into town tomorrow, will you kindly
+ give me a call? I want to see you particularly.
+
+ "Respectfully, A. BARTLE."
+
+Collingwood handed back the letter.
+
+"Have you any idea to what that refers?" he asked.
+
+"Well, I think I have--perhaps," answered Mrs. Mallathorpe. "Mr. Bartle
+persuaded us to sell him some books--local books--which my late
+brother-in-law had at his office in the mill. And since then he has been
+very anxious to buy more local books and pamphlets about this
+neighbourhood, and he had some which Mr. Bartle was very anxious indeed
+to get hold of. I suppose he wanted to see me about that." Collingwood
+made no remarks for the moment. He was wondering whether or not to tell
+what Jabey Naylor had told him about this paper taken from the linen
+pocket inside the _History of Barford_. But Mrs. Mallathorpe's ready
+explanation had given him a new idea, and he rose from his chair.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "I suppose that's it. You may think it odd that I
+wanted to know what he'd written about, but as it was certainly the last
+letter he wrote----"
+
+"Oh, I'm quite sure it must have been that!" exclaimed Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+"And as I am going into Barford this afternoon, in any case, I meant to
+call at Mr. Bartle's. I'm sorry to hear of his death, poor old
+gentleman! But he was very old indeed, wasn't he?"
+
+"He was well over eighty," replied Collingwood. "Well, thank you
+again--and good-bye--I have a motorcar waiting outside there, and I have
+much to do in Barford when I get back."
+
+The two young people accompanied Collingwood into the hall. And Harper
+suddenly brightened.
+
+"I say!" he said. "Have a drink before you go. It's a long way in and
+out. Come into the dining-room."
+
+But Collingwood caught Nesta's eye, and he was quick to read a signal in
+it.
+
+"No, thanks awfully!" he answered. "I won't really--I must get
+back--I've such a lot of things to attend to. This is a very beautiful
+place of yours," he went on, as Harper, whose face had fallen at the
+visitor's refusal, followed with his sister to where the motor-car
+waited. "It might be a hundred miles from anywhere."
+
+"It's a thousand miles from anywhere!" muttered Harper. "Nothing to do
+here!"
+
+"No hunting, shooting, fishing?" asked Collingwood. "Get tired of 'em?
+Well, why not make a private golf-links in your park? You'd get a fine
+sporting course round there."
+
+"That's a good notion, Harper," observed Nesta, with some eagerness.
+"You could have it laid out this winter."
+
+Harper suddenly looked at Collingwood.
+
+"Going to stop in Barford?" he asked.
+
+"Till I settle my grandfather's affairs--yes," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Come and see us again," said Harper. "Come for the night--we've got a
+jolly good billiard table."
+
+"Do!" added Nesta heartily.
+
+"Since you're so kind, I will, then," replied Collingwood. "But not for
+a few days."
+
+He drove off--to wonder why he had visited Normandale Grange at all. For
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's explanation of the letter was doubtless the right
+one: Collingwood, little as he had seen of Antony Bartle, knew what a
+veritable sleuth-hound the old man was where rare books or engravings
+were concerned. Yet--why the sudden exclamation on finding that paper?
+Why the immediate writing of the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe? Why the
+setting off to Eldrick & Pascoe's office as soon as the letter was
+written? It all looked as if the old man had found some document, the
+contents of which related to the Mallathorpe family, and was anxious to
+communicate its nature to Mrs. Mallathorpe, and to his own solicitor, as
+soon as possible.
+
+"But that's probably only my fancy," he mused, as he sped back to
+Barford; "the real explanation is doubtless that suggested by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. Something made the old man think of the collection of local
+books at Normandale Grange--and he immediately wrote off to ask her to
+see him, with the idea of persuading her to let him have them. That's
+all there is in it--what a suspicious sort of party I must be getting!
+And suspicious of whom--and of what? Anyhow, I'm glad I went out
+there--and I'll certainly go again."
+
+On his way back to Barford he thought a good deal of the two young
+people he had just left. There was something of the irony of fate about
+their situation. There they were, in possession of money and luxury and
+youth--and already bored because they had nothing to do. He felt what
+closely approached a contemptuous pity for Harper--why didn't he turn to
+some occupation? There was their own business--why didn't he put in so
+many hours a day there, instead of leaving it to managers? Why didn't he
+interest himself in local affairs?--work at something? Already he had
+all the appearance of a man who is inclined to slackness--and in that
+case, mused Collingwood, his money would do him positive harm. But he
+had no thoughts of that sort about Nesta Mallathorpe: he had seen that
+she was of a different temperament.
+
+"She'll not stick there--idling," he said. "She'll break out and do
+something or other. What did she say? 'Suffering from lack of
+occupation'? A bad thing to suffer from, too--glad I'm not similarly
+afflicted!"
+
+There was immediate occupation for Collingwood himself when he reached
+the town. He had already made up his mind as to his future plans. He
+would sell his grandfather's business as soon as he could find a
+buyer--the old man had left a provision in his will, the gist of which
+Eldrick had already communicated to Collingwood, to the effect that his
+grandson could either carry on the business with the help of a competent
+manager until the stock was sold out, or could dispose of it as a going
+concern--Collingwood decided to sell it outright, and at once. But first
+it was necessary for him to look round the collection of valuable books
+and prints, and get an idea of what it was that he was about to sell.
+And when he had reached Barford again, and had lunched at his hotel, he
+went to Quagg Alley, and shut himself in the shop, and made a careful
+inspection of the treasures which old Bartle had raked up from many
+quarters.
+
+Within ten minutes of beginning his task Collingwood knew that he had
+gone out to Normandale Grange about a mere nothing. Picking up the
+_History of Barford_ which Jabey Naylor had spoken of, and turning over
+its leaves, two papers dropped out; one a half sheet of foolscap,
+folded; the other, a letter from some correspondent in the United
+States. Collingwood read the letter first--it was evidently that which
+Naylor had referred to as having been delivered the previous afternoon.
+It asked for a good, clear copy of Hopkinson's _History of Barford_--and
+then it went on, "If you should come across a copy of what is, I
+believe, a very rare tract or pamphlet, _Customs of the Court Leet of
+the Manor of Barford_, published, I think, about 1720, I should be glad
+to pay you any price you like to ask for it--in reason." So much for the
+letter--Collingwood turned from it to the folded paper. It was headed
+"List of Barford Tracts and Pamphlets in my box marked B.P. in the
+library at N Grange," and it was initialled at the foot J.M. Then
+followed the titles of some twenty-five or thirty works--amongst them
+was the very tract for which the American correspondent had inquired.
+And now Collingwood had what he believed to be a clear vision of what
+had puzzled him--his grandfather having just read the American buyer's
+request had found the list of these pamphlets inside the _History of
+Barford_, and in it the entry of the particular one he wanted, and at
+once he had written to Mrs. Mallathorpe in the hope of persuading her to
+sell what his American correspondent desired to buy. It was all quite
+plain--and the old man's visit to Eldrick & Pascoe's had nothing to do
+with the letter to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Nor had he carried the folded paper
+in his pocket to Eldrick's--when Jabey Naylor went out to post the
+letter, Antony had placed the folded paper and the American letter
+together in the book and left them there. Quite, quite simple!--he had
+had his run to Normandale Grange and back all about nothing, and for
+nothing--except that he had met Nesta Mallathorpe, whom he was already
+sufficiently interested in to desire to see again. But having arrived at
+an explanation of what had puzzled him and made him suspicious, he
+dismissed that matter from his mind and thought no more of it.
+
+But across the street, all unknown to Collingwood, Linford Pratt was
+thinking a good deal. Collingwood had taken his car from a rank
+immediately opposite Eldrick & Pascoe's windows; Pratt, whose desk
+looked on to the street, had seen him drive away soon after ten o'clock
+and return about half-past twelve. Pratt, who knew everybody in the
+business centre of the town, knew the man who had driven Collingwood,
+and when he went out to his lunch he asked him where he had been that
+morning. The man, who knew no reason for secrecy, told him--and Pratt
+went off to eat his bread and cheese and drink his one glass of ale and
+to wonder why young Collingwood had been to Normandale Grange. He became
+slightly anxious and uneasy. He knew that Collingwood must have made
+some slight examination of old Bartle's papers. Was it--could it be
+possible that the old man, before going to Eldrick's, had left some
+memorandum of his discovery in his desk--or in a diary? He had said that
+he had not shown the will, nor mentioned the will, to a soul--but he
+might;--old men were so fussy about things--he might have set down in
+his diary that he had found it on such a day, and under such-and-such
+circumstances.
+
+However, there was one person who could definitely inform him of the
+reason of Collingwood's visit to Normandale Grange--Mrs. Mallathorpe. He
+would see her at once, and learn if he had any grounds for fear. And so
+it came about that at nine o'clock that evening, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for
+the second time that day, found herself asked to see a limb of the law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+POINT-BLANK
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was alone when Pratt's card was taken to her. Harper
+and Nesta were playing billiards in a distant part of the big house.
+Dinner had been over for an hour; Mrs. Mallathorpe, who had known what
+hard work and plenty of it was, in her time, was trifling over the
+newspapers--rest, comfort, and luxury were by no means boring to her.
+She looked at the card doubtfully--Pratt had pencilled a word or two on
+it: "Private and important business." Then she glanced at the butler--an
+elderly man who had been with John Mallathorpe many years before the
+catastrophe occurred.
+
+"Who is he, Dickenson?" she asked. "Do you know him?"
+
+"Clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's, in the town, ma'am," replied the butler.
+"I know the young man by sight."
+
+"Where is he?" inquired Mrs. Mallathorpe.
+
+"In the little morning room, at present, ma'am," said Dickenson.
+
+"Take him into the study," commanded Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I'll come to him
+presently." She was utterly at a loss to understand Pratt's presence
+there. Eldrick & Pascoe were not her solicitors, and she had no business
+of a legal nature in which they could be in any way concerned. But it
+suddenly struck her that that was the second time she had heard
+Eldrick's name mentioned that day--young Mr. Collingwood had said that
+his grandfather's death had taken place at Eldrick & Pascoe's office.
+Had this clerk come to see her about that?--and if so, what had she to
+do with it? Before she reached the room in which Pratt was waiting for
+her, Mrs. Mallathorpe was filled with curiosity. But in that curiosity
+there was not a trace of apprehension; nothing suggested to her that her
+visitor had called on any matter actually relating to herself or her
+family.
+
+The room into which Pratt had been taken was a small apartment opening
+out of the library--John Mallathorpe, when he bought Normandale Grange,
+had it altered and fitted to suit his own tastes, and Pratt, as soon as
+he entered it, saw that it was a place in which privacy and silence
+could be ensured. He noticed that it had double doors, and that there
+were heavy curtains before the window. And during the few minutes which
+elapsed between his entrance and Mrs. Mallathorpe's, he took the
+precaution to look behind those curtains, and to survey his
+surroundings--what he had to say was not to be overheard, if he could
+help it.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked her curiosity as soon as she came in. She did
+not remember that she had ever seen this young man before, but she
+recognized at once that he was a shrewd and sharp person, and she knew
+from his manner that he had news of importance to give her. She quietly
+acknowledged Pratt's somewhat elaborate bow, and motioned him to take a
+chair at the side of the big desk which stood before the fireplace--she
+herself sat down at the desk itself, in John Mallathorpe's old
+elbow-chair. And Pratt thought to himself that however much young Harper
+John Mallathorpe might be nominal master of Normandale Grange, the real
+master was there, in the self-evident, quiet-looking woman who turned to
+him in business-like fashion.
+
+"You want to see me?" said Mrs. Mallathorpe. "What is it?"
+
+"Business, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt. "As I said on my card--of a
+private and important sort."
+
+"To do with me?" she asked.
+
+"With you--and with your family," said Pratt. "And before we go any
+further, not a soul knows of it but--me."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe took another searching look at her visitor. Pratt was
+leaning over the corner of the desk, towards her; already he had lowered
+his tones to the mysterious and confidential note.
+
+"I don't know what you're talking about," she said. "Go on."
+
+Pratt bent a little nearer.
+
+"A question or two first, if you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe. And--answer
+them! They're for your own good. Young Mr. Collingwood called on you
+today."
+
+"Well--and what of it?"
+
+"What did he want?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated and frowned a little. And Pratt hastened to
+reassure her. "I'm using no idle words, Mrs. Mallathorpe, when I say
+it's for your own good. It is! What did he come for?"
+
+"He came to ask what there was in a letter which his grandfather wrote
+to me yesterday afternoon."
+
+"Antony Bartle had written to you, had he? And what did he say, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? For that is important!"
+
+"No more than that he wanted me to call on him today, if I happened to
+be in Barford."
+
+"Nothing more?"
+
+"Nothing more--not a word."
+
+"Nothing as to--why he wanted to see you?"
+
+"No! I thought that he probably wanted to see me about buying some books
+of the late Mr. Mallathorpe's."
+
+"Did you tell Collingwood that?" asked Pratt, eagerly.
+
+"Yes--of course."
+
+"Did it satisfy him?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe frowned again.
+
+"Why shouldn't I?" she demanded. "It was the only explanation I could
+possibly give him. How do I know what the old man really wanted?"
+
+Pratt drew his chair still nearer to the desk. His voice dropped to a
+whisper and his eyes were full of meaning.
+
+"I'll tell you what he wanted!" he said speaking very slowly. "It's what
+I've come for. Listen! Antony Bartle came to our office soon after five
+yesterday afternoon. I was alone--everybody else had gone. I took him
+into Eldrick's room. He told me that in turning over one of the books
+which he had bought from Mallathorpe Mill, some short time ago, he had
+found--what do you think?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's cheek had flushed at the mention of the books from
+the Mill. Now, at Pratt's question, and under his searching eye, she
+turned very pale, and the clerk saw her fingers tighten on the arms of
+her chair.
+
+"What?" she asked. "What?"
+
+"John Mallathorpe's will!" he answered. "Do you understand? His--will!"
+
+The woman glanced quickly about her--at the doors, the uncurtained
+window.
+
+"Safe enough here," whispered Pratt. "I made sure of that. Don't be
+afraid--no one knows--but me."
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe seemed to find some difficulty in speaking, and
+when she at last got out a word her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Impossible!"
+
+"It's a fact!" said Pratt. "Nothing was ever more a fact as you'll see.
+But let me finish my story. The old man told me how he'd found the
+will--only half an hour before--and he asked me to ring up Eldrick, so
+that we might all read it together. I went to the telephone--when I came
+back, Bartle was dead--just dead. And--I took the will out of his
+pocket."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe made an involuntary gesture with her right hand. And
+Pratt smiled, craftily, and shook his head.
+
+"Much too valuable to carry about, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said. "I've got
+it--all safe--under lock and key. But as I've said--nobody knows of it
+but myself. Not a living soul. No one has any idea! No one can have any
+idea. I was a bit alarmed when I heard that young Collingwood had been
+to you, for I thought that the old man, though he didn't tell me of any
+such thing, might have dropped you a line saying what he'd found. But as
+he didn't--well, not one living soul knows that the will's in
+existence, except me--and you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe was regaining her self-possession. She had had a great
+shock, but the worst of it was over. Already she knew, from Pratt's
+manner, insidious and suggesting, that the will was of a nature that
+would dispossess her and hers of this recently acquired wealth--the
+clerk had made that evident by look and tone. So--there was nothing but
+to face things.
+
+"What--what does it--say?" she asked, with an effort.
+
+Pratt unbuttoned his overcoat, plunged a hand into the inner pocket,
+drew out a sheet of paper, unfolded it and laid it on the desk.
+
+"An exact copy," he said tersely. "Read it for yourself."
+
+In spite of the determined effort which she made to be calm, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's fingers still trembled as she took up the sheet on which
+Pratt had made a fair copy of the will. The clerk watched her narrowly
+as she read. He knew that presently there would be a tussle between
+them: he knew, too, that she was a woman who would fight hard in defence
+of her own interest, and for the interests of her children.
+
+Always keeping his ears open to local gossip, especially where money was
+concerned, Pratt had long since heard that Mrs. Mallathorpe was a keen
+and sharp business woman. And now he was not surprised when, having
+slowly and carefully read the copy of the will from beginning to end,
+she laid it down, and turned to him with a business-like question.
+
+"The effect of that?" she asked. "What would it be--curtly?"
+
+"Precisely what it says," answered Pratt. "Couldn't be clearer!"
+
+"We--should lose all?" she demanded, almost angrily. "All?"
+
+"All--except what he says--there," agreed Pratt.
+
+"And that," she went on, drumming her fingers on the paper, "that--would
+stand?"
+
+"What it's a copy of would stand," said Pratt. "Oh, yes, don't you make
+any mistake about it, Mrs. Mallathorpe! Nothing can upset that will. It
+is plain as a pikestaff how it came to be made. Your late brother-in-law
+evidently wrote his will out--it's all in his own handwriting--and took
+it down to the Mill with him the very day of the chimney accident. Just
+as evidently he signed it in the presence of his manager, Gaukrodger,
+and his cashier, Marshall--they signed at the same time, as it says,
+there. Now I take it that very soon after that, Mr. Mallathorpe went out
+into his mill yard to have a look at the chimney--Gaukrodger and
+Marshall went with him. Before he went, he popped the will into the
+book, where old Bartle found it yesterday--such things are easily done.
+Perhaps he was reading the book--perhaps it lay handy--he slipped the
+will inside, anyway. And then--he was killed--and, what's more the two
+witnesses were killed with him. So there wasn't a man left who could
+tell of that will! But--there's half Barford could testify to these
+three signatures! Mrs. Mallathorpe, there's not a chance for you if I
+put that will into the hands of the two trustees!"
+
+He leaned back in his chair after that--nodding confidently, watching
+keenly. And now he saw that the trembling fingers were interlacing each
+other, twisting the rings on each other, and that Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+thinking as she had most likely never thought in her life. After a
+moment's pause Pratt went on. "Perhaps you didn't understand," he said.
+"I mean, you don't know the effect. Those two trustees--Charlesworth &
+Wyatt--could turn you all clean out of this--tomorrow, in a way of
+speaking. Everything's theirs! They can demand an account of every penny
+that you've all had out of the estate and the business--from the time
+you all took hold. If anything's been saved, put aside, they can demand
+that. You're entitled to nothing but the three amounts of ten thousand
+each. Of course, thirty thousand is thirty thousand--it means, at five
+per cent., fifteen hundred a year--if you could get five per cent.
+safely. But--I should say your son and daughter are getting a few
+thousand a year each, aren't they, Mrs. Mallathorpe? It would be a nice
+come-down! Five hundred a year apiece--at the outside. A small house
+instead of Normandale Grange. Genteel poverty--comparatively
+speaking--instead of riches. That is--if I hand over the will to
+Charlesworth & Wyatt."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe slowly turned her eyes on Pratt. And Pratt suddenly
+felt a little afraid--there was anger in those eyes; anger of a curious
+sort. It might be against fate--against circumstance: it might not--why
+should it?--be against him personally, but it was there, and it was
+malign and almost evil, and it made him uncomfortable.
+
+"Where is the will!" she asked.
+
+"Safe! In my keeping," answered Pratt.
+
+She looked him all over--surmisingly.
+
+"You'll sell it to me?" she suggested. "You'll hand it over--and let me
+burn it--destroy it?"
+
+"No!" answered Pratt. "I shall not!"
+
+He saw that his answer produced personal anger at last. Mrs. Mallathorpe
+gave him a look which would have warned a much less observant man than
+Pratt. But he gave her back a look that was just as resolute.
+
+"I say no--and I mean no!" he continued. "I won't sell--but I'll
+bargain. Let's be plain with each other. You don't want that will to be
+handed over to the trustees named in it, Charlesworth & Wyatt?"
+
+"Do you think I'm a fool--man!" she flashed out.
+
+"I should be a fool myself if I did," replied Pratt calmly. "And I'm not
+a fool. Very well--then you'll square me. You'll buy me. Come to terms
+with me, and nobody shall ever know. I repeat to you what I've said
+before--not a soul knows now, no nor suspects! It's utterly impossible
+for anybody to find out. The testator's dead. The attesting witnesses
+are dead. The man who found this will is dead. No one but you and myself
+ever need know a word about all this. If--you make terms with me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe."
+
+"What do you want?" she asked sullenly. "You forget--I've nothing of my
+own. I didn't come into anything."
+
+"I've a pretty good notion who's real master here--and at Mallathorpe
+Mill, too," retorted Pratt. "I should say you're still in full control
+of your children, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and that you can do pretty well what
+you like with them."
+
+"With one of them perhaps," she said, still angry and sullen. "But--I
+tell you, for you may as well know--if my daughter knew of what you've
+told me, she'd go straight to these trustees and tell! That's a fact
+that you'd better realize. I can't control her."
+
+"Oh!" remarked Pratt. "Um!--then we must take care that she doesn't
+know. But we don't intend that anybody should know but you and me, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. You needn't tell a soul--not even your son. You mustn't
+tell! Listen, now--I've thought out a good scheme which'll profit me,
+and make you safe. Do you know what you want on this estate?"
+
+She stared at him as if wondering what this question had to do with the
+matter which was of such infinite importance. And Pratt smiled, and
+hastened to enlighten her.
+
+"You want--a steward," he said. "A steward and estate agent. John
+Mallathorpe managed everything for himself, but your son can't, and
+pardon me if I say that you can't--properly. You need a man--you need
+me. You can persuade your son to that effect. Give me the job of steward
+here. I'll suggest to you how to do it in such a fashion that it'll
+arouse no suspicion, and look just like an ordinary--very
+ordinary--business job--at a salary and on conditions to be arranged,
+and--you're safe! Safe, Mrs. Mallathorpe--you know what that means!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly rose from her chair.
+
+"I know this!" she said. "I'll discuss nothing, and do nothing, till
+I've seen that will!"
+
+Pratt rose, too, nodding his head as if quite satisfied. He took up the
+copy, tore it in two pieces, and carefully dropped them into the glowing
+fire.
+
+"I shall be at my lodgings at any time after five-thirty tomorrow
+evening," he answered quietly. "Call there. You have the address. And
+you can then read the will with your own eyes. I shan't bring it here.
+The game's in my hands, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Within a few minutes he was out in the park again, and making his way to
+the little railway station in the valley below. He felt triumphant--he
+knew that the woman he had just left was at his mercy and would accede
+to his terms. And all the way back to town, and through the town to his
+lodgings, he considered and perfected the scheme he was going to suggest
+to Mrs. Mallathorpe on the morrow.
+
+Pratt lived in a little hamlet of old houses on the very outskirts of
+Barford--on the edge of a stretch of Country honeycombed by
+stone-quarries, some in use, some already worked out. It was a lonely
+neighbourhood, approached from the nearest tramway route by a narrow,
+high-walled lane. He was half-way along that lane when a stealthy foot
+stole to his side, and a hand was laid on his arm--just as stealthily
+came the voice of one of his fellow-clerks at Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"A moment, Pratt! I've been waiting for you. I want--a word or two--in
+private!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+THE UNEXPECTED
+
+
+Pratt started when he heard that voice and felt the arresting hand. He
+knew well enough to whom they belonged--they were those of one James
+Parrawhite, a little, weedy, dissolute chap who had been in Eldrick &
+Pascoe's employ for about a year. It had always been a mystery to him
+and the other clerks that Parrawhite had been there at all, and that
+being there he was allowed to stop. He was not a Barford man. Nobody
+knew anything whatever about him, though his occasional references to it
+seemed to indicate that he knew London pretty thoroughly. Pratt shrewdly
+suspected that he was a man whom Eldrick had known in other days,
+possibly a solicitor who had been struck off the rolls, and to whom
+Eldrick, for old times' sake, was disposed to extend a helping hand.
+
+All that any of them knew was that one morning some fifteen months
+previously, Parrawhite, a complete stranger, had walked into the office,
+asked to see Eldrick, had remained closeted with him half an hour, and
+had been given a job at two pounds a week, there and then. That he was a
+clever and useful clerk no one denied, but no one liked him.
+
+He was always borrowing half-crowns. He smelt of rum. He was altogether
+undesirable. It was plain to the clerks that Pascoe disliked him. But he
+was evidently under Eldrick's protection, and he did his work and did it
+well, and there was no doubt that he knew more law than either of the
+partners, and was better up in practice than Pratt himself. But--he was
+not desirable ... and Pratt never desired him less than on this
+occasion.
+
+"What are you after--coming on a man like that!" growled Pratt.
+
+"You," replied Parrawhite. "I knew you'd got to come up this lane, so I
+waited for you. I've something to say."
+
+"Get it said, then!" retorted Pratt.
+
+"Not here," answered Parrawhite. "Come down by the quarry--nobody about
+there."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Then you'll be very sorry for yourself--tomorrow," replied Parrawhite.
+"That's all!"
+
+Pratt had already realized that this fellow knew something. Parrawhite's
+manner was not only threatening but confident. He spoke as a man speaks
+who has got the whip hand. And so, still growling, and inwardly raging
+and anxious, he turned off with his companion into a track which lay
+amongst the stone quarries. It was a desolate, lonely place; no house
+was near; they were as much alone as if they had been in the middle of
+one of the great moors outside the town, the lights of which they could
+see in the valley below them. In the grey sky above, a waning moon gave
+them just sufficient light to see their immediate surroundings--a
+grass-covered track, no longer used, and the yawning mouths of the old
+quarries, no longer worked, the edges of which were thick with gorse and
+bramble. It was the very place for secret work, and Pratt was certain
+that secret work was at hand.
+
+"Now then!" he said, when they had walked well into the wilderness.
+"What is it? And no nonsense!"
+
+"You'll get no nonsense from me," sneered Parrawhite. "I'm not that
+sort. This is what I want to say. I was in Eldrick's office last night
+all the time you were there with old Bartle."
+
+This swift answer went straight through Pratt's defences. He was
+prepared to hear something unpleasant and disconcerting, but not that.
+And he voiced the first thought that occurred to him.
+
+"That's a lie!" he exclaimed. "There was nobody there!"
+
+"No lie," replied Parrawhite. "I was there. I was behind the curtain of
+that recess--you know. And since I know what you did, I don't mind
+telling you--we're in the same boat, my lad!--what I was going to do.
+You thought I'd gone--with the others. But I hadn't. I'd merely done
+what I've done several times without being found out--slipped in
+there--to wait until you'd gone. Why? Because friend Eldrick, as you
+know, is culpably careless about leaving loose cash in the unlocked
+drawer of his desk, culpably careless, too, about never counting it.
+And--a stray sovereign or half-sovereign is useful to a man who only
+gets two quid a week. Understand?"
+
+"So you're a thief?" said Pratt bitterly.
+
+"I'm precisely what you are--a thief!" retorted Parrawhite. "You stole
+John Mallathorpe's will last night. I heard everything, I tell you!--and
+saw everything. I heard the whole business--what the old man said--what
+you, later, said to Eldrick. I saw old Bartle die--I saw you take the
+will from his pocket, read it, and put it in your pocket. I know
+all!--except the terms of the will. But--I've a pretty good idea of what
+those terms are. Do you know why? Because I watched you set off to
+Normandale by the eight-twenty train tonight!"
+
+"Hang you for a dirty sneak!" growled Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite laughed, and flourished a heavy stick which he carried.
+
+"Not a bit of it!" he said, almost pleasantly. "I thought you were more
+of a philosopher--I fancied I'd seen gleams--mere gleams--of philosophy
+in you at times. Fortunes of war, my boy! Come now--you've seen enough
+of me to know I'm an adventurer. This is an adventure of the sort I
+love. Go into it heart and soul, man! Own up!--you've found out that the
+will leaves the property away from the present holders, and you've been
+to Normandale to--bargain? Come, now!"
+
+"What then!" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Then, of course, I come in at the bargaining," answered Parrawhite.
+"I'm going to have my share. That's a certainty. You'd better take my
+advice. Because you're absolutely in my power. I've nothing to do but to
+tell Eldrick tomorrow morning."
+
+"Suppose I tell Eldrick tomorrow morning of what you've told me?"
+interjected Pratt.
+
+"Eldrick will believe me before you," retorted Parrawhite,
+imperturbably. "I'm a much cleverer, more plausible man than you are, my
+friend--I've had an experience of the world which you haven't, I can
+easily invent a fine excuse for being in that room. For two pins I'll
+incriminate you! See? Be reasonable--for if it comes to a contest of
+brains, you haven't a rabbit's chance against a fox. Tell me all about
+the will--and what you've done. You've got to--for, by the Lord
+Harry!--I'm going to have my share. Come, now!"
+
+Pratt stood, in a little hollow wherein they had paused, and thought,
+rapidly and angrily. There was no doubt about it--he was trapped. This
+fearful scoundrel at his side, who boasted of his cleverness, would
+stick to him like a leach--he would have to share. All his own smart
+schemes for exploiting Mrs. Mallathorpe, for ensuring himself a
+competence for life, were knocked on the head. There was no helping
+it--he would have to tell--and to share. And so, sullenly, resentfully,
+he told.
+
+Parrawhite listened in silence, taking in every point. Pratt, knowing
+that concealment was useless, told the truth about everything,
+concisely, but omitting nothing.
+
+"All right!" remarked Parrawhite at the end, "Now, then, what terms do
+you mean to insist on?"
+
+"What's the good of going into that?" growled Pratt. "Now that you've
+stuck your foot in it, what do my terms matter?"
+
+"Quite right," agreed Parrawhite, "They don't. What matter is--our
+terms. Now let me suggest--no, insist on--what they must be. Cash! Do
+you know why I insist on that? No? Then I'll tell you. Because this
+young barrister chap, Collingwood, has evidently got some suspicion
+of--something."
+
+"I can't see it," said Pratt uneasily. "He was only curious to know what
+that letter was about."
+
+"Never mind," continued Parrawhite. "He had some suspicion--or he
+wouldn't have gone out there almost as soon as he reached Barford after
+his grandfather's death. And even if suspicion is put to sleep for
+awhile, it can easily be reawakened, so--cash! We must profit at
+once--before any future risk arises. But--what terms were you thinking
+of?"
+
+"Stewardship of this estate for life," muttered Pratt gloomily.
+
+"With the risk of some discovery being made, some time, any time!"
+sneered Parrawhite. "Where are your brains, man? The old fellow, John
+Mallathorpe, probably made a draft or two of that will before he did his
+fair copy--he may have left those drafts among his papers."
+
+"If he did, Mrs. Mallathorpe 'ud find 'em," said Pratt slowly. "I don't
+believe there's the slightest risk. I've figured everything out. I don't
+believe there's any danger from Collingwood or from anybody--it's
+impossible! And if we take cash now--we're selling for a penny what we
+ought to get pounds for."
+
+"The present is much more important than the future, my friend,"
+answered Parrawhite. "To me, at any rate. Now, then, this is my
+proposal. I'll be with you when this lady calls at your place tomorrow
+evening. We'll offer her the will, to do what she likes with, for ten
+thousand pounds. She can find that--quickly. When she pays--as she
+will!--we share, equally, and then--well, you can go to the devil! I
+shall go--somewhere else. So that's settled."
+
+"No!" said Pratt.
+
+Parrawhite turned sharply, and Pratt saw a sinister gleam in his eyes.
+
+"Did you say no?" he asked.
+
+"I said--no!" replied Pratt. "I'm not going to take five thousand pounds
+for a chance that's worth fifty thousand. Hang you!--if you hadn't been
+a black sneak-thief, as you are, I'd have had the whole thing to myself!
+And I don't know that I will give way to you. If it comes to it, my
+word's as good as yours--and I don't believe Eldrick would believe you
+before me. Pascoe wouldn't anyway. You've got a past!--in quod, I should
+think--my past's all right. I've a jolly good mind to let you do your
+worst--after all, I've got the will. And by george! now I come to think
+of it, you can do your worst! Tell what you like tomorrow morning. I
+shall tell 'em what you are--a scoundrel."
+
+He turned away at that--and as he turned, Parrawhite, with a queer cry
+of rage that might have come from some animal which saw its prey
+escaping, struck out at him with the heavy stick. The blow missed
+Pratt's head, but it grazed the tip of his ear, and fell slantingly on
+his left shoulder. And then the anger that had been boiling in Pratt
+ever since the touch on his arm in the dark lane, burst out in activity,
+and he turned on his assailant, gripped him by the throat before
+Parrawhite could move, and after choking and shaking him until his teeth
+rattled and his breath came in jerking sobs, flung him violently against
+the masses of stone by which they had been standing.
+
+Pratt was of considerable physical strength. He played cricket and
+football; he visited a gymnasium thrice a week. His hands had the grip
+of a blacksmith; his muscles were those of a prize-fighter. He had put
+more strength than he was aware of into his fierce grip on Parrawhite's
+throat; he had exerted far more force than he knew he was exerting, when
+he flung him away. He heard a queer cracking sound as the man struck
+something, and for the moment he took no notice of it--the pain of that
+glancing blow on his shoulder was growing acute, and he began to rub it
+with his free hand and to curse its giver.
+
+"Get up, you fool, and I'll give you some more!" he growled. "I'll teach
+you to----"
+
+He suddenly noticed the curiously still fashion in which Parrawhite was
+lying where he had flung him--noticed, too, as a cloud passed the moon
+and left it unveiled, how strangely white the man's face was. And just
+as suddenly Pratt forgot his own injury, and dropped on his knees beside
+his assailant. An instant later, and he knew that he was once more
+confronting death. For Parrawhite was as dead as Antony Bartle--violent
+contact of his head with a rock had finished what Pratt had nearly
+completed with that vicious grip. There was no questioning it, no
+denying it--Pratt was there in that lonely place, staring half
+consciously, half in terror, at a dead man.
+
+He stood up at last, cursing Parrawhite with the anger of despair. He
+had not one scrap of pity for him. All his pity was for himself. That he
+should have been brought into this!--that this vile little beast,
+perfect scum that he was, should have led him to what might be the utter
+ruin of his career!--it was shameful, it was abominable, it was cruel!
+He felt as if he could cheerfully tear Parrawhite's dead body to pieces.
+But even as these thoughts came, others of a more important nature
+crowded on them. For--there lay a dead man, who was not to be put in
+one's pocket, like a will. It was necessary to hide that thing from the
+light--ever that light. Within a few hours, morning would break, and
+lonely and deserted as that place was nowadays, some one might pass that
+way. Out of sight with him, then!--and quickly.
+
+Pratt was very well acquainted with the spot at which he stood. Those
+old quarries had a certain picturesqueness. They had become grass-grown;
+ivy, shrubs, trees had clustered about them--the people who lived in the
+few houses half a mile away, sometimes walked around them; the children
+made a playground of the place: Pratt himself had often gone into some
+quiet corner to read and smoke. And now his quick mind immediately
+suggested a safe hiding place for this thing that he could not carry
+away with him, and dare not leave to the morning sun--close by was a
+pit, formerly used for some quarrying purpose, which was filled, always
+filled, with water. It was evidently of considerable depth; the water
+was black in it; the mouth was partly obscured by a maze of shrub and
+bramble. It had been like that ever since Pratt came to lodge in that
+part of the district--ten or twelve years before; it would probably
+remain like that for many a long year to come. That bit of land was
+absolutely useless and therefore neglected, and as long as rain fell and
+water drained, that pit would always be filled to its brim.
+
+He remembered something else: also close by where he stood--a heap of
+old iron things--broken and disused picks, smashed rails, fragments
+thrown aside when the last of the limestone had been torn out of the
+quarries. Once more luck was playing into his hands--those odds and ends
+might have been put there for the very purpose to which he now meant to
+turn them. And being certain that he was alone, and secure, Pratt
+proceeded to go about his unpleasant task skilfully and methodically. He
+fetched a quantity of the iron, fastened it to the dead man's clothing,
+drew the body, thus weighted, to the edge of the pit, and prepared to
+slide it into the black water. But there an idea struck him. While he
+made these preparations he had had hosts of ideas as to his operations
+next morning--this idea was supplementary to them. Quickly and
+methodically he removed the contents of Parrawhite's pockets to his
+own--everything: money, watch and chain, even a ring which the dead man
+had been evidently vain of. Then he let Parrawhite glide into the
+water--and after him he sent the heavy stick, carefully fastened to a
+bar of iron.
+
+Five minutes later, the surface of the water in that pit was as calm and
+unruffled as ever--not a ripple showed that it had been disturbed. And
+Pratt made his way out of the wilderness, swearing that he would never
+enter it again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+THE SUPREME INDUCEMENT
+
+
+Pratt was in Eldrick & Pascoe's office soon after half-past eight next
+morning, and for nearly forty minutes he had the place entirely to
+himself. But it took only a few of those minutes for him to do what he
+had carefully planned before he went to bed the previous night. Shutting
+himself into Eldrick's private room, and making sure that he was alone
+that time, he immediately opened the drawer in the senior partner's
+desk, wherein Eldrick, culpably enough, as Parrawhite had sneeringly
+remarked, was accustomed to put loose money. Eldrick was strangely
+careless in that way: he would throw money into that drawer in presence
+of his clerks--notes, gold, silver. If it happened to occur to him, he
+would take the money out at the end of the afternoon and hand it to
+Pratt to lock up in the safe; but as often as not, it did not occur.
+Pratt had more than once ventured on a hint which was almost a
+remonstrance, and Eldrick had paid no attention to him. He was a
+careless, easy-going man in many respects, Eldrick, and liked to do
+things in his own way. And after all, as Pratt had decided, when he
+found that his hints were not listened to, it was Eldrick's own affair
+if he liked to leave the money lying about.
+
+There was money lying about in that drawer when Pratt drew it open; it
+was never locked, day or night, or, if it was, the key was left in it.
+As soon as he opened it, he saw gold--two or three sovereigns--and
+silver--a little pile of it. And, under a letter weight, four banknotes
+of ten pounds each. But this was precisely what Pratt had expected to
+see; he himself had handed banknotes, gold, and silver to Eldrick the
+previous evening, just after receiving them from a client who had called
+to pay his bill. And he had seen Eldrick place them in the drawer, as
+usual, and soon afterwards Eldrick had walked out, saying he was going
+to the club, and he had never returned.
+
+What Pratt now did was done as the result of careful thought and
+deliberation. There was a cheque-book lying on top of some papers in the
+drawer; he took it up and tore three cheques out of it. Then he picked
+up the bank-notes, tore them and the abstracted blank cheques into
+pieces, and dropped the pieces in the fire recently lighted by the
+caretaker. He watched these fragments burn, and then he put the gold and
+silver in his hip-pocket, where he already carried a good deal of his
+own, and walked out.
+
+Nine o'clock brought the office-boy; a quarter-past nine brought the
+clerks; at ten o'clock Eldrick walked in. According to custom, Pratt
+went into Eldrick's room with the letters, and went through them with
+him. One of them contained a legal document over which the solicitor
+frowned a little.
+
+"Ask Parrawhite's opinion about that," he said presently, indicating a
+marked paragraph.
+
+"Parrawhite has not come in this morning, sir," observed Pratt,
+gathering up letters and papers. "I'll draw his attention to it when he
+arrives."
+
+He went into the outer office, only to be summoned back to Eldrick a few
+minutes later. The senior partner was standing by his desk, looking a
+little concerned, and, thought Pratt, decidedly uncomfortable. He
+motioned the clerk to close the door.
+
+"Has Parrawhite come?" he asked.
+
+"No," replied Pratt, "Not yet, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Is--is he usually late?" inquired Eldrick.
+
+"Usually quite punctual--half-past nine," said Pratt.
+
+Eldrick glanced at his watch; then at his clerk.
+
+"Didn't you give me some cash last night?" he asked.
+
+"Forty-three pounds nine," answered Pratt. "Thompson's bill of costs--he
+paid it yesterday afternoon."
+
+Eldrick looked more uncomfortable than ever.
+
+"Well--the fact is," he said, "I--I meant to hand it to you to put in
+the safe, Pratt, but I didn't come back from the club. And--it's gone!"
+
+Pratt simulated concern--but not astonishment. And Eldrick pulled open
+the drawer, and waved a hand over it.
+
+"I put it down there," he said. "Very careless of me, no doubt--but
+nothing of this sort has ever happened before, and--however, there's the
+unpleasant fact, Pratt. The money's gone!"
+
+Pratt, who had hastily turned over the papers and other contents of the
+drawer, shook his head and used his privilege as an old and confidential
+servant. "I've always said, sir, that it was a great mistake to leave
+loose money lying about," he remarked mournfully. "If there'd only been
+a practice of letting me lock anything of that sort up in the safe every
+night--and this chequebook, too, sir--then----"
+
+"I know--I know!" said Eldrick. "Very reprehensible on my part--I'm
+afraid I am careless--no doubt of it. But----"
+
+He in his turn was interrupted by Pratt, who was turning over the
+cheque-book.
+
+"Some cheque forms have been taken out of this," he said. "Three! at the
+end. Look there, sir!"
+
+Eldrick uttered an exclamation of intense annoyance and disgust. He
+looked at the despoiled cheque-book, and flung it into the drawer.
+
+"Pratt!" he said, turning half appealingly, half confidentially to the
+clerk. "Don't say a word of this--above all, don't mention it to Mr.
+Pascoe. It's my fault and I must make the forty-three pounds good.
+Pratt, I'm afraid this is Parrawhite's work. I--well, I may as well tell
+you--he'd been in trouble before he came here. I gave him another
+chance--I'd known him, years ago. I thought he'd go straight. But--I
+fear he's been tempted. He may have seen me leave money about. Was he in
+here last night?"
+
+Pratt pointed to a document which lay on Eldrick's desk.
+
+"He came in here to leave that for your perusal," he answered. "He was
+in here--alone--a minute or two before he left."
+
+All these lies came readily and naturally--and Eldrick swallowed each.
+He shook his head.
+
+"My fault--all my fault!" he said. "Look here--keep it quiet. But--do
+you know where Parrawhite has lived--lodged?"
+
+"No!" replied Pratt. "Some of the others may, though!"
+
+"Try to find out--quickly," continued Eldrick; "Then, make some excuse
+to go out--take papers somewhere, or something--and find if he's left
+his lodgings! I--I don't want to set the police on him. He was a decent
+fellow, once. See what you can make out, Pratt. In strict secrecy, you
+know---I do not want this to go further."
+
+Pratt could have danced for joy when he presently went out into the
+town. There would be no hue-and-cry after Parrawhite--none! Eldrick
+would accept the fact that Parrawhite had robbed him and flown--and
+Parrawhite would never be heard of--never mentioned again. It was the
+height of good luck for him. Already he had got rid of any small scraps
+of regret or remorse about the killing of his fellow-clerk. Why should
+he be sorry? The scoundrel had tried to murder him, thinking no doubt
+that he had the will on him. And he had not meant to kill him--what he
+had done, he had done in self-defence. No--everything was working most
+admirably--Parrawhite's previous bad record, Eldrick's carelessness and
+his desire to shut things up: it was all good. From that day forward,
+Parrawhite would be as if he had never been. Pratt was not even afraid
+of the body being discovered--though he believed that it would remain
+where it was for ever--for the probability was that the authorities
+would fill up that pit with earth and stones. But if it was brought to
+light? Why, the explanation was simple.
+
+Parrawhite, having robbed his employer, had been robbed himself,
+possibly by men with whom he had been drinking, and had been murdered in
+the bargain. No suspicion could attach to him, Pratt--he had nothing to
+fear--nothing!
+
+For the form of the thing, he called at the place whereat Parrawhite had
+lodged--they had seen nothing of him since the previous morning. They
+were poor, cheap lodgings in a mean street. The woman of the house said
+that Parrawhite had gone out as usual the morning before, and had never
+been in again. In order to find out all he could, Pratt asked if he had
+left much behind him in the way of belongings, and--just as he had
+expected--he learned that Parrawhite's personal property was remarkably
+limited: he possessed only one suit of clothes and not over much
+besides, said the landlady.
+
+"Is there aught wrong?" she asked, when Pratt had finished his
+questions. "Are you from where he worked?"
+
+"That's it," answered Pratt, "And he hasn't turned up this morning, and
+we think he's left the town. Owe you anything, missis?"
+
+"Nay, nothing much," she replied. "Ten shillings 'ud cover it, mister."
+
+Pratt gave her half a sovereign. It was not out of consideration for
+her, nor as a concession to Parrawhite's memory: it was simply to stop
+her from coming down to Eldrick & Pascoe's.
+
+"Well, I don't think you'll see him again," he remarked. "And I dare say
+you won't care if you don't."
+
+He turned away then, but before he had gone far, the woman called him
+back.
+
+"What am I to do with his bits of things, mister, if he doesn't come
+back?" she asked.
+
+"Aught you please," answered Pratt, indifferently. "Throw 'em on the
+dust-heap."
+
+As he went back to the centre of the town, he occupied himself in
+considering his attitude to Mrs. Mallathorpe when she called on him that
+evening. In spite of his own previous notion, and of his
+carefully-worked-out scheme about the stewardship, he had been impressed
+by what Parrawhite has said as to the wisdom of selling the will for
+cash. Pratt did not believe that there was anything in the Collingwood
+suggestion--no doubt whatever, he had decided, that old Bartle had meant
+to tell Mrs. Mallathorpe of his discovery when she called in answer to
+his note, but as he had died before she could call, and as he had told
+nobody but him, Pratt, what possible danger could there be from
+Collingwood? And a stewardship for life appealed to him. He knew, from
+observation of the world, what a fine thing it is to have a certainty.
+
+Once he became steward and agent of the Normandale Grange estate, he
+would stick there, until he had saved a tidy heap of money. Then he
+would retire--with a pension and a handsome present--and enjoy himself.
+To be provided for, for life!--what more could a wise man want? And
+yet--there was something in what that devil Parrawhite had urged.
+
+For there was a risk--however small--of discovery, and if discovery were
+made, there would be a nice penalty to pay. It might, after all, be
+better to sell the will outright--for as much ready money as ever he
+could get, and to take his gains far away, and start out on a career
+elsewhere. After all, there was much to be said for the old proverb. The
+only question was--was the bird in hand worth the two; or the money,
+which he believed he would net in the bush?
+
+Pratt's doubts on this point were settled in a curious fashion. He had
+reached the centre of the town in his return to Eldrick's, and there, in
+the fashionable shopping street, he ran up against an acquaintance. He
+and the acquaintance stopped and chatted--about nothing. And as they
+lounged on the curb, a smart victoria drew up close by, and out of it,
+alone, stepped a girl who immediately attracted Pratt's eyes. He watched
+her across the pavement; he watched her into the shop. And his companion
+laughed.
+
+"That's the sort!" he remarked flippantly. "If you and I had one each,
+old man--what?"
+
+"Who is she?" demanded Pratt.
+
+The acquaintance stared at him in surprise.
+
+"What!" he exclaimed. "You don't know. That's Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I didn't know," said Pratt. "Fact!"
+
+He waited until Nesta Mallathorpe came out and drove away--so that he
+could get another and a closer look at her. And when she was gone, he
+went slowly back to the office, his mind made up. Risk or no risk, he
+would carry out his original notion. Whatever Mrs. Mallathorpe might
+offer, he would stick to his idea of close and intimate connection with
+Normandale Grange.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+TERMS
+
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, left to face the situation which Pratt had revealed to
+her in such sudden and startling fashion, had been quick to realize its
+seriousness. It had not taken much to convince her that the clerk knew
+what he was talking about. She had no doubt whatever that he was right
+when he said that the production of John Mallathorpe's will would mean
+dispossession to her children, and through them to herself. Nor had she
+any doubt, either, of Pratt's intention to profit by his discovery. She
+saw that he was a young man of determination, not at all scrupulous,
+eager to seize on anything likely to turn to his own advantage. She was,
+in short, at his mercy. And she had no one to turn to. Her son was weak,
+purposeless, almost devoid of character; he cared for nothing beyond
+ease and comfort, and left everything to her so long as he was allowed
+to do what he liked. She dared not confide in him--he was not fit to be
+entrusted with such a secret, nor endowed with the courage to carry it
+boldly and unflinchingly. Nor dare she confide it to her daughter--Nesta
+was as strong as her brother was weak: Mrs. Mallathorpe had only told
+the plain truth when she said to Pratt that if her daughter knew of the
+will she would go straight to the two trustees. No--she would have to do
+everything herself. And she could do nothing save under Pratt's
+dictation. So long as he had that will in his possession, he could make
+her agree to whatever terms he liked to insist upon.
+
+She spent a sleepless night, resolving all sorts of plans; she resolved
+more plans and schemes during the day which followed. But they all ended
+at the same point--Pratt. All the future depended upon--Pratt. And by
+the end of the day it had come to this--she must make a determined
+effort to buy Pratt clean out, so that she could get the will into her
+own possession and destroy it. She knew that she could easily find the
+necessary money--Harper Mallathorpe had such a natural dislike of all
+business matters and was so little fitted to attend to them that he was
+only too well content to leave everything relating to the estate and the
+mill at Barford to his mother. Up to that time Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+managed the affairs of both, and she had large sums at her disposal, out
+of which she could pay Pratt without even Harper being aware that she
+was paying him anything. And surely no young man in Pratt's position--a
+mere clerk, earning a few pounds a week--would refuse a big sum of ready
+money! It seemed incredible to her--and she went into Barford towards
+evening hoping that by the time she returned the will would have been
+burned to grey ashes.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe used some ingenuity in making her visit to Pratt.
+Giving out that she was going to see a friend in Barford, of whose
+illness she had just heard, she drove into the town, and on arriving
+near the Town Hall dismissed her carriage, with orders to the coachman
+to put up his horses at a certain livery stable, and to meet her at the
+same place at a specified time. Then she went away on foot, and drew a
+thick veil over her face before hiring a cab in which she drove up to
+the outskirt on which Pratt had his lodging. She was still veiled when
+Pratt's landlady showed her into the clerk's sitting-room.
+
+"Is it safe here?" she asked at once. "Is there no fear of anybody
+hearing what we may say?"
+
+"None!" answered Pratt reassuringly. "I know these folks--I've lived
+here several years. And nobody could hear however much they put their
+ears to the keyhole. Good thick old walls, these, Mrs. Mallathorpe, and
+a solid door. We're as safe here as we were in your study last night."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat down in the chair which Pratt politely drew near
+his fire. She raised her veil and looked at him, and the clerk saw at
+once how curious and eager she was.
+
+"That--will!" she said, in a low voice. "Let me see it--first."
+
+"One moment," answered Pratt. "First--you understand that I'm not going
+to let you handle it. I'll hold it before you, so you can read it.
+Second--you give me your promise--I'm trusting you--that you'll make no
+attempt to seize it. It's not going out of my hands."
+
+"I'm only a woman--and you're a strong man," she retorted sullenly.
+
+"Quite so," said Pratt. "But women have a trick of snatching at things.
+And--if you please--you'll do exactly what I tell you to do. Put your
+hands behind you! If I see you make the least movement with them--back
+goes the will into my pocket!"
+
+If Pratt had looked more closely at her just then, he would have taken
+warning from the sudden flash of hatred and resentment which swept
+across Mrs. Mallathorpe's face--it would have told him that he was
+dealing with a dangerous woman who would use her wits to circumvent and
+beat him--if not now, then later. But he was moving the gas bracket over
+the mantelpiece, and he did not see.
+
+"Very well--but I had no intention of touching it," said Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. "All I want is to see it--and read it."
+
+She obediently followed out Pratt's instructions, and standing in front
+of her he produced the will, unfolded it, and held it at a convenient
+distance before her eyes. He watched her closely, as she read it, and he
+saw her grow very pale.
+
+"Take your time--read it over two or three times," he said quietly. "Get
+it well into your mind, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+She nodded her head at last, and Pratt stepped back, folded up the will,
+and turning to a heavy box which lay open on the table, placed it
+within, under lock and key. And that done, he turned back and took a
+chair, close to his visitor.
+
+"Safe there, Mrs. Mallathorpe," he said with a glance that was both
+reassuring and cunning. "But only for the night. I keep a few securities
+of my own at one of the banks in the town--never mind which--and that
+will shall be deposited with them tomorrow morning."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe shook her head.
+
+"No!" she said. "Because--you'll come to terms with me."
+
+Pratt shook his head, too, and he laughed.
+
+"Of course I shall come to terms with you," he answered. "But they'll be
+my terms--and they don't include any giving up of that document. That's
+flat, Mrs. Mallathorpe!"
+
+"Not if I make it worth your while?" she asked. "Listen!--you don't know
+what ready money I can command. Ready money, I tell you--cash down, on
+the spot!"
+
+"I've a pretty good notion," responded Pratt. "It's generally understood
+in the town that your son's a mere figure-head, and that you're the real
+boss of the whole show. I know that you're at the mill four times a
+week, and that the managers are under your thumb. I know that you manage
+everything connected with the estate. So, of course, I know you've lots
+of ready money at your disposal."
+
+"And I know that you don't earn more than four or five pounds a week, at
+the outside," said Mrs. Mallathorpe quietly. "Come, now--just think what
+a nice, convenient thing it would be to a young man of your age to
+have--a capital. Capital! It would be the making of you. You could go
+right away--to London, say, and start out on whatever you liked. Be
+sensible--sell me that paper--and be done with the whole thing."
+
+"No!" replied Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at him for a full moment. She was a shrewd judge
+of character, and she felt that Pratt was one of those men who are hard
+to stir from a position once adopted. But she had to make her
+effort--and she made it in what she thought the most effective way.
+
+"I'll give you five thousand pounds--cash--for it," she said. "Meet me
+with it tomorrow--anywhere you like in the town--any time you like--and
+I'll hand you the money--in notes."
+
+"No!" said Pratt. "No!"
+
+Once more she looked at him. And Pratt looked back--and smiled.
+
+"When I say no, I mean no," he went on. "And I never meant 'No' more
+firmly than I do now."
+
+"I don't believe you," she answered, affecting a doubt which she
+certainly did not feel. "You're only holding out for more money."
+
+"If I were holding out for more money, Mrs. Mallathorpe," replied Pratt,
+"if I meant to sell you that will for cash payment, I should have stated
+my terms to you last night. I should have said precisely how much I
+wanted--and I shouldn't have budged from the amount. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe!--it's no good. I've got my own schemes, and my own
+ideas--and I'm going to carry 'em out. I want you to appoint me steward
+to your property, your affairs, for life."
+
+"Life!" she exclaimed. "Life!"
+
+"My life," answered Pratt. "And let me tell you--you'll find me a
+first-class man--a good, faithful, honest servant. I'll do well by you
+and yours. You'll never regret it as long as you live. It'll be the best
+day's work you've ever done. I'll look after your son's
+interests--everybody's interests--as if they were my own. As indeed," he
+added, with a sly glance, "they will be."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe realized the finality, the resolve, in all this--but
+she made one more attempt.
+
+"Ten thousand!" she said. "Come, now!--think what ten thousand pounds in
+cash would mean to you!"
+
+"No--nor twenty thousand," replied Pratt. "I've made up my mind. I'll
+have my own terms. It's no use--not one bit of use--haggling or
+discussing matters further. I'm in possession of the will--and therefore
+of the situation, Mrs. Mallathorpe, you've just got to do what I tell
+you!"
+
+He got up from his chair, and going over to a side-table took from it a
+blotting-pad, some writing paper and a pencil. For the moment his back
+was turned--and again he did not see the look of almost murderous hatred
+which came into his visitor's eyes; had he seen and understood it, he
+might even then have reconsidered matters and taken Mrs. Mallathorpe's
+last offer. But the look had gone when he turned again, and he noticed
+nothing as he handed over the writing materials.
+
+"What are these for?" she asked.
+
+"You'll see in a moment," replied Pratt, reseating himself, and drawing
+his chair a little nearer her own. "Now listen--because it's no good
+arguing any more. You're going to give me that stewardship and agency.
+You'll simply tell your son that it's absolutely necessary to have a
+steward. He'll agree. If he doesn't, no matter--you'll convince him.
+Now, then, we must do it in a fashion that won't excite any suspicion.
+Thus--in a few days--say next week--you'll insert in the Barford
+papers--all three of them--the advertisement I'm going to dictate to
+you. We'll put it in the usual, formal phraseology. Write this down, if
+you please, Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+He dictated an advertisement, setting forth the requirements of which he
+had spoken, and Mrs. Mallathorpe obeyed him and wrote. She hated Pratt
+more than ever at that moment--there was a quiet, steadfast
+implacability about him that made her feel helpless. But she restrained
+all sign of it, and when she had done his bidding she looked at him as
+calmly as he looked at her.
+
+"I am to insert this in the Barford papers next week," she said.
+"And--what then?"
+
+"Then you'll get a lot of applications for the job," chuckled Pratt.
+"There'll be mine amongst them. You can throw most of 'em in the fire.
+Keep a few for form's sake. Profess to discuss them with Mr. Harper--but
+let the discussion be all on your side. I'll send two or three good
+testimonials--you'll incline to me from the first. You'll send for me.
+Your interview with me will be highly satisfactory. And you'll give me
+the appointment."
+
+"And--your terms?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. Now that her own scheme had
+failed, she seemed quite placable to all Pratt's proposals--a sure sign
+of danger to him if he had only known it. "Better let me know them
+now--and have done with it."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Pratt. "But first of all--can you keep this secret to
+yourself and me? The money part, any way?"
+
+"I can--and shall," she answered.
+
+"Good!" said Pratt. "Very well. I want a thousand a year. Also I want
+two rooms--and a business room--at the Grange. I shall not interfere
+with you or your family, or your domestic arrangements, but I shall
+expect to have all my meals served to me from your kitchen, and to have
+one of your servants at my disposal. I know the Grange--I've been over
+it more than once. There's much more room there than you can make use
+of. Give me the rooms I want in one of the wings. I shan't disturb any
+of you. You'll never see me except on business--and if you want to."
+
+Again the calm acquiescence which would have surprised some men. Why
+Pratt failed to be surprised by it was because he was just then feeling
+exceedingly triumphant--he believed that Mrs. Mallathorpe was,
+metaphorically, at his feet. He had more than a little vanity in him,
+and it pleased him greatly, that dictating of terms: he saw himself a
+conqueror, with his foot on the neck of his victim.
+
+"Is that all, then?" asked the visitor.
+
+"All!" answered Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe calmly folded up the draft advertisement and placed it
+in her purse. Then she rose and adjusted her veil.
+
+"Then--there is nothing to be done until I get your answer to this--your
+application?" she asked. "Very well."
+
+Pratt showed her out, and walked to the cab with her. He went back to
+his rooms highly satisfied--and utterly ignorant of what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was thinking as she drove away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+UNTIL NEXT SPRING
+
+
+Within a week of his sudden death in Eldrick's private office, old
+Antony Bartle was safely laid in the tomb under the yew-tree of which
+Mrs. Clough had spoken with such appreciation, and his grandson had
+entered into virtual possession of all that he had left. Collingwood
+found little difficulty in settling his grandfather's affairs.
+Everything had been left to him: he was sole executor as well as sole
+residuary legatee. He found his various tasks made uncommonly easy.
+Another bookseller in the town hurried to buy the entire stock and
+business, goodwill, book debts, everything--Collingwood was free of all
+responsibility of the shop in Quagg Alley within a few days of the old
+man's funeral. And when he had made a handsome present to the
+housekeeper, a suitable one to the shop-boy, and paid his grandfather's
+last debts, he was free to depart--a richer man by some five-and-twenty
+thousand pounds than when he hurried down to Barford in response to
+Eldrick's telegram.
+
+He sat in Eldrick's office one afternoon, winding up his affairs with
+him. There were certain things that Eldrick & Pascoe would have to do;
+as for himself it was necessary for him to get back to London.
+
+"There's something I want to propose to you," said Eldrick, when they
+had finished the immediate business. "You're going to practise, of
+course?"
+
+"Of course!" replied Collingwood, with a laugh. "If I get the chance!"
+
+"You'll get the chance," said Eldrick. "What were you going in for?"
+
+"Commercial law--company law--as a special thing," answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I'll tell you what it is," continued Eldrick eagerly. "There's a career
+for you if you'll take my advice. Leave London--come down here and take
+chambers in the town, and go the North-Eastern Circuit. I'll promise
+you--for our firm alone--plenty of work. You'll get more--there's lots
+of work waiting here for a good, smart young barrister. Ah!--you smile,
+but I know what I'm talking about. You don't know Barford men. They
+believe in the old adage that one should look at home before going
+abroad. They're terribly litigious, too, and if you were here, on the
+spot, they'd give you work. What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"That sounds very tempting. But I was thinking of sticking to London."
+
+"Not one hundredth part of the chance in London that there is here!"
+affirmed Eldrick. "We badly want two or three barristers in this place. A
+man who's really well up in commercial and company law would soon have
+his hands full. There's work, I tell you. Take my advice, and come!"
+
+"I couldn't come--in any case--for a few months," said Collingwood,
+musingly. "Of course, if you really think there's an opening----"
+
+"I know there is!" asserted Eldrick. "I'll guarantee you lots of
+work--our work. I'm sick of fetching men down all the way from town, or
+getting them from Leeds. Come!--and you'll see."
+
+"I might come in a few months' time, and try things for a year or two,"
+replied Collingwood. "But I'm off to India, you know, next week, and I
+shall be away until the end of spring--four months or so."
+
+"To India!" exclaimed Eldrick. "What are you going to do there?"
+
+"Sir John Standridge," said Collingwood, mentioning a famous legal
+luminary of the day, "is going out to Hyderabad to take certain
+evidence, and hold a sort of inquiry, in a big case, and I'm going with
+him as his secretary and assistant--I was in his chambers for two years,
+you know. We leave next week, and we shall not be back until the end of
+April."
+
+"Lucky man!" remarked the solicitor. "Well, when you return, don't
+forget what I've said. Come back!--you'll not regret it. Come and settle
+down. Bye-the-bye, you're not engaged, are you?"
+
+"Engaged?" said Collingwood. "To what--to whom--what do you mean?"
+
+"Engaged to be married," answered Eldrick coolly. "You're not? Good! If
+you want a wife, there's Miss Mallathorpe. Nice, clever girl, my
+boy--and no end of what Barford folk call brass. The very woman for
+you."
+
+"Do you Barford people ever think of anything else but what you call
+brass?" asked Collingwood, laughing.
+
+"Sometimes," replied Eldrick. "But it's generally of something that
+nothing but brass can bring or produce. After all, a rich wife isn't a
+despicable thing, nowadays. You've seen this young lady?"
+
+"I've been there once," asserted Collingwood.
+
+"Go again--before you leave," counselled Eldrick. "You're just the right
+man. Listen to the counsels of the wise! And while you're in India,
+think well over my other advice. I tell you there's a career for you,
+here in the North, that you'd never get in town."
+
+Collingwood left him and went out--to find a motorcar and drive off to
+Normandale Grange, not because Eldrick had advised him to go, but
+because of his promise to Harper and Nesta Mallathorpe. And once more he
+found Nesta alone, and though he had no spice of vanity in his
+composition it seemed to him that she was glad when he walked into the
+room in which they had first met.
+
+"My mother is out--gone to town--to the mill," she said. "And Harper is
+knocking around the park with a gun--killing rabbits--and time. He'll be
+in presently to tea--and he'll be delighted to see you. Are you going to
+stay in Barford much longer?"
+
+"I'm going up to town this evening--seven o'clock train," answered
+Collingwood, watching her keenly. "All my business is finished now--for
+the present."
+
+"But--you'll be coming back?" she asked.
+
+"Perhaps," he said. "I may come back--after a while."
+
+"When you do come back," she went on, a little hurriedly, "will you come
+and see us again? I--it's difficult to explain--but I do wish Harper
+knew more men--the right sort of men. Do you understand?"
+
+"You mean--he needs more company?"
+
+"More company of the right kind. He doesn't know many nice men. And he
+has so little to occupy him. He's no head for business--my mother
+attends to all that--and he doesn't care much about sport--and when he
+goes into Barford he only hangs about the club, and, I'm afraid, at two
+or three of the hotels there, and--it's not good for him."
+
+"Can't you get him interested in anything?" suggested Collingwood. "Is
+there nothing that he cares about?"
+
+"He never did care about anything," replied Nesta with a sigh. "He's
+apathetic! He just moves along. Sometimes I think he was born half
+asleep, and he's never been really awakened. Pity, isn't it?"
+
+"Considering everything--a great pity," agreed Collingwood. "But--he's
+provided for."
+
+Nesta gave him a swift glance.
+
+"It might have been a good deal better for him if he hadn't been
+provided for!" she said. "He'd have just had to do something, then.
+But--if you come back, you'll come here sometimes?"
+
+"Of course!" answered Collingwood. "And if I come back, it will probably
+be to stop here. Mr. Eldrick says there's a lot of work going begging in
+Barford--for a smart young barrister well up in commercial law. Perhaps
+I may try to come up to his standard--I'm certainly young, but I don't
+know whether I'm smart."
+
+"Better come and try," she said, smiling. "Don't forget that I've seen
+you look the part, anyway--your wig and gown suited you very well."
+
+"Theatrical properties," he replied, laughing. "The wig was too small,
+and the gown too long. Well--we'll see. But in the meantime, I'm going
+away for four months--to India."
+
+"To India--four months!" she exclaimed. "That sounds nice."
+
+"Legal business," said Collingwood. "I shall be back about the end of
+April--and then I shall probably come down here again, and seriously
+consider Eldrick's suggestion. I'm very much inclined to take it."
+
+"Then--you'd leave London?" she asked.
+
+"I've little to leave there," replied Collingwood. "My father and mother
+are dead, and I've no brothers, no sisters--no very near relations.
+Sounds lonely, doesn't it?"
+
+"One can feel lonely when one has relations," said Nesta.
+
+"Are you saying that from--experience?" he asked.
+
+"I often wish I had more to do," she answered frankly. "What's the use
+of denying it? I've next to nothing to do, here. I liked my work at the
+hospital--I was busy all day. Here----"
+
+"If I were you," interrupted Collingwood, "I'd set to work nursing in
+another fashion. Look after your brother! Get him going at
+something--even if it's playing golf. Play with him! It would do
+him--and you--all the good in the world if you got thoroughly infatuated
+with even a game. Don't you see?"
+
+"You mean--anything is better than nothing," she replied. "All
+right--I'll try that, anyway. For--I'm anxious about Harper. All this
+money!--and no occupation!"
+
+Collingwood, who was sitting near the windows, looked out across the
+park and into the valley beyond.
+
+"I should have thought that a man who had come into an estate like this
+would have found plenty of occupation," he remarked. "What is there,
+beside the house and this park?"
+
+Nesta, who had busied herself with some fancy-work since Collingwood's
+entrance, laid it down and came to the windows. She pointed to certain
+roofs and gables in the valley.
+
+"There's the whole village of Normandale," she said. "A busy place, no
+doubt, but it's all Harper's--he's lord of the manor. He's patron of the
+living, too. It's all his--farms, cottages, everything. And the woods,
+and the park, and this house, and a stretch of the moors, as well. Of
+course, he ought to find a lot to do--but he doesn't. Perhaps because my
+mother does everything. She really is a business woman."
+
+Collingwood looked out over the area which Nesta had indicated. Harper
+Mallathorpe, he calculated, must be possessed of some three or four
+thousand acres.
+
+"A fine property!" he said. "He's a very fortunate fellow!"
+
+Just then this very fortunate fellow came in. His face, dull enough as
+he entered, lighted up at sight of a visitor, and fell again when
+Collingwood explained that his visit was a mere flying one, and that he
+was returning to London that night. Collingwood led him on to the
+project which he had mentioned at his previous visit--the making of golf
+links in the park, and pointed out, as a devotee of the sport, what a
+fine course could be made. Before he left he had succeeded in arousing
+like interest in Harper--he promised to go into the matter, and to
+employ a man whom Collingwood recommended as an expert in laying out
+golf courses.
+
+"You'll have got your greens in something like order by this time next
+year, if you start operations soon," said Collingwood. "And then, if I
+settle down at Barford, I'll come out now and then, if you'll let me."
+
+"Let you!" exclaimed Harper. "By Jove!--we're only too glad to have
+anybody out here--aren't we, Nesta?"
+
+"We shall always be glad to see Mr. Collingwood," said Nesta.
+
+Collingwood went away with that last intimation warm in his memory. He
+had an idea that the girl meant what she said--and for a moment he was
+sorry that he was going to India. He might have settled down at Barford
+there and then, and--but at that he laughed at himself.
+
+"A young woman with several thousands a year of her own!" he said. "Of
+course, she'll marry some big pot in the county. They feel a little
+lonely, those two, just now, because everything's new to them, and
+they're new to their changed circumstances. But when I get back--ah!--I
+guess they'll have got plenty of people around them."
+
+And he determined, being a young man of sense, not to think any
+more--for already he had thought a good deal of Nesta Mallathorpe, until
+he returned from his Indian travels. Let him attend to his business, and
+leave possibilities until they came nearer.
+
+"All the same." he mused, as he drew near the town again, "I'm pretty
+sure I shall come back here next spring--I feel like it."
+
+He called in at Eldrick's office on his way to the hotel, to take some
+documents which had been preparing for him. It was then late in the
+afternoon, and no one but Pratt was there--Pratt, indeed, had been
+waiting until Collingwood called.
+
+"Going back to town, Mr. Collingwood?" asked Pratt as he handed over a
+big envelope. "When shall we have the pleasure of seeing you again,
+sir?"
+
+Something in the clerk's tone made Collingwood think--he could not tell
+why--that Pratt was fishing for information. And--also for reasons which
+he could not explain--Collingwood had taken a curious dislike to Pratt,
+and was not inclined to give him any confidence.
+
+"I don't know," he answered, a little icily. "I am leaving for India
+next week."
+
+He bade the clerk a formal farewell and went off, and Pratt locked the
+office door and slowly followed him downstairs.
+
+"To India!" he said to himself, watching the young barrister's
+retreating figure. "To India, eh? For a time--or for--what?"
+
+Anyway, that was good news, Pratt had seen in Collingwood a possible
+rival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE FOOT-BRIDGE
+
+
+Collingwood's return to London was made on a Friday evening: next day he
+began the final preparations for his departure to India on the following
+Thursday. He was looking forward to his journey and his stay in India
+with keen expectation. He would have the society of a particularly
+clever and brilliant man; they were to break their journey in Italy and
+in Egypt; he would enjoy exceptional facilities for seeing the native
+life of India; he would gain valuable experience. It was a chance at
+which any young man would have jumped, and Collingwood had been greatly
+envied when it was known that Sir John Standridge had offered it to him.
+And yet he was conscious that if he could have done precisely what he
+desired, he would have stayed longer at Barford, in order to see more of
+Nesta Mallathorpe. Already it seemed a long time to the coming spring,
+when he would be back--and free to go North again.
+
+But Collingwood was fated to go North once more much sooner than he had
+dreamed of. As he sat at breakfast in his rooms on the Monday morning
+after his departure from Barford, turning over his newspaper with no
+particular aim or interest, his attention was suddenly and sharply
+arrested by a headline. Even that headline might not have led him to
+read what lay beneath. But in the same instant in which he saw it he
+also saw a name--Mallathorpe. In the next he knew that heavy trouble had
+fallen on Normandale Grange, the very day after he had left it.
+
+This is what Collingwood read as he sat, coffee-cup in one hand,
+newspaper in the other--staring at the lines of unleaded type:
+
+ TRAGIC FATE OF YOUNG YORKSHIRE SQUIRE
+
+ "A fatal accident, of a particularly sad and disturbing nature,
+ occurred near Barford, Yorkshire, on Saturday. About four
+ o'clock on Saturday afternoon, Mr. Linford Pratt, managing clerk
+ to Messrs. Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, of Barford, who was
+ crossing the grounds of Normandale Grange on his way to a
+ business appointment, discovered the dead body of Mr. H. J.
+ Mallathorpe, the owner of the Normandale Estate, lying in a
+ roadway which at that point is spanned, forty feet above, by a
+ narrow foot-bridge. The latter is an ancient construction of
+ wood, and there is no doubt that it was in extremely bad repair,
+ and had given way when the unfortunate young gentleman, who was
+ out shooting in his park, stepped upon it. Mr. Mallathorpe, who
+ was only twenty-four years of age, succeeded to the Normandale
+ estates, one of the finest properties in the neighbourhood of
+ Barford, about two years ago, under somewhat romantic--and also
+ tragic--circumstances, their previous owner, his uncle, Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe, a well-known Barford manufacturer, meeting a sudden
+ death by the falling of his mill chimney--a catastrophe which
+ also caused the deaths of several of his employees. Mr. John
+ Mallathorpe died intestate, and the estate at Normandale passed
+ to the young gentleman who met such a sad fate on Saturday
+ afternoon. Mr. H.J. Mallathorpe was unmarried, and it is
+ understood that Normandale (which includes the village of that
+ name, the advowson of the living, and about four thousand acres
+ of land) now becomes the property of his sister, Miss Nesta
+ Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood set down his cup, and dropped the newspaper. He was but half
+way through his breakfast, but all his appetite had vanished. All that
+he was conscious of was that here was trouble and grief for a girl in
+whom--it was useless to deny it--he had already begun to take a warm
+interest. And suddenly he started from his chair and snatched up a
+railway guide. As he turned over its pages, he thought rapidly. The
+preparations for his journey to India were almost finished--what was not
+done he could do in a few hours. He had no further appointment with Sir
+John Standridge until nine o'clock on Thursday morning, when he was to
+meet him at the train for Dover and Paris. Monday--Tuesday--Wednesday--he
+had three days--ample time to hurry down to Normandale, to do what he
+could to help there, and to get back in time to make his own last
+arrangements. He glanced at his watch--he had forty minutes in which to
+catch an express from King's Cross to Barford. Without further delay he
+picked up a suit-case which was already packed and set out for the
+station.
+
+He was in Barford soon after two o'clock--in Eldrick's office by
+half-past two. Eldrick shook his head at sight of him.
+
+"I can guess what's brought you down, Collingwood," he said. "Good of
+you, of course--I don't think they've many friends out there."
+
+"I can scarcely call myself that--yet," answered Collingwood. "But--I
+thought I might be of some use. I'll drive out there presently. But
+first--how was it?"
+
+Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"Don't know much more than what the papers say," he answered. "There's
+an old foot-bridge there that spans a road in the park--road cut through
+a ravine. They say it was absolutely rotten, and the poor chap's weight
+was evidently too much for it. And there was a drop of forty feet into a
+hard road. Extraordinary thing that nobody on the estate seems to have
+known of the dangerous condition of that bridge!--but they say it was
+little used--simply a link between one plantation and another.
+However;--it's done, now. Our clerk--Pratt, you know--found the body.
+Hadn't been dead five minutes, Pratt says."
+
+"What was Pratt doing there?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Oh, business of his own," replied Eldrick. "Not ours. There was an
+advertisement in Saturday's papers which set out that a steward was
+wanted for the Normandale estate, and Pratt mentioned it to me in the
+morning that he thought of applying for the job if we'd give him a good
+testimonial. I suppose he'd gone out there to see about the
+preliminaries. Anyway, he was walking through the park when he found
+young Mallathorpe's body. I understand he made himself very useful, too,
+and I've sent him out there again today, to do anything he can--smart
+chap, Pratt!"
+
+"Possibly, then, there is nothing I can do," remarked Collingwood.
+
+"I should say you'll do a lot by merely going there," answered Eldrick.
+"As I said just now, they've few friends, and no relations, and I hear
+that Mrs. Mallathorpe is absolutely knocked over. Go, by all means--a
+bit of sympathy goes a long way on these occasions. I say!--what a
+regular transformation an affair of this sort produces. Do you know,
+that young fellow, just like his uncle, had not made any will! Fact!--I
+had it from Robson, their solicitor, this very morning. The whole of the
+estate comes to the sister, of course--she and the mother will share the
+personal property. By that lad's death, Nesta Mallathorpe becomes one of
+the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!"
+
+Collingwood made no reply to this communication. But as he drove off to
+Normandale Grange, it was fresh in his mind. And it was not very
+pleasant to him. One of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire!--and he
+was already realizing that he would like to make Nesta Mallathorpe his
+wife: it was because he felt what he did for her that he had rushed down
+to do anything he could that would be of help. Supposing--only
+supposing--that people--anybody--said that he was fortune-hunting!
+Somewhat unduly sensitive, proud, almost to a fault, he felt his cheek
+redden at the thought, and for a moment he wished that old John
+Mallathorpe's wealth had never passed to his niece. But then he sneered
+at himself for his presumption.
+
+"Ass!" he said. "She's never even thought of me--in that way, most
+likely! Anyway, I'm a stupid fool for thinking of these things at
+present."
+
+But he knew, within a few minutes of entering the big, desolate-looking
+house, that Nesta had been thinking of him. She came to him in the room
+where they had first met, and quietly gave him her hand.
+
+"I was not surprised when they told me you were here," she said. "I was
+thinking about you--or, rather, expecting to hear from you."
+
+"I came at once," answered Collingwood, who had kept her hand in his.
+"I--well, I couldn't stop away. I thought, perhaps, I could do
+something--be of some use."
+
+"It's a great deal of use to have just--come," she said. "Thank you!
+But--I suppose you'll have to go?"
+
+"Not for two days, anyway," he replied. "What can I do?"
+
+"I don't know that you can actually do anything," she answered.
+"Everything is being done. Mr. Eldrick sent his clerk, Mr. Pratt--who
+found Harper--he's been most kind and useful. He--and our own
+solicitor--are making all arrangements. There's got to be an inquest.
+No--I don't know that you can do actual things. But--while you're
+here--you can look in when you like. My mother is very ill--she has
+scarcely spoken since Saturday."
+
+"I'll tell you what I will do," said Collingwood determinedly. "I
+noticed in coming through the village just now that there's quite a
+decent inn there. I'll go down and arrange to stay there until Wednesday
+evening--then I shall be close by--if you should need me."
+
+He saw by her look of quick appreciation and relief that this suggestion
+pleased her. She pressed his hand and withdrew her own. "Thank you
+again!" she said. "Do you know--I can't quite explain--I should be glad
+if you were close at hand? Everybody has been very kind--but I do feel
+that there is nobody I can talk to. If you arrange this, will you come
+in again this evening?"
+
+"I shall arrange it," answered Collingwood. "I'll see to it now. Tell
+your people I am to be brought in whenever I call. And--I'll be close by
+whenever you want me."
+
+It seemed little to say, little to do, but he left her feeling that he
+was being of some use. And as he went off to make his arrangements at
+the inn he encountered Pratt, who was talking to the butler in the outer
+hall.
+
+The clerk looked at Collingwood with an unconcern and a composure which
+he was able to assume because he had already heard of his presence in
+the house. Inwardly, he was malignantly angry that the young barrister
+was there, but his voice was suave, and polite enough when he spoke.
+
+"Good afternoon, Mr. Collingwood," he said quietly. "Very sad occasion
+on which we meet again, sir. Come to offer your sympathy, Mr.
+Collingwood, of course--very kind of you."
+
+"I came," answered Collingwood, who was not inclined to bandy phrases
+with Pratt, "to see if I could be of any practical use."
+
+"Just so, sir," said Pratt. "Mr. Eldrick sent me here for the same
+purpose. There's really not much to do--beyond the necessary
+arrangements, which are already pretty forward. Going back to town,
+sir?" he went on, following Collingwood out to his motor-car, which
+stood waiting in the drive.
+
+"No!" replied Collingwood. "I'm going to send this man to Barford to
+fetch my bag to the inn down there in the village, where I'm going to
+stay for a few days. Did you hear that?" he continued, turning to the
+driver. "Go back to Barford--get my bag from the _Station Hotel_
+there--bring it to the _Normandale Arms_--I'll meet you there on your
+return."
+
+The car went off, and Collingwood, with a nod to Pratt, was about to
+turn down a side path towards the village. But Pratt stopped him.
+
+"Would you care to see the place where the accident happened, Mr.
+Collingwood?" he said. "It's close by--won't take five minutes."
+
+Collingwood hesitated a moment; then he turned back. It might be well,
+he reflected, if he made himself acquainted with all the circumstances
+of this case, simple as they seemed.
+
+"Thank you," he said. "If it's so near."
+
+"This way, sir," responded Pratt. He led his companion along the front
+of the house, through the shrubberies at the end of a wing, and into a
+plantation by a path thickly covered with pine needles. Presently they
+emerged upon a similar track, at right angles to that by which they had
+come, and leading into a denser part of the woods. And at the end of a
+hundred yards of it they came to a barricade, evidently of recent
+construction, over which Pratt stretched a hand. "There!" he said.
+"That's the bridge, sir." Collingwood looked over the barricade. He saw
+that he and Pratt were standing at the edge of one thick plantation of
+fir and pine; the edge of a similar plantation stretched before them
+some ten yards away. But between the two lay a deep, dark ravine, which,
+immediately in front of the temporary barricade, was spanned by a narrow
+rustic bridge--a fragile-looking thing of planks, railed in by boughs of
+trees. And in the middle was a jagged gap in both floor and side-rails,
+showing where the rotten wood had given way.
+
+"I'll explain, Mr. Collingwood," said the clerk presently. "I knew this
+park, sir--I knew it well, before the late Mr. John Mallathorpe bought
+the property. That path at the other end of the bridge makes a short cut
+down to the station in the valley--through the woods and the lower part
+of the park. I came up that path, from the station, on Saturday
+afternoon, intending to cross this bridge and go on to the house, where
+I had private business. When I got to the other end of the bridge,
+there, I saw the gap in the middle. And then I looked down into the
+cut--there's a road--a paved road--down there, and I saw--him! And so I
+made shift to scramble down--stiff job it was!--to get to him. But he
+was dead, Mr. Collingwood--stone dead, sir!--though I'm certain he
+hadn't been dead five minutes. And----"
+
+"Aye, an' he'd never ha' been dead at all, wouldn't young Squire, if
+only his ma had listened to what I telled her!" interrupted a voice
+behind them. "He'd ha' been alive at this minute, he would, if his ma
+had done what I said owt to be done--now then!"
+
+Collingwood turned sharply--to confront an old man, evidently one of the
+woodmen on the estate who had come up behind them unheard on the thick
+carpeting of pine needles. And Pratt turned, too--with a keen look and a
+direct question.
+
+"What do you mean?" he asked. "What are you talking about?"
+
+"I know what I'm talking about, young gentleman," said the man doggedly.
+"I ain't worked, lad and man, on this one estate nine-and-forty
+years--and happen more--wi'out knowin' all about it. I tell'd Mrs.
+Mallathorpe on Friday noon 'at that there owd brig 'ud fall in afore
+long if it worn't mended. I met her here, at this very place where we're
+standin', and I showed her 'at it worn't safe to cross it. I tell'd her
+'t she owt to have it fastened up theer an' then. It's been rottin' for
+many a year, has this owd brig--why, I mind when it wor last repaired,
+and that wor years afore owd Mestur Mallathorpe bowt this estate!"
+
+"When do you say you told Mrs. Mallathorpe all that?" asked Pratt.
+
+"Friday noon it were, sir," answered the woodman. "When I were on my way
+home--dinner time. 'Cause I met the missis here, and I made bold to tell
+her what I'd noticed. That there owd brig!--lor' bless yer, gentlemen!
+it were black rotten i' the middle, theer where poor young maister he
+fell through it. 'Ye mun hev' that seen to at once, missis,' I says.
+'Sartin sure, 'tain't often as it's used,' I says, 'but surely sartin
+'at if it ain't mended, or closed altogether,' I says, 'summun 'll be
+going through and brekkin' their necks,' I says. An' reight, too,
+gentlemen--forty feet it is down to that road. An' a mortal hard road,
+an' all, paved wi' granite stone all t' way to t' stable-yard."
+
+"You're sure it was Friday noon?" repeated Pratt.
+
+"As sure as that I see you," answered the woodman. "An' Mrs. Mallathorpe
+she said she'd hev it seen to. Dear-a-me!--it should ha' been closed!"
+
+The old man shook his head and went off amongst the trees, and Pratt,
+giving his vanishing figure a queer look, turned silently back along the
+path, followed by Collingwood. At the point where the other path led to
+the house, he glanced over his shoulder at the young barrister.
+
+"If you keep straight on, Mr. Collingwood," he said, "you'll get
+straight down to the village and the inn. I must go this way."
+
+He went off rapidly, and Collingwood walked on through the plantation
+towards the _Normandale Arms_--wondering, all the way, why Pratt was so
+anxious to know exactly when it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe had been
+warned about the old bridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+THE PREVALENT ATMOSPHERE
+
+
+Until that afternoon Collingwood had never been in the village to which
+he was now bending his steps; on that and his previous visits to the
+Grange he had only passed the end of its one street. Now, descending
+into it from the slopes of the park, he found it to be little more than
+a hamlet--a church, a farmstead or two, a few cottages in their gardens,
+all clustering about a narrow stream spanned by a high-arched bridge of
+stone. The _Normandale Arms_, a roomy, old-fashioned place, stood at one
+end of the bridge, and from the windows of the room into which
+Collingwood was presently shown he could look out on the stream itself
+and on the meadows beyond it. A peaceful, pretty, quiet place--but the
+gloom which was heavy at the big house or the hill seemed to have spread
+to everybody that he encountered.
+
+"Bad job, this, sir!" said the landlord, an elderly, serious-faced man,
+to whom Collingwood had made known his wants, and who had quickly formed
+the opinion that his guest was of the legal profession. "And a queer
+one, too! Odd thing, sir, that our old squire, and now the young one,
+should both have met their deaths in what you might term violent
+fashion."
+
+"Accident--in both cases," remarked Collingwood.
+
+The landlord nodded his head--and then shook it in a manner which seemed
+to indicate that while he agreed with this proposition in one respect he
+entertained some sort of doubt about it in others.
+
+"Ay, well!" he answered. "Of course, a mill chimney falling, without
+notice, as it were, and a bridge giving way--them's accidents, to be
+sure. But it's a very strange thing about this foot-bridge, up yonder at
+the Grange--very strange indeed! There's queer talk about it, already."
+
+"What sort of talk?" asked Collingwood. Ever since the old woodman had
+come up to him and Pratt, as they stood looking at the foot-bridge, he
+had been aware of a curious sense of mystery, and the landlord's remark
+tended to deepen it. "What are people talking about?"
+
+"Nay--it's only one or two," replied the landlord. "There's been two men
+in here since the affair happened that crossed that bridge Friday
+afternoon--and both of 'em big, heavy men. According to what one can
+learn that there bridge wasn't used much by the Grange people--it led to
+nowhere in particular for them. But there is a right of way across that
+part of the park, and these two men as I'm speaking of--they made use of
+it on Friday--getting towards dark. I know 'em well--they'd both of 'em
+weigh four times as much--together--as young Squire Mallathorpe, and yet
+it didn't give way under them. And then--only a few hours later, as you
+might say, down it goes with him!"
+
+"I don't think you can form any opinion from that!" said Collingwood.
+"These things, these old structures, often give way quite suddenly and
+unexpectedly."
+
+"Ay, well, they did admit, these men too, that it seemed a bit tottery,
+like," remarked the landlord. "Talking it over, between themselves, in
+here, they agreed, to be sure, that it felt to give a bit. All the same,
+there's them as says that it's a queer thing it should ha' given
+altogether when young squire walked on it."
+
+Collingwood clinched matters with a straight question.
+
+"You don't mean to say that people are suggesting that the foot-bridge
+had been tampered with?" he asked.
+
+"There is them about as wouldn't be slow to say as much," answered the
+landlord. "Folks will talk! You see, sir--nobody saw what happened. And
+when country folk doesn't see what takes place, with their own eyes,
+then they----"
+
+"Make mysteries out of it," interrupted Collingwood, a little
+impatiently. "I don't think there's any mystery here, landlord--I
+understood that this foot-bridge was in a very unsafe condition. No! I'm
+afraid the whole affair was only too simple."
+
+But he was conscious, as he said this, that he was not precisely voicing
+his own sentiments. He himself was mystified. He was still wondering why
+Pratt had been so pertinacious in asking the old woodman when,
+precisely, he had told Mrs. Mallathorpe about the unsafe condition of
+the bridge--still wondering about a certain expression which had come
+into Pratt's face when the old man told them what he did--still
+wondering at the queer look which Pratt had given the information as he
+went off into the plantation. Was there, then, something--some secret
+which was being kept back by--somebody?
+
+He was still pondering over these things when he went back to the
+Grange, later in the evening--but he was resolved not to say anything
+about them to Nesta. And he saw Nesta only for a few minutes. Her
+mother, she said, was very ill indeed--the doctor was with her then, and
+she must go back to them. Since her son's death, Mrs. Mallathorpe had
+scarcely spoken, and the doctor, knowing that her heart was not strong,
+was somewhat afraid of a collapse.
+
+"If there is anything that I can do,--or if you should want me, during
+the night," said Collingwood, earnestly, "promise me that you'll send at
+once to the inn!"
+
+"Yes," answered Nesta. "I will. But--I don't think there will be any
+need. We have two nurses here, and the doctor will stop. There is
+something I should be glad if you would do tomorrow," she went on,
+looking at him a little wistfully, "You know about--the inquest?"
+
+"Yes," said Collingwood.
+
+"They say we--that is I, because, of course, my mother couldn't--that I
+need not be present," she continued. "Mr. Robson--our solicitor--says it
+will be a very short, formal affair. He will be there, of
+course,--but--would you mind being there, too!--so that you
+can--afterwards--tell me all about it?"
+
+"Will you tell me something--straight out?" answered Collingwood,
+looking intently at her. "Have you any doubt of any description about
+the accepted story of your brother's death? Be plain with me!"
+
+Nesta hesitated for awhile before answering.
+
+"Not of the actual circumstances," she replied at last,--"none at all of
+what you call the accepted story. The fact is, I'm not a good hand at
+explaining anything, and perhaps I can't convey to you what I mean. But
+I've a feeling--an impression--that there is--or was some mystery on
+Saturday which might have--and might not have--oh, I can't make it
+clear, even to myself.
+
+"If you would be at the inquest tomorrow, and listen carefully to
+everything--and then tell me afterwards--do you understand?"
+
+"I understand," answered Collingwood. "Leave it to me."
+
+Whether he expected to hear anything unusual at the inquest, whether he
+thought any stray word, hint, or suggestion would come up during the
+proceedings, Collingwood was no more aware than Nesta was certain of her
+vague ideas. But he was very soon assured that there was going to be
+nothing beyond brevity and formality. He had never previously been
+present at an inquest--his legal mind was somewhat astonished at the way
+in which things were done. It was quickly evident to him that the twelve
+good men and true of the jury--most of them cottagers and labourers
+living on the estate--were quite content to abide by the directions of
+the coroner, a Barford solicitor, whose one idea seemed to be to get
+through the proceedings as rapidly and smoothly as possible. And
+Collingwood felt bound to admit that, taking the evidence as it was
+brought forward, no simpler or more straightforward cause of
+investigation could be adduced. It was all very simple indeed--as it
+appeared there and then.
+
+The butler, a solemn-faced, respectable type of the old family
+serving-man, spoke as to his identification of the dead master's body,
+and gave his evidence in a few sentences. Mr. Mallathorpe, he said, had
+gone out of the front door of the Grange at half-past two on Saturday
+afternoon, carrying a gun, and had turned into the road leading towards
+the South Shrubbery. At about three o'clock Mr. Pratt had come running
+up the drive to the house, and told him and Miss Mallathorpe that he had
+just found Mr. Mallathorpe lying dead in the sunken cut between the
+South and North Shrubbery. Nobody had any question to ask the butler.
+Nor were any questions asked of Pratt--the one really important witness.
+
+Pratt gave his evidence tersely and admirably. On Saturday morning he
+had seen an advertisement in the Barford newspapers which stated that a
+steward and agent was wanted for the Normandale Estate, and all
+applications were to be made to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Desirous of applying
+for the post, he had written out a formal letter during Saturday
+morning, had obtained a testimonial from his present employers, Messrs.
+Eldrick & Pascoe, and, anxious to present his application as soon as
+possible, had decided to take it to Normandale Grange himself, that
+afternoon. He had left Barford by the two o'clock train, which arrived
+at Normandale at two-thirty-five. Knowing the district well, he had
+taken the path through the plantations. Arrived at the foot-bridge, he
+had at once noticed that part of it had fallen in. Looking into the
+cutting, he had seen a man lying in the roadway beneath--motionless. He
+had scrambled down the side of the cutting, discovered that the man was
+Mr. Harper Mallathorpe, and that he was dead, and had immediately
+hurried up the road to the house, where he had informed the last witness
+and Miss Mallathorpe.
+
+A quite plain story, evidently thought everybody--no questions needed.
+Nor were there any questions needed in the case of the only other
+witnesses--the estate carpenter who said that the foot-bridge was very
+old, but that he had not been aware that it was in quite so bad a
+condition, and who gave it as his opinion that the recent heavy rains
+had had something to do with the matter; and the doctor who testified
+that the victim had suffered injuries which would produce absolutely
+instantaneous death. A clear case--nothing could be clearer, said the
+coroner to his obedient jury, who presently returned the only
+verdict--one of accidental death--which, on the evidence, was possible.
+
+Collingwood heard no comments on the inquest from those who were
+present. But that evening, as he sat in his parlour at the _Normandale
+Arms_, the landlord, coming in on pretence of attending to the fire,
+approached him with an air of mystery and jerked his thumb in the
+direction of the regions which he had just quitted.
+
+"You remember what we were talking of this afternoon when you come in,
+sir?" he whispered. "There's some of 'em--regular nightly customers,
+village folk, you understand--talking of the same thing now, and of this
+here inquest. And if you'd like to hear a bit of what you may call local
+opinion--and especially one man's--I'll put you where you can hear it,
+without being seen. It's worth hearing, anyway."
+
+Collingwood, curious to know what the village wiseacres had to say,
+rose, and followed the landlord into a small room at the back of the
+bar-parlour.
+
+An open hatchment in the wall, covered by a thin curtain, allowed him to
+hear every word which came from what appeared to be a full company. But
+it was quickly evident that in that company there was one man who either
+was, or wished to be dictator and artifex--a man of loud voice and
+domineering tone, who was laying down the law to the accompaniment of
+vigorous thumpings of the table at which he sat. "What I say is--and I
+say it agen---I reckon nowt at all o' crowners' quests!" he was
+affirming, as Collingwood and his guide drew near the curtained opening.
+"What is a crowner's quest, anyway? It's nowt but formality--all form
+and show--it means nowt. All them 'at sits on t' jury does and says just
+what t' crowner tells 'em to say and do. They nivver ax no questions out
+o' their own mouths--they're as dumb as sheep--that's what yon jury wor
+this mornin'--now then!"
+
+"That's James Stringer, the blacksmith," whispered the landlord, coming
+close to Collingwood's elbow. "He thinks he knows everything!"
+
+"And pray, what would you ha' done, Mestur Stringer, if you'd been on
+yon jury?" inquired a milder voice. "I suppose ye'd ha' wanted to know a
+bit more, what?" "Mestur Stringer 'ud ha' wanted to know a deal more,"
+observed another voice. "He would do!"
+
+"There's a many things I want to know," continued the blacksmith, with a
+stout thump of the table. "They all tak' it for granted 'at young squire
+walked on to yon bridge, an' 'at it theer and then fell to pieces. Who
+see'd it fall to pieces? Who was theer to see what did happen?"
+
+"What else did happen or could happen nor what were testified to?" asked
+a new voice. "Theer wor what they call circumstantial evidence to show
+how all t' affair happened!"
+
+"Circumstantial evidence be blowed!" sneered the blacksmith heartily. "I
+reckon nowt o' circumstantial evidence! Look ye here! How do you
+know--how does anybody know 'at t' young squire worn't thrown off that
+bridge, and 'at t' bridge collapsed when he wor thrown? He might ha' met
+somebody on t' bridge, and quarrelled wi' 'em, and whoivver it wor might
+ha' been t' strongest man, and flung him into t' road beneath!"
+
+"Aye, but i' that case t' other feller--t' assailant--'ud ha' fallen wi'
+him," objected somebody.
+
+"Nowt o' t' sort!" retorted the blacksmith. "He'd be safe on t' sound
+part o' t' bridge--it's only a piece on 't that gave way. I say that
+theer idea wants in-quirin' into. An' theer's another thing--what wor
+that lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What
+reight had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and
+at that time? Come, now!--theer's a tickler for somebody."
+
+"He telled that," exclaimed several voices. "He had business i' t'
+place. He had some papers to 'liver."
+
+"Then why didn't he go t' nearest way to t' house t' 'liver 'em?"
+demanded Stringer. "T' shortest way to t' house fro' t' railway station
+is straight up t' carriage drive--not through them plantations. I ax
+agen--what wor that feller doin' theer? It's important."
+
+"Why, ye don't suspect him of owt, do yer, Mestur Stringer?" asked
+somebody. "A respectable young feller like that theer--come!"
+
+"I'm sayin' nowt about suspectin' nobody!" vociferated the blacksmith.
+"I'm doin' nowt but puttin' a case, as t' lawyers 'ud term it. I say 'at
+theer's a lot o' things 'at owt to ha' comed out. I'll tell ye one on
+'em--how is it 'at nowt--not a single word--wor said at yon inquest
+about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t' affair? Not one word!"
+
+A sudden silence fell on the company, and the landlord tapped
+Collingwood's arm and took the liberty of winking at him.
+
+"Why," inquired somebody, at last, "what about Mrs. Mallathorpe and t'
+affair? What had she to do wi' t' affair?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice became judicial in its solemnity.
+
+"Ye listen to me!" he said with emphasis. "I know what I'm talking
+about. Ye know what came out at t' inquest. When this here Pratt ran to
+tell t' news at t' house he returned to what they term t' fatal spot i'
+company wi' t' butler, and a couple of footmen, and Dan Scholes, one o'
+t' grooms. Now theer worn't a word said at t' inquest about what that
+lot--five on em, mind yer--found when they reached t' dead corpse--not
+one word! But I know--Dan Scholes tell'd me!"
+
+"What did they find, then, Mestur Stringer?" asked an eager member of
+the assemblage. "What wor it?"
+
+The blacksmith's voice sank to a mysterious whisper.
+
+"I'll tell yer!" he replied. "They found Mrs. Mallathorpe, lyin' i' a
+dead faint--close by! And they say 'at she's nivver done nowt but go out
+o' one faint into another, ivver since. So, of course, she's nivver been
+able to tell if she saw owt or knew owt! And what I say is," he
+concluded, with a heavy thump of the table, "that theer crowner's quest
+owt to ha' been what they term adjourned, until Mrs. Mallathorpe could
+tell if she did see owt, or if she knew owt, or heer'd owt! She mun ha'
+been close by--or else they wo'dn't ha' found her lyin' theer aside o'
+t' corpse. What did she see? What did she hear? Does she know owt? I
+tell ye 'at theer's questions 'at wants answerin'--and theer's trouble
+ahead for somebody if they aren't answered--now then!"
+
+Collingwood went away from his retreat, beckoning the landlord to
+follow. In the parlour he turned to him.
+
+"Have you heard anything of what Stringer said just now?" he asked. "I
+mean--about Mrs. Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Heard just the same--and from the same chap, Scholes, the groom, sir,"
+replied the landlord. "Oh, yes! Of course, people will wonder why they
+didn't get some evidence from Mrs. Mallathorpe--just as Stringer says."
+
+Collingwood sat a long time that night, thinking over the things he had
+heard. He came to the conclusion that the domineering blacksmith was
+right in one of his dogmatic assertions--there was trouble ahead. And
+next morning, before going up to the Grange, he went to the nearest
+telegraph office, and sent Sir John Standridge a lengthy message in
+which he resigned the appointment that would have taken him to India.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+THE POWER OF ATTORNEY
+
+
+Collingwood had many things to think over as he walked across Normandale
+Park that morning. He had deliberately given up his Indian appointment
+for Nesta's sake, so that he might be near her in case the trouble which
+he feared arose suddenly. But it was too soon yet to let her know that
+she was the cause of his altered arrangements--in any case, that was not
+the time to tell her that it was on her account that he had altered
+them.
+
+He must make some plausible excuse: then he must settle down in Barford,
+according to Eldrick's suggestion. He would then be near at hand--and if
+the trouble, whatever it might be, took tangible form, he would be able
+to help. But he was still utterly in the dark as to what that possible
+trouble might be--yet, of one thing he felt convinced--it would have
+some connection with Pratt.
+
+He remembered, as he walked along, that he had formed some queer, uneasy
+suspicion about Pratt when he first hurried down to Barford on hearing
+of Antony Bartle's death: that feeling, subsequently allayed to some
+extent, had been revived. There might be nothing in it, he said to
+himself, over and over again; everything that seemed strange might be
+easily explained; the evidence of Pratt at the inquest had appeared
+absolutely truthful and straightforward, and yet the blunt, rough,
+downright question of the blacksmith, crudely voiced as it was, found a
+ready agreement in Collingwood's mind. As he drew near the house he
+found himself repeating Stringer's broad Yorkshire--"What wor that
+lawyer-clerk chap fro' Barford--Pratt--doin' about theer? What reight
+had he to be prowlin' round t' neighbourhood o' that bridge, and at that
+time? Come, now--theer's a tickler for somebody!" And even as he smiled
+at the remembrance of the whole rustic conversation of the previous
+evening, and thought that the blacksmith's question certainly might be a
+ticklish one--for somebody--he looked up from the frosted grass at his
+feet, and saw Pratt.
+
+Pratt, a professional-looking bag in his hand, a morning newspaper under
+the other arm, was standing at the gate of one of the numerous
+shrubberies which flanked the Grange, talking to a woman who leaned over
+it. Collingwood recognized her as a person whom he had twice seen in the
+house during his visits on the day before---a middle-aged, slightly
+built woman, neatly dressed in black, and wearing a sort of nurse's cap
+which seemed to denote some degree of domestic servitude. She was a
+woman who had once been pretty, and who still retained much of her good
+looks; she was also evidently of considerable shrewdness and
+intelligence and possessed a pair of remarkably quick eyes--the sort of
+eyes, thought Collingwood, that see everything that happens within their
+range of vision. And she had a firm chin and a mouth which expressed
+determination; he had seen all that as she exchanged some conversation
+with the old butler in Collingwood's presence--a noticeable woman
+altogether. She was evidently in close conference with Pratt at that
+moment--but as Collingwood drew near she turned and went slowly in the
+direction of the house, while Pratt, always outwardly polite, stepped
+towards the interrupter of this meeting, and lifted his hat.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Collingwood," he said. "A fine, sharp morning, sir! I
+was just asking Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid how her mistress is this
+morning--she was very ill when I left last night. Better, sir, I'm glad
+to say--Mrs. Mallathorpe has had a much better night."
+
+"I'm very pleased to hear it," replied Collingwood. He was going towards
+the front of the Grange, and Pratt walked at his side, evidently in the
+same direction. "I am afraid she has had a great shock. You are still
+here, then?" he went on, feeling bound to make some remark, and saying
+the first obvious thing. "Still busy?"
+
+"Mr. Eldrick has lent me--so to speak--until the funeral's over,
+tomorrow," answered Pratt. "There are a lot of little things in which I
+can be useful, you know, Mr. Collingwood. I suppose your
+arrangements--you said you were sailing for India--won't permit of your
+being present tomorrow, sir?"
+
+Collingwood was not sure if the clerk was fishing for information.
+Pratt's manner was always polite, his questions so innocently put, that
+it was difficult to know what he was actually after. But he was not
+going to give him any information--either then, or at any time.
+
+"I don't quite know what my arrangements may be," he answered. And just
+then they came to the front entrance, and Collingwood was taken off in
+one direction by a footman, while Pratt, who already seemed to be fully
+acquainted with the house and its arrangements, took himself and his bag
+away in another.
+
+Nesta came to Collingwood looking less anxious than when he had left her
+at his last call the night before. He had already told her what his
+impressions of the inquest were, and he was now wondering whether to
+tell her of the things he had heard said at the village inn. But
+remembering that he was now going to stay in the neighbourhood, he
+decided to say nothing at that time--if there was anything in these
+vague feelings and suspicions it would come out, and could be dealt with
+when it arose. At present he had need of a little diplomacy.
+
+"Oh!--I wanted to tell you," he said, after talking to her awhile about
+Mrs. Mallathorpe. "I--there's a change in my arrangements, I'm not going
+to India, after all."
+
+He was not prepared for the sudden flush that came over the girl's face.
+It took him aback. It also told him a good deal that he was glad to
+know--and it was only by a strong effort of will that he kept himself
+from taking her hands and telling her the truth. But he affected not to
+see anything, and he went on talking rapidly. "Complete change in the
+arrangements at the last minute," he said. "I've just been writing about
+it. So--as that's off, I think I shall follow Eldrick's advice, and take
+chambers in Barford for a time, and see how things turn out. I'm going
+into Barford now, to see Eldrick about all that."
+
+Nesta, who was conscious of her betrayal of more than she cared to show
+just then, tried to speak calmly.
+
+"But--isn't it an awful disappointment?" she said. "You were looking
+forward so to going there, weren't you?"
+
+"Can't be helped," replied Collingwood. "All these affairs
+are--provisional. I thought I'd tell you at once, however--so that
+you'll know--if you ever want me--that I shall be somewhere round about.
+In fact, as it's quite comfortable there, I shall stop at the inn until
+I've got rooms in the town."
+
+Then, not trusting himself to remain longer, he went off to Barford,
+certain that he was now definitely pledged in his own mind to Nesta
+Mallathorpe, and not much less that when the right time came she would
+not be irresponsive to him. And on that, like a cold douche, came the
+remembrance of her actual circumstances--she was what Eldrick had said,
+one of the wealthiest young women in Yorkshire. The thought of her
+riches made Collingwood melancholy for a while--he possessed a curious
+sort of pride which made him hate and loathe the notion of being taken
+for a fortune-hunter. But suddenly, and with a laugh, he remembered that
+he had certain possessions of his own--ability, knowledge, and
+perseverance. Before he reached Eldrick's office, he had had a vision of
+the Woolsack.
+
+Eldrick received Collingwood's news with evident gratification. He
+immediately suggested certain chambers in an adjacent building; he
+volunteered information as to where the best rooms in the town were to
+be had. And in proof of his practical interest in Collingwood's career,
+he there and then engaged his professional services for two cases which
+were to be heard at a local court within the following week.
+
+"Pratt shall deliver the papers to you at once," he said. "That is, as
+soon as he's back from Normandale this afternoon. I sent him there again
+to make himself useful."
+
+"I saw him this morning," remarked Collingwood. "He appears to be a very
+useful person."
+
+"Clever chap," asserted Eldrick, carelessly. "I don't know what'll be
+done about that stewardship that he was going to apply for. Everything
+will be altered now that young Mallathorpe's dead. Of course, I,
+personally, shouldn't have thought that Pratt would have done for a job
+like that, but Pratt has enough self-assurance and self-confidence for a
+dozen men, and he thought he would do, and I couldn't refuse him a
+testimonial. And as he's made himself very useful out there, it may be
+that if this steward business goes forward, Pratt will get the
+appointment. As I say, he's a smart chap."
+
+Collingwood offered no comment. But he was conscious that it would not
+be at all pleasing to him to know that Linford Pratt held any official
+position at Normandale. Foolish as it might be, mere inspiration though
+it probably was, he could not get over his impression that Eldrick's
+clerk was not precisely trustworthy. And yet, he reflected, he himself
+could do nothing--it would be utter presumption on his part to offer any
+gratuitous advice to Nesta Mallathorpe in business matters. He was very
+certain of what he eventually meant to say to her about his own personal
+hopes, some time hence, when all the present trouble was over, but in
+the meantime, as regarded anything else, he could only wait and watch,
+and be of service to her if she asked him to render any.
+
+Some time went by before Collingwood was asked to render service of any
+sort. At Normandale Grange, events progressed in apparently ordinary and
+normal fashion. Harper Mallathorpe was buried; his mother began to make
+some recovery from the shock of his death; the legal folk were busied in
+putting Nesta in possession of the estate, and herself and her mother in
+proprietorship of the mill and the personal property. In Barford, things
+went on as usual, too. Pratt continued his round of duties at Eldrick &
+Pascoe's; no more was heard--by outsiders, at any rate--of the
+stewardship at Normandale. As for Collingwood, he settled down in
+chambers and lodgings and, as Eldrick had predicted, found plenty of
+work. And he constantly went out to Normandale Grange, and often met
+Nesta elsewhere, and their knowledge of each other increased, and as the
+winter passed away and spring began to show on the Normandale woods and
+moors, Collingwood felt that the time was coming when he might speak. He
+was professionally engaged in London for nearly three weeks in the early
+part of that spring--when he returned, he had made up his mind to tell
+Nesta the truth, at once. He had faced it for himself--he was by that
+time so much in love with her that he was not going to let monetary
+considerations prevent him from telling her so.
+
+But Collingwood found something else than love to talk about when he
+presented himself at Normandale Grange on the morning after his arrival
+from his three weeks' absence in town. As soon as he met her, he saw
+that Nesta was not only upset and troubled, but angry.
+
+"I am glad you have come," she said, when they were alone. "I want some
+advice. Something has happened--something that bothers--and puzzles--me
+very, very much! I'm dreadfully bothered."
+
+"Tell me," suggested Collingwood.
+
+Nesta frowned--at some recollection or thought.
+
+"Yesterday afternoon," she answered, "I was obliged to go into Barford,
+on business. I left my mother fairly well---she has been recovering fast
+lately, and she only has one nurse now. Unfortunately, she, too, was out
+for the afternoon. I came back to find my mother ill and much
+upset---and there's no use denying it--she'd all the symptoms of having
+been--well, frightened. I can't think of any other term than
+that--frightened. And then I learned that, in my absence, Mr. Eldrick's
+clerk, Mr. Pratt--you know him--had been here, and had been with her for
+quite an hour. I am furiously angry!"
+
+Collingwood had expected this announcement as soon as she began to
+explain. So--the trouble was beginning!
+
+"How came Pratt to be admitted to your mother?" he asked.
+
+"That makes me angry, too," answered Nesta. "Though I confess I ought to
+be angry with myself for not giving stricter orders. I left the house
+about two--he came about three, and asked to see my mother's maid,
+Esther Mawson. He told her that it was absolutely necessary for him to
+see my mother on business, and she told my mother he was there. My
+mother consented to see him--and he was taken up. And as I say, I found
+her ill--and frightened--and that's not the worst of it!"
+
+"What is the worst of it?" asked Collingwood, anxiously. "Better tell
+me!--I may be able to do something."
+
+"The worst of it," she said, "is just this--my mother won't tell me what
+that man came about! She flatly refuses to tell me anything! She will
+only say that it was business of her own. She won't trust me with it,
+you see!--her own daughter! What business can that man have with
+her?--or she with him? Eldrick & Pascoe are not our solicitors! There's
+some secret and----"
+
+"Will you answer one or two questions?" said Collingwood quietly. He had
+never seen Nesta angry before, and he now realized that she had certain
+possibilities of temper and determination which would be formidable when
+roused. "First of all, is that maid you speak of, Esther Mawson,
+reliable?"
+
+"I don't know!" answered Nesta. "My mother has had her two years--she's
+a Barford woman. Sometimes I think she's sly and cunning. But I've given
+her such strict orders now that she'll never dare to let any one see my
+mother again without my consent."
+
+"The other question's this," said Collingwood. "Have you any idea, any
+suspicion of why Pratt wanted to see your mother?"
+
+"Not unless it was about that stewardship," replied Nesta. "But--how
+could that frighten her? Besides, all that's over. Normandale is
+mine!--and if I have a steward, or an estate agent, I shall see to the
+appointment myself. No!--I do not know why he should have come here!
+But--there's some mystery. The curious thing is----"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood, as she paused.
+
+"Why," she said, shaking her head wonderingly, "that I'm absolutely
+certain that my mother never even knew this man Pratt--I don't I think
+she even knew his name--until quite recently. I know when she got to
+know him, too. It was just about the time that you first called here--at
+the time of Mr. Bartle's death. Our butler told me this morning that
+Pratt came here late one evening--just about that time!--and asked to
+see my mother, and was with her for some time in the study. Oh! what is
+it all about?--and why doesn't she tell me?"
+
+Collingwood stood silently staring out of the window. At the time of
+Antony Bartle's death? An evening visit?--evidently of a secret nature.
+And why paid to Mrs. Mallathorpe at that particular time? He suddenly
+turned to Nesta.
+
+"What do you wish me to do?" he asked.
+
+"Will you speak to Mr. Eldrick?" she said. "Tell him that his clerk must
+not call upon, or attempt to see, my mother. I will not have it!"
+
+Collingwood went off to Barford, and straight to Eldrick's office. He
+noticed as he passed through the outer rooms that Pratt was not in his
+accustomed place--as a rule, it was impossible to get at either Eldrick
+or Pascoe without first seeing Pratt.
+
+"Hullo!" said Eldrick. "Just got in from town? That's lucky--I've got a
+big case for you."
+
+"I got in last night," replied Collingwood. "But I went out to
+Normandale first thing this morning: I've just come back from there. I
+say, Eldrick, here's an unpleasant matter to tell you of"; and he told
+the solicitor all that Nesta had just told him, and also of Pratt's
+visit to Mrs. Mallathorpe about the time of Antony Bartle's death.
+"Whatever it is," he concluded sternly, "it's got to stop! If you've any
+influence over your clerk----"
+
+Eldrick made a grimace and waved his hand.
+
+"He's our clerk no longer!" he said. "He left us the week after you went
+up to town, Collingwood. He was only a weekly servant, and he took
+advantage of that to give me a week's notice. Now, what game is Master
+Pratt playing? He's smart, and he's deep, too. He----"
+
+Just then an office-boy announced Mr. Robson, the Mallathorpe family
+solicitor, a bustling, rather rough-and-ready type of man, who came into
+Eldrick's room looking not only angry but astonished. He nodded to
+Collingwood, and flung himself into a chair at the side of Eldrick's
+desk.
+
+"Look here, Eldrick!" he exclaimed. "What on earth has that clerk of
+yours, Pratt, got to do with Mrs. Mallathorpe? Do you know what Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has done? Hang it, she must be out of her senses,--or--or
+there's something I can't fathom. She's given your clerk, Linford Pratt,
+a power of attorney to deal with all her affairs and all her property!
+Oh, it's all right, I tell you! Pratt's been to my office, and exhibited
+it to me as if--as if he were the Lord Chancellor!"
+
+Eldrick turned to Collingwood, and Collingwood to Eldrick--and then both
+turned to Robson.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE FIRST TRICK
+
+
+The Mallathorpe family solicitor shook his head impatiently under those
+questioning glances.
+
+"It's not a bit of use appealing to me to know what it means!" he
+exclaimed. "I know no more than what I've told you. That chap walked
+into my office as bold as brass, half an hour ago, and exhibited to me a
+power of attorney, all duly drawn up and stamped, executed in his favour
+by Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday. And as Mrs. Mallathorpe is, as far as I
+know, in her senses,--why--there you are!"
+
+"What is it?" asked Eldrick. "A general power? Or a special?"
+
+"General!" answered Robson, with an air of disgust. "Authorizes him to
+act for her in all business matters. It means, of course, that that
+fellow now has full control over--why, a tremendous amount of money! The
+estate, of course, is Miss Mallathorpe's--he can't interfere with that.
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shares equally with her daughter as regards the
+personal property of Harper Mallathorpe--his share in the business, and
+all that he left, and what's more, Mrs. Mallathorpe is administratrix of
+the personal property. She's simply placed in Pratt's hands an enormous
+power! And--for what reason? Who on earth is Pratt--what right, title,
+age, or qualification, has he to be entrusted with such a big affair? I
+never knew of such a business in the whole course of my professional
+experiences!"
+
+"Nor I!" agreed Eldrick. "But there's one thing in which you're
+mistaken, Robson. You ask what qualification Pratt has for a post of
+that sort? Pratt's a very smart, clever, managing chap!"
+
+"Oh, of course! He's your clerk!" retorted Robson, a little sneeringly.
+"Naturally, you've a big idea of his abilities. But----"
+
+"He's not our clerk any longer," said Eldrick. "He left us about a week
+ago. I heard this morning that he's set up an office in Market
+Street--in the Atlas Building--and I wondered for what purpose."
+
+"Purpose of fleecing Mrs. Mallathorpe, I should say!" grumbled Robson.
+"Of course, everything of hers must pass through his hands. What on
+earth can her daughter have been thinking of to allow----"
+
+"Stop a bit!" interrupted Eldrick. "Collingwood came in to tell me about
+that--he's just come from Normandale Grange. Miss Mallathorpe complains
+that Pratt called there yesterday in her absence. That's probably when
+this power of attorney was signed. But Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know
+anything of it--she insists that Pratt shall not visit her mother."
+
+Robson stirred impatiently in his chair.
+
+"That's all bosh!" he said. "She can't prevent it. I saw Mrs.
+Mallathorpe myself three days ago--she's recovering very well, and she's
+in her right senses, and she's capable of doing business. Her daughter
+can't prevent her from doing anything she likes! And if she did what she
+liked yesterday when she signed that document--why, everybody's
+powerless--except Pratt."
+
+"There's the question of how the document was obtained," remarked
+Collingwood. "There may have been undue influence."
+
+The two solicitors looked at each other. Then Eldrick rose from his
+chair. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he said. "It's no affair of mine,
+but we employed Pratt for years, and he'll confide in me. I'll go and
+see him, and ask him what it's all about. Wait here a while, you two."
+
+He went out of his office and across into Market Street, where the Atlas
+Building, a modern range of offices and chambers, towered above the
+older structures at its foot. In the entrance hall a man was gilding the
+name of a new tenant on the address board--that name was Pratt's, and
+Eldrick presently found himself ascending in the lift to Pratt's
+quarters on the fifth floor. Within five minutes of leaving Collingwood
+and Robson, he was closeted with Pratt in a well-furnished and appointed
+little office of two rooms, the inner one of which was almost luxurious
+in its fittings. And Pratt himself looked extremely well satisfied, and
+confident--and quite at his ease. He wheeled forward an easy chair for
+his visitor, and pushed a box of cigarettes towards him.
+
+"Glad to see you, Mr. Eldrick," he said, with a cordial politeness which
+suggested, however, somehow, that he and the solicitor were no longer
+master and servant. "How do you like my little place of business?"
+
+"You're making a comfortable nest of it, anyhow, Pratt," answered
+Eldrick, looking round. "And--what sort of business are you going to do,
+pray?"
+
+"Agency," replied Pratt, promptly. "It struck me some little time ago
+that a smart man,--like myself, eh?--could do well here in Barford as an
+agent in a new sort of fashion--attending to things for people who
+aren't fitted or inclined to do 'em for themselves--or are rich enough
+to employ somebody to look after their affairs. Of course, that
+Normandale stewardship dropped out when young Harper died, and I don't
+suppose the notion 'll be revived now that his sister's come in. But
+I've got one good job to go on with---Mrs. Mallathorpe's given me her
+affairs to look after."
+
+Eldrick took one of the cigarettes and lighted it--as a sign of his
+peaceable and amicable intentions.
+
+"Pratt!" he said. "That's just what I've come to see you about.
+Unofficially, mind--in quite a friendly way. It's like this"; and he
+went on to tell Pratt of what had just occurred at his own office.
+"So--there you are," he concluded. "I'm saying nothing, you know, it's
+no affair of mine--but if these people begin to say that you've used any
+undue influence----"
+
+"Mr. Collingwood, and Mr. Robson, and Miss Mallathorpe--and anybody,"
+answered Pratt, slowly and firmly, "had better mind what they are
+saying, Mr. Eldrick. There's such a thing as slander, as you're well
+aware. I'm not the man to be slandered, or libelled, or to have my
+character defamed--without fighting for my rights. There has been no
+undue influence! I went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday at her own
+request. The arrangement between me and her is made with her approval
+and free will. If her daughter found her a bit upset, it's because she'd
+such a shock at the time of her son's death. I did nothing to frighten
+her, not I! The fact is, Miss Mallathorpe doesn't know that her mother
+and I have had a bit of business together of late. And all that Mrs.
+Mallathorpe has entrusted to me is the power to look after her affairs
+for her. And why not? You know that I'm a good man of business, a really
+good hand at commercial accountancy, and well acquainted with the trade
+of this town. You know too, Mr. Eldrick, that I'm scrupulously
+honest--I've had many and many a thousand pounds of yours and your
+partner's through my hands! Who's got anything to say against me? I'm
+only trying to earn an honest living."
+
+"Well, well!" said Eldrick, who, being an easy-going and
+kindly-dispositioned man, was somewhat inclined to side with his old
+clerk. "I suppose Mr. Robson thinks that if Mrs. Mallathorpe wished to
+put her affairs in anybody's hands, she should have put them in his.
+He's their family solicitor, you know, Pratt, while you're a young man
+with no claim on Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+Pratt smiled--a queer, knowing smile--and reached out his hand to some
+papers which lay on his desk.
+
+"You're wrong there, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "But of course, you don't
+know. I didn't know myself, nor did Mrs. Mallathorpe, until lately. But
+I have a claim--and a good one--to get a business lift from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe. I'm a relation."
+
+"What--of the Mallathorpe family?" exclaimed Eldrick, whose legal mind
+was at once bitten by notion of kinship and succession, and who knew
+that Harper Mallathorpe was supposed to have no male relatives at all,
+of any degree. "You don't mean it?"
+
+"No!--but of hers, Mrs. Mallathorpe," answered Pratt. "My mother was her
+cousin. I found that out by mere chance, and when I'd found it, I worked
+out the facts from our parish church register. They're all here--fairly
+copied--Mrs. Mallathorpe has seen them. So I have some claim--even if
+it's only that of a poor relation."
+
+Eldrick took the sheets of foolscap which Pratt handed to him, and
+looked them over with interest and curiosity. He was something of an
+expert in such matters, and had helped to edit a print more than once of
+the local parish registers. He soon saw from a hasty examination of the
+various entries of marriages and births that Pratt was quite right in
+what he said.
+
+"I call it a poor--and a mean--game," remarked Pratt, while his old
+master was thus occupied, "a very mean game indeed, of well-to-do folk
+like Mr. Collingwood and Mr. Robson to want to injure me in a matter
+which is no business of theirs. I shall do my duty by Mrs.
+Mallathorpe--you yourself know I'm fully competent to do it--and I shall
+fully earn the percentage that she'll pay me. What right have these
+people--what right has her daughter--to come between me and my living?"
+
+"Oh, well, well!" said Eldrick, as he handed back the papers and rose.
+"It's one of those matters that hasn't been understood. You made a
+mistake, you know, Pratt, when you went to see Mrs. Mallathorpe yesterday
+in her daughter's absence. You shouldn't have done that."
+
+Pratt pulled open a drawer and, after turning over some loose papers,
+picked out a letter.
+
+"Do you know Mrs. Mallathorpe's handwriting?" he asked. "Very
+well--there it is! Isn't that a request from her that I should call on
+her yesterday afternoon? Very well then!"
+
+Eldrick looked at the letter with some surprise. He had a good memory,
+and he remembered that Collingwood had told him that Nesta had said that
+Pratt had gone to Normandale Grange, seen Esther Mawson, and told her
+that it was absolutely necessary for him to see Mrs. Mallathorpe. And
+though Eldrick was naturally unsuspicious, an idea flashed across his
+mind--had Pratt got Mrs. Mallathorpe to write that letter while he was
+there--yesterday--and brought it away with him?
+
+"I think there's a good deal of misunderstanding," he said. "Mr.
+Collingwood says that you went there and told her maid that it was
+absolutely necessary for you to see her mistress--sort of forced
+yourself in, you see, Pratt."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" retorted Pratt. He flourished the letter in his
+hand. "Doesn't it say there, in Mrs. Mallathorpe's own handwriting, that
+she particularly desires to see me at three o'clock? It does! Then it
+was absolutely necessary for me to see her. Come, now! And Mr.
+Collingwood had best attend to his own business. What's he got to do
+with all this? After Miss Mallathorpe and her money, I should
+think!--that's about it!"
+
+Eldrick said another soothing word or two, and went back to his own
+office. He was considerably mystified by certain things, but inclined to
+be satisfied about others, and in giving an account of what had just
+taken place he unconsciously seemed to take Pratt's side--much to
+Robson's disgust, and to Collingwood's astonishment.
+
+"You can't get over this, you know, Robson," said Eldrick. "Pratt went
+there yesterday by appointment--went at Mrs. Mallathorpe's own express
+desire, made in her own handwriting. And it's quite certain that what he
+says about the relationship is true---I examined the proof myself. It's
+not unnatural that Mrs. Mallathorpe should desire to do something for
+her own cousin's son."
+
+"To that extent?" sneered Robson. "Bless me, you talk as if it were no
+more than presenting him with a twenty pound note, instead of its being
+what it is--giving him the practical control of many a thousand pounds
+every year. There'll be more heard of this--yet!"
+
+He went away angrier than when he came, and Eldrick looked at
+Collingwood and shook his head.
+
+"I don't see what more there is to do," he said. "So far as I can make
+out, or see, Pratt is within his rights. If Mrs. Mallathorpe liked to
+entrust her business to him, what is to prevent it? I see nothing at all
+strange in that. But there is a fact which does seem uncommonly strange
+to me! It's this--how is it that Mrs. Mallathorpe doesn't consult,
+hasn't consulted--doesn't inform, hasn't informed--her daughter about
+all this?"
+
+"That," answered Collingwood, "is precisely what strikes me--and I can't
+give any explanation. Nor, I believe, can Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+He felt obliged to go back to Normandale, and tell Nesta the result of
+the afternoon's proceedings. And having seen during his previous visit
+how angry she could be, he was not surprised to see her become angrier
+and more determined than ever.
+
+"I will not have Mr. Pratt coming here!" she exclaimed. "He shall not
+see my mother--under my roof, at any rate. I don't believe she sent for
+him."
+
+"Mr. Eldrick saw her letter!" interrupted Collingwood quietly.
+
+"Then that man made her write it while he was here!" exclaimed Nesta.
+"As to the relationship--it may be so. I never heard of it. But I don't
+care what relation he is to my mother--he is not going to interfere with
+her affairs!"
+
+"The strange thing," said Collingwood, as pointedly as was consistent
+with kindness, "is that your mother--just now, at any rate--doesn't seem
+to be taking you into her confidence."
+
+Nesta looked steadily at him for a moment, without speaking. When she
+did speak it was with decision.
+
+"Quite so!" she said. "She is keeping something from me! And if she
+won't tell me things--well, I must find them out for myself."
+
+She would say no more than that, and Collingwood left her. And as he
+went back to Barford he cursed Linford Pratt soundly for a deep and
+underhand rogue who was most certainly playing some fine game.
+
+But Pratt himself was quite satisfied--up to that point. He had won his
+first trick and he had splendid cards still left in his hand. And he was
+reckoning his chances on them one morning a little later when a ring at
+his bell summoned him to his office door--whereat stood Nesta
+Mallathorpe, alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+CARDS ON THE TABLE
+
+
+Had any third person been present, closely to observe the meeting of
+these two young people, he would have seen that the one to whom it was
+unexpected and a surprise was outwardly as calm and self-possessed as if
+the other had come there to keep an ordinary business appointment.
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, looking very dignified and almost stately in her
+mourning, was obviously angry, indignant, and agitated. But Pratt was as
+cool and as fully at his ease as if he were back in Eldrick's office,
+receiving the everyday ordinary client. He swept his door open and
+executed his politest bow--and was clever enough to pretend that he saw
+nothing of his visitor's agitation. Yet deep within himself he felt more
+tremors than one, and it needed all his powers of dissimulation to act
+and speak as if this were the most usual of occurrences.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "You wish to see me? Come
+into my private office, if you please. I haven't fixed on a clerk yet,"
+he went on, as he led his visitor through the outer room, and to the
+easy chair by his desk. "I have several applications from promising
+aspirants, but I have to be careful, you know, Miss Mallathorpe--it's a
+position of confidence. And now," he concluded, as he closed the door
+upon Nesta and himself, "how is Mrs. Mallathorpe today? Improving, I
+hope?"
+
+Nesta made no reply to these remarks, or to the question. And instead of
+taking the easy chair which Eldrick had found so comfortable, she went
+to one which stood against the wall opposite Pratt's desk and seated
+herself in it in as upright a position as the wall behind her.
+
+"I wish to speak to you--plainly!" she said, as Pratt, who now regarded
+her somewhat doubtfully, realizing that he was in for business of a
+serious nature, sat down at his desk. "I want to ask you a plain
+question--and I expect a plain answer. Why are you blackmailing my
+mother?"
+
+Pratt shook his head--as if he felt more sorrow than anger. He glanced
+deprecatingly at his visitor.
+
+"I think you'll be sorry--on reflection--that you said that, Miss
+Mallathorpe," he answered. "You're a little--shall we say--upset? A
+little--shall we say--angry? If you were calmer, you wouldn't say such
+things--you wouldn't use such a term as--blackmailing. It's--dear me, I
+dare say you don't know it!--it's actionable. If I were that sort of
+man, Miss Mallathorpe, and you said that of me before witnesses--ah! I
+don't know what mightn't happen. However--I'm not that sort of man.
+But--don't say it again, if you please!"
+
+"If you don't answer my question--and at once," said Nesta, whose cheeks
+were pale with angry determination, "I shall say it again in a fashion
+you won't like--not to you, but to the police!"
+
+Pratt smiled--a quiet, strange smile which made his visitor feel a
+sudden sense of fear. And again he shook his head, slowly and
+deprecatingly.
+
+"Oh, no!" he said gently. "That's a bigger mistake than the other, Miss
+Mallathorpe! The police! Oh, not the police, I think, Miss Mallathorpe.
+You see--other people than you might go to the police--about something
+else."
+
+Nesta's anger cooled down under that scarcely veiled threat. The sight
+of Pratt, of his self-assurance, his comfortable offices, his general
+atmosphere of almost sleek satisfaction, had roused her temper, already
+strained to breaking point. But that smile, and the quiet look which
+accompanied his last words, warned her that anger was mere foolishness,
+and that she was in the presence of a man who would have to be dealt
+with calmly if the dealings were to be successful. Yet--she repeated her
+words, but this time in a different tone.
+
+"I shall certainly go to the police authorities," she said, "unless I
+get some proper explanation from you. I shall have no option. You are
+forcing--or have forced--my mother to enter into some strange
+arrangements with you, and I can't think it is for anything but what I
+say--blackmail. You've got--or you think you've got--some hold on her.
+Now what is it? I mean to know, one way or another!"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," said Pratt. "You're taking a wrong course--with me.
+Now who advised you to come here and speak to me like this, as if I were
+a common criminal? Mr. Collingwood, no doubt? Or perhaps Mr. Robson? Now
+if either----"
+
+"Neither Mr. Robson nor Mr. Collingwood know anything whatever about my
+coming here!" retorted Nesta. "No one knows! I am quite competent to
+manage my own affairs--of this sort. I want to know why my mother has
+been forced into that arrangement with you--for I am sure you have
+forced her! If you will not tell me why--then I shall do what I said."
+
+"You'll go to the police authorities?" asked Pratt. "Ah!--but let us
+consider things a little, Miss Mallathorpe. Now, to start with, who says
+there has been any forcing? I know one person who won't say so--and
+that's your mother herself!"
+
+Nesta felt unable to answer that assertion. And Pratt smiled
+triumphantly and went on.
+
+"She'll tell you--Mrs. Mallathorpe'll tell you--that she's very pleased
+indeed to have my poor services," he said. "She knows that I shall serve
+her well. She's glad to do a kind service to a poor relation. And since
+I am your mother's relation, Miss Mallathorpe, I'm yours, too. I'm some
+degree of cousin to you. You might think rather better, rather more
+kindly, of me!"
+
+"Are you going to tell me anything more than that?" asked Nesta
+steadily. Pratt shrugged his shoulders and waved his hands.
+
+"What more can I tell?" he asked. "The fact is, there's a business
+arrangement between me and your mother--and you object to it. Well--I'm
+sorry, but I've my own interests to consider."
+
+"Are you going to tell me what it was that induced my mother to sign
+that paper you got from her the other day?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Can I say more than that it was--a business arrangement?" pleaded
+Pratt. "There's nothing unusual in one party in a business arrangement
+giving a power of attorney to another party. Nothing!"
+
+"Very well!" said Nesta, rising from the straight-backed chair, and
+looking very rigid herself as she stood up. "You won't tell me anything!
+So--I am now going to the police. I don't know what they'll do. I don't
+know what they can do. But--I can tell them what I think and feel about
+this, at any rate. For as sure as I am that I see you, there's something
+wrong! And I'll know what it is."
+
+Pratt recognized that she had passed beyond the stage of mere anger to
+one of calm determination. And as she marched towards the door he called
+her back--as the result of a second's swift thought on his part.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe," he said. "Oblige me by sitting down again. I'm not
+in the least afraid of your going to the police. But my experience is
+that if one goes to them on errands of this sort, it sets all sorts of
+things going--scandal, and suspicion, and I don't know what! You don't
+want any scandal. Sit down, if you please, and let us think for a
+moment. And I'll see if I can tell you--what you want to know."
+
+Nesta already had a hand on the door. But after looking at him for a
+second or two, she turned back, and sat down in her old position. And
+Pratt, still seated at his desk, plunged his hands in his trousers
+pockets, tilted back his chair, and for five minutes stared with knitted
+brows at his blotting pad. A queer silence fell on the room. The windows
+were double-sashed; no sound came up from the busy street below. But on
+the mantelpiece a cheap Geneva clock ticked and ticked, and Nesta felt
+at last that if it went on much longer, without the accompaniment of a
+human voice, she should suddenly snatch it up, and hurl it--anywhere.
+
+Pratt was in the position of the card-player, who, confronted by a
+certain turn in the course of a game which he himself feels sure he is
+bound to win, wonders whether he had better not expedite matters by
+laying his cards on the table, and asking his opponent if he can
+possibly beat their values and combination. He had carefully reckoned up
+his own position more than once during the progress of recent events,
+and the more carefully he calculated it the more he felt convinced that
+he had nothing to fear. He had had to alter his ground in consequence of
+the death of Harper Mallathorpe, and he had known that he would have to
+fight Nesta. But he had not anticipated that hostilities would come so
+soon, or begin with such evident determination on her part. How would it
+be, then, at this first stage to make such a demonstration in force that
+she would recognize his strength?
+
+He looked up at last and saw Nesta regarding him sternly. But Pratt
+smiled--the quiet smile which made her uneasy.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" he said. "I was thinking of two things just then--a
+game at cards--and the science of warfare. In both it's a good thing
+sometimes to let your adversary see what a strong hand you've got. Now,
+then, a question, if you please--are you and I adversaries?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Nesta unflinchingly. "You're acting like an enemy--you
+are an enemy!"
+
+"I've hoped that you and I would be friends--good friends," said Pratt,
+with something like a sigh. "And if I may say so, I've no feeling of
+enmity towards you. When I speak of us being adversaries, I mean it
+in--well, let's say a sort of legal sense. But now I'll show you my
+hand--that is, as far as I please. Will you listen quietly to me?"
+
+"I've no choice," replied Nesta bluntly. "And I came here to know what
+you've got to say for yourself. Say it!"
+
+Pratt moved his chair a little nearer to his visitor.
+
+"Now," he said, speaking very quietly and deliberately, "I'll go through
+what I have to say to you carefully, point by point. I shall ask you to
+go back a little way. It is now some time since I discovered a secret
+about your mother, Mrs. Mallathorpe. Ah, you start!--it may be with
+indignation, but I assure you I'm telling you, and am going to tell you,
+the absolute truth. I say--a secret! No one knows it but myself--not one
+living soul! Except, of course, your mother. I shall not reveal it to
+you--under any consideration, or in any circumstances--but I can tell
+you this--if that secret were revealed, your mother would be ruined for
+life--and you yourself would suffer in more ways than one."
+
+Nesta looked at him incredulously--and yet she began to feel he was
+telling some truth. And Pratt shook his head at the incredulous
+expression.
+
+"It's quite so!" he said. "You'll begin to believe it---from other
+things. Now, it was in connection with this that I paid a visit to
+Normandale Grange one evening some months ago. Perhaps you never heard
+of that? I was alone with your mother for some time in the study."
+
+"I have heard of it," she answered.
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "But you haven't heard that your mother came to
+see me at my rooms here in Barford--my lodgings--the very next night! On
+the same business, of course. But she did--I know how she came, too.
+Secretly--heavily veiled--naturally, she didn't want anybody to know.
+Are you beginning to see something in it, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"Go on with your--story," answered Nesta.
+
+"I go on, then, to the day before your brother's death," continued
+Pratt. "Namely, a certain Friday. Now, if you please, I'll invite you to
+listen carefully to certain facts--which are indisputable, which I can
+prove, easily. On that Friday, the day before your brother's death, Mrs.
+Mallathorpe was in the shrubbery at Normandale Grange which is near the
+north end of the old foot-bridge. She was approached by Hoskins, an old
+woodman, who has been on the estate a great many years--you know him
+well enough. Hoskins told Mrs. Mallathorpe that the foot-bridge between
+the north and south shrubberies, spanning the cut which was made there a
+long time since so that a nearer road could be made to the stables, was
+in an extremely dangerous condition--so dangerous, in fact, that in his
+opinion, it would collapse under even a moderate weight. I impress this
+fact upon you strongly."
+
+"Well?" said Nesta.
+
+"Hoskins," Pratt went on, "urged upon Mrs. Mallathorpe the necessity of
+having the bridge closed at once, or barricaded. He pointed out to her
+from where they stood certain places in the bridge, and in the railing
+on one side of it, which already sagged in such a fashion, that he, as a
+man of experience, knew that planks and railings were literally rotten
+with damp. Now what did Mrs. Mallathorpe do? She said nothing to
+Hoskins, except that she'd have the thing seen to. But she immediately
+went to the estate carpenter's shop, and there she procured two short
+lengths of chain, and two padlocks, and she herself went back to the
+foot-bridge and secured its wicket gates at both ends. I beg you will
+bear that in mind, too, Miss Mallathorpe."
+
+"I am bearing everything in mind," said Nesta resolutely. "Don't be
+afraid that I shall forget one word that you say."
+
+"I hear that sneer in your voice," answered Pratt, as he turned,
+unlocked a drawer, and drew out some papers. "But I think you will soon
+learn that the sneer at what I'm telling you is foolish. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe had a set purpose in locking up those gates--as you will see
+presently. You will see it from what I am now going to tell you. Oblige
+me, if you please, by looking at that letter. Do you recognize your
+mother's handwriting?"
+
+"Yes!" admitted Nesta, with a sudden feeling of apprehension. "That is
+her writing."
+
+"Very good," said Pratt. "Then before I read it to you, I'll just tell
+you what this letter is. It formed, when it was written, an invitation
+from Mrs. Mallathorpe to me--an invitation to walk, innocently, into
+what she knew--knew, mind you!--to be a death-trap! She meant _me_ to
+fall through the bridge!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+PRATT OFFERS A HAND
+
+
+For a full moment of tense silence Nesta and Pratt looked at each other
+across the letter which he held in his outstretched hand--looked
+steadily and with a certain amount of stern inquiry. And it was Nesta's
+eyes which first gave way--beaten by the certainty in Pratt's. She
+looked aside; her cheeks flamed; she felt as if something were rising in
+her throat--to choke her.
+
+"I can't believe that!" she muttered. "You're--mistaken! Oh--utterly
+mistaken!"
+
+"No mistake!" said Pratt confidently. "I tell you your mother meant
+me--me!--to meet my death at that bridge. Here's the proof in this
+letter! I'll tell you, first, when I received it: then I'll read you
+what's in it, and if you doubt my reading of it, you shall read it
+yourself--but it won't go out of my hands! And first as to my getting
+it, for that's important. It reached me, by registered post, mind you,
+on the Saturday morning on which your brother met his death. It was
+handed in at Normandale village post-office for registration late on the
+Friday afternoon. And--by whom do you think?"
+
+"I--don't know!" replied Nesta faintly. This merciless piling up of
+details was beginning to frighten her--already she felt as if she
+herself were some criminal, forced to listen from the dock to the
+opening address of a prosecuting counsel. "How should I know?--how can I
+think?"
+
+"It was handed in for registration by your mother's maid, Esther
+Mawson," said Pratt with a dark look. "I've got her evidence, anyway!
+And that was all part of a plan--just as a certain something that was
+enclosed was a part of the same plan--a plot. And now I'll read you the
+letter--and you'll bear it in mind that I got it by first post that
+Saturday morning. This is what it--what your mother--says:--
+
+ "I particularly wish to see you again, at once, about the matter
+ between us and to have another look at _that document_. Can you
+ come here, bringing it with you, tomorrow, Saturday afternoon,
+ by the train which leaves soon after two o'clock? As I am most
+ anxious that your visit should be private and unknown to any one
+ here, do not come to the house. Take the path across the park to
+ the shrubberies near the house, so that if you are met people
+ would think you were taking a near cut to the village. I will
+ meet you in the shrubbery on the house side of the little
+ foot-bridge. The gates--'"
+
+Pratt suddenly paused, and before proceeding looked hard at his visitor.
+
+"Now listen to what follows--and bear in mind what your mother knew, and
+had done, at the time she wrote this letter. This is how the letter goes
+on---let every word fix itself in your mind, Miss Mallathorpe!"
+
+ "'The gates of the foot-bridge are locked, but the enclosed keys
+ will open them. I will meet you amongst the trees on the further
+ side. Be sure to come and to bring _that document_--I have
+ something to say about it on seeing it again.'"
+
+Pratt turned to the drawer from which he had taken the letter and took
+out two small keys, evidently belonging to patent padlocks. He held them
+up before Nesta.
+
+"There they are!" he said triumphantly. "Been in my possession ever
+since--and will remain there. Now--do you wish to read the letter? I've
+read it to you word for word. You don't? Very good--back it goes in
+there, with these keys. And now then," he continued, having replaced
+letter and keys in his drawer, and turned to her again, "now then, you
+see what a diabolical scheme it was that was in your mother's mind
+against me. She meant me to meet with the fate which overtook her own
+son! She meant me to fall through that bridge. Why? She hoped that I
+should break my neck--as he did! She wanted to silence me--but she also
+wanted more--she wanted to take from my dead body, or my unconscious
+body, the certain something which she was so anxious I should bring with
+me, which she referred to as _that document_. She was willing to risk
+anything--even to murder!--to get hold of that. And now you know why I
+went to Normandale Grange that Saturday--you know, now, the real reason.
+I told a deliberate lie at the inquest, for your mother's sake--for your
+sake, if you know it. I did not go there to hand in my application for
+the stewardship--I went in response to the letter I've just read. Is all
+this clear to you?"
+
+Nesta could only move her head in silent acquiescence. She was already
+convinced, that whether all this was entirely true or not, there was
+truth of some degree in what Pratt had told her. And she was thinking of
+her mother--and of the trap which she certainly appeared to have
+laid--and of her brother's fate--and for the moment she felt sick and
+beaten. But Pratt went on in that cold, calculating voice, telling his
+story point by point.
+
+"Now I come to what happened that Saturday afternoon," he said. "I may
+as well tell you that in my own interest I have carefully collected
+certain evidence which never came out at the inquest--which, indeed, has
+nothing to do with the exact matter of the inquest. Now, that Saturday,
+your mother and you had lunch together--your brother, as we shall see in
+a moment, being away--at your lunch time--a quarter to two. About twenty
+minutes past two your mother left the house. She went out into the
+gardens. She left the gardens for the shrubberies. And at twenty-five
+minutes to three, she was seen by one of your gardeners, Featherstone,
+in what was, of course, hiding, amongst the trees at the end of the
+north shrubbery. What was she doing there, Miss Mallathorpe? She was
+waiting!--waiting until a certain hoped-for accident happened--to me.
+Then she would come out of her hiding-place in the hope of getting that
+document from my pocket! Do you see how cleverly she'd laid her
+plans--murderous plans?"
+
+Nesta was making a great effort to be calm. She knew now that she was
+face to face with some awful mystery which could only be solved by
+patience and strenuous endeavour. She knew, too, that she must show no
+sign of fear before this man!
+
+"Will you finish your story, if you please?" she asked.
+
+"In my own way--in my own time," answered Pratt. "I now come to--your
+mother. On the Friday noon, the late Mr. Harper Mallathorpe went to
+Barford to visit a friend--young Stemthwaite, at the Hollies. He was to
+stay the night there, and was not expected home until Saturday evening.
+He did stay the night, and remained in Barford until noon on Saturday;
+but he--unexpectedly--returned to the house at half past two. And almost
+as soon as he'd got in, he picked up a gun and strolled out--into the
+gardens and the north shrubbery. And, as you know, he went to the
+foot-bridge. You see, Miss Mallathorpe, your mother, clever as she was,
+had forgotten one detail--the gates of that footbridge were merely low,
+four-barred things, and there was nothing to prevent an active young man
+from climbing them. She forgot another thing, too--that warning had not
+been given at the house that the bridge was dangerous. And, of course,
+she'd never, never calculated that your brother would return sooner than
+he was expected, or that, on his return, he'd go where he did. And
+so--but I'll spare you any reference to what happened. Only--you know
+now how it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe was found by her son's body. She'd
+been waiting about--for me! But--the fate she'd meant for me was dealt
+out to--him!"
+
+In spite of herself Nesta gave way to a slight cry.
+
+"I can't bear any more of that!" she said. "Have you finished?"
+
+"There's not much more to say--now at any rate," replied Pratt. "And
+what I have to say shall be to the point. I'm sorry enough to have been
+obliged to say all that I have said. But, you know, you forced me to it!
+You threatened me. The real truth, Miss Mallathorpe, is just this--you
+don't understand me at all. You come here--excuse my plain
+speech--hectoring and bullying me with talk about the police, and
+blackmail, and I don't know what! It's I who ought to go to the police!
+I could have your mother arrested, and put in the dock, on a charge of
+attempted murder, this very day! I've got all the proofs."
+
+"I suppose you held that out as a threat to her when you forced her to
+sign that power of attorney?" observed Nesta.
+
+For the first time since her arrival Pratt looked at his visitor in an
+unfriendly fashion. His expression changed and his face flushed a
+little.
+
+"You think that, do you?" he said. "Well, you're wrong. I'm not a fool.
+I held out no such threat. I didn't even tell your mother what I'd found
+out. I wasn't going to show her my hand all at once--though I've shown
+you a good deal of it."
+
+"Not all?" she asked quickly.
+
+"Not all," answered Pratt with a meaning glance. "To use more
+metaphors--I've several cards up my sleeve, Miss Mallathorpe. But you're
+utterly wrong about the threats. I'll tell you--I don't mind that--how I
+got the authority you're speaking about. Your mother had promised me
+that stewardship--for life. I'd have been a good steward. But we
+recognized that your brother's death had altered things--that you,
+being, as she said, a self-willed young woman--you see how plain I
+am--would insist on looking after your own affairs. So she gave
+me--another post. I'll discharge its duties honestly."
+
+"Yes," said Nesta, "but you've already told me that you'd a hold on my
+mother before any of these recent events happened, and that you possess
+some document which she was anxious to get into her hands. So it comes
+to this--you've a double hold on her, according to your story."
+
+"Just so," agreed Pratt. "You're right, I have--a double hold."
+
+Nesta looked at him silently for a while: Pratt looked at her.
+
+"Very well," she said at last. "How much do you want--to be bought out?"
+
+Pratt laughed.
+
+"I thought that would be the end of it!" he remarked. "Yes--I thought
+so!"
+
+"Name your price!" said Nesta.
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe!" answered Pratt, bending forward and speaking with a
+new earnestness. "Just listen to me. It's no good. I'm not to be bought
+out. Your mother tried that game with me before. She offered me first
+five, then ten thousand pounds--cash down--for that document, when she
+came to see me at my rooms. I dare say she'd have gone to twenty
+thousand--and found the money there and then. But I said no then--and I
+say no to you! I'm not to be purchased in that way. I've my own ideas,
+my own plans, my own ambitions, my own--hopes. It's not any use at all
+for you to dangle your money before me. But--I'll suggest something
+else--that you can do."
+
+Nesta made no answer. She continued to look steadily at the man who
+evidently had her mother in his power, and Pratt, who was watching her
+intently, went on speaking quietly but with some intensity of tone.
+
+"You can do this," he said. "To start with--and it'll go a long
+way--just try and think better of me. I told you, you don't understand
+me. Try to! I'm not a bad lot. I've great abilities. I'm a hard worker.
+Eldrick & Pascoe could tell you that I'm scrupulously honest in money
+matters. You'll see that I'll look after your mother's affairs in a
+fashion that'll commend itself to any firm of auditors and accountants
+who may look into my accounts every year. I'm only taking the salary
+from her that I was to have had for the stewardship. So--why not leave
+it at that? Let things be! Perhaps--in time you'll come to see that--I'm
+to be trusted."
+
+"How can I trust a man who deliberately tells me that he holds a secret
+and a document over a woman's head?" demanded Nesta. "You've admitted a
+previous hold on my mother. You say you're in possession of a secret
+that would ruin her--quite apart from recent events. Is that honest?"
+
+"It was none of my seeking," retorted Pratt. "I gained the knowledge by
+accident."
+
+"You're giving yourself away," said Nesta. "Or you've some mental twist
+or defect which prevents you from seeing things straight. It's not how
+you got your knowledge, but the use you're making of it that's the
+important thing! You're using it to force my mother to----"
+
+"Excuse me!" interrupted Pratt with a queer smile. "It's you who don't
+see things straight. I'm using my knowledge to protect--all of you. Let
+your mind go back to what was said at first--to what I said at first. I
+said that I'd discovered a secret which, if revealed, would ruin your
+mother and injure--you! So it would--more than ever, now. So, you see,
+in keeping it, I'm taking care, not only of her interests, but
+of--yours!"
+
+Nesta rose. She realized that there was no more to be said--or done. And
+Pratt rose, too, and looked at her almost appealingly.
+
+"I wish you'd try to see things as I've put them, Miss Mallathorpe," he
+said. "I don't bear malice against your mother for that scheme she
+contrived--I'm willing to put it clear out of my head. Why not accept
+things as they are? I'll keep that secret for ever--no one shall ever
+know about it. Why not be friends, now--why not shake hands?"
+
+He held out his hand as he spoke. But Nesta drew back.
+
+"No!" she said. "My opinion is just what it was when I came here."
+
+Before Pratt could move she had turned swiftly to the door and let
+herself out, and in another minute she was amongst the crowds in the
+street below. For a few minutes she walked in the direction of Robson's
+offices, but when she had nearly reached them, she turned, and went
+deliberately to those of Eldrick & Pascoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+A HEADQUARTERS CONFERENCE
+
+
+By the time she had been admitted to Eldrick's private room, Nesta had
+regained her composure; she had also had time to think, and her present
+action was the result of at any rate a part of her thoughts. She was
+calm and collected enough when she took the chair which the solicitor
+drew forward.
+
+"I called on you for two reasons, Mr. Eldrick," she said. "First, to
+thank you for your kindness and thoughtfulness at the time of my
+brother's death, in sending your clerk to help in making the
+arrangements."
+
+"Very glad he was of any assistance, Miss Mallathorpe," answered
+Eldrick. "I thought, of course, that as he had been on the spot, as it
+were, when the accident happened, he could do a few little things----"
+
+"He was very useful in that way," said Nesta. "And I was very much
+obliged to him. But the second reason for my call is--I want to speak to
+you about him."
+
+"Yes?" responded Eldrick. He had already formed some idea as to what was
+in his visitor's mind, and he was secretly glad of the opportunity of
+talking to her. "About Pratt, eh? What about him, Miss Mallathorpe?"
+
+"He was with you for some years, I believe?" she asked.
+
+"A good many years," answered Eldrick. "He came to us as office-boy, and
+was head-clerk when he left us."
+
+"Then you ought to know him--well," she suggested.
+
+"As to that," replied Eldrick, "there are some people in this world whom
+other people never could know well--that's to say, really well. I know
+Pratt well enough for what he was--our clerk. Privately, I know little
+about him. He's clever--he's ability--he's a chap who reads a good
+deal--he's got ambitions. And I should say he is a bit--subtle."
+
+"Deceitful?" she asked.
+
+"I couldn't say that," replied Eldrick. "It wouldn't be true if I said
+so. I think he's possibilities of strategy in him. But so far as we're
+concerned, we found him hardworking, energetic, truthful, dependable and
+honest, and absolutely to be trusted in money matters. He's had many and
+many a thousand pounds of ours through his hands."
+
+"I believe you're unaware that my mother, for some reason or other,
+unknown to me, has put him in charge of her affairs?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Yes--Mr. Collingwood told me so," answered Eldrick. "So, too, did your
+own solicitor, Mr. Robson--who's very angry about it."
+
+"And you?" she said, putting a direct question. "What do you think? Do
+please, tell me!"
+
+"It's difficult to say, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, with a smile
+and a shake of the head. "If your mother--who, of course, is quite
+competent to decide for herself--wishes to have somebody to look after
+her affairs, I don't see what objection can be taken to her procedure.
+And if she chooses to put Linford Pratt in that position--why not? As I
+tell you, I, as his last--and only--employer, am quite convinced of his
+abilities and probity. I suppose that as your mother's agent, he'll
+supervise her property, collect money due to her, advise her in
+investments, and so on. Well, I should say--personally, mind--he's quite
+competent to do all that, and that he'll do it honestly, I should
+certainly say so."
+
+"But--why should he do it at all?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick waved his hands.
+
+"Ah!" he exclaimed. "Now you ask me a very different question! But--I
+understand--in fact, I know--that Pratt turns out to be a relation of
+yours--distant, but it's there. Perhaps your mother--who, of course, is
+much better off since your brother's sad death--is desirous of
+benefiting Pratt--as a relation."
+
+"Do you advise anything?" asked Nesta.
+
+"Well, you know, Miss Mallathorpe," replied Eldrick, smiling. "I'm not
+your legal adviser. What about Mr. Robson?"
+
+"Mr. Robson is so very angry about all this--with my mother," said
+Nesta, "that I don't even want to ask his advice. What I really do want
+is the advice, counsel, of somebody--perhaps more as a friend than as a
+solicitor."
+
+"Delighted to give you any help I can--either professionally or as a
+friend," exclaimed Eldrick. "But--let me suggest something. And first of
+all--is there anything--something--in all this that you haven't told to
+anybody yet?"
+
+"Yes--much!" she answered. "A great deal!"
+
+"Then," said Eldrick, "let me advise a certain counsel. Two heads are
+better than one. Let me ask Mr. Collingwood to come here."
+
+He was watching his visitor narrowly as he said this, and he saw a faint
+rise of colour in her cheeks. But for the moment she did not answer, and
+Eldrick saw that she was thinking.
+
+"I can get him across from his chambers in a few minutes," he said.
+"He's sure to be in just now."
+
+"Can I have a few minutes to decide?" asked Nesta.
+
+Eldrick jumped up.
+
+"Of course!" he said. "I'll leave you a while. It so happens I want to
+see my partner, I'll go up to his room, and return to you presently."
+
+Nesta, left alone, gave herself up to deep thought, and to a careful
+reckoning of her position. She was longing to confide in some
+trustworthy person or persons, for Pratt's revelations had plunged her
+into a maze of perplexity. But her difficulties were many. First of all,
+she would have to tell all about the terrible charge brought by Pratt
+against her mother. Then about the second which he professed to--or
+probably did--hold. What sort of a secret could it be? And supposing her
+advisers suggested strong measures against Pratt--what then, about the
+danger to her mother, in a twofold direction?
+
+Would it be better, wiser, if she kept all this to herself at present,
+and waited for events to develop? But at the mere thought of that, she
+shrank, feeling mentally and physically afraid--to keep all that
+knowledge to herself, to brood over it in secret, to wonder what it all
+meant, what lay beneath, what might develop, that was more than she felt
+able to bear. And when Eldrick came back she looked at him and nodded.
+
+"I should like to talk to you and Mr. Collingwood," she said quietly.
+
+Collingwood came across to Eldrick's office at once. And to these two
+Nesta unbosomed herself of every detail that she could remember of her
+interview with Pratt--and as she went on, from one thing to another, she
+saw the men's faces grow graver and graver, and realized that this was a
+more anxious matter than she had thought.
+
+"That's all," she said in the end. "I don't think I've forgotten
+anything. And even now, I don't know if I've done right to tell you all
+this. But--I don't think I could have faced it--alone!"
+
+"My dear Miss Mallathorpe!" said Eldrick earnestly. "You've done the
+wisest thing you probably ever did in your life! Now," he went on,
+looking at Collingwood, "just let us all three realize what is to me a
+more important fact. Nobody would be more astonished than Pratt to know
+that you have taken the wise step you have. You agree, Collingwood?"
+
+"Yes!" answered Collingwood, after a moment's reflection. "I think so."
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe doesn't quite see what we mean," said Eldrick, turning
+to Nesta. "We mean that Pratt firmly believed, when he told you what he
+did, that for your mother's sake and your own, you would keep his
+communication a dead secret. He firmly believed that you would never
+dare to tell anybody what he told you. Most people--in your
+position--wouldn't have told. They'd have let the secret eat their lives
+out. You're a wise and a sensible young woman! And the thing is--we
+must let Pratt remain under the impression that you are keeping your
+knowledge to yourself. Let him continue to believe that you'll remain
+silent under fear. And let us meet his secret policy with a secret
+strategy of our own!"
+
+Again he glanced at Collingwood, and again Collingwood nodded assent.
+
+"Now," continued Eldrick, "just let us consider matters for a few
+minutes from the position which has newly arisen. To begin with. Pratt's
+account of your mother's dealings about the foot-bridge is a very clever
+and plausible one. I can see quite well that it has caused you great
+pain; so before I go any further, just let me say this to you--don't you
+attach one word of importance to it!"
+
+Nesta uttered a heartfelt cry of relief.
+
+"Oh!" she exclaimed. "If you knew how thankful I should be to know that
+it's all lies--that he was lying! Can I really think that--after what I
+saw?"
+
+"I won't ask you to think that he's telling lies--just now," answered
+Eldrick, with a glance at Collingwood, "but I'll ask you to believe that
+your mother could put a totally different aspect and complexion on all
+her actions and words in connection with the entire affair. My
+impression, of course," he went on, with something very like a wink at
+Collingwood, "is that Mrs. Mallathorpe, when she wrote that letter to
+Pratt, intended to have the bridge mended first thing next morning, and
+that something prevented that being done, and that when she was seen
+about the shrubberies in the afternoon, she was on her way to meet Pratt
+before he could reach the dangerous point, so that she could warn him.
+What do you say, Collingwood?"
+
+"I should say," answered Collingwood, regarding the solicitor earnestly,
+and speaking with great gravity of manner, "that that would make an
+admirable line of defence to any charge which Pratt was wicked enough to
+prefer."
+
+"You don't think my mother meant--meant to----" exclaimed Nesta, eagerly
+turning from one man to the other. "You--don't?"
+
+"There is no evidence worth twopence against your mother!" replied
+Eldrick soothingly. "Put everything that Pratt has said against her
+clear out of your mind. Put all recent events out of your mind! Don't
+interfere with Pratt--just now. The thing to be done about Pratt is
+this--and it's the only thing. We must find out--exactly, as secretly as
+possible--what this secret is of which he speaks. What is this hold on
+Mrs. Mallathorpe? What is this document to which he refers? In other
+words, we must work back to some point which at present we can't see. At
+least, I can't see it. But--we may discover it. What do you say,
+Collingwood?"
+
+"I agree entirely," answered Collingwood. "Let Pratt rest in his fancied
+security. The thing is, certainly, to go back. But--to what point?"
+
+"That we must consider later," said Eldrick. "Now--for the present, Miss
+Mallathorpe,--you are, I suppose, going back home?"
+
+"Yes, at once," answered Nesta. "I have my car at the _Crown Hotel_."
+
+"I should just like to know something," continued Eldrick again, looking
+at Collingwood as if for approval. "That is--Mrs. Mallathorpe's present
+disposition towards affairs in general and Pratt in particular. Miss
+Mallathorpe!--just do something which I will now suggest to you. When
+you reach home, see your mother--she is still, I understand, an invalid,
+though evidently able to transact business. Just approach her gently and
+kindly, and tell her that you are a little--should we say
+uncomfortable?--about certain business arrangements which you hear she
+has made with Mr. Pratt, and ask her, if she won't talk them over with
+you, and give you her full confidence. It's now half-past twelve,"
+continued Eldrick, looking at his watch. "You'll be home before lunch.
+See your mother early in the afternoon, and then telephone, briefly, the
+result to me, here, at four o'clock. Then--Mr. Collingwood and I will
+have a consultation."
+
+He motioned Collingwood to remain where he was, and himself saw Nesta
+down to the street. When he came back to his room he shook his head at
+the young barrister.
+
+"Collingwood!" he said. "There's some dreadful business afloat in all
+this! And it's all the worse because of the fashion in which Pratt
+talked to that girl. She's evidently a very good memory--she narrated
+that conversation clearly and fully. Pratt must be very sure of his hand
+if he showed her his cards in that way--his very confidence in himself
+shows what a subtle network he's either made or is making. I question if
+he'd very much care if he knew that we know. But he mustn't know
+that--yet. We must reply to his mine with a counter-mine!"
+
+"What do you think of Pratt's charge against Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick made a wry face.
+
+"Looks bad!--very, very bad, Collingwood!" he answered. "Art and scheme
+of a desperate woman, of course. But--we mustn't let her daughter think
+we believe it. Let her stick to the suggestion I made--which, as you
+remarked, would certainly make a very good line of defence, supposing
+Pratt even did accuse her. But now--what on earth is this document
+that's been mentioned--this paper of which Pratt has possession? Has
+Mrs. Mallathorpe at some time committed forgery--or bigamy--or--what is
+it? One thing's sure, however--we've got to work quietly. We mustn't let
+Pratt know that we're working. I hope he doesn't know that Miss
+Mallathorpe came here. Will you come back about four and hear what
+message she sends me? After that, we could consult."
+
+Collingwood went away to his chambers. He was much occupied just then,
+and had little time to think of anything but the work in hand. But as he
+ate his lunch at the club which he had joined on settling in Barford, he
+tried to get at some notion of the state of things, and once more his
+mind reverted to the time of his grandfather's death, and his own
+suspicions about Pratt at that period. Clearly that was a point to which
+they must hark back--he himself must make more inquiries about the
+circumstances of Antony Bartle's last hours. For this affair would not
+have to rest where it was--it was intolerable that Nesta Mallathorpe
+should in any way be under Pratt's power. He went back to Eldrick at
+four o'clock with a suggestion or two in his mind. And at the sight of
+him Eldrick shook his head.
+
+"I've had that telephone message from Normandale," he said, "five
+minutes ago. Pretty much what I expected--at this juncture, anyway. Mrs.
+Mallathorpe absolutely declines to talk business with even her daughter
+at present--and earnestly desires that Mr. Linford Pratt may be left
+alone."
+
+"Well?" asked Collingwood after a pause. "What now?"
+
+"We must do what we can--secretly, privately, for the daughter's sake,"
+said Eldrick. "I confess I don't quite see a beginning, but----"
+
+Just then the private door opened, and Pascoe, a somewhat
+lackadaisical-mannered man, who always looked half-asleep, and was in
+reality remarkably wide-awake, lounged in, nodded to Collingwood, and
+threw a newspaper in front of his partner.
+
+"I say, Eldrick," he drawled, as he removed a newly-lighted cigar from
+his lips. "There's an advertisement here which seems to refer to that
+precious protégé of yours, who left you with such scant ceremony. Same
+name, anyhow!"
+
+Eldrick snatched up the paper, glanced at it and read a few words aloud.
+
+"INFORMATION WANTED about James Parrawhite, at one time in practice as a
+solicitor."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT
+
+
+Eldrick looked up at his partner with a sharp, confirmatory glance.
+
+"That's our Parrawhite, of course!" he said. "Who's after him, now?" And
+he went on to read the rest of the advertisement, murmuring its
+phraseology half-aloud: "'in practice as a solicitor at Nottingham and
+who left that town six years ago. If the said James Parrawhite will
+communicate with the undersigned he will hear something greatly to his
+advantage. Any person able to give information as to his whereabouts
+will be suitably rewarded. Apply to Halstead & Byner, 56B, St. Martin's
+Chambers, London, W.C.' Um!--Pascoe, hand over that Law List."
+
+Collingwood looked on in silence while Eldrick turned over the pages of
+the big book which his partner took down from a shelf. He wondered at
+Eldrick's apparent and almost eager interest.
+
+"Halstead & Byner are not solicitors," announced Eldrick presently.
+"They must be inquiry agents or something of that sort. Anyway, I'll
+write to them, Pascoe, at once."
+
+"You don't know where the fellow is," said Pascoe. "What's the good?"
+
+"No--but we know where he last was," retorted Eldrick. He turned to
+Collingwood as the junior partner sauntered out of the room. "Rather odd
+that Pascoe should draw my attention to that just now," he remarked.
+"This man Parrawhite was, in a certain sense, mixed up with Pratt--at
+least, Pratt and I are the only two people who know the secret of
+Parrawhite's disappearance from these offices. That was just about the
+time of your grandfather's death."
+
+Collingwood immediately became attentive. His first suspicions of Pratt
+were formed at the time of which Eldrick spoke, and any reference to
+events contemporary excited his interest.
+
+"Who was or is--this man you're talking of?" he asked.
+
+"Bad lot--very!" answered Eldrick, shaking his head. "He and I were
+articled together, at the same time, to the same people: we saw a lot of
+each other as fellow articled clerks. He afterwards practised in
+Nottingham, and he held some good appointments. But he'd a perfect mania
+for gambling--the turf--and he went utterly wrong, and misappropriated
+clients' money, and in the end he got into prison, and was, of course,
+struck off the rolls. I never heard anything of him for years, and then
+one day, some time ago, he turned up here and begged me to give him a
+job. I did--and I'll do him the credit to say that he earned his money.
+But--in the end, his natural badness broke out. One afternoon--I'm
+careless about some things--I left some money lying in this
+drawer--about forty pounds in notes and gold--and next morning
+Parrawhite never came to business. We've never seen or heard of him
+since."
+
+"You mentioned Pratt," said Collingwood.
+
+"Only Pratt and I know--about the money," replied Eldrick. "We kept it
+secret--I didn't want Pascoe to know I'd been so careless. Pascoe didn't
+like Parrawhite--and he doesn't know his record. I only told him that
+Parrawhite was a chap I'd known in better circumstances and wanted to
+give a hand to."
+
+"You said it was about the time of my grandfather's death?" asked
+Collingwood.
+
+"It was just about then--between his death and his funeral I should
+say," answered Eldrick, "The two events are associated in my mind.
+Anyway, I'd like to know what it is that these people want Parrawhite
+for. If it's money that's come to him, it'll be of no advantage--it'll
+only go where all the rest's gone."
+
+Collingwood lost interest in Parrawhite. Parrawhite appeared to have
+nothing to do with the affairs in which he was interested. He sat down
+and began to tell Eldrick about his own suspicions of Pratt at the time
+of Antony Bartle's death; of what Jabey Naylor had told him about the
+paper taken from the _History of Barford_; of the lad's account of the
+old man's doings immediately afterwards; and of his own proceedings
+which had led him to believe for the time being that his suspicions were
+groundless.
+
+"But now," he went on, "a new idea occurs to me. Suppose that that
+paper, found by my grandfather in a book which had certainly belonged to
+the late John Mallathorpe, was something important relating to Mrs.
+Mallathorpe? Suppose that my grandfather brought it across here to you?
+Suppose that finding you out, he showed it to Pratt? As my grandfather
+died suddenly, with nobody but Pratt there, what was there to prevent
+Pratt from appropriating that paper if he saw that it would give him a
+hold over Mrs. Mallathorpe? We know now that he has some document in his
+possession which does give him a hold--may it not be that of which the
+boy Naylor told me?"
+
+"Might be," agreed Eldrick. "But--my opinion is, taking things all
+together, that the paper which Antony Bartle found was the one you
+yourself discovered later--the list of books. No--I'll tell you what I
+think. I believe that the document which Pratt told Miss Mallathorpe he
+holds, and to which her mother referred in the letter asking Pratt to
+meet her, is probably--most probably!--one which he discovered in
+searching out his relationship to Mrs. Mallathorpe. He's a cute
+chap--and he may have found some document which--well, I'll tell you
+what it might be--something which would upset the rights of Harper
+Mallathorpe to his uncle's estates. No other relatives came forward, or
+were heard of, or were discoverable when John Mallathorpe was killed in
+that chimney accident; but there may be some--there may be one in
+particular. That's my notion!--and I intend, in the first place, to make
+a personal search of the parish registers from which Pratt got his
+information. He may have discovered something there which he's keeping
+to himself."
+
+"You think that is the course to adopt?" asked Collingwood, after a
+moment's reflection.
+
+"At present--yes," replied Eldrick. "And while I'm making it--I'll do it
+myself--we'll just go on outwardly--as if nothing had happened. If I
+meet Pratt--as I shall--I shall not let him see that I know anything. Do
+you go on in just the usual way. Go out to Normandale Grange now and
+then--and tell Miss Mallathorpe to think no more of her interview with
+Pratt until we've something to talk to her about. You talk to her
+about--something else."
+
+When Collingwood had left him Eldrick laid a telegram form on his
+plotting pad, and after a brief interval of thought wrote out a message
+addressed to the people whose advertisement had attracted Pascoe's
+attention.
+
+ "HALSTEAD & BYNER, 56B, St. Martin's Chambers, London, W.C.
+
+ "I can give you definite information concerning James Parrawhite
+ if you will send representative to see me personally.
+
+ "CHARLES ELDRICK, Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford."
+
+After Eldrick had sent off a clerk with this message to the nearest
+telegraph office, he sat thinking for some time. And at the close of his
+meditations, and after some turning over of a diary which lay on his
+desk, he picked up pen and paper, and drafted an advertisement of his
+own.
+
+ "TEN POUNDS REWARD will be paid to any person who can give
+ reliable and useful information as to James Parrawhite, who
+ until November last was a clerk in the employ of Messrs. Eldrick
+ & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford, and who is believed to have left
+ the town on the evening of November 23.--Apply to Mr. CHARLES
+ ELDRICK, of the above firm."
+
+"Worth risking ten pounds on--anyway," muttered Eldrick. "Whether these
+London people will cover it or not. Here!" he went on, turning to a
+clerk who had just entered the room. "Make three copies of this
+advertisement, and take one to each of the three newspaper offices, and
+tell 'em to put it in their personal column tonight."
+
+He sat musing for some time after he was left alone again, and when he
+at last rose, it was with a shake of the head.
+
+"I wonder if Pratt told me the truth that morning?" he said to himself.
+"Anyway, he's now being proved to be even deeper than I'd ever
+considered him. Well--other folk than Pratt are possessed of pretty good
+wits."
+
+Before he left the office that evening Eldrick was handed a telegram
+from Messrs. Halstead & Byner, of St. Martin's Chambers, informing him
+that their Mr. Byner would travel to Barford by the first express next
+morning, and would call upon him at eleven o'clock.
+
+"Then they have some important news for Parrawhite," mused Eldrick, as
+he put the message in his pocket and went off to his club. "Inquiry
+agents don't set off on long journeys at a moment's notice for a matter
+of a trifling agency. But--where is Parrawhite?"
+
+He awaited the arrival of Mr. Byner next morning with considerable
+curiosity. And soon after eleven there was shown in to him, a smart,
+well-dressed, alert-looking young man, who, having introduced himself as
+Mr. Gerald Byner, immediately plunged into business.
+
+"You can tell me something of James Parrawhite, Mr. Eldrick?" he began.
+"We shall be glad--we've been endeavouring to trace him for some months.
+It's odd that you didn't see our advertisement before."
+
+"I don't look at that sort of advertisement," replied Eldrick. "I
+believe it was by mere accident that my partner saw yours yesterday
+afternoon. But now, a question or two first. What are you--inquiry
+agents?"
+
+"Just so, sir--inquiry agents--with a touch of private detective
+business," answered Mr. Gerald Byner with a smile. "We undertake to find
+people, to watch people, to recover lost property, and so on. In this
+case we're acting for Messrs. Vickers, Marshall & Hebbleton, Solicitors,
+of Cannon Street. They want James Parrawhite badly."
+
+"Why?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," replied Byner with a dry laugh, "there's about twenty
+thousand pounds waiting for him, in their hands."
+
+Eldrick whistled with astonishment.
+
+"Whew!" he said. "Twenty thousand--for Parrawhite! My good sir--if
+that's so, and if, as you say, you've been advertising----"
+
+"Advertising in several papers," interrupted Byner. "Dailies, weeklies,
+provincials. Never had one reply, till your wire."
+
+"Then--Parrawhite must be dead!" said Eldrick. "Or--in gaol, under
+another name. Twenty thousand pounds--waiting for Parrawhite! If
+Parrawhite was alive, man, or at liberty, he wouldn't let twenty
+thousand pence wait five minutes! I know him!"
+
+"What can you tell me, Mr. Eldrick?" asked the inquiry agent.
+
+Eldrick told all he knew--concealing nothing. And Byner listened
+silently and eagerly.
+
+"There's something strikes me at once," he said. "You say that with him
+disappeared three or four ten-pound notes of yours. Have you the numbers
+of those notes?"
+
+"I can't say," replied Eldrick, doubtfully. "I haven't, certainly.
+But--they were paid in to our head-clerk, Pratt, and I think he used to
+enter such things in a sort of day-ledger. I'll get it."
+
+He went into the clerks' office and presently returned with an oblong,
+marble-backed book which he began to turn over.
+
+"This may be what you ask about," he said at last. "Here, under date
+November 23, are some letters and figures which obviously refer to
+bank-notes. You can copy them if you like."
+
+"Another question, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner as he made a note of the
+entries. "You say some cheque forms were abstracted from a book of yours
+at the same time. Have you ever heard of any of these cheque forms being
+made use of?"
+
+"Never!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"No forgery of your name or anything?" suggested the caller.
+
+"No," said Eldrick. "There's been nothing of that sort."
+
+"I can soon ascertain if these bank-notes have reached the Bank of
+England," said Byner. "That's a simple matter. Now suppose they
+haven't!"
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"You know, of course," continued Byner, "that it doesn't take long for a
+Bank of England note, once issued, to get back to the Bank? You know,
+too, that it's never issued again. Now if those notes haven't been
+presented at the Bank--where are they? And if no use has been made of
+your stolen cheques--where are they?"
+
+"Good!" agreed Eldrick. "I see that you ought to do well in your special
+line of business. Now--are you going to pursue inquiries for Parrawhite
+here in Barford, after what I've told you?"
+
+"Certainly!" said Byner. "I came down prepared to stop awhile. It's
+highly important that this man should be found--highly important," he
+added smiling, "to other people than Parrawhite himself."
+
+"In what way?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Why," replied Byner, "if he's dead--as he may be--this money goes to
+somebody else--a relative. The relative would be very glad to hear he is
+dead! But--definite news will be welcome, in any case. Oh, yes, now that
+I've got down here, I shall do my best to trace him. You have the
+address of the woman he lodged with, you say. I shall go there first, of
+course. Then I must try to find out what he did with himself in his
+spare time. But, from all you tell me, it's my impression he's
+dead--unless, as you say, he's got into prison again--possibly under
+another name. It seems impossible that he should not have seen our
+advertisements."
+
+"You never advertised in any Yorkshire newspapers?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"No," said Byner. "Because we'd no knowledge of his having come so far
+North. We advertised in the Midland papers. But then, all the London
+papers, daily and weekly, that we used come down to Yorkshire."
+
+"Parrawhite," said Eldrick reflectively, "was a big newspaper reader. He
+used to go to the Free Library reading-room a great deal. I begin to
+think he must certainly be dead--or locked up. However, in supplement of
+your endeavours, I did a little work of my own last night. There you
+are!" he went on, picking up the local papers and handing them over. "I
+put that in--we'll see if any response comes. But now a word, Mr. Byner,
+since you've come to me. You have heard me mention my late
+clerk--Pratt?"
+
+"Yes," answered Byner.
+
+"Pratt has left us, and is in business as a sort of estate agent in the
+next street," continued Eldrick. "Now I have particular reasons--most
+particular reasons!--why Pratt should remain in absolute ignorance of
+your presence in the town. If you should happen to come across him--as
+you may, for though there are a quarter of a million of us here, it's a
+small place, compared with London--don't let him know your business."
+
+"I'm not very likely to do that, Mr. Eldrick," remarked Byner quietly.
+
+"Aye, but you don't take my meaning," said Eldrick eagerly. "I mean
+this--it's just possible that Pratt may see that advertisement of yours,
+and that he may write to your firm. In that case, as he's here, and
+you're here, your partner would send his letter to you. Don't deal with
+it--here. Don't--if you should come across Pratt, even let him know your
+name!"
+
+"When I've a job of this sort," replied Byner, "I don't let anybody know
+my name--except people like you. When I register at one of your hotels
+presently, I shall be Mr. Black of London. But--if this Pratt wanted to
+give any information about Parrawhite, he'd give it to you, surely, now
+that you've advertised."
+
+"No, he wouldn't!" asserted Eldrick. "Why? Because he's told me all he
+knows--or says he knows--already!"
+
+The inquiry agent looked keenly at the solicitor for a moment during
+which they both kept silence. Then Byner smiled.
+
+"You said--'or says he knows,'" he remarked. "Do you think he didn't
+tell the truth about Parrawhite?"
+
+"I should say--now--it's quite likely he didn't," answered Eldrick. "The
+truth is, I'm making some inquiry myself about Pratt--and I don't want
+this to interfere with it. You keep me informed of what you find out,
+and I'll help you all I can while you're here. It may be----"
+
+A clerk came into the room and looked at his master.
+
+"Mr. George Pickard, of the _Green Man_ at Whitcliffe, sir," he said.
+
+"Well?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Wants to see you about that advertisement in the paper this morning,
+sir," continued the clerk.
+
+Eldrick looked at Byner and smiled significantly. Then he turned towards
+the door.
+
+"Bring Mr. Pickard in," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE CONFIDING LANDLORD
+
+
+The clerk presently ushered in a short, thick-set, round-faced man,
+apparently of thirty to thirty-five years of age, whose chief personal
+characteristics lay in a pair of the smallest eyes ever set in a human
+countenance and a mere apology for a nose. But both nose and eyes
+combined somehow to communicate an idea of profound inquiry as the round
+face in which they were placed turned from the solicitor to the man from
+London, and a podgy forefinger was lifted to a red forehead.
+
+"Servant, gentlemen," said the visitor. "Fine morning for the time of
+year!"
+
+"Take a chair, Mr. Pickard," replied Eldrick. "Let me see--from the
+_Green Man_, at Whitcliffe, I believe?"
+
+"Landlord, sir--had that house a many years," answered Pickard, as he
+took a seat near the wall. "Seven year come next Michaelmas, any road."
+
+"Just so--and you want to see me about the advertisement in this
+morning's paper?" continued Eldrick. "What about it--now?"
+
+The landlord looked at Eldrick and then at Eldrick's companion. The
+solicitor understood that look: it meant that what his caller had to say
+was of a private nature.
+
+"It's all right, Mr. Pickard," he remarked reassuringly. "This gentleman
+is here on just the same business--whatever you say will be treated as
+confidential--it'll go no further. You've something to tell about my
+late clerk, James Parrawhite."
+
+Pickard, who had been nervously fingering a white billycock hat, now put
+it down on the floor and thrust his hands into the pockets of his
+trousers as if to keep them safe while he talked.
+
+"It's like this here," he answered. "When I saw that there advertisement
+in the paper this mornin', says I to my missus, 'I'll away,' I says,
+'an' see Lawyer Eldrick about that there, this very day!' 'Cause you
+see, Mr. Eldrick, there is summat as I can tell about yon man 'at you
+mention--James Parrawhite. I've said nowt about it to nobody, up to now,
+'cause it were private business atween him and me, as it were, but I
+lost money over it, and of course, ten pound is ten pound, gentlemen."
+
+"Quite so," agreed Eldrick, "And you shall have your ten pounds if you
+can tell anything useful."
+
+"I don't know owt about it's being useful, sir, nor what use is to be
+made on it," said Pickard, "but I can tell you a bit o' truth, and you
+can do what you like wi' what I tell. But," he went on, lowering his
+voice and glancing at the door by which he had just entered, "there's
+another name 'at 'll have to be browt in--private, like. Name, as it so
+happens, o' one o' your clerks--t' head clerk, I'm given to
+understand--Mr. Pratt."
+
+Eldrick showed no sign of surprise. But he continued to look
+significantly at Byner as he turned to the landlord.
+
+"Mr. Pratt has left me," he said. "Left me three weeks ago. So you
+needn't be afraid, Mr. Pickard--say anything you like."
+
+"Oh, I didn't know," remarked Pickard. "It's not oft that I come down in
+t' town, and we don't hear much Barford news up our way. Well, it's this
+here, Mr. Eldrick--you know where my place is, of course?"
+
+Eldrick nodded, and turned to Byner.
+
+"I'd better explain to you," he said. "Whitcliffe is an outlying part of
+the town, well up the hills--a sort of wayside hamlet with a lot of our
+famous stone quarries in its vicinity. The _Green Man_, of which our
+friend here is the landlord, is an old-fashioned tavern by the
+roadside--where people are rather fond of dropping in on a Sunday, I
+fancy, eh, Mr. Pickard?"
+
+"You're right, sir," replied the landlord. "It makes a nice walk out on
+a Sunday. And it were on a Sunday, too, 'at I got to know this here
+James Parrawhite as you want to know summat about. He began coming to my
+place of a Sunday evenin', d'ye see, gentlemen?--he'd walk across t'
+valley up there to Whitcliffe and stop an hour or two, enjoyin' hisself.
+Well, now, as you're no doubt well aweer, Mr. Eldrick, he were a reight
+hand at talkin', were yon Parrawhite--he'd t' gift o' t' gab reight
+enough, and talked well an' all. And of course him an' me, we hed bits
+o' conversation at times, 'cause he come to t' house reg'lar and
+sometimes o' week-nights an' all. An' he tell'd me 'at he'd had a deal
+o' experience i' racin' matters--whether it were true or not, I couldn't
+say, but----"
+
+"True enough!" said Eldrick. "He had."
+
+"Well, so he said," continued Pickard, "and he was allus tellin' me 'at
+he could make a pile o' brass on t' turf if he only had capital. An' i'
+t' end, he persuaded me to start what he called investin' money with him
+i' that way--i' plain language, it meant givin' him brass to put on
+horses 'at he said was goin' to win, d'ye understand?"
+
+"Perfectly," replied Eldrick. "You gave him various amounts which he was
+to stake for you."
+
+"Just so, sir! And at first," said Pickard, with a shake of the head,
+"at first I'd no great reason to grumble. He cert'ny wor a good hand at
+spottin' a winner. But as time went on, I' t' greatest difficulty in
+gettin' a settlement wi' him, d'ye see? He wor just as good a hand at
+makin' excuses as he wor at pickin' out winners--better, I think! I
+nivver knew wheer I was wi' him--he'd pay up, and then he'd persuade me
+to go in for another do wi' t' brass I'd won, and happen we should lose
+that time, and then of course we had to hev another investment to get
+back what we'd dropped, and so it went on. But t' end wor this
+here--last November theer wor about fifty to sixty pound o' mine i' his
+hands, and I wanted it. I'd a spirit merchant's bill to settle, and I
+wanted t' brass badly for that. I knew Parrawhite had been paid, d'ye
+see, by t' turf agent, 'at he betted wi', and I plagued him to hand t'
+brass over to me. He made one excuse and then another--howsumivver, it
+come to that very day you're talkin' about i' your advertisement, Mr.
+Eldrick--the twenty-third o' November----"
+
+"Stop a minute, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Eldrick. "Now, how do you
+know--for a certainty--that this day you're going to talk about was the
+twenty-third of November?"
+
+The landlord, who had removed his hands from his pockets, and was now
+twiddling a pair of fat thumbs as he talked, chuckled slyly.
+
+"For a very good reason," he answered. "I had to pay that spirit bill I
+tell'd about just now on t' twenty-fourth, and that I'm going to tell
+you happened t' night afore t' twenty-fourth, so of course it were t'
+twenty-third. D'ye see?"
+
+"I see," asserted Eldrick. "That'll do! And now--what did happen?"
+
+"This here," replied Pickard. "On that night--t' twenty-third
+November--Parrawhite came into t' _Green Man_ at about, happen,
+half-past eight. He come into t' little private parlour to me, bold as
+brass--as indeed, he allers wor. 'Ye're a nice un!' I says. 'I've
+written yer three letters durin' t' last week, and ye've nivver answered
+one o' 'em!' 'I've come to answer i' person,' he says. 'There's nobbut
+one answer I want,' says I. 'Wheer's my money?' 'Now then, be quiet a
+bit,' he says. 'You shall have your money before the evening's over,' he
+says. 'Or, if not, as soon as t' banks is open tomorrow mornin',' he
+says. 'Wheer's it coomin' from?' says I. 'Now, never you mind,' he says.
+'It's safe!' 'I don't believe a word you're sayin',' says I. 'Ye're
+havin' me for t' mug!--that's about it.' An' I went on so at him, 'at i'
+t' end he tell'd me 'at he wor presently goin' to meet Pratt, and 'at he
+could get t' brass out o' Pratt an' as much more as iwer he liked to ax
+for. Well, I don't believe that theer, and I said so. 'What brass has
+Pratt?' says I. 'Pratt's nowt but a clerk, wi' happen three or four
+pound a week!' 'That's all you know,' he says. 'Pratt's become a gold
+mine, and I'm going to dig in it a bit. What's it matter to you,' he
+says, 'so long as you get your brass?' Well, of course, that wor true
+enough--all 'at I wanted just then were to handle my brass. And I tell'd
+him so. 'I'll brek thy neck, Parrawhite,' I says, 'if thou doesn't bring
+me that theer money eyther to-night or t' first thing tomorrow--so now!'
+'Don't talk rot!' he says. 'I've told you!' And he had money wi' him
+then--'nough to pay for drinks and cigars, any road, and we had a drink
+or two, and a smoke or two, and then he went out, sayin' he wor goin' to
+meet Pratt, and he'd be back at my place before closin' time wi' either
+t' cash or what 'ud be as good. An' I waited--and waited after closin'
+time, an' all. But I've nivver seen Parrawhite from that day to
+this---nor heerd tell on him neither!"
+
+Eldrick and Byner looked at each other for a moment. Then the solicitor
+spoke--quietly and with a significance which the agent understood.
+
+"Do you want to ask Mr. Pickard any questions?" he said.
+
+Byner nodded and turned to the landlord.
+
+"Did Parrawhite tell you where he was going to meet Pratt?" he asked.
+
+"He did," replied Pickard. "Near Pratt's lodgin' place."
+
+"Did--or does--Pratt live near you, then?"
+
+"Closish by--happen ten minutes' walk. There's few o' houses--a sort o'
+terrace, like, on t' edge o' what they call Whitcliffe Moor. Pratt
+lodged--lodges now for all I know to t' contrary--i' one o' them."
+
+"Did Parrawhite give you any idea that he was going to the house in
+which Pratt lodged?"
+
+"No! He were not goin' to t' house. I know he worn't. He tell'd me 'at
+he'd a good idea what time Pratt 'ud be home, 'cause he knew where he
+was that evening and he were goin' to meet him just afore Pratt got to
+his place. I know where he'd meet him."
+
+"Where?" asked Byner. "Tell me exactly. It's important."
+
+"Pratt 'ud come up fro' t' town i' t' tram," answered Pickard. "He'd
+approach this here terrace I tell'd you about by a narrow lane that runs
+off t' high road. He'd meet him there, would Parrawhite."
+
+"Did you ever ask any question of Pratt about Parrawhite?"
+
+"No--never! I'd no wish that Pratt should know owt about my dealin's
+with Parrawhite. When Parrawhite never come back--why, I kep' it all to
+myself, till now."
+
+"What do you think happened to Parrawhite, Mr. Pickard?" asked Byner.
+
+"Gow, I know what I think!" replied Pickard disgustedly. "I think 'at if
+he did get any brass out o' Pratt--which is what I know nowt about, and
+hewn't much belief in--he went straight away fro' t' town--vanished! I
+do know this--he nivver went back to his lodgin's that neet, 'cause I
+went theer mysen next day to inquire."
+
+Eldrick pricked up his ears at that. He remembered that he had sent
+Pratt to make inquiry at Parrawhite's lodgings on the morning whereon
+the money was missing.
+
+"What time of the day--on the twenty-fourth--was that, Mr. Pickard?" he
+asked.
+
+"Evenin', sir," replied the landlord. "They'd nivver seen naught of him
+since he went out the day before. Oh, he did me, did Parrawhite! Of
+course, I lost mi brass--fifty odd pounds!"
+
+Byner gave Eldrick a glance.
+
+"I think Mr. Pickard has earned the ten pounds you offered," he said.
+
+Eldrick took the hint and pulled out his cheque-book.
+
+"Of course, you're to keep all this private--strictly private, Mr.
+Pickard," he said as he wrote. "Not a word to a soul!"
+
+"Just as you order, sir," agreed Pickard. "I'll say nowt--to nobody."
+
+"And--perhaps tomorrow--perhaps this afternoon--you'll see me at the
+_Green Man_," remarked Byner. "I shall just drop in, you know. You
+needn't know me--if there's anybody about."
+
+"All right, sir--I understand," said Pickard.
+
+"Quiet's the word--what? Very good--much obliged to you, gentlemen."
+
+When the landlord had gone Eldrick motioned Byner to pick up his hat.
+"Come across the street with me," he said. "I want us to have a
+consultation with a friend of mine, a barrister, Mr. Collingwood. For
+this matter is assuming a very queer aspect, and we can't move too
+warily, nor consider all the features too thoroughly."
+
+Collingwood listened with deep interest to Eldrick's account of the
+morning's events. And once again he was struck by the fact that all
+these various happenings in connection with Pratt, and now with
+Parrawhite, took place at the time of Antony Bartle's death, and he said
+so.
+
+"True enough!" agreed Eldrick.
+
+"And once more," pointed out Collingwood. "We're hearing of a hold!
+Pratt claims to have a hold on Mrs. Mallathorpe--now it turns out that
+Parrawhite boasted of a hold on Pratt. Suppose all these things have a
+common origin? Suppose the hold which Parrawhite had--or has--on Pratt
+is part and parcel of the hold which Pratt has on Mrs. Mallathorpe? In
+that case--or cases--what is the best thing to do?"
+
+"Will you gentlemen allow me to suggest something?" said Byner. "Very
+well--find Parrawhite! Of all the people concerned in this, Parrawhite,
+from your account of him, anyway, Mr. Eldrick, is the likeliest person
+to extract the truth from."
+
+"There's a great deal in that suggestion," said Eldrick. "Do you know
+what I think?" he went on, turning to Collingwood, "Mr. Byner tells me
+he means to stay here until he has come across some satisfactory news of
+Parrawhite or solved the mystery of his disappearance. Well, now that
+we've found that there is some ground for believing that Parrawhite was
+in some fashion mixed up with Pratt about that time, why not place the
+whole thing in Mr. Byner's hands--let him in any case see what he can do
+about the Parrawhite-Pratt business of November twenty-third, eh?"
+
+"I take it," answered Collingwood, looking at the inquiry agent, "that
+Mr. Byner having heard what he has, would do that quite apart from us?"
+
+"Yes," said Byner. "Now that I've heard what Pickard had to say, I
+certainly shall follow that up."
+
+"I am following out something of my own," said Collingwood, turning to
+Eldrick. "I shall know more by this time tomorrow. Let us have a
+conference here--at noon."
+
+They separated on that understanding, and Byner went his own ways. His
+first proceeding was to visit, one after another, the Barford newspaper
+offices, and to order the insertion in large type, and immediately, of
+the Halstead-Byner advertisement for news of Parrawhite. His second was
+to seek the General Post Office, where he wrote out and dispatched a
+message to his partner in London. That message was in cypher--translated
+into English, it read as follows:--
+
+ "If person named Pratt sends any communication to us _re_
+ Parrawhite, on no account let him know I am in Barford, but
+ forward whatever he sends to me at once, addressed to H.D.
+ Black, Central Station Hotel."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE EYE-WITNESS
+
+
+When Collingwood said that he was following out something of his own, he
+was thinking of an interesting discovery which he had made. It was one
+which might have no significance in relation to the present
+perplexities--on the other hand, out of it might come a good deal of
+illumination. Briefly, it was that on the evening before this
+consultation with Eldrick & Byner, he had found out that he was living
+in the house of a man who had actually witnessed the famous catastrophe
+at Mallathorpe's Mill, whereby John Mallathorpe, his manager, and his
+cashier, together with some other bystanders, had lost their lives.
+
+On settling down in Barford, Collingwood had spent a couple of weeks in
+looking about him for comfortable rooms of a sort that appealed to his
+love of quiet and retirement. He had found them at last in an old house
+on the outskirts of the town--a fine old stone house, once a farmstead,
+set in a large garden, and tenanted by a middle-aged couple, who having
+far more room than they needed for themselves, had no objection to
+letting part of it to a business gentleman. Collingwood fell in love
+with this place as soon as he saw it. The rooms were large and full of
+delightful nooks and corners; the garden was rich in old trees; from it
+there were fine views of the valley beneath, and the heather-clad hills
+in the distance; within two miles of the town and easily approached by a
+convenient tram-route, it was yet quite out in the country.
+
+He was just as much set up by his landlady--a comfortable, middle-aged
+woman, who fostered true Yorkshire notions about breakfast, and knew how
+to cook a good dinner at night. With her Collingwood had soon come to
+terms, and to his new abode had transferred a quantity of books and
+pictures from London. He soon became acquainted with the domestic
+menage. There was the landlady herself, Mrs. Cobcroft, who, having no
+children of her own, had adopted a niece, now grown up, and a teacher in
+an adjacent elementary school: there was a strapping, rosy-cheeked
+servant-maid, whose dialect was too broad for the lodger to understand
+more than a few words of it; finally there was Mr. Cobcroft, a
+mild-mannered, quiet man who disappeared early in the morning, and was
+sometimes seen by Collingwood returning home in the evening.
+
+Lately, with the advancing spring, this unobtrusive individual was seen
+about the garden at the end of the day: Collingwood had so seen him on
+the evening before the talk with Eldrick and Byner, busied in setting
+seeds in the flower-beds. And he had asked Mrs. Cobcroft, just then in
+his sitting-room, if her husband was fond of gardening.
+
+"It's a nice change for him, sir," answered the landlady. "He's kept
+pretty close at it all day in the office yonder at Mallathorpe's Mill,
+and it does him good to get a bit o' fresh air at nights, now that the
+fine weather's coming on. That was one reason why we took this old
+place--it's a deal better air here nor what it is in the town."
+
+"So your husband is at Mallathorpe's Mill, eh?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Been there--in the counting-house--boy and man, over thirty years,
+sir," replied Mrs. Cobcroft.
+
+"Did he see that terrible affair then--was it two years ago?"
+
+The landlady shook her head and let out a weighty sigh.
+
+"Aye, I should think he did!" she answered. "And a nice shock it gave
+him, too!--he actually saw that chimney fall--him and another clerk were
+looking out o' the counting-house window when it gave way."
+
+Collingwood said no more then--except to remark that such a sight must
+indeed have been trying to the nerves. But for purposes of his own he
+determined to have a talk with Cobcroft, and the next evening, seeing
+him in his garden again, he went out to him and got into conversation,
+and eventually led up to the subject of Mallathorpe's Mill, the new
+chimney of which could be seen from a corner of the garden.
+
+"Your wife tells me," observed Collingwood, "that you were present when
+the old chimney fell at the mill yonder?"
+
+Cobcroft, a quiet, unassuming man, usually of few words, looked along
+the hillside at the new chimney, and nodded his head. A curious,
+far-away look came into his eyes.
+
+"I was, sir!" he said. "And I hope I may never see aught o' that sort
+again, as long as ever I live. It was one o' those things a man can
+never forget!"
+
+"Don't talk about it if you don't want to," remarked Collingwood. "But
+I've heard so much about that affair that----"
+
+"Oh, I don't mind talking about it," replied Cobcroft. He leaned over
+the fence of his garden, still gazing at the mill in the distance.
+"There were others that saw it, of course: lots of 'em. But I was close
+at hand--our office was filled with the dust in a few seconds."
+
+"It was a sudden affair?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It was one of those affairs," answered Cobcroft slowly, "that some folk
+had been expecting for a long time--only nobody had the sense to see
+that it might happen at some unexpected minute. It was a very old
+chimney. It looked all right--stood plumb, and all that. But Mr.
+Mallathorpe--my old master, Mr. John Mallathorpe, I'm talking of--he got
+an idea from two or three little things, d'ye see, that it wasn't as
+safe as it ought to be. And he got a couple of these professional
+steeplejacks to examine it. They made a thorough examination, too--so
+far as one could tell by what they did. They'd been at the job several
+days when the accident happened. One of 'em had only just come down when
+the chimney fell. Mr. Mallathorpe, himself, and his manager, and his
+cashier, had just stepped out of the counting-house and crossed the yard
+to hear what this man had got to say when--down it came! Not the
+slightest warning at the time. It just--collapsed!"
+
+"You saw the actual collapse?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--didn't I?" exclaimed Cobcroft. "Another man and myself were
+looking out of the office window, right opposite. It fell in the
+queerest way--like this," he went on, holding up his garden-rake.
+"Supposing this shaft was the chimney--standing straight up. As we
+looked we saw it suddenly bulge out, on all sides--it was a square
+chimney, same size all the way up till you got to the cornice at the
+top--bulge out, d'ye see, just about half-way up--simultaneous, like.
+Then--down it came with a roar that they heard over half the town! O'
+course, there were some two or three thousands of tons of stuff in that
+chimney--and when the dust was cleared a bit there it was in one great
+heap, right across the yard. And it was a good job," concluded Cobcroft,
+reflectively, "that it fell straight--collapsed in itself, as you might
+say--for if it had fallen slanting either way, it 'ud ha' smashed right
+through some of the sheds, and there'd ha' been a terrible loss of
+life."
+
+"Mr. John Mallathorpe was killed on the spot, I believe?" suggested
+Collingwood.
+
+"Aye--and Gaukrodger, and Marshall, and the steeplejack that had just
+come down, and another or two," said Cobcroft. "They'd no chance--they
+were standing in a group at the very foot, talking. They were all killed
+there and then--instantaneous. Some others were struck and injured--one
+or two died. Yes, sir,--I'm not very like to forget that!"
+
+"A terrible experience!" agreed Collingwood. "It would naturally fix
+itself on your memory."
+
+"Aye--my memory's very keen about it," said Cobcroft. "I remember every
+detail of that morning. And," he continued, showing a desire to become
+reminiscent, "there was something happened that morning, before the
+accident, that I've oft thought over and has oft puzzled me. I've never
+said aught to anybody about it, because we Yorkshiremen we're not given
+to talking about affairs that don't concern us, and after all, it was
+none o' mine! But you're a law gentleman, and I dare say you get things
+told to you in confidence now and then, and, of course, this is between
+you and me. I'll not deny that I have oft thought that I would like to
+tell it to a lawyer of some sort, and find out how it struck him."
+
+"Anything that you like to tell me, Mr. Cobcroft, I shall treat as a
+matter of confidence--until you tell me it's no longer a secret,"
+answered Collingwood.
+
+"Why," continued Cobcroft, "it isn't what you rightly would call a
+secret--though I don't think anybody knows aught about it but myself! It
+was just this--and it may be there's naught in it but a mere fancy o'
+mine. That morning, before the accident happened, I was in and out of
+the private office a good deal--carrying in and out letters, and account
+books, and so on. Mr. John Mallathorpe's private office, ye'll
+understand, sir, opened out of our counting-house--as it does still--the
+present manager, Mr. Horsfall, has it, just as it was. Well, now, on one
+occasion, when I went in there, to take a ledger back to the safe, Mr.
+Mallathorpe had his manager and cashier, Gaukrodger and Marshall in with
+him. Mr. Mallathorpe, he always used a stand-up desk to write at--never
+wrote sitting down, though he had a big desk in the middle of the room
+that he used to sit at to look over accounts or talk to people. Now when
+I went in, he and Gaukrodger and Marshall were all at this stand-up
+desk--in the window-place--and they were signing some papers. At least
+Gaukrodger had just signed a paper, and Marshall was taking the pen from
+him. 'Sign there, Marshall,' says Mr. Mallathorpe. And then he went on,
+'Now we'll sign this other--it's well to have these things in duplicate,
+in case one gets lost.' And then--well, then, I went out, and--why, that
+was all."
+
+"You've some idea in your mind about that," said Collingwood, who had
+watched Cobcroft closely as he talked. "What is it?"
+
+Cobcroft smiled--and looked round as if to ascertain that they were
+alone. "Why!" he answered in a low voice. "I'll tell you what I did
+wonder--some time afterwards. I dare say you're aware--it was all in the
+papers--that Mr. John Mallathorpe died intestate?"
+
+"Yes," asserted Collingwood. "I know that."
+
+"I've oft wondered," continued Cobcroft, "if that could ha' been his
+will that they were signing! But then I reflected a bit on matters. And
+there were two or three things that made me say naught at all--not a
+word. First of all, I considered it a very unlikely thing that a rich
+man like Mr. John Mallathorpe would make a will for himself. Second--I
+remembered that very soon after I'd been in his private office Marshall
+came out into the counting-house and gave the office lad a lot of
+letters and documents to take to the post--some of 'em big
+envelopes--and I thought that what I'd seen signed was some agreement or
+other that was in one of them. And third--and most important--no will
+was ever found in any of Mr. John Mallathorpe's drawers or safes or
+anywhere, though they turned things upside down at the office, and, I
+heard, at his house as well. Of course, you see, sir, supposing that to
+have been a will--why, the only two men who could possibly have proved
+it was were dead and gone! They were killed with him. And of course, the
+young people, the nephew and niece, they came in for everything--so
+there was an end of it. But--I've oft wondered what those papers were.
+One thing is certain, anyway!" concluded Cobcroft, with a grim laugh,
+"when those three signed 'em, they were picking up their pens for the
+last time!"
+
+"How long was it--after you saw the signing of those papers--that the
+accident occurred?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"It 'ud be twelve or fifteen minutes, as near as I can recollect,"
+replied Cobcroft. "A few minutes after I'd left the private office,
+Gaukrodger came out of it, alone, and stood at the door leading into the
+yard, looking up at the chimney. The steeple-jack was just coming down,
+and his mate was waiting for him at the bottom. Gaukrodger turned back
+to the private office and called Mr. Mallathorpe out. All three of 'em,
+Mallathorpe, Gaukrodger, Marshall, went out and walked across the yard
+to the chimney foot. They stood there talking a bit--and then--down it
+came!"
+
+Collingwood thought matters over. Supposing that the document which
+Cobcroft spoke of as being in process of execution before him were
+indeed duplicate copies of a will. What could have been done with them,
+in the few minutes which elapsed between the signing and the catastrophe
+to the chimney? It was scarcely likely that John Mallathorpe would have
+sent them away by post. If they had been deposited in his own pocket,
+they would have been found when his clothing was removed and examined.
+If they were in the private office when the three men left it----
+
+"You're sure the drawers, safe and so on in Mr. Mallathorpe's room were
+thoroughly searched--after his death?" he asked.
+
+"I should think they were!" answered Cobcroft laconically. "I helped at
+that, myself. There wasn't as much as an old invoice that was not well
+fingered and turned over. No!--I came to the conclusion that what I'd
+seen signed was some contract or something--sent off there and then by
+the lad to post."
+
+Collingwood made no further remark and asked no more questions. But he
+thought long and seriously that night, and he came to certain
+conclusions. First: what Cobcroft had seen signed was John Mallathorpe's
+will. Second: John Mallathorpe had made it himself and had taken the
+unusual course of making a duplicate copy. Third: John Mallathorpe had
+probably slipped the copy into the _History of Barford_ which was in his
+private office when he went out to speak to the steeple-jack. Fourth:
+that copy had come into Linford Pratt's hands through Antony Bartle.
+
+And now arose two big questions. What were the terms of that will?
+And--where was the duplicate copy? He was still putting these to himself
+when noon of the next day came and brought Eldrick and Byner for the
+promised serious consultation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE _GREEN MAN_
+
+
+Byner, in taking his firm's advertisement for Parrawhite to the three
+Barford newspaper offices, had done so with a special design--he wanted
+Pratt to see that a serious wish to discover Parrawhite was alive in
+more quarters than one. He knew that Pratt was almost certain to see
+Eldrick's advertisement in his own name; now he wanted Pratt to see
+another advertisement of the same nature in another name. Already he had
+some suspicion that Pratt had not told Eldrick the truth about
+Parrawhite, and that nothing would suit him so well as that Parrawhite
+should never be heard of or mentioned again: now he wished Pratt to
+learn that Parrawhite was much wanted, and was likely to be much
+mentioned--wherefore the supplementary advertisements with Halstead &
+Byner's name attached. It was extremely unlikely that Pratt could fail
+to see those advertisements.
+
+There were three newspapers in Barford: one a morning journal of large
+circulation throughout the county; the other two, evening journals,
+which usually appeared in three or four editions. As Byner stipulated
+for large type, and a prominent position, in the personal column of
+each, it was scarcely within the bounds of probability that a townsman
+like Pratt would miss seeing the advertisement. Most likely he would see
+it in all three newspapers. And if he had also seen Eldrick's similar
+advertisement, he would begin to think, and then----
+
+"Why, then," mused Byner, ruminating on his design, "then we will see
+what he will do!"
+
+Meanwhile, there was something he himself wanted to do, and on the
+morning following his arrival in the town, he set out to do it. Byner
+had been much struck by Pickard's account of his dealings with James
+Parrawhite on the evening which appeared to be the very last wherein
+Parrawhite was ever seen. He had watched the landlord of the _Green Man_
+closely as he told his story, and had set him down for an honest, if
+somewhat sly and lumpish soul, who was telling a plain tale to the best
+of his ability. Byner believed all the details of that story--he even
+believed that when Parrawhite told Pickard that he would find him fifty
+pounds that evening, or early next day, he meant to keep his word. In
+the circumstances--as far as Byner could reckon them up from what he had
+gathered--it would not have paid Parrawhite to do otherwise. Byner put
+the situation to himself in this fashion--Pratt had got hold of some
+secret which was being, or could be made to be, highly profitable to
+him. Parrawhite had discovered this, and was in a position to blackmail
+Pratt. Therefore Parrawhite would not wish to leave Pratt's
+neighbourhood--so long as there was money to be got out of Pratt,
+Parrawhite would stick to him like a leech. But if Parrawhite was to
+abide peaceably in Barford, he must pay Pickard that little matter of
+between fifty and sixty pounds. Accordingly, in Byner's opinion,
+Parrawhite had every honest intention of returning to the _Green Man_ on
+the evening of the twenty-third of November after having seen Pratt.
+And, in Byner's further--and very seriously considered--opinion, the
+whole problem for solution--possibly involving the solution of other and
+more important problems--was this: Did Parrawhite meet Pratt that night,
+and if he did what took place between them which prevented Parrawhite
+from returning to Pickard?
+
+It was in an endeavour to get at some first stage of a solution of this
+problem that Byner, having breakfasted at the _Central Hotel_ on his
+second day in the town, went out immediately afterwards, asked his way
+to Whitcliffe, and was directed to an electric tram which started from
+the Town Hall Square, and after running through a district of tall
+warehouses and squat weaving-sheds, began a long and steady climb to the
+heights along the town. When he left it, he found himself in a district
+eminently characteristic of that part of the country. The tram set him
+down at a cross-roads on a high ridge of land. Beneath him lay Barford,
+its towers and spires and the gables of its tall buildings showing
+amongst the smoke of its many chimneys. All about him lay open ground,
+broken by the numerous stone quarries of which Eldrick had spoken, and
+at a little distance along one of the four roads at the intersection of
+which he stood, he saw a few houses and cottages, one of which, taller
+and bigger than the rest, was distinguished by a pole, planted in front
+of its stone porch and bearing a swinging sign whereon was rudely
+painted the figure of a man in Lincoln green. Byner walked on to this,
+entered a flagged hall, and found himself confronting Pickard, who at
+sight of him, motioned him into a little parlour behind the bar.
+
+"Mornin', mister," said he. "You'll be all right in here--there's nobody
+about just now, and if my missis or any o' t' servant lasses sees yer,
+they'll tak' yer for a brewer's traveller, or summat o' that sort. Come
+to hev a look round, like--what?"
+
+"I want to have a look at the place where you told us Parrawhite was to
+meet Pratt that night," replied Byner. "I thought you would perhaps be
+kind enough to show me where it is."
+
+"I will, an' all--wi' pleasure," said the landlord, "but ye mun hev a
+drop o' summat first--try a glass o' our ale," he went on, with true
+Yorkshire hospitality. "I hev some bitter beer i' my cellar such as I'll
+lay owt ye couldn't get t' likes on down yonder i' Barford--no, nor i'
+London neyther!--I'll just draw a jug."
+
+Byner submitted to this evidence of friendliness, and Pickard, after
+disappearing into a dark archway and down some deeply worn stone steps,
+came back with a foaming jug, the sight of which seemed to give him
+great delight. He gazed admiringly at the liquor which he presently
+poured into two tumblers, and drew his visitor's attention to its
+colour.
+
+"Reight stuff that, mister--what?" he said. "I nobbut tapped that barril
+two days since, and I'd been keepin' it twelve month, so you've come in
+for it at what they call t' opportune moment. I say!" he went on, after
+pledging Byner and smacking his lips over the ale. "I heard summat last
+night 'at might be useful to you and Lawyer Eldrick--about this here
+Parrawhite affair."
+
+"Oh!" said Byner, at once interested. "What now?"
+
+"You'll ha' noticed, as you come along t' road just now, 'at there's a
+deal o' stone quarries i' this neighbourhood?" replied Pickard. "Well,
+now, of course, some o' t' quarry men comes in here. Last night theer
+wor sev'ral on 'em i' t' bar theer, talkin', and one on 'em wor readin'
+t' evenin' newspaper--t' _Barford Dispatch_. An' he read out that theer
+advertisement about Parrawhite--wi' your address i' London at t' foot on
+it. Well, theer wor nowt said, except summat about advertisin' for
+disappeared folk, but later on, one o' t' men, a young man, come to me,
+private like. 'I say, Pickard,' he says, 'between you an' me, worrn't t'
+name o' that man 'at used to come in here on a Sunday sometimes,
+Parrawhite? It runs a' my mind,' he says, ''at I've heerd you call him
+by that name.' 'Well, an' what if it wor?' I says. 'Nay, nowt much,' he
+says, 'but I see fro' t' _Dispatch_ 'at he's wanted, and I could tell a
+bit about him,' he says. 'What could ye tell?' says I--just like that
+theer. 'Why,' he says, 'this much--one night t' last back-end----'"
+
+"Stop a bit, Mr. Pickard," interrupted Byner. "What does that mean--that
+term 'back-end'?"
+
+"Why, it means t' end o' t' year!" answered the landlord. "What some
+folks call autumn, d'ye understand? 'One night t' last back-end,' says
+this young fellow, 'I wor hengin' about on t' quiet at t' end o' Stubbs'
+Lane,' he says: 'T' truth wor,' he says, 'I wor waitin' for a word wi' a
+young woman 'at lives i' that terrace at t' top o' Stubbs' Lane--she wor
+goin' to come out and meet me for half an hour or so. An,' he says, 'I
+see'd that theer feller 'at I think I've heerd you call Parrawhite, come
+out o' Stubbs' Lane wi' that lawyer chap 'at lives i' t' Terrace--Pratt.
+I know Pratt,' he says, ''cause them 'at he works for--Eldricks--once
+did a bit o' law business for me.' 'Where did you see 'em go to, then?'
+says I. 'I see'd 'em cross t' road into t' owd quarry ground,' he says.
+'I see'd 'em plain enough, tho' they didn't see me--I wor keepin' snug
+agen 't wall--it wor a moonlit night, that,' he says. 'Well,' I says,
+'an' what now?' 'Why,' he says, 'd'yer think I could get owt o' this
+reward for tellin that theer?' So I thowt pretty sharp then, d'ye see,
+mister. 'I'll tell yer what, mi lad,' I says. 'Say nowt to nobody--keep
+your tongue still--and I'll tell ye tomorrow night what ye can do--I
+shall see a man 'at's on that job 'tween now and then,' I says. So theer
+it is," concluded Pickard, looking hard at Byner. "D'yer think this
+chap's evidence 'ud be i' your line?"
+
+"Decidedly I do!" replied Byner. "Where is he to be found?"
+
+"I couldn't say wheer he lives," answered the landlord. "But it'll be
+somewhere close about; anyway, he'll be in here tonight. Bill Thomson t'
+feller's name is--decent young feller enough."
+
+"I must contrive to see him, certainly," said Byner. "Well, now, can you
+show me this Stubbs' Lane and the neighbourhood?"
+
+"Just step along t' road a bit and I'll join you in a few o' minutes,"
+assented Pickard. "We'd best not be seen leavin t' house together, or
+our folk'll think it's a put-up job. Walk forrard a piece."
+
+Byner strolled along the road a little way, and leaned over a wall until
+Mr. Pickard, wearing his white billycock hat and accompanied by a fine
+fox-terrier, lounged up with his thumbs in the armholes of his
+waistcoat. Together they went a little further along.
+
+"Now then!" said the landlord, crossing the road towards the entrance of
+a narrow lane which ran between two high stone walls. "This here is
+Stubbs' Lane--so called, I believe, 'cause an owd gentleman named
+similar used to hev a house here 'at's been pulled down. Ye see, it runs
+up fro' this high-road towards yon terrace o' houses. Folks hereabouts
+calls that terrace t' World's End, 'cause they're t' last houses afore
+ye get on to t' open moorlands. Now, that night 'at Parrawhite wor
+aimin' to meet Pratt, it wor i' this very lane. Pratt, when he left t'
+tram-car, t' other side o' my place, 'ud come up t' road, and up this
+lane. And it wor at t' top o' t' lane 'at Bill Thomson see'd Pratt and
+Parrawhite cross into what Bill called t' owd quarry ground."
+
+"Can we go into that?" asked Byner.
+
+"Nowt easier!" said Pickard. "It's a sort of open space where t' childer
+goes and plays about: they hev'n't worked no stone theer for many a long
+year--all t' stone's exhausted, like."
+
+He led Byner along the lane to its further end, pointed out the place
+where Thomson said he had seen Pratt and Parrawhite, and indicated the
+terrace of houses in which Pratt lived. Then he crossed towards the old
+quarries.
+
+"Don't know what they should want to come in here for--unless it wor to
+talk very confidential," said Pickard. "But lor bless yer!--it 'ud be
+quiet enough anywheer about this neighbourhood at that time o' neet.
+However, this is wheer Bill Thomson says he see'd 'em come."
+
+He led the way amongst the disused quarries, and Byner, following,
+climbed on a mound, now grown over with grass and weed, and looked about
+him. To his town eyes the place was something novel. He had never seen
+the like of it before. Gradually he began to understand it. The stone
+had been torn out of the earth, sometimes in square pits, sometimes in
+semi-circular ones, until the various veins and strata had become
+exhausted. Then, when men went away, Nature had stepped in to assert her
+rights. All over the despoiled region she had spread a new clothing of
+green. Turf had grown on the flooring of the quarries; ivy and bramble
+had covered the deep scars; bushes had sprung up; trees were already
+springing. And in one of the worn-out excavations some man had planted a
+kitchen-garden in orderly and formal rows and plots.
+
+"Dangerous place that there!" said Pickard suddenly. "If I'd known o'
+that, I shouldn't ha' let my young 'uns come to play about here. They
+might be tummlin' in and drownin' theirsens! I mun tell my missis to
+keep 'em away!"
+
+Byner turned--to find the landlord pointing at the old shaft which had
+gradually become filled with water. In the morning sunlight its surface
+glittered like a plane of burnished metal, but when the two men went
+nearer and gazed at it from its edge, the water was black and
+unfathomable to the eye.
+
+"Goodish thirty feet o' water in that there!" surmised Pickard. "It's
+none safe for childer to play about--theer's nowt to protect 'em. Next
+time I see Mestur Shepherd I shall mak' it my business to tell him so;
+he owt either to drain that watter off or put a fence around it."
+
+"Is Mr. Shepherd the property-owner?" asked Byner.
+
+"Aye!--it's all his, this land," answered Pickard. He pointed to a
+low-roofed house set amidst elms and chestnuts, some distance off across
+the moor. "Lives theer, does Mestur Shepherd--varry well-to-do man, he
+is."
+
+"How could that water be drained off?" asked Byner with assumed
+carelessness.
+
+"Easy enough!" replied Pickard. "Cut through yon ledge, and let it run
+into t' far quarry there. A couple o' men 'ud do that job in a day."
+
+Byner made no further remark. He and Pickard strolled back to the _Green
+Man_ together. And declining the landlord's invitation to step inside
+and take another glass, but promising to see him again very soon, the
+inquiry agent walked on to the tram-car and rode down to Barford to keep
+his appointment with Eldrick and Collingwood at the barrister's
+chambers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+THE DIRECT CHARGE
+
+
+While Byner was pursuing his investigations in the neighbourhood of the
+_Green Man_, Collingwood was out at Normandale Grange, discussing
+certain matters with Nesta Mallathorpe. He had not only thought long and
+deeply over his conversation with Cobcroft the previous evening, but had
+begun to think about the crucial point of the clerk's story as soon as
+he spoke in the morning, and the result of his meditations was that he
+rose early, intercepted Cobcroft before he started for Mallathorpe's
+Mill and asked his permission to re-tell the story to Miss Mallathorpe.
+Cobcroft raised no objection, and when Collingwood had been to his
+chambers and seen his letters, he chartered a car and rode out to
+Normandale where he told Nesta of what he had learned and of his own
+conclusions. And Nesta, having listened carefully to all he had to tell,
+put a direct question to him.
+
+"You think this document which Pratt told me he holds is my late uncle's
+will?" she said. "What do you suppose its terms to be?"
+
+"Frankly--these, or something like these," replied Collingwood. "And I
+get at my conclusions in this way. Your uncle died intestate--consequently,
+everything in the shape of real estate came to your brother and everything
+in personal property to your brother and yourself. Now, supposing that
+the document which Pratt boasts of holding is the will, one fact is very
+certain--the property, real or personal, is not disposed of in the way
+in which it became disposed of because of John Mallathorpe's intestacy.
+He probably disposed of it in quite another fashion. Why do I think that?
+Because the probability is that Pratt said to your mother, 'I have got
+John Mallathorpe's will! It doesn't leave his property to your son and
+daughter. Therefore, I have all of you at my mercy. Make it worth my
+while, or I will bring the will forward.' Do you see that situation?"
+
+"Then," replied Nesta, after a moment's reflection, "you do think that
+my mother was very anxious to get that document--a will--from Pratt?"
+
+Collingwood knew what she was thinking of--her mind was still uneasy
+about Pratt's account of the affair of the foot-bridge. But--the matter
+had to be faced.
+
+"I think your mother would naturally be very anxious to secure such a
+document," he said. "You must remember that according to Pratt's story
+to you, she tried to buy it from him--just as you did yourself, though
+you, of course, had no idea of what it was you wanted to buy."
+
+"What I wanted to buy," she answered readily, "was necessity from
+further interference! But--is there no way of compelling Pratt to give
+up that document--whatever it is? Can't he be made to give it up?"
+
+"A way is may be being made, just now--through another affair," replied
+Collingwood. "At present matters are vague. One couldn't go to Pratt and
+demand something at which one is, after all, only guessing. Your mother,
+of course, would deny that she knows what it is that Pratt holds.
+But--there is the possibility of the duplicate to which Cobcroft
+referred. Now, I want to put the question straight to you--supposing
+that duplicate will can be found--and supposing--to put it plainly---its
+terms dispossess you of all your considerable property--what then?"
+
+"Do you want the exact truth?" she asked. "Well, then, I should just
+welcome anything that cleared up all this mystery! What is it at
+present, this situation, but intolerable? I know that my
+mother is in Pratt's power, and likely to remain so as long as ever this
+goes on--probably for life. She will not give me her confidence. What is
+more, I am certain that she is giving it to Esther Mawson--who is most
+likely hand-in-glove with Pratt. Esther Mawson is always with her. I am
+almost sure that she communicates with Pratt through Esther Mawson. It
+is all what I say--intolerable! I had rather lose every penny that has
+come into my hands than have this go on."
+
+"Answer me a plain question," said Collingwood. "Is your mother fond of
+money, position--all that sort of thing?"
+
+"She is fond of power!" replied Nesta. "It pleased her greatly when we
+came into all this wealth to know that she was the virtual
+administrator. Even if she could only do it by collusion with Pratt, she
+would make a fight for all that she--and I--hold. It's useless to deny
+that. Don't forget," she added, looking appealingly at Collingwood,
+"don't forget that she has known what it was to be poor--and if one does
+come into money--I suppose one doesn't want to lose it again."
+
+"Oh, it's natural enough!" agreed Collingwood. "But--if things are as I
+think, Pratt would be an incubus, a mill-stone, for ever. Anyway, I came
+out to tell you what I've learned, and what I have an idea may be the
+truth, and above all, to get your definite opinion. You want the Pratt
+influence out of the way--at any cost?"
+
+"At any cost!" she affirmed. "Even if I have to go back to earning my
+own living! Whatever pleasure in life could there be for me, knowing
+that at the back of all this there is that--what?"
+
+"Pratt!" answered Collingwood. "Pratt! He's the shadow--with his deep
+schemes. However, as I said--there may be--developing at this
+moment--another way of getting at Pratt. Gentlemen like Pratt, born
+schemers, invariably forget one very important factor in life--the
+unexpected! Even the cleverest and most subtle schemer may have his
+delicate machinery broken to pieces by a chance bit of mere dust getting
+into it at an unexpected turn of the wheels. And to turn to plainer
+language--I'm going back to Barford now to hear what another man has to
+say concerning certain of Pratt's recent movements."
+
+Eldrick was already waiting when Collingwood reached his chambers: Byner
+came there a few moments later. Within half an hour the barrister had
+told his story of Cobcroft, and the inquiry agent his of his visit to
+the _Green Man_ and the quarries. And the solicitor listened quietly and
+attentively to both, and in the end turned to Collingwood.
+
+"I'll withdraw my opinion about the nature of the document which Pratt
+got hold of," he said. "What he's got is what you think--John
+Mallathorpe's will!"
+
+"If I may venture an opinion," remarked Byner, "that's dead certain!"
+
+"And now," continued Eldrick, "we're faced with a nice situation! Don't
+either of you forget this fact. Not out of willingness on her part, but
+because she's got to do it, Mrs. Mallathorpe and Pratt are partners in
+that affair. He's got the will--but she knows its contents. She'll pay
+any price to Pratt to keep them from ever becoming known or operative.
+But, as I say, don't you forget something!"
+
+"What?" asked Collingwood.
+
+Eldrick tapped the edge of the table, emphasizing his words as he spoke
+them.
+
+"They can destroy that will whenever they like!" he said. "And once
+destroyed, nothing can absolutely prove that it ever existed!"
+
+"The duplicate?" suggested Collingwood.
+
+"Nothing to give us the faintest idea as to its existence!" said
+Eldrick.
+
+"We might advertise," said Collingwood.
+
+"Lots of advertising was done when John Mallathorpe died," replied the
+solicitor. "No!--if any person had had it in possession, it would have
+turned up then. It may be--probably is--possibly must be--somewhere--and
+may yet come to light. But--there's another way of getting at Pratt.
+Through this Parrawhite affair. Pratt most likely had not the least
+notion that he would ever hear of Parrawhite again. He is going to hear
+of Parrawhite again! I am convinced now that Parrawhite knew something
+about this, and that Pratt squared him and got him away. Aren't you?" he
+asked, turning to Byner.
+
+But Byner smiled quietly and shook his head.
+
+"No!" he answered. "I am not, Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"You're not?" exclaimed Eldrick, surprised and wondering that anybody
+could fail to agree with him.
+
+"Why not, then?"
+
+"Because," replied Byner. "I am certain that Pratt murdered Parrawhite
+on the night of November twenty-third last. That's why. He didn't square
+him. He didn't get him away. He killed him!"
+
+The effect of this straightforward pronouncement of opinion on the two
+men who heard it was strikingly different. Collingwood's face at once
+became cold and inscrutable; his lips fixed themselves sternly; his eyes
+looked hard into a problematic future. But Eldrick flushed as if a
+direct accusation had been levelled at himself, and he turned on the
+inquiry agent almost impatiently.
+
+"Murder!" he exclaimed. "Oh, come! I--really, that's rather a stiff
+order! I dare say Pratt's been up to all sorts of trickery, and even
+deviltry--but murder is quite another thing. You're pretty ready to
+accuse him!"
+
+Byner moved his head in Collingwood's direction--and Eldrick turned and
+looked anxiously at Collingwood, who, finding the eyes of both men on
+him, opened his hitherto tight-shut lips.
+
+"I think it quite likely!" he said.
+
+Byner laughed softly and looked at the solicitor.
+
+"Just listen to me a minute or two, Mr. Eldrick," he said. "I'll sum up
+my own ideas on this matter, got from the various details that have been
+supplied to me since I came to Barford. Just consider my points one by
+one. Let's take them separately--and see how they fit in.
+
+"1. Mr. Bartle is seen by his shop-boy to take a certain paper from a
+book which came from the late John Mallathorpe's office at Mallathorpe
+Mill. He puts that paper in his pocket.
+
+"2. Immediately afterwards Mr. Bartle goes to your office. Nobody is
+there but Pratt--as far as Pratt knows.
+
+"3. Bartle dies suddenly--after telling Pratt that the paper is John
+Mallathorpe's will. Pratt steals the will. And the probability is that
+Parrawhite, unknown to Pratt, was in that office, and saw him steal it.
+Why is that probable? Because--
+
+"4. Next night Parrawhite, who is being pressed for money by Pickard,
+tells Pickard that he can get it out of Pratt, over whom he has a hold.
+What hold? We can imagine what hold. Anyway--
+
+"5. Parrawhite leaves Pickard to meet Pratt. He did meet Pratt--in
+Stubbs' Lane. He was seen to go with Pratt into the disused quarry. And
+there, in my opinion, Pratt killed him--and disposed of his body.
+
+"6. What does Pratt do next? He goes to your office first thing next
+morning, and removes certain moneys which you say you carelessly left in
+your desk the night before, and tears out certain cheque forms from your
+book. When Parrawhite never turns up that morning, you--and
+Pratt--conclude that he's the thief, and that he's run away.
+
+"7. If you want some proof of the correctness of this last suggestion,
+you'll find it in the fact that no use has ever been made of those blank
+cheques, and that--in all probability--the stolen bank-notes have never
+reached the Bank of England. On that last point I'm making inquiry--but
+my feeling is that Pratt destroyed both cheques and bank-notes when he
+stole them.
+
+"8. This man Parrawhite out of the way, Pratt has a clear field. He's
+got the will. He's already acquainted Mrs. Mallathorpe with that fact,
+and with the terms of the will--whatever they may be. We may be sure,
+however, that they are of such a nature as to make her willing to agree
+to his demands upon her--and, accidentally, to go to any lengths--upon
+which we needn't touch, at present--towards getting possession of the
+will from him.
+
+"9. And the present situation--from Pratt's standpoint of yesterday--is
+this. He's so sure of his own safety that he doesn't mind revealing to
+the daughter that the mother's in his power. Why? Because Pratt, like
+most men of his sort, cannot believe that self-interest isn't paramount
+with everybody--it's beyond him to conceive it possible that Miss
+Mallathorpe would do anything that might lose her several thousands a
+year. He argued--'So long as I hold that will, nobody and nothing can
+make me give it up nor divulge its contents. But I can bind one person
+who benefits by it--Miss Mallathorpe, and for the mother's sake I can
+keep the daughter quiet!' Well--he hasn't kept the daughter quiet!
+She--spoke!
+
+"10. And last--in all such schemes as Pratt's, the schemer invariably
+forgets something. Pratt forgot that there might arise what actually has
+arisen--inquiry for Parrawhite. The search for Parrawhite is afoot--and
+if you want to get at Pratt, it will have to be through what I firmly
+believe to be a fact--his murder of Parrawhite and his disposal of
+Parrawhite's body.
+
+"That's all, Mr. Eldrick," concluded Byner who had spoken with much
+emphasis throughout. "It all seems very clear to me, and," he added,
+with a glance at Collingwood, "I think Mr. Collingwood is inclined to
+agree with most of what I've said."
+
+"Pretty nearly all--if not all," assented Collingwood. "I think you've
+put into clear language precisely what I feel. I don't believe there's a
+shadow of doubt that Pratt killed Parrawhite! And we can--and must--get
+at him in that way. What do you suggest?" he continued, turning to
+Byner. "You have some idea, of course?"
+
+"First of all," answered Byner, "we mustn't arouse any suspicion on
+Pratt's part. Let us work behind the screen. But I have an idea as to
+how he disposed of Parrawhite, and I'm going to follow it up this very
+day--my first duty, you know, is towards the people who want Parrawhite,
+or proof of his death. I propose to----"
+
+Just then Collingwood's clerk came in with a telegram.
+
+"Sent on from the _Central Hotel_, sir," he answered. "They said Mr.
+Black would be found here."
+
+"That's mine," said the inquiry agent. "I left word at the hotel that
+they were to send to your chambers if any wire came for me. Allow me."
+He opened the telegram, looked it over, and waiting until the clerk had
+gone, turned to his companions. "Here's a message from my partner, Mr.
+Halstead," he continued. "Listen to what he wires:
+
+ "'Wire just received from Murgatroyd, shipping agent, Peel Row,
+ Barford. He says Parrawhite left that town for America on
+ November 24th last and offers further information. Let me know
+ what to reply!'"
+
+Byner laid the message before Eldrick and Collingwood without further
+comment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+THE CAT'SPAW
+
+
+On the evening of the day whereon Nesta Mallathorpe had paid him the
+visit which had resulted in so much plain speech on both sides, Pratt
+employed his leisure in a calm review of the situation. He was by no
+means dissatisfied, it seemed to him that everything was going very well
+for his purposes. He was not at all sorry that Nesta had been to see
+him--far from it. He regretted nothing that he had said to her. In his
+desperate opinion, his own position was much stronger when she left
+him than it was when he opened his office door to her. She now knew,
+said Pratt, with what a strong and resourceful man she had to deal: she
+would respect him, and have a better idea of him, now that she was aware
+of his impregnable position.
+
+Herein Pratt's innate vanity and his ignorance showed themselves. He had
+little knowledge of modern young women, and few ideas about them; and
+such ideas as he possessed were usually mistaken ones. But one was that
+it is always necessary to keep a firm hand on women--let them see and
+feel your power, said Pratt. He had been secretly delighted to acquaint
+Nesta Mallathorpe with his power, to drive it into her that he had the
+whip hand of her mother, and through her mother, of Nesta herself. He
+had seen that Nesta was much upset and alarmed by what he told her. And
+though she certainly seemed to recover her spirits at the end of the
+interview, and even refused to shake hands with him, he cherished the
+notion that in the war of words he had come off a decided victor. He did
+not believe that Nesta would utter to any other soul one word of what
+had passed between them: she would be too much afraid of calling down
+his vengeance on her mother. What he did believe was that as time went
+by, and all progressed smoothly, Nesta would come to face and accept
+facts: she would find him honest and hardworking in his dealings with
+Mrs. Mallathorpe (as he fully intended to be, from purely personal and
+selfish motives) and she herself would begin to tolerate and then to
+trust him, and eventually--well, who knew what might or might not
+happen? What said the great Talleyrand?--WITH TIME AND PATIENCE, THE
+MULBERRY LEAF IS TURNED INTO SATIN.
+
+But Pratt's self-complacency received a shock next morning. If he had
+been a reader of London newspapers, it would have received a shock the
+day before. Pratt, however, was essentially parochial in his newspaper
+tastes--he never read anything but the Barford papers. And when he
+picked up the Barford morning journal and saw Eldrick's advertisement
+for Parrawhite in a prominent place, he literally started from sheer
+surprise--not unmingled with alarm. It was as if he were the occupant of
+a strong position, only fortified, who suddenly finds a shell dropped
+into his outworks from a totally unexpected quarter.
+
+Parrawhite! Advertised for by Eldrick! Why? For what reason? For what
+purpose? With what idea? Parrawhite!--of all men in the
+world--Parrawhite, of whom he had never wanted to hear again! And what
+on earth could Eldrick want with him, or with news of him? It would
+be--or might be--an uncommonly awkward thing for him, Pratt, if a really
+exhaustive search were made for Parrawhite. For nobody knew better than
+himself that one little thing leads to another, and--but he forbore to
+follow out what might have been his train of thought. Once he was
+tempted to make an excuse for going round to Eldrick & Pascoe's with the
+idea of fishing for information--but he refrained. Let things
+develop--that was a safer plan. Still, he was anxious and disturbed all
+day. Then, towards the end of the afternoon, he bought one of the
+Barford evening papers--and saw, in staring letters, the advertisement
+which Byner had caused to be inserted only a few hours previously. And
+at that, Pratt became afraid.
+
+Parrawhite wanted!--news of Parrawhite wanted!--and in two separate
+quarters. Wanted by Eldrick--wanted by some London people! What in the
+name of the devil did it mean? At any rate, he must see to himself. One
+thing was certain--no search for Parrawhite must be permitted in
+Barford.
+
+That evening, instead of going home to dinner, Pratt remained in town,
+and dined at a quiet restaurant. When he dined, he thought, and planned,
+and schemed--and after treating himself very well in the matter of food
+and drink, he lighted a cigar, returned to his new offices, opened a
+safe which he had just set up, and took from a drawer in it a hundred
+pounds in bank-notes. With these in his pocket-book he went off to a
+quiet part of the town--the part in which James Parrawhite had lodged
+during his stay in Barford.
+
+Pratt turned into a somewhat mean and shabby street--a street of small,
+poor-class shops. He went forward amongst them until he came to one
+which, if anything, was meaner and shabbier than the others and bore
+over its window the name Reuben Murgatroyd--Watchmaker and Jeweller.
+There were few signs of jewellery in Reuben Murgatroyd's window--some
+cheap clocks, some foreign-made watches of the five-shilling and
+seven-and-six variety, a selection of flashy rings and chains were
+spread on the shelves, equally cheap and flashy bangles, bracelets, and
+brooches lay in dust-covered trays on the sloping bench beneath them. At
+these things Pratt cast no more than a contemptuous glance. But he
+looked with interest at the upper part of the window, in which were
+displayed numerous gaily-coloured handbills and small posters relating
+to shipping--chiefly in the way of assisted passages to various parts of
+the globe. These set out that you could get an assisted passage to
+Canada for so much; to Australia for not much more--and if the bills and
+posters themselves did not tell you all you wanted to know, certain big
+letters at the foot of each invited you to apply for further information
+to Mr. R. Murgatroyd, agent, within. And Pratt pushed open the shop-door
+and walked inside.
+
+An untidily dressed, careworn, anxious-looking man came forward from a
+parlour at the rear of his shop. At sight of Pratt--who in the course of
+business had once served him with a writ--his pale face flushed, and
+then whitened, and Pratt hastened to assure him of his peaceful errand.
+
+"All right, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said. "Nothing to be alarmed about--I'm
+out of that line, now--no papers of that sort tonight. I've a bit of
+business I can put in your hands--profitable business. Look here!--have
+you got a quarter of an hour to spare?"
+
+Murgatroyd, who looked greatly relieved to find that his visitor had
+neither writ nor summons for him, glanced at his parlour door.
+
+"I was just going to put the shutters up, and sit down to a bite of
+supper, Mr. Pratt," he answered. "Will you come in, sir?"
+
+"No--you come out with me," said Pratt. "Come round to the _Coach and
+Horses_, and have a drink and we can talk. You'll have a better appetite
+for your supper when you come back," he added, with a wink. "I've a
+profitable job for you."
+
+"Glad to hear it, sir," replied Murgatroyd. "I can do with aught of that
+sort, I assure you!" He went into the parlour, said a word or two to
+some person within, and came out again. "Not much business doing at
+present, Mr. Pratt," he said, as he and his visitor turned into the
+street. "Gets slacker than ever."
+
+"Then you'll do with a slice of good luck," remarked Pratt. "It just
+happens that I can put a bit in your way."
+
+He led Murgatroyd to the end of the street, where stood a corner tavern,
+into a side-door of which Pratt turned as if he were well acquainted
+with the geography of the place. Walking down a narrow passage he
+conducted his companion into a small parlour, at that moment untenanted,
+pointed him to a seat in the corner, and rang the bell. Five minutes
+later, having provided Murgatroyd with rum and water and a cigar, he
+turned on him with a direct question.
+
+"Look here!" he said in a low voice. "Would a hundred pounds be any use
+to you?"
+
+Murgatroyd's cheeks flushed.
+
+"It 'ud be a fortune!" he answered with fervour. "A hundred pound! Lor'
+bless you, Mr. Pratt, it's many a year since I saw a hundred pound--of
+my own--all in one lump!"
+
+Pratt pulled out his roll of bank-notes, fluttered it in his companion's
+face, laid it on the table, and set an ashtray on it.
+
+"There's a hundred pounds there!" he said, "It's yours to pick up--if
+you'll do a little job for me. Easy job, too!--you'll never earn a
+hundred pounds so easy in your life!"
+
+Murgatroyd pricked up his ears. According to his ideas, money easily
+come by was seldom honestly earned. He stirred uncomfortably in his
+seat.
+
+"So long as it's a straight job," he muttered. "I don't want----"
+
+"Straight enough--as straight as it's easy," answered Pratt. "It may
+seem a bit mysterious, but there's reasons for that. I give you my word
+it's all right--all a mere bit of diplomacy--and that nobody'll ever
+know you're in it--that is, beyond a certain stage--and that there's no
+danger to you."
+
+"What is it?" asked Murgatroyd, still uneasy and doubtful.
+
+Pratt pulled the evening paper out of his pocket and showed Murgatroyd
+the advertisement signed Halstead & Byner.
+
+"You see that?" he said. "Information wanted about Parrawhite. Do you
+remember Parrawhite? He once served you with some papers in that affair
+in which we were against you."
+
+"I remember him," answered Murgatroyd. "I've seen him in here now and
+again. So he's wanted, is he? I didn't know he'd left the town."
+
+"Left last November," said Pratt. "And--there are folks--influential
+folks, as you can guess, seeing that they can throw a hundred pounds
+away!--who don't want any inquiries made for him in Barford. They don't
+mind--those folks--how many inquiries and searches are made for him
+anywhere else, but--not here!"
+
+"Well?" asked Murgatroyd anxiously.
+
+"This is it," replied Pratt. "You do a bit now and then as agent for
+some of these shipping lines. You book passages for emigrants--and for
+other people, going to New Zealand or Canada or Timbuctoo--never mind
+where. Now then--couldn't you remember--I'm sure you could--that you
+booked a passage for Parrawhite to America last November? Come! It's an
+easy matter to remember is that--for a hundred pounds."
+
+Murgatroyd's thin fingers trembled a little as he picked up his glass.
+"What do you want me to do--exactly?" he asked.
+
+"This!" said Pratt. "I want you, tomorrow morning, early, to send a
+telegram to these people, Halstead & Byner, St. Martin's Chambers,
+London, just saying that James Parrawhite left Barford for America on
+November 24th last, and that you can give further information if
+necessary."
+
+"And what if it is necessary?" inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"Then--in answer to any letter or telegram of inquiry--you'll just say
+that you knew Parrawhite by sight as a clerk at Eldrick & Pascoe's in
+this town, that on November 23rd he told you that he was going to
+emigrate to America, that next day you booked him his passage, for which
+he paid you whatever it was, and that he thereupon set off for
+Liverpool. See?"
+
+"It's all lies, you know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Nobody can find 'em out, anyway," replied Pratt. "That's the one
+important thing to consider. You're safe! And if you're cursed with a
+conscience and it's tender--well, that'll make a good plaister for it!"
+
+He pointed to the little wad of bank-notes--and the man sitting at his
+side followed the pointing finger with hungry eyes. Murgatroyd wanted
+money badly. His business, always poor, was becoming worse: his shipping
+agency rarely produced any result: his rent was in arrears: he owed
+money to his neighbour-tradesmen: he had a wife and young children. To
+such a man, a hundred pounds meant relief, comfort, the lifting of
+pressure.
+
+"You're sure there's naught wrong in it, Mr. Pratt," he asked abruptly
+and assiduously. "It 'ud be a bad job for my family if anything happened
+to me, you know."
+
+"There's naught that will happen," answered Pratt confidently. "Who on
+earth can contradict you? Who knows what people you sell passages
+to--but yourself?"
+
+"There's the folks themselves," replied Murgatroyd. "Suppose Parrawhite
+turns up?"
+
+"He won't!" exclaimed Pratt.
+
+"You know where he is?" suggested Murgatroyd.
+
+"Not exactly," said Pratt, "But--he's left this country for
+another--further off than America. That's certain! And--the folks I
+referred to don't want any inquiry about him here."
+
+"If I am asked questions--later--am I to say he booked in his own name?"
+inquired Murgatroyd.
+
+"No--name of Parsons," responded Pratt. "Here, I'll write down for you
+exactly what I want you to say in the telegram to Halstead & Byner, and
+I'll make a few memoranda for you--to post you up in case they write for
+further information."
+
+"I haven't said that I'll do it," remarked Murgatroyd. "I don't like the
+looks of it. It's all a pack of lies."
+
+Pratt paid no heed to this moral reflection. He found some loose paper
+in his pocket and scribbled on it for a while. Then, as if accidentally,
+he moved the ash-tray, and the bank-notes beneath it, all new, gave
+forth a crisp, rustling sound.
+
+"Here you are!" said Pratt, pushing notes and memoranda towards his
+companion. "Take the brass, man!--you don't get a job like that every
+day."
+
+And Murgatroyd put the money in his pocket, and presently went home,
+persuading himself that everything would be all right.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+SMOOTH FACE AND ANXIOUS BRAIN
+
+
+Byner watched Eldrick and Collingwood inquisitively as they bent over
+Halstead's telegram. He was not surprised when Collingwood merely nodded
+in silence--nor when Eldrick turned excitedly in his own direction.
+
+"There!--what did I tell you?" he exclaimed. "There's been no murder!
+The man left the town. Probably, Pratt helped him off. Couldn't have
+better proof than that wire!"
+
+"What do you take that wire to prove, then, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Byner.
+
+"Take it to prove!" answered Eldrick. "Why, that Parrawhite booked a
+passage to America with this man Murgatroyd, last November. Clear
+enough, that!"
+
+"What do you take it to prove, Mr. Collingwood?" continued the inquiry
+agent, as he turned to the barrister with a smile.
+
+"Before I take it for anything," replied Collingwood, "I want to know
+who Murgatroyd is."
+
+Byner looked at Eldrick and laughed.
+
+"Precisely!" he said. "Who is Murgatroyd? Perhaps Mr. Eldrick knows."
+
+"I do just know that he's a man who carries on a small watch and clock
+business in a poorish part of the town, and that he has some sort of a
+shipping agency," answered Eldrick. "But--do you mean to imply that
+whatever message it is that he's sent to your partner in London this
+morning has not been sent in good faith?"
+
+"I don't imply anything," answered Byner. "All I say is--before I attach
+any value to his message I, like Collingwood, want to know something
+about the sender. He may have been put up to sending it. He may be in
+collusion with somebody. Now, Mr. Eldrick, you can come in
+here--strongly! I don't want to be seen in this affair--yet. Will you go
+and see Murgatroyd? Tell him his wire to Halstead & Byner in London has
+been communicated to you here. Ask him for further particulars--and then
+drop in on me at my hotel and tell me what you've learnt. I'll be found
+in the smoking-room there any time after two-thirty onward."
+
+Eldrick's intense curiosity in what was rapidly becoming a fascinating
+mystery to him, led him to accept this embassy. And a little before
+three o'clock he walked into the smoking-room at the _Central Hotel_ and
+discovered Byner in a comfortable corner.
+
+"I've seen Murgatroyd," he whispered, as he took an adjacent chair.
+"Decent honest enough man--very poor, I should say. He tells a plain
+enough story. Parrawhite, whom he knew as one of our clerks, told him,
+last November 23rd----"
+
+"He was exact about dates, then, was he?" interrupted Byner.
+
+"He mentioned them readily enough," replied the solicitor. "But to go
+on--Parrawhite mentioned to him, November 23rd last, that he wanted to
+go to America at once, Murgatroyd told him about bookings. Parrawhite
+called very early next morning, paid for his passage under the name of
+Parsons, and went off--en route for Liverpool, of course. So--there you
+are!"
+
+"That's all Murgatroyd could tell?" inquired Byner.
+
+"That's all he knows," answered Eldrick.
+
+"You say Murgatroyd knew Parrawhite as one of your clerks?" asked Byner
+after a moment's thought.
+
+"We had some process in hand against this man last autumn," replied
+Eldrick. "I dare say Parrawhite served him with papers."
+
+"Would he--Murgatroyd--be likely to know Pratt?" continued Byner.
+
+"He might--in the same connection," admitted Eldrick.
+
+Byner smoked in silence for a while.
+
+"Do you know what I think, Mr. Eldrick?" he said at last. "I think Pratt
+put up Murgatroyd to sending that telegram to us in London this
+morning."
+
+"You do!" exclaimed Eldrick.
+
+"Surely! And now," continued the inquiry agent, "if you will, you can do
+more--much more--without appearing to do anything. Pratt's office is
+only a few minutes away. Can you drop in there, making some excuse, and
+while there, mention, more or less casually, that Parrawhite, or
+information about him, is wanted; that you and a certain Halstead &
+Byner are advertising for him; that you've just seen Murgatroyd in
+respect of a communication which he wired to Halstead's this morning,
+and that--most important of all--a fortune of twenty thousand pounds is
+awaiting Parrawhite! Don't forget the last bit of news."
+
+"Why that particularly?" asked Eldrick.
+
+"Because," answered Byner solemnly, "I want Pratt to know that the
+search for Parrawhite is going to be a thorough one!"
+
+Eldrick went off on his second mission, promising to return in due
+course. Within a few minutes he was in Pratt's office, talking over some
+unimportant matter of business which he had invented as he went along.
+It was not until he was on the point of departure that he referred to
+the real reason of his visit.
+
+"Did you notice that Parrawhite is being advertised for?" he asked,
+suddenly turning on his old clerk.
+
+Pratt was ready for this--had been ready ever since Eldrick walked in.
+He affected a fine surprise.
+
+"Parrawhite!" he exclaimed. "Why--who's advertising for him?"
+
+"Don't you see the newspapers?" asked Eldrick, pointing to some which
+lay about the room. "It's in there--there's an advertisement of mine,
+and one of Halstead & Byner's, of London."
+
+Pratt picked up a Barford paper and looked at the advertisements with a
+clever affectation of having never seen them before.
+
+"I haven't had much time for newspaper reading this last day or two," he
+remarked. "Advertisements for him--from two quarters!"
+
+"Acting together--acting together, you know!" replied Eldrick. "It's
+those people who really want him--Halstead & Byner, inquiry agents,
+working for a firm of City solicitors. I'm only local agent--as it
+were."
+
+"Had any response, Mr. Eldrick?" asked Pratt, throwing aside the paper.
+"Any one come forward?"
+
+"Yes," answered Eldrick, watching Pratt narrowly without seeming to do
+so. "This morning, a man named Murgatroyd, in Peel Row, who does a bit
+of shipping agency, wired to Halstead & Byner to say that he booked
+Parrawhite to New York last November. Of course, they at once
+communicated with me, and I've just been to see Murgatroyd. He's that
+man--watchmaker--we had some proceedings against last year."
+
+"Oh, that man!" said Pratt. "Thought the name was familiar. I remember
+him. And what does he say?"
+
+"Just about as much as--and little more than--he said in his wire to
+London," replied Eldrick. "Booked Parrawhite to America November 24th
+last, and believes he left for Liverpool there and then."
+
+"Ah!" remarked Pratt, "That explains it, then?"
+
+"Explains--what?" asked Eldrick.
+
+Pratt gave his old employer a look--confidential and significant.
+
+"Explains why he took that money out of your desk," he said. "You
+remember--forty odd pounds. He'd use some of that for his passage-money.
+America eh? Now--I suppose he's vanished for good, then--it's not very
+likely he'll ever be heard of from across there."
+
+Eldrick laughed--meaningly, of set purpose.
+
+"We don't know that he's gone there," he observed. "He mightn't get
+beyond Liverpool, you know. Anyhow, we're going to make a very good
+search for him here in Barford, first. We've nothing but Murgatroyd's
+word for his having set out for Liverpool."
+
+"What's he wanted for?" asked Pratt as unconcernedly as possible. "Been
+up to something?"
+
+"No," answered Eldrick, as he turned on his heel. "A relation has left
+him twenty thousand pounds. That's what he's wanted for--and why he must
+be found--or his death proved."
+
+He gave Pratt another quick glance and went off--to return to the hotel
+and Byner, to whom he at once gave a faithful account of what had just
+taken place.
+
+"And he didn't turn a hair," he remarked. "Cool as a cucumber, all
+through! If your theory is correct, Pratt's a cleverer hand than I ever
+took him for--and I've always said he was clever."
+
+"Didn't show anything when you mentioned Murgatroyd?" asked Byner.
+
+"Not a shred of a thing!" replied Eldrick.
+
+"Nor when you spoke of the twenty thousand pounds?"
+
+"No more than what you might call polite and interested surprise!"
+
+Byner laughed, threw away the end of a cigar, and rose out of his
+lounging posture.
+
+"Now, Mr. Eldrick," he said, leaning close to the solicitor, "between
+ourselves, do you know what I'm going to do--next--which means at once?"
+
+"No," replied Eldrick.
+
+"The police!" whispered Byner. "That's my next move. Just now! Within a
+few minutes. So--will you give me a couple of notes--one to the
+principal man here--chief constable, or police superintendent, or
+whatever he is; and another to the best detective there is here--in your
+opinion. They'll save me a lot of trouble."
+
+"Of course--if you wish it," answered Eldrick. "But you don't mean to
+say you're going to have Pratt arrested--on what you know up to now?"
+
+"Not at all!" replied Byner. "Much too soon! All I want is--detective
+help of the strictly professional kind. No--we'll give Mr. Pratt a
+little more rope yet--for another four-and-twenty-hours, say. But--it'll
+come! Now, who is the best local detective--a quiet, steady fellow who
+knows how to do his work unobtrusively?"
+
+"Prydale's the man!" said Eldrick "Detective-Sergeant Prydale--I've had
+reason to employ him, more than once. I'll give you a note to him, and
+one to Superintendent Waterson."
+
+He went over to a writing-table and scribbled a few lines on half-sheets
+of notepaper which he enclosed in envelopes and handed to Byner.
+
+"I don't know what line you're taking," he said, "nor where it's going
+to end--exactly. But I do know this--Pratt never turned a hair when I
+let out all that to him."
+
+But if Eldrick went away from his old clerk's fine new offices thinking
+that Pratt was quite unperturbed and unmoved by the news he had just
+acquired, he was utterly mistaken. Pratt was very much perturbed, deeply
+moved, not a little frightened. He had so schooled himself to keep a
+straight and ever blank expression of countenance in any sudden change
+of events that he had shown nothing to Eldrick--but he was none the less
+upset by the solicitor's last announcement. Twenty thousand pounds was
+lying to be picked up by Parrawhite--or by Parrawhite's next-of-kin!
+What an unhappy turn of fortune! For the next-of-kin would never rest
+until either Parrawhite came to light, or it was satisfactorily
+established that he was dead--and if search begun to be made in Barford,
+where might not that search end? Unmoved?--cool?--if Eldrick had turned
+back, he would have found that Pratt had suddenly given way to a fit of
+nerves.
+
+But that soon passed, and Pratt began to think. He left his office
+early, and betook himself to his favourite gymnasium. Exercise did him
+good--he thought a lot while he was exercising. And once more, instead
+of going home to dinner, he dined in town, and he sat late over his
+dinner in a snug corner of the restaurant, and he thought and planned
+and schemed--and after twilight had fallen on Barford, he went out and
+made his way to Peel Row. He must see Murgatroyd again--at once.
+
+Half-way along Peel Row, Pratt stopped, suddenly--and with sudden fear.
+Out of a side street emerged a man, a quiet ordinary-looking man whom he
+knew very well indeed--Detective-Sergeant Prydale. He was accompanied by
+a smart-looking, much younger man, whom Pratt remembered to have seen in
+Beck Street that afternoon--a stranger to him and to Barford. And as he
+watched, these two covered the narrow roadway, and walked into
+Murgatroyd's shop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+THE BETTER HALF
+
+
+Under the warming influence of two glasses of rum and water, and lulled
+by Pratt's assurance that all would be well, Murgatroyd had carried home
+his hundred pounds with pretty much the same feeling which permeates a
+man who, having been within measurable distance of drowning, suddenly
+finds a substantial piece of timber drifting his way, and takes a firm
+grip on it. After all, a hundred pounds was a hundred pounds. He would
+be able to pay his rent, and his rates, and give something to the grocer
+and the butcher and the baker and the milkman; the children should have
+some much-needed new clothes and boots--when all this was done, there
+would be a nice balance left over. And it was Pratt's affair, when all
+was said and done, and if any trouble arose, why, Pratt would have to
+settle it. So he ate his supper with the better appetite which Pratt had
+prophesied, and he slept more satisfactorily than usual, and next
+morning he went to the nearest telegraph office and sent off the
+stipulated telegram to Halstead & Byner in London, and hoped that there
+was the end of the matter as far as he was concerned. And then, shortly
+after noon, in walked Mr. Eldrick, one of the tribe which Murgatroyd
+dreaded, having had various dealings with solicitors, in the way of
+writs and summonses, and began to ask questions.
+
+Murgatroyd emerged from that ordeal very satisfactorily. Eldrick's
+questions were few, elementary, and easily answered. There were no signs
+of suspicion about him, and Murgatroyd breathed more freely when he was
+gone. It seemed to him that the solicitor's visit would certainly wind
+things up--for him. Eldrick asked all that could be asked, as far as he
+could see, and he had replied: now, he would probably be bothered no
+more. His spirits had assumed quite a cheerful tone by evening--but they
+received a rude shock when, summoned from his little workshop to the
+front premises, he found himself confronting one man whom he certainly
+knew to be a detective, and another who might be one. Do what he would
+he could not conceal some agitation, and Detective-Sergeant Prydale, a
+shrewdly observant man, noticed it--and affected not to.
+
+"Evening, Mr. Murgatroyd," he said cheerily. "We've come to see if you
+can give us a bit of information. You've had Mr. Eldrick, the lawyer,
+here today on the same business. You know--this affair of an old clerk
+of his--Parrawhite?"
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick all I know," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Very likely," replied Prydale, "but there's a few questions this
+gentleman and myself would like to ask. Can we come in?"
+
+Murgatroyd fetched his wife to mind the shop, and took the callers into
+the parlour which she had unwillingly vacated. He knew Prydale by sight
+and reputation; about Byner he wondered. Finally he set him down as a
+detective from London--and was all the more afraid of him.
+
+"What do you want to know?" he asked, when the three men were alone. "I
+don't think there's anything that I didn't tell Mr. Eldrick."
+
+"Oh, there's a great deal that Mr. Eldrick didn't ask," said Prydale.
+"Mr. Eldrick sort of just skirted round things, like. We want to know a
+bit more. This Parrawhite's got to be found, d'ye see, Mr. Murgatroyd,
+and as you seem to be the last man who had aught to do with him in
+Barford, why, naturally, we come to you. Now, to start with, you say he
+came to you about getting a passage to America? Just so--now, when would
+that be?"
+
+"Day before he did get it," answered Murgatroyd, rapidly thinking over
+the memoranda which Pratt had jotted down for his benefit.
+
+"That," said Prydale, "would be on the 23rd?"
+
+"Yes," replied Murgatroyd, "23rd November, of course."
+
+"What time, now, on the 23rd?" asked the detective.
+
+"Time?" said Murgatroyd. "Oh--in the evening."
+
+"Bit vague," remarked Prydale. "What time in the evening?"
+
+"As near as I can recollect," replied Murgatroyd, "it 'ud be just about
+half-past eight. I was thinking of closing."
+
+"Ah!" said Prydale, with a glance at Byner, who had already told him of
+Parrawhite's presence at the _Green Man_ on the other side of the town,
+a good two miles away, at the hour which Murgatroyd mentioned. "Ah!--he
+was here in your shop at half-past eight on the evening of November 23rd
+last? Asking about a ticket to America?"
+
+"New York," muttered Murgatroyd.
+
+"And he came next morning and bought one?" asked the detective.
+
+"I told Mr. Eldrick that," said Murgatroyd, a little sullenly.
+
+"How much did it cost?" inquired Byner.
+
+"Eight pound ten," replied Murgatroyd. "Usual price."
+
+"What did he pay for it in?" continued Prydale.
+
+"He gave me a ten-pound note and I gave him thirty shillings change,"
+answered Murgatroyd.
+
+"Just so," assented Prydale. "Now what line might that be by?"
+
+Murgatroyd was becoming uneasy under all these questions, and his
+uneasiness was deepened by the way in which both his visitors watched
+him. He was a man who would have been a bad witness in any
+case--nervous, ill at ease, suspicious, inclined to boggle--and in this
+instance he was being forced to invent answers.
+
+"It was--oh, the Royal Atlantic!" he answered at last. "I've an agency
+for them."
+
+"So I noticed from the bills and placards in your window," observed the
+detective. "And of course you issue these tickets on their paper--I've
+seen 'em before. You fill up particulars on a form and a counterfoil,
+don't you? And you send a copy of those particulars to the Royal
+Atlantic offices at Liverpool?"
+
+Murgatroyd nodded silently--this was much more than he bargained for,
+and he did not know how much further it was going. And Prydale gave him
+a sudden searching look.
+
+"Can you show us the counterfoil in this instance?" he asked.
+
+Murgatroyd flushed. But he managed to get out a fairly quick reply. "No,
+I can't," he answered, "I sent that book back at the end of the year."
+
+"Oh, well--they'll have it at Liverpool," observed Prydale. "We can get
+at it there. Of course, they'll have your record of the entire
+transaction. He'd be down on their passenger list--under the name of
+Parsons, I think, Mr. Murgatroyd?"
+
+"He gave me that name," said Murgatroyd.
+
+Prydale gave Byner a look and both rose.
+
+"I think that's about all," said the detective. "Of course, our next
+inquiry will be at Liverpool---at the Royal Atlantic. Thank you, Mr.
+Murgatroyd--much obliged."
+
+Before the watchmaker could collect himself sufficiently to say or ask
+more, Prydale and his companion had walked out of the shop and gone
+away. And then Murgatroyd realized that he was in for--but he did not
+know what he was in for. What he did know was that if Prydale went or
+sent over to Liverpool the whole thing would burst like a bubble. For
+the Royal Atlantic people would tell the detectives at once that no
+passenger named Parsons had sailed under their auspices on November 24th
+last, and that he, Murgatroyd, had been telling a pack of lies.
+
+Mrs. Murgatroyd, a sharp-featured woman whose wits had been sharpened by
+a ten years' daily acquaintance with poverty, came out of the shop into
+the parlour and looked searchingly at her husband.
+
+"What did them fellows want?" she demanded. "I knew one of 'em--Prydale,
+the detective. Now what's up, Reuben? More trouble?"
+
+Murgatroyd hesitated a moment. Then he told his wife the whole story
+concealing nothing.
+
+"If they go to the Royal Atlantic, it'll all come out," he groaned. "I
+couldn't make any excuse or explanation--anyhow! What's to be done?"
+
+"You should ha' had naught to do wi' that Pratt!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd. "A scoundrelly fellow, to come and tempt poor folk to do his
+dirty work! Where's the money?"
+
+"Locked up!" answered Murgatroyd. "I haven't touched a penny of it. I
+thought I'd wait a bit and see if aught happened. But he assured me it
+was all right, and you know as well as I do that a hundred pound doesn't
+come our way every day. We want money!"
+
+"Not at that price!" said his wife. "You can pay too much for money, my
+lad! I wish you'd told me what that Pratt was after--he should have
+heard a bit o' my tongue! If I'd only known----"
+
+Just then the shop door opened, and Pratt walked in. He at once saw
+Murgatroyd and his wife standing between shop and parlour, and realized
+at a glance that his secret in this instance was his no longer.
+
+"Well?" he said, walking up to the watchmaker. "You've had Prydale
+here--and you'd Eldrick this morning. Of course, you knew what to say to
+both?"
+
+"I wish we'd never had you here last night, young man!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Murgatroyd fiercely. "What right have you to come here, making trouble
+for folk that's got plenty already? But at any rate, ours was honest
+trouble. Yours is like to land my husband in dishonesty--if it hasn't
+done so already! And if my husband had only spoken to me----"
+
+"Just let your husband speak a bit now," interrupted Pratt, almost
+insolently. "It's you that's making all the trouble or noise, anyhow!
+There's naught to fuss about, missis. What's upset you, Murgatroyd?"
+
+"They're going to the Royal Atlantic people," muttered the watchmaker.
+"Of course, it'll all come out, then. They know that I never booked any
+Parsons--nor anybody else for that matter--last November. You should ha'
+thought o' that!"
+
+Pratt realized that the man was right. He had never thought of
+that--never anticipated that inquiry would go beyond Murgatroyd. But his
+keen wits at once set to work.
+
+"What's the system?" he asked quickly. "Tell me--what's done when you
+book anybody like that? Come on!--explain, quick!"
+
+Murgatroyd turned to a drawer and pulled out a book and some papers.
+"It's simple enough," he said. "I've this book of forms, d'ye see? I
+fill up this form--sort of ticket or pass for the passenger, and hand it
+to him--it's a receipt as well, to him. Then I enter the same
+particulars on that counterfoil. Then I fill up one of these papers,
+giving just the same particulars, and post it at once to the Company
+with the passage money, less my commission. When one of these books is
+finished, I return the counterfoils to Liverpool--they check 'em.
+Prydale's up to all that. He asked to see the counterfoil in this case.
+I had to say I hadn't got it--I'd sent it to the Company. Of course,
+he'll find out that I didn't."
+
+"Lies!" said Mrs. Murgatroyd, vindictively. "And they didn't start wi'
+us neither!"
+
+"Who was that other man with Prydale?" asked Pratt.
+
+"London detective, I should say," answered the watchmaker. "And judging
+by the way he watched me, a sharp 'un, too!"
+
+"What impression did you get--altogether?" demanded Pratt.
+
+"Why!--that they're going to sift this affair--whatever it is--right
+down to the bottom!" exclaimed Murgatroyd. "They're either going to find
+Parrawhite or get to know what became of him. That's my impression. And
+what am I going to do, now! This'll lose me what bit of business I've
+done with yon shipping firm."
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" answered Pratt scornfully. "Don't be a fool!
+You're all right. You listen to me. You write--straight off--to the
+Royal Atlantic. Tell 'em you had some inquiry made about a man named
+Parsons, who booked a passage with you for New York last November. Say
+that on looking up your books you found that you unaccountably forgot to
+send them the forms for him and his passage money. Make out a form for
+that date, and crumple it up--as if it had been left lying in a drawer.
+Enclose the money in it--here, I'll give you ten pounds to cover it," he
+went on, drawing a bank-note from his purse. "Get it off at once--you've
+time now--plenty--to catch the night-mail at the General. And then, d'ye
+see, you're all right. It's only a case then--as far as you're
+concerned--of forgetfulness. What's that?--we all forget something in
+business, now and then. They'll overlook that--when they get the money."
+
+"Aye, but you're forgetting something now!" remarked Murgatroyd. "You're
+forgetting this--no such passenger ever went! They'll know that by their
+passenger lists."
+
+"What the devil has that to do with it?" snarled Pratt impatiently.
+"What the devil do we care whether any such passenger went or not? All
+that you're concerned about is to prove that you issued a ticket to
+Parrawhite, under the name of Parsons. What's it matter to you where
+Parrawhite, _alias_ Parsons, went, when he'd once left your shop? You
+naturally thought he'd go straight to the Lancashire and Yorkshire
+Station, on his way to Liverpool and New York! But, for aught you know,
+he may have fallen down a drain pipe in the next street! Don't you see,
+man? There's nothing, there's nobody, not all the detectives in London
+and Barford, can prove that you didn't issue a ticket to Parrawhite on
+that date? It isn't up to you to prove that you did!--it's up to them to
+prove that you didn't! And--they can't. It's impossible. You get that
+letter off--at once--to Liverpool, with that money inside it, and you're
+as safe as houses--and your hundred pounds as well. Get it done! And if
+those chaps come asking any more questions, tell 'em you're not going to
+answer a single one! Mind you!--do what I tell you, and you're safe!"
+
+With that Pratt walked out of the shop and went off towards the centre
+of the town, inwardly raging and disturbed. It was very evident that
+these people meant to find Parrawhite, alive or dead; evident, too, that
+they had called in the aid of the Barford police. And in spite of all
+his assurances to the watchmaker and his suggestion for the next move,
+Pratt was far from easy about the whole matter. He would have been
+easier if he had known who Prydale's companion was--probably he was, as
+Murgatroyd had suggested, a London detective who might have been making
+inquiries in the town for some time and knew much more than he, Pratt,
+could surmise. That was the devil of the whole thing!--in Pratt's
+opinion. Adept himself in working underground, he feared people who
+adopted the same tactics. What was this stranger chap after? What did he
+know? What was he doing? Had he let Eldrick know anything? Was there a
+web of detectives already being spun around himself? Was that silly,
+unfortunate affair with Parrawhite being slowly brought to light--to
+wreck him on the very beginning of what he meant to be a brilliant
+career? He cursed Parrawhite again and again as he left Peel Row behind
+him.
+
+The events of the day had made Pratt cautious as well as anxious. He
+decided to keep away from his lodgings that night, and when he reached
+the centre of the town he took a room at a quiet hotel. He was up early
+next morning; he had breakfasted by eight o'clock; by half-past eight he
+was at his office. And in his letter-box he found one letter--a thickish
+package which had not come by post, but had been dropped in by hand, and
+was merely addressed to Mr. Pratt.
+
+Pratt tore that package open with a conviction of imminent disaster. He
+pulled out a sheet of cheap note-paper--and a wad of bank-notes. His
+face worked curiously as he read a few lines, scrawled in illiterate,
+female handwriting.
+
+ "MR PRATT,--My husband and me don't want any more to do with
+ either you or your money which it is enclosed. Been honest up to
+ now though poor, and intending to remain so our purpose is to
+ make a clean breast of everything to the police first thing
+ tomorrow morning for which you have nobody but yourself to blame
+ for wickedness in tempting poor people to do wrong.
+
+ "Yours, MRS. MURGATROYD."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+DRY SHERRY
+
+
+Pratt wasted no time in cursing Mrs. Murgatroyd. There would be plenty
+of opportunity for such relief to his feelings later on. Just then he
+had other matters to occupy him--fully. He tore the indignant letter to
+shreds; he hastily thrust the bank-notes into one pocket and drew his
+keys from another. Within five minutes he had taken from his safe a
+sealed packet, which he placed in an inside pocket of his coat, and had
+left his office--for the last time, as he knew very well. That part of
+the game was up--and it was necessary to be smart in entering on another
+phase of it.
+
+Since Eldrick's visit of the previous day, Pratt had been prepared for
+all eventuality. He had made ready for flight. And he was not going
+empty-handed. He had a considerable amount of Mrs. Mallathorpe's money
+in his possession; by obtaining her signature to one or two documents he
+could easily obtain much more in London, at an hour's notice. Those
+documents were all ready, and in the sealed packet which he had just
+taken from the safe; in it, too, were some other documents--John
+Mallathorpe's will; the letter which Mrs. Mallathorpe had written to him
+on the evening previous to her son's fatal accident; and the power of
+attorney which Pratt had obtained from her at his first interview after
+that occurrence. All was ready--and now there was nothing to do but to
+get to Normandale Grange, see Mrs. Mallathorpe, and--vanish. He had
+planned it all out, carefully, when he perceived the first danger
+signals, and knew that his other plans and schemes were doomed to
+failure. Half an hour at Normandale Grange--a journey to London--a
+couple of hours in the City--and then the next train to the Continent,
+on his way to regions much further off. Here, things had turned out
+badly, unexpectedly badly--but he would carry away considerable, easily
+transported wealth, to a new career in a new country.
+
+Pratt began his flight in methodical fashion. He locked up his office,
+and left the building by a back entrance which took him into a network
+of courts and alleys at the rear of the business part of Barford. He
+made his way in and out of these places until he reached a
+bicycle-dealer's shop in an obscure street, whereat he had left a
+machine of his own on the previous evening under the excuse of having it
+thoroughly cleaned and oiled. It was all ready for him on his arrival,
+and he presently mounted it and rode away through the outskirts of the
+town, carefully choosing the less frequented streets and roads. He rode
+on until he was clear of Barford: until, in fact, he was some miles from
+it, and had reached a village which was certainly not on the way to
+Normandale. And then, at the post-office he dismounted, and going
+inside, wrote out and dispatched a telegram. It was a brief message
+containing but three words--"One as usual"--and it was addressed Esther
+Mawson, The Grange, Normandale. This done, he remounted his bicycle,
+rode out of the village, and turned across country in quite a different
+direction. It was not yet ten o'clock--he had three hours to spare
+before the time came for keeping the appointment which he had just made.
+
+At an early stage of his operations, Pratt had found that even the
+cleverest of schemers cannot work unaided. It had been absolutely
+necessary to have some tool close at hand to Normandale Grange and its
+inhabitants; to have some person there upon whom he could depend for
+news. He had found that person, that tool, in Esther Mawson, who, as
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's maid, had opportunities which he at once recognized
+as being likely to be of the greatest value to him. The circumstances of
+Harper Mallathorpe's death had thrown Pratt and the maid together, and
+he had quickly discovered that she was to be bought, and would do
+anything for money. He had soon come to an understanding with her; soon
+bargained with her, and made her a willing accomplice in certain of his
+schemes, without letting her know their full meaning and extent: all,
+indeed, that she had learned from Pratt was that he had some
+considerable hold on her mistress.
+
+But it is dangerous work to play with edged tools, and if Pratt had only
+known it, he was running great risks in using Esther Mawson as a
+semi-accomplice. Esther Mawson was in constant touch with her mistress,
+and Mrs. Mallathorpe, afraid of her daughter, and not greatly in
+sympathy with her, badly needed a confidante. Little by little the
+mistress began to confide in the maid, and before long Esther Mawson
+knew the secret--and thenceforward she played a double game. Pratt found
+her useful in arranging meetings with Mrs. Mallathorpe unknown to Nesta,
+and he believed her to be devoted to him. But the truth was that Esther
+Mawson had only one object of devotion--herself--and she was waiting and
+watching for an opportunity to benefit that object--at Pratt's expense.
+
+Pratt knew nothing of this as he slowly made his way to Normandale that
+morning. Having plenty of time he went by devious and lonely roads and
+by-lanes. Eventually he came to the boundary of Normandale Park at a
+point far away from the Grange. There he dismounted, hid his bicycle in
+a coppice wherein he had often left it before, and went on towards the
+house through the woods and plantations. He knew every yard of the
+ground he traversed, and was skilled in taking cover if he saw any sign
+of woodman or gamekeeper. And in the end, just as one o'clock chimed
+from the clock over the stables, he came to a quiet spot in the
+shrubberies behind the Grange, and found Esther Mawson waiting for him
+in an old summer-house in which they had met on previous and similar
+occasions.
+
+Esther Mawson immediately realized that something unusual was in the
+air. Clever as Pratt was at concealing his feelings, she was cleverer in
+seeing small signs, and she saw that this was no ordinary visit.
+
+"Anything wrong?" she asked at once.
+
+"Bit of bother--nothing much--it'll blow over," answered Pratt, who knew
+that a certain amount of candour was necessary in dealing with this
+woman. "But--I shall have to be away for a bit--week or two, perhaps."
+
+"You want to see her?" inquired Esther.
+
+"Of course! I've some papers for her to sign," replied Pratt. "How do
+things stand? Coast clear?"
+
+"Miss Mallathorpe's going into Barford after lunch," answered Esther.
+"She'll be driving in about half-past two. I can manage it then. How
+long shall you want to be with her?"
+
+"Oh, a quarter of an hour'll do," said Pratt. "Ten minutes, if it comes
+to that."
+
+"And after that?" asked Esther.
+
+"Then I want to get a train at Scaleby," replied Pratt, mentioning a
+railway junction which lay ten miles across country in another
+direction. "So make it as soon after two-thirty as you can."
+
+"You can see her as soon as Miss Mallathorpe's gone," said Esther.
+"You'd better come into the house--I've got the key of the turret door,
+and all's clear--the servants are all at dinner."
+
+"I could do with something myself," observed Pratt, who, in his anxiety,
+had only made a light breakfast that morning. "Can it be managed?"
+
+"I'll manage it," she answered. "Come on--now."
+
+Behind the summer-house in which they had met a narrow path led through
+the shrubberies to an old part of the Grange which was never used, and
+was, in fact, partly ruinous. Esther Mawson led the way along this until
+she and Pratt came to a turret in the grey walls, in the lower story of
+which a massive oaken door, heavily clamped with iron, gave entrance to
+a winding stair, locked it from inside when she and Pratt had entered,
+and preceded her companion up the stair, and across one or two empty and
+dust-covered chambers to a small room in which a few pieces of ancient
+furniture were slowly dropping to decay. Pratt had taken refuge in this
+room before, and he sat down in one of the old chairs and mopped his
+forehead.
+
+"I want something to drink, above everything," he remarked. "What can
+you get?"
+
+"Nothing but wine," answered Esther Mawson. "As much as you like of
+that, because I've a stock that's kept up in Mrs. Mallathorpe's room. I
+couldn't get any ale without going to the butler. I can get wine and
+sandwiches without anybody knowing."
+
+"That'll do," said Pratt. "What sort of wine?"
+
+"Port, sherry, claret," she replied. "Whichever you like."
+
+"Sherry, then," answered Pratt. "Bring a bottle if you can get it--I
+want a good drink."
+
+The woman went away--through the disused part of the old house into the
+modern portion. She went straight to a certain store closet and took
+from it a bottle of old dry sherry which had been brought there from a
+bin in the cellars--it was part of a quantity of fine wine laid down by
+John Mallathorpe, years before, and its original owner would have been
+disgusted to think that it should ever be used for the mere purpose of
+quenching thirst. But Esther Mawson had another purpose in view, with
+respect to that bottle. Carrying it to her own sitting-room, she
+carefully cut off the thick mass of sealing-wax at its neck, drew the
+cork, and poured a little of the wine away. And that done, she unlocked
+a small box which stood on a corner of her dressing table, and took from
+it a glass phial, half full of a colourless liquid. With steady hands
+and sure fingers, she dropped some of that liquid into the wine,
+carefully counting the drops. Then she restored the phial to its
+hiding-place and re-locked the box--after which, taking up a spoon which
+lay on her table, she poured out a little of the sherry and smelled and
+tasted it. No smell--other than that which ought to be there; no
+taste--other than was proper. Pratt would suspect nothing even if he
+drunk the whole bottle.
+
+Esther Mawson had anticipated Pratt's desires in the way of refreshment,
+and she now went to a cupboard and took from it a plate of sandwiches,
+carefully swathed in a napkin. Carrying these in one hand, and the
+bottle of sherry and a glass in the other, she stole quietly back to the
+disused part of the house, and set her provender before its expectant
+consumer. Pratt poured out a glassful of the sherry, and drank it
+eagerly.
+
+"Good stuff that!" he remarked, smacking his lips. "Some of old John
+Mallathorpe's--no doubt."
+
+"It was here when we came, anyhow," replied Esther. "Well--I shall have
+to go. You'll be all right until I come back."
+
+"What time do you think it'll be?" asked Pratt. "Make it as soon as the
+coast's clear--I want to be off."
+
+"As soon as ever she's gone," agreed Esther. "I heard her order the
+carriage for half-past two."
+
+"And no fear of anybody else being about?" asked Pratt. "That butler
+man, for instance? Or servants?"
+
+"I'll see to it," replied Esther reassuringly. "I'll lock this door and
+take the key until I come back--make yourself comfortable."
+
+She locked Pratt in the old room and went off, and the willing prisoner
+ate his sandwiches and drank his sherry, and looked out of a mullioned
+window on the wide stretches of park and coppice and the breezy
+moorlands beyond. He indulged in some reflections--not wholly devoid of
+sentiment. He had cherished dreams of becoming the virtual owner of
+Normandale. Always confident in his own powers, he had believed that
+with time and patience he could have persuaded Nesta Mallathorpe to
+marry him--why not? Now--all owing to that cursed and unfortunate
+contretemps with Parrawhite, that seemed utterly impossible--all he
+could do now was to save himself--and to take as much as he could get.
+More than once that morning, as he made his way across country, he had
+remembered Parrawhite's advice to take cash and be done with
+it--perhaps, he reflected, it might have been better. Still--when he
+presently began his final retreat, he would carry away with him a lot of
+the Mallathorpe money.
+
+But before long Pratt indulged in no more reflections--sentiment or
+practical. He had eaten all his sandwiches; he had drunk three-quarters
+of the bottle of sherry. And suddenly he felt unusually drowsy, and he
+laid his head back in his big chair, and fell soundly asleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+THE TELEPHONE MESSAGE
+
+
+If Pratt had only known what was going on in the old quarries at
+Whitcliffe, about the very time that he was riding slowly out to Barford
+on his bicycle, he would not only have accelerated his pace, but would
+have taken good care to have chosen another route: he would also have
+made haste to exchange bicycle for railway train as quickly as possible,
+and to have got himself far away before anybody could begin looking for
+him in his usual haunts, or at places wherein there was a possibility of
+his being found. But Pratt knew nothing of what Byner had done. He was
+conscious of Byner's visit to the _Green Man_. He did not know what
+Pickard had been told by Bill Thomson. He was unaware of anything which
+Pickard had told to Byner. If he had known that Byner, guided by
+Pickard, had been to the old quarries, had fixed his inquiring eye on
+the shaft which was filled to its brim with water, and had got certain
+ideas from the mere sight of it, Pratt would have hastened to put
+hundreds of miles between himself and Barford as quickly as possible.
+But all that Pratt knew was that there was a possibility of
+suspicion--which might materialize eventually, but not immediately.
+
+On the previous evening, Pratt--had he but known it--made a great
+mistake. Instead of going into Murgatroyd's shop after he had watched
+Byner and Prydale away from it--he should have followed those two astute
+and crafty persons, and have ascertained something of their movements.
+Had he done so, he would certainly not have troubled to return to Peel
+Row, nor to remain in Barford an hour longer than was absolutely
+necessary. For Pratt was sharp-witted enough when it came to a question
+of putting one and two together, and if he had tracked Prydale and the
+unknown man who was with him to a certain house whereto they repaired as
+soon as they quitted Murgatroyd's shop, he would have drawn an inference
+from the mere fact of their visit which would have thrown him into a
+cold sweat of fear. But Pratt, after all, was only one man, one brain,
+one body, and could not be in two places, nor go in two ways, at the
+same time. He took his own way--ignorant of his destruction.
+
+Byner also took a way of his own. As soon as he and Prydale left
+Murgatroyd's shop, they chartered the first cab they met with, and
+ordered its driver to go to Whitcliffe Moor.
+
+"It's the quickest thing to do--if my theory's correct," observed Byner,
+as they drove along, "Of course, it is all theory--mere theory! But I've
+grounds for it. The place--the time--mere lonely situation--that scrap
+iron lying about, which would be so useful in weighting a dead body!--I
+tell you, I shall be surprised if we don't find Parrawhite at the bottom
+of that water!"
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," agreed Prydale. "One thing's very certain, as we
+shall prove before we're through with it--Pratt's put that poor devil
+Murgatroyd up to this passage-to-America business. And a bit clumsily,
+too--fancy Murgatroyd being no better posted up than to tell me that
+Parrawhite called on him at a certain hour that night!"
+
+"But you've got to remember that Pratt didn't know of Parrawhite's
+affairs with Pickard, nor that he was at the _Green Man_ at that hour,"
+rejoined Byner. "My belief is that Pratt thinks himself safe--that he
+fancies he's provided for all contingencies. If things turn out as I
+think they will, I believe we shall find Pratt calmly seated at his desk
+tomorrow morning."
+
+"Well--if things do turn out as you expect, we'll lose no time in
+seeking him there!" observed Prydale dryly. "We'd better arrange to get
+the job done first thing."
+
+"This Mr. Shepherd'll make no objection, I suppose?" asked Byner.
+
+"Objection! Lor' bless you--he'll love it!" exclaimed Prydale. "It'll be
+a bit of welcome diversion to a man like him that's naught to do. He'll
+object none, not he!"
+
+Shepherd, a retired quarry-owner, who lived in a picturesque old stone
+house in the middle of Whitcliffe Moor, with nothing to occupy his
+attention but the growing of roses and vegetables, and an occasional
+glance at the local newspapers, listened to Prydale's request with
+gradually rising curiosity. Byner had at once seen that this call was
+welcome to this bluff and hearty Yorkshireman, who, without any question
+as to their business, had immediately welcomed them to his hearth and
+pressed liquor and cigars on them: he sized up Shepherd as a man to whom
+any sort of break in the placid course of retired life was a delightful
+event.
+
+"A dead man i' that old shaft i' one o' my worked out quarries!" he
+exclaimed. "Ye don't mean to say so! An' how long d'yer think he might
+ha' been there, now, Prydale?"
+
+"Some months, Mr. Shepherd," replied the detective.
+
+"Why, then it's high time he were taken out," said Shepherd. "When might
+you be thinkin' o' doin' t' job, like?"
+
+"As soon as possible," said Prydale. "Tomorrow morning, early, if that's
+convenient to you."
+
+"I'll tell you what I'll do," observed the retired quarry-owner. "You
+leave t' job to me. I'll get two or three men first thing tomorrow
+morning, and we'll do it reight. You be up there by half-past eight
+o'clock, and we'll soon satisfy you as to whether there's owt i' t'
+shape of a dead man or not i' t' pit. You hev' grounds for believin' 'at
+theer is----what?"
+
+"Strong grounds!" replied the detective, "and equally strong ones for
+believing the man came there by foul play, too."
+
+"Say no more!" said Shepherd. "T' mystery shall be cleared up. Deary me!
+An' to think 'at I've walked past yon theer pit many a dozen times
+within this last few o' months, and nivver dreamed 'at theer wor owt in
+it but watter! Howivver, gentlemen, ye can put yer minds at ease--we'll
+investigate the circumstances, as the sayin' goes, before noon
+tomorrow."
+
+"One other matter," remarked Prydale. "We want things kept quiet. We
+don't want all the folk of the neighbourhood round about, you know."
+
+"Leave it to me," answered Shepherd. "There'll be me, and these men, and
+yourselves--and a pair of grapplin' irons. We'll do it quiet and
+comfortable--and we'll do it reight."
+
+"Odd character!" remarked Byner, when he and Prydale went away.
+
+"Useful man--for a job of that sort," said the detective laconically.
+"Now then--are we going to let anybody else know what we're after--Mr.
+Eldrick or Mr. Collingwood, for instance? Do you want them, or either of
+them, to be present?"
+
+"No!" answered Byner, after a moment's reflection. "Let us see what
+results. We can let them know, soon enough, if we've anything to tell.
+But--what about Pratt?"
+
+"Keeping an eye on him--you mean?" said Prydale. "You said just now that
+in your opinion we should find him at his desk."
+
+"Just so--but that's no reason why he shouldn't be looked after tomorrow
+morning," answered Byner.
+
+"All right--I'll put a man on to shadow him, from the time he leaves his
+lodgings until--until we want him," said the detective. "That is--if we
+do want him."
+
+"It will be one of the biggest surprises I ever had in my life if we
+don't!" asserted Byner. "I never felt more certain of anything than I do
+of finding Parrawhite's body in that pit!"
+
+It was this certainty which made Byner appear extraordinarily cool and
+collected, when next day, about noon, he walked into Eldrick's private
+room, where Collingwood was at that moment asking the solicitor what was
+being done. The certainty was now established, and it seemed to Byner
+that it would have been a queer thing if he had not always had it. He
+closed the door and gave the two men an informing glance.
+
+"Parrawhite's body has been found," he said quietly.
+
+Eldrick started in his chair, and Collingwood looked a sharp inquiry.
+
+"Little doubt about his having been murdered, just as I conjectured,"
+continued Byner. "And his murderer had pretty cleverly weighted his body
+with scrap iron, before dropping it into a pit full of water, where it
+might have remained for a long time undiscovered. However--that's
+settled!"
+
+Eldrick got out the first question.
+
+"Pratt?"
+
+"Prydale's after him," answered Byner. "I expect we shall hear something
+in a few minutes--if he's in town. But I confess I'm a bit doubtful and
+anxious now, on that score. Because, when Prydale and I got down from
+Whitcliffe half an hour ago--where the body's now lying, at the _Green
+Man_, awaiting the inquest--we found Murgatroyd hanging about the police
+station. He'd come to make a clean breast of it--about Pratt. And it
+unfortunately turns out that Pratt saw Prydale and me go to Murgatroyd's
+shop last night, and afterwards went in there himself, and of course
+pumped Murgatroyd dry as to why we'd been."
+
+"Why unfortunately?" asked Collingwood.
+
+"Because that would warn Pratt that something was afoot," said Byner.
+"And--he may have disappeared during the night. He----"
+
+But just then Prydale came in, shaking his head.
+
+"I'm afraid he's off!" he announced. "I'd a man watching for him outside
+his lodgings from an early hour this morning, but he never came out, and
+finally my man made an excuse and asked for him there, and then he heard
+that he'd never been home last night. And his office is closed."
+
+"What steps are you taking?" asked Byner.
+
+"I've got men all over the place already," replied Prydale. "But--if he
+got off in the night, as I'm afraid he did, we shan't find him in
+Barford. It's a most unlucky thing that he saw us go to Murgatroyd's
+last evening! That, of course, would set him off: he'd know things were
+reaching a crisis."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood had arranged to lunch together that day, and
+they presently went off, asking the detective to keep them informed of
+events. But up to half-past three o 'clock they heard no more--then, as
+they were returning along the street Byner came running up to them.
+
+"Prydale's just had a telephone message from the butler at Normandale!"
+he exclaimed. "Pratt is there!--and something extraordinary is going on:
+the butler wants the police. We're off at once--there's Prydale in a
+motor, waiting for me. Will you follow?"
+
+He darted away again, and Eldrick looking round for a car, suddenly
+recognized the Mallathorpe livery.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "There's Miss Mallathorpe--just driving in.
+Better tell her!"
+
+A moment later, he and Collingwood had joined Nesta in her carriage, and
+the horses' heads were turned in the direction towards which Byner and
+Prydale were already hastening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+RESTORED TO ENERGY
+
+
+Esther Mawson, leaving Pratt to enjoy his sherry and sandwiches at his
+leisure, went away through the house, out into the gardens, and across
+the shrubbery to the stables. The coachman and grooms were at
+dinner--with the exception of one man who lived in a cottage at the
+entrance to the stable-yard. This was the very man she wanted to see,
+and she found him in the saddle-room, and beckoned him to its door.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe wants me to go over to Scaleby on an errand for her
+this afternoon," she said. "Can you have the dog-cart ready, at the
+South Garden gate at three o'clock sharp? And--without saying anything
+to the coachman? It's a private errand."
+
+Of late this particular groom had received several commissions of this
+sort, and being a sharp fellow he had observed that they were generally
+given to him when Miss Mallathorpe was out.
+
+"All right," he answered. "The young missis is going out in the carriage
+at half-past two. South Garden gate--three sharp. Anybody but you?"
+
+"Only me," replied Esther. "Don't say anything to anybody about where
+we're going. Get the dog-cart ready after the carriage has gone."
+
+The groom nodded in comprehension, and Esther went back to the house and
+to her own room. She ought at that time of day to have been eating her
+dinner with the rest of the upper servants, but she had work to do which
+was of much more importance than the consumption of food and drink.
+There was going to be a flight that afternoon--but it would not be Pratt
+who would undertake it. Esther Mawson had carefully calculated all her
+chances as soon as Pratt told her that he was going to be away for a
+while. She knew that Pratt would not have left Barford for any
+indefinite period unless something had gone seriously wrong. But she
+knew more--by inference and intuition. If Pratt was going away--rather,
+since he was going away, he would have on his person things of
+value--documents, money. She meant to gain possession of everything that
+he had; she meant to have a brief interview with Mrs. Mallathorpe; then
+she meant to drive to Scaleby--and to leave that part of the country
+just as thoroughly and completely as Pratt had meant to leave it. And
+now in her own room she was completing her preparations. There was
+little to do. She knew that if her venture came off successfully, she
+could easily afford to leave her personal possessions behind her, and
+that she would be all the more free and unrestricted in her movements if
+she departed without as much as a change of clothes and linen. And so by
+two o'clock she had arrayed herself in a neat and unobtrusive
+tailor-made travelling costume, had put on an equally neat and plain
+hat, had rolled her umbrella, and laid it, her gloves, and a cloak where
+they could be readily picked up, and had attached to her slim waist a
+hand-bag--by means of a steel chain which she secured by a small padlock
+as soon as she had arranged it to her satisfaction. She was not the sort
+of woman to leave a hand-bag lying about in a railway carriage at any
+time, but in this particular instance she was not going to run any risk
+of even a moment's forgetfulness.
+
+Everything was in readiness by twenty minutes past two, and she took up
+her position in a window from which she could see the front door of the
+house. At half-past two the carriage and its two fine bay horses came
+round from the stables; a minute or two later Nesta Mallathorpe emerged
+from the hall; yet another minute and the carriage was whirling down the
+park in the direction of Barford. And then Esther moved from the window,
+picked up the umbrella, the cloak, the gloves, and went off in the
+direction of the room wherein she had left Pratt.
+
+No one ever went near those old rooms except on some special errand or
+business, and there was a dead silence all around her as she turned the
+key in the lock and slipped inside the door--to lock it again as soon as
+she had entered. There was an equally deep silence within the room--and
+for a moment she glanced a little fearfully at the recumbent figure in
+the old, deep-backed chair. Pratt had stretched himself fully in his
+easy quarters---his legs lay extended across the moth-eaten hearth-rug;
+his head and shoulders were thrown far back against the faded tapestry,
+and he was so still that he might have been supposed to be dead. But
+Esther Mawson had tried the effect of that particular drug on a good
+many people, and she knew that the victim in this instance was merely
+plunged in a sleep from which nothing whatever could wake him yet
+awhile. And after one searching glance at him, and one lifting of an
+eyelid by a practised finger, she went rapidly and thoroughly through
+Pratt's pockets, and within a few minutes of entering the room had
+cleared them of everything they contained. The sealed packet which he
+had taken from his safe that morning; the bank-notes which Mrs.
+Murgatroyd had returned in her indignant letter; another roll of notes,
+of considerable value, in a note-case; a purse containing notes and gold
+to a large amount--all those she laid one by one on a dust-covered
+table. And finally--and as calmly as if she were sorting linen--she
+swept bank-notes, gold, and purse into her steel-chained bag, and tore
+open the sealed envelope.
+
+There were five documents in that envelope--Esther examined each with
+meticulous care. The first was an authority to Linford Pratt to sell
+certain shares standing in the name of Ann Mallathorpe. The second was a
+similar document relating to other shares: each was complete, save for
+Ann Mallathorpe's signature. The third document was the power of
+attorney which Ann Mallathorpe had given to Linford Pratt: the fourth,
+the letter which she had written to him on the evening before the fatal
+accident to Harper. And the fifth was John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+At last she held in her hand the half-sheet of foolscap paper of which
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, driven to distraction, and knowing that she would get
+no sympathy from her own daughter, had told her. She was a woman of a
+quick and an understanding mind, and she had read the will through and
+grasped its significance as swiftly as her eyes ran over it. And those
+eyes turned to the unconscious Pratt with a flash of contempt--she, at
+any rate, would not follow his foolish example, and play for too high a
+stake--no, she would make hay while the sun shone its hottest! She was
+of the Parrawhite persuasion--better, far better one good bird in the
+hand than a score of possible birds in the bush.
+
+She presently restored the five documents to the stout envelope, picked
+up her other belongings, and without so much as a glance at Pratt, left
+the room. She turned the key in the door and took it away with her. And
+now she went straight to a certain sitting-room which Mrs. Mallathorpe
+had tenanted by day ever since her illness. The final and most important
+stage of Esther's venture was at hand.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe sat at an open window, wearily gazing out on the park.
+Ever since her son's death she had remained in a more or less torpid
+condition, rarely talking to any person except Esther Mawson: it had
+been manifest from the first that her daughter's presence distressed and
+irritated her, and by the doctor's advice Nesta had gone to her as
+little as possible, while taking every care to guard her and see to her
+comfort. All day long she sat brooding--and only Esther Mawson, now for
+some time in her full confidence, knew that her brooding was rapidly
+developing into a monomania. Mrs. Mallathorpe, indeed, had but one
+thought in her mind--the eventual circumventing of Pratt, and the
+destruction of John Mallathorpe's will.
+
+She turned slowly as the maid came in and carefully closed the door
+behind her, and her voice was irritable and querulous as she at once
+began to complain.
+
+"You've never been near me for two hours!" she said. "Your dinner time
+was over long since! I might have been wanting all sorts of things for
+aught you cared!"
+
+"I've had something else to do--for you!" retorted Esther, coming close
+to her mistress. "Listen, now!--I've got it!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's attitude and manner suddenly changed. She caught
+sight of the packet of papers in the woman's hand, and at once sprang to
+her feet, white and trembling. Instinctively she held out her own hands
+and moved a little nearer to the maid. And Esther quickly put the table
+between them, and shook her head.
+
+"No--no!" she exclaimed. "No handling of anything--yet! You keep your
+hands off! You were ready enough to bargain with Pratt--now you'll have
+to bargain with me. But I'm not such a fool as he was--I'll take cash
+down, and be done with it."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe rested her trembling hands on the table and bent
+forward across it.
+
+"Is it--is it--really--the will?" she whispered hoarsely.
+
+Instead of replying in words, Esther, taking care to keep at a safe
+distance behind the table, and with the door only a yard or two in her
+rear, drew out the documents one by one and held them up.
+
+"The will!" she said. "Your letter to Pratt. The power of attorney. Two
+papers that he brought for you to sign. That's the lot! And now, as I
+said, we'll bargain."
+
+"Where is--he?" asked Mrs. Mallathorpe. "How--how did you get them? Does
+he know--did he give them up?"
+
+"If you want to know, he's safe and sound asleep in one of the rooms in
+the old part of the house," answered Esther. "I drugged him. There's
+something afoot--something gone wrong with his schemes--at Barford, and
+he came here on his way--elsewhere. And so--I took the chance. Now
+then--what are you going to give me?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe, whose nervous agitation was becoming more and more
+marked, wrung her hands.
+
+"I've nothing to give!" she cried. "You know very well he's had the
+management of everything--I don't know how things are----"
+
+"Stuff!" exclaimed Esther. "I know better than that. You've a lot of
+ready money in that desk there--you know you drew a lot out of the bank
+some time ago, and it's there now. You kept it for a contingency--the
+contingency's here. And--you've your rings--the diamond and ruby
+rings--I know what they're worth! Come on, now--I mean to have the whole
+lot, so it's no use hesitating."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe looked at the maid's bold and resolute eyes--and then
+at the papers. And she glanced from eyes and papers to a bright fire
+which burned in the grate close by.
+
+"You'll give everything up?" she asked nervously.
+
+"Put those bank-notes that you've got in your desk, and those rings that
+are in your jewel-case, on the table between us," answered Esther, "and
+I'll hand over these papers on the instant! I'm not going to be such a
+fool as to keep them--not I! Come on, now!--isn't this the chance you've
+wanted?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a small bunch of keys from her gown, and went over
+to the desk which Esther had pointed to. Within a minute she was back
+again at the table, a roll of bank notes in one hand, half a dozen
+magnificent rings in the other. She put both hands halfway across and
+unclasped them. And Esther Mawson, with a light laugh, threw the papers
+over the table, and hastily swept their price into her handbag.
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe's nerves suddenly became steady. With a deep sigh she
+caught up the various documents and looked them quickly and thoroughly
+over. Then she tore them into fragments and flung the fragments in the
+fire--and as they blazed up, she turned and looked at Esther Mawson in a
+way which made Esther shrink a little. But she was already at the
+door--and she opened it and walked out and down the stair.
+
+She was half-way across the hall beneath, where the butler and one of
+the footmen were idly talking, when a sharp cry from above made her then
+look up. Mrs. Mallathorpe, suddenly restored to life and energy, was
+leaning over the balustrade.
+
+"Stop that woman, you men!" she said. "Seize her! Fasten her up!--lock
+the door wherever you put her! She's stolen my rings, and a lot of money
+out of my desk! And telephone instantly to Barford, and tell them to
+send the police here--at once!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+THE WOMAN IN BLACK
+
+
+Nesta Mallathorpe, who had just arrived in Barford when Eldrick caught
+sight of her, was seriously startled as he and Collingwood came running
+up to her carriage. The solicitor entered it without ceremony or
+explanation, and turning to the coachman bade him drive back to
+Normandale as fast as he could make his horses go. Meanwhile Collingwood
+turned to Nesta. "Don't be alarmed!" he said. "Something is happening at
+the Grange--your mother has just telephoned to the police here to go
+there at once--there they are--in front of us, in that car!"
+
+"Did my mother say if she was in danger?" demanded Nesta.
+
+"She can't be!" exclaimed Eldrick, turning from the coachman, as the
+horses were whipped round and the carriage moved off. "She evidently
+gave orders for the message. No--Pratt's there! And--but of course, you
+don't know--the police want Pratt. They've been searching for him since
+noon. He's wanted for murder!"
+
+"Don't frighten Miss Mallathorpe," said Collingwood. "The murder has
+nothing to do with present events," he went on reassuringly. "It's
+something that happened some time ago. Don't be afraid about your
+mother--there are plenty of people round her, you know."
+
+"I can't help feeling anxious if Pratt is there," she answered. "How did
+he come to be there? It's not an hour since I left home. This is all
+some of Esther Mawson's work! And we shall have to wait nearly an hour
+before we know what is going on!--it's all uphill work to Normandale,
+and the horses can't do it in the time."
+
+"Eldrick!" said Collingwood, as the carriage came abreast of the Central
+Station and a long line of motorcars. "Stop the coachman! Let's get one
+of those cars--we shall get to Normandale twice as quickly. The main
+thing is to relieve Miss Mallathorpe of anxiety. Now!" he went on, as
+they hastily left the carriage and transferred themselves to a car
+quickly scented by Eldrick as the most promising of the lot. "Tell the
+driver to go as fast as he can--the other car's not very far in
+front--tell him to catch it up."
+
+Eldrick leaned over and gave his orders.
+
+"I've told him not only to catch him up, but to get in front of 'em," he
+said, settling down again in his seat. "This is a better car than
+theirs, and we shall be there first. Now, Miss Mallathorpe, don't you
+bother--this is probably going to be the clearing-up point of
+everything. One feels certain, at any rate--Pratt has reached the end of
+his tether!"
+
+"If I seem to bother," replied Nesta, "it's because I know that he and
+Esther Mawson are at Normandale--working mischief."
+
+"We shall be there in half an hour," said Collingwood, as their own car
+ran past that in which the detectives and Byner were seated. "They can't
+do much mischief in that time."
+
+None of the three spoke again until the car pulled up suddenly at the
+gates of Normandale Park. The lodge-keeper, an old man, coming out to
+open them, approached the door of the car on seeing Nesta within.
+
+"There's a young woman just gone up to the house that wants to see you
+very particular, miss," he said. "I tell'd her that you'd gone to
+Barford, but she said she'd come a long way, and she'd wait till you
+come back. She's going across the park there--crossin' yon path."
+
+He pointed over the level sward to the slight figure of a woman in
+black, who was obviously taking a near cut up to the Grange. Nesta
+looked wonderingly across the park as the car cleared the gate and went
+on up the drive.
+
+"Who can she be?" she said musingly. "A woman from a long way--to see
+me?"
+
+"She'll get to the house soon after we reach it," said Eldrick. "Let's
+attend to this more pressing business first. We should know what's afoot
+here in a minute or two."
+
+But it was somewhat difficult to make out or to discover what really was
+afoot. The car stopped at the hall door: the second car came close
+behind it; Nesta, Collingwood, Eldrick, Byner, and the detectives poured
+into the hall--encountered a much mystified-looking butler, a couple of
+footmen, and the groom whose services Esther Mawson had requisitioned,
+and who, weary of waiting for her, had come up to the house.
+
+"What's all this?" asked Eldrick, taking the situation into his own
+hands. "What's the matter? Why did you send for the police?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe's orders, sir," answered the butler, with an
+apologetic glance at his young mistress. "Really, sir, I don't
+know--exactly--what is the matter! We are all so confused! What happened
+was, that not very long after Miss Mallathorpe had left for town in the
+carriage, Esther Mawson, the maid, came downstairs from Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's room, and was crossing the lower part of the hall, when
+Mrs. Mallathorpe suddenly appeared up there and called to me and James
+to stop her and lock her up, as she'd stolen money and jewels! We were
+to lock her up and telephone for the police, sir, and to add that Mr.
+Pratt was here."
+
+"Well?" demanded Eldrick.
+
+"We did lock her up, sir! She's in my pantry," continued the butler,
+ruefully. "We've got her in there because there are bars to the
+windows--she can't get out of that. A terrible time we had, too,
+sir--she fought us like--like a maniac, protesting all the time that
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had given her what she had on her. Of course, sir, we
+don't know what she may have on her--we simply obeyed Mrs. Mallathorpe."
+
+"Where is Mrs. Mallathorpe?" asked Collingwood. "Is she safe?"
+
+"Oh, quite safe, sir!" replied the butler. "She returned to her room
+after giving those orders. Mrs. Mallathorpe appeared to be--quite calm,
+sir."
+
+Prydale pushed himself forward--unceremoniously and insistently.
+
+"Keep that woman locked up!" he said. "First of all--where's Pratt?"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe said he would be found in a room in the old part of
+the house," answered the butler, shaking his head as if he were
+thoroughly mystified. "She said you would find him fast asleep--Mawson
+had drugged him!"
+
+Prydale looked at Byner and at his fellow-detectives. Then he turned to
+the butler.
+
+"Come on!" he said brusquely. "Take us there at once!" He glanced at
+Eldrick. "I'm beginning to see through it, Mr. Eldrick!" he whispered.
+"This maid's caught Pratt for us. Let's hope he's still----"
+
+But before he could say more, and just as the butler opened a door which
+led into a corridor at the rear of the hall, a sharp crack which was
+unmistakably that of a revolver, rang through the house, waking equally
+sharp echoes in the silent room. And at that, Nesta hurried up the
+stairway to her mother's apartment, and the men, after a hurried glance
+at each other, ran along the corridor after the butler and the footmen.
+
+Pratt came out of his stupor much sooner than Esther Mawson had reckoned
+on. According to her previous experiments with the particular drug which
+she had administered to him, he ought to have remained in a profound and
+an undisturbed slumber until at least five o'clock. But he woke at
+four--woke suddenly, sharply, only conscious at first of a terrible pain
+in his head, which kept him groaning and moaning in his chair for a
+minute or two before he fairly realized where he was and what had
+happened. As the pain became milder and gave way to a dull throbbing and
+a general sense of discomfort, he looked round out of aching eyes and
+saw the bottle of sherry. And so dull were his wits that his only
+thought at first was that the wine had been far stronger than he had
+known, and that he had drunk far too much of it, and that it had sent
+him to sleep--and just then his wandering glance fell on some papers
+which Esther Mawson had taken from one of his pockets and thrown aside
+as of no value.
+
+He leapt to his feet, trembling and sweating. His hands, shaking as if
+smitten with a sudden palsy, went to his pockets--he tore off his coat
+and turned his pockets out, as if touch and feeling were not to be
+believed, and his eyes must see that there was really nothing there.
+Then he snatched up the papers on the floor and found nothing but
+letters, and odd scraps of unimportant memoranda. He stamped his feet on
+those things, and began to swear and curse, and finally to sob and
+whine. The shock of his discovery had driven all his stupefaction away
+by that time, and he knew what had happened. And his whining and sobbing
+was not that of despair, but the far worse and fiercer sobbing and
+whining of rage and terrible anger. If the woman who had tricked him had
+been there he would have torn her limb from limb, and have glutted
+himself with revenge. But--he was alone.
+
+And presently, after moving around his prison more like a wild beast
+than a human being, his senses having deserted him for a while, he
+regained some composure, and glanced about him for means of escape. He
+went to the door and tried it. But the old, substantial oak stood firm
+and fast--nothing but a crow-bar would break that door. And so he turned
+to the mullioned window, set in a deep recess.
+
+He knew that it was thirty or forty feet above the level of the
+ground--but there was much thick ivy growing on the walls of Normandale
+Grange, and it might be possible to climb down by its aid. With a great
+effort he forced open one of the dirt-encrusted sashes and looked
+out--and in the same instant he drew in his head with a harsh groan. The
+window commanded a full view of the hall door--and he had seen Prydale,
+and two other detectives, and the stranger from London whom he believed
+to be a detective, hurrying from their motorcar into the house.
+
+There was but one thing for it, now. Esther Mawson had robbed him of
+everything that was on him in the way of papers and money. But in his
+hip-pocket she had left a revolver which Pratt had carried, always
+loaded, for some time. And now, without the least hesitation, he drew it
+out and sent one of its bullets through his brain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, returning to the hall from the room in which
+they and the detectives had found Pratt's dead body, stood a little
+later in earnest conversation with Prydale, who had just come there from
+an interview with Esther Mawson. Nesta Mallathorpe suddenly called to
+them from the stairs, at the same time beckoning them to go up to her.
+
+"Will you come with me and speak to my mother?" she said. "She knows you
+are here, and she wants to say something about what has
+happened--something about that document which Pratt said he possessed."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood exchanged glances without speaking. They
+followed Nesta into her mother's sitting-room. And instead of the
+semi-invalid whom they had expected to find there, they saw a woman who
+had evidently regained not only her vivacity and her spirits but her
+sense of authority and her inclination to exercise it.
+
+"I am sorry that you gentlemen should have been drawn into all this
+wretched business!" she exclaimed, as she pointed the two men to chairs.
+"Everything must seem very strange, and indeed have seemed so for some
+time. But I have been the victim of as bad a scoundrel as ever
+lived--I'm not going to be so hypocritical as to pretend that I'm sorry
+he's dead--I'm not! I only wish he'd met his proper fate--on the
+scaffold. I don't know what you may have heard, or gathered--my daughter
+herself, from what she tells me, has only the vaguest notions--but I
+wanted to tell you, Mr. Eldrick, and you, Mr. Collingwood--seeing that
+you're one a solicitor and the other a barrister, that Pratt invented a
+most abominable plot against me, which, of course, hasn't a word of
+truth in it, yet was so clever that----"
+
+Eldrick suddenly raised his hand.
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" he said quietly. "I think you had better let me
+speak before you go any further. Perhaps we--Mr. Collingwood and I--know
+more than you think. Don't trifle, Mrs. Mallathorpe, for your own and
+your daughter's sake! Tell the truth--and answer a plain question, which
+I assure you, is asked in your own interest. What have you done with
+John Mallathorpe's will?"
+
+Collingwood, anxious for Nesta, was watching her closely, and now he saw
+her turn a startled and inquiring look on her mother, who, in her turn,
+dashed a surprised glance at Eldrick. But if Mrs. Mallathorpe was
+surprised, she was also indignant, or she simulated indignation, and she
+replied to the solicitor's question with a sharp retort.
+
+"What do you mean?--John Mallathorpe's will!" she exclaimed. "What do I
+know of John Mallathorpe's will? There never was----"
+
+"Mrs. Mallathorpe!" interrupted Eldrick. "Don't! I'm speaking in your
+interest, I tell you! There was a will! It was made on the morning of
+John Mallathorpe's death. It was found by Mr. Collingwood's late
+grandfather, Antony Bartle: when he died suddenly in my office, it fell
+into Pratt's hands. That is the document which Pratt held over you--and
+not an hour ago, Esther Mawson took it from Pratt, and she gave it to
+you. Again I ask you--what have you done with it?"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe hesitated a moment. Then she suddenly faced Eldrick
+with a defiant look. "Let them--let everybody--do what they like!" she
+exclaimed. "It's burnt! I threw it in that fire as soon as I got it! And
+now----"
+
+Nesta interrupted her mother.
+
+"Does any one know the terms of that will?" she asked, looking at
+Eldrick. "Tell me!--if you know. Hush!" she went on, as Mrs. Mallathorpe
+tried to speak again. "I will know!"
+
+"Yes!" answered Eldrick. "Esther Mawson knows them. She read the will
+carefully. She told Prydale just now what they were. With the exception
+of three legacies of ten thousand pounds each to your mother, your
+brother, and yourself, John Mallathorpe left everything he possessed to
+the town of Barford for an educational trust."
+
+"Then," asked Nesta quietly, as she made a peremptory sign to her mother
+to be silent, "we--never had any right to be here--at all?"
+
+"I'm afraid not," replied Eldrick.
+
+"Then of course we shall go," said Nesta. "That's certain! Do you hear
+that, mother? That's my decision. It's final!"
+
+"You can do what you like," retorted Mrs. Mallathorpe sullenly. "I am
+not going to be frightened by anything that Esther Mawson says. Nor by
+what you say!" she continued, turning on Eldrick. "All that has got to
+be proved. Who can prove it? What can prove it? Do you think I am going
+to give up my rights without fighting for them? I shall swear that every
+word of Esther Mawson's is a lie! No one can bring forward a will that
+doesn't exist. And what concern is it of yours, Mr. Eldrick? What right
+have you?"
+
+"You are quite right, Mrs. Mallathorpe," said Eldrick. "It is no concern
+of mine. And so----"
+
+He turned to the door--and as he turned the door opened, to admit the
+old butler who looked apologetically but earnestly at Nesta as he
+stepped forward.
+
+"A Mrs. Gaukrodger wishes to see you on very particular business," he
+murmured. "She's been waiting some little time--something, she says,
+about some papers she has just found--belonging to the late Mr. John
+Mallathorpe."
+
+Collingwood, who was standing close to Nesta, caught all the butler
+said.
+
+"Gaukrodger!" he exclaimed, with a quick glance at Eldrick. "That was
+the name of the manager--a witness. See the woman at once," he whispered
+to Nesta.
+
+"Bring Mrs. Gaukrodger in, Dickenson," said Nesta. "Stay--I'll come with
+you, and bring her in myself."
+
+She returned a moment later with a slightly built, rather careworn woman
+dressed in deep mourning--the woman in black whom they had seen crossing
+the park--who looked nervously round her as she entered.
+
+"What is it you have for me, Mrs. Gaukrodger?" asked Nesta. "Papers
+belonging to the late Mr. John Mallathorpe? How--where did you get
+them?"
+
+Mrs. Gaukrodger drew a large envelope from under her cloak. "This,
+miss," she answered. "One paper--I only found it this morning. In this
+way," she went on, addressing herself to Nesta. "When my husband was
+killed, along with Mr. John Mallathorpe, they, of course, brought home
+the clothes he was wearing. There were a lot of papers in the pockets of
+the coat--two pockets full of them. And I hadn't heart or courage to
+look at them at that time, miss!--I couldn't, and I locked them up in a
+box. I never looked at them until this very day--but this morning I
+happened to open that box, and I saw them, and I thought I'd see what
+they were. And this was one--you see, it's in a plain envelope--it was
+sealed, but there's no writing on it. I cut the envelope open, and drew
+the paper out, and I saw at once it was Mr. John Mallathorpe's will--so
+I came straight to you with it."
+
+She handed the envelope over to Nesta, who at once gave it to Eldrick.
+The solicitor hastily drew out the enclosure, glanced it over, and
+turned sharply to Collingwood with a muttered exclamation.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "That man Cobcroft was right! There _was_ a
+duplicate! And here it is!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe had come nearer. The sight of the half sheet of
+foolscap in Eldrick's hands seemed to fascinate her. And the expression
+of her face as she came close to his side was so curious that the
+solicitor involuntarily folded up the will and hastily put it behind his
+back--he had not only seen that expression but had caught sight of Mrs.
+Mallathorpe's twitching fingers.
+
+"Is--that--that--another will?" she whispered. "John Mallathorpe's?"
+
+"Precisely the same--another copy--duly signed and witnessed!" answered
+Eldrick firmly. "What you foolishly did was done for nothing. And--it's
+the most fortunate thing in the world, Mrs. Mallathorpe, that this has
+turned up!--most fortunate for you!"
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe steadied herself on the edge of the table and looked at
+him fixedly. "Everything'll have to be given up?" she asked.
+
+"The terms of this will will be carried out," answered Eldrick.
+
+"Will--will they make me give up--what we've--saved?" she whispered.
+
+"Mother!" said Nesta appealingly. "Don't! Come away somewhere and let me
+talk to you--come!"
+
+But Mrs. Mallathorpe shook off her daughter's hand and turned again to
+Eldrick.
+
+"Will they?" she demanded. "Answer!"
+
+"I don't think you'll find the trustees at all hard when it comes to a
+question of account," answered Eldrick. "They'll probably take matters
+over from now and ignore anything that's happened during the past two
+years."
+
+Again Nesta tried to lead her mother away, and again Mrs. Mallathorpe
+pushed the appealing hand from her. All her attention was fixed on
+Eldrick. "And--and will the police give me--now--what they found on that
+woman?" she whispered.
+
+"I have no doubt they will," replied Eldrick. "It's--yours."
+
+Mrs. Mallathorpe drew a sigh of relief. She looked at the solicitor
+steadily for a moment--then without another word she turned and went
+away--to find Prydale.
+
+Eldrick turned to Nesta.
+
+"Don't forget," he said in a low voice, "it's a terrible blow to her,
+and she's been thinking of your interests! Leave her alone for a
+while--she'll get used to the altered circumstances. I'm sorry for
+her--and for you!"
+
+But Nesta made a sign of dissent.
+
+"There's no need to be sorry for me, Mr. Eldrick," she answered. "It's a
+greater relief than you can realize." She turned from him and went over
+to Mrs. Gaukrodger who had watched this scene without fully
+comprehending it. "Come with me," she said. "You look very tired and you
+must have some tea and rest awhile--come now."
+
+Eldrick and Collingwood, left alone, looked at each, other in silence
+for a moment. Then the solicitor shook his head expressively.
+
+"Well, that's over!" he exclaimed. "I must go back and hand this will
+over to the two trustees. But you, Collingwood--stay here a bit--if ever
+that girl needs company and help, it's now!"
+
+"I'm stopping," said Collingwood.
+
+He remained for a time where Eldrick left him; at last he went down to
+the hall and out into the gardens. And presently Nesta came to him
+there, and as if with a mutual understanding they walked away into the
+nearer stretches of the park. Normandale had never looked more beautiful
+than it did that afternoon, and in the midst of a silence which up to
+then neither of them had cared to break, Collingwood suddenly turned to
+the girl who had just lost it.
+
+"Are you sure that you won't miss all this--greatly?" he asked. "Just
+think!"
+
+"I'd rather lose more than this, however fond I'd got of it, than go
+through what I've gone through lately," she answered frankly. "Do you
+know what I want to do?"
+
+"No--I think not," he said. "What?"
+
+"If it's possible--to forget all about this," she replied. "And--if
+that's also possible--to help my mother to forget, too. Don't think too
+hardly of her--I don't suppose any of us know how much all this
+place--and the money--meant to her."
+
+"I've got no hard thoughts about her," said Collingwood. "I'm sorry for
+her. But--is it too soon to talk about the future?"
+
+Nesta looked at him in a way which showed him that she only half
+comprehended the question. But there was sufficient comprehension in her
+eyes to warrant him in taking her hands in his.
+
+"You know why I didn't go to India?" he said, bending his face to hers.
+
+"I--guessed!" she answered shyly.
+
+Then Collingwood, at this suddenly arrived supreme moment, became
+curiously bereft of speech. And after a period of silence, during which,
+being in the shadow of a grove of beech-trees which kindly concealed
+them from the rest of the world, they held each other's hands, all that
+he could find to say was one word.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Nesta laughed.
+
+"Well--what?" she whispered.
+
+Collingwood suddenly laughed too and put his arm round her.
+
+"It's no good!" he said. "I've often thought of what I'd to say to
+you--and now I've forgotten all. Shall I say it all at once!"
+
+"Wouldn't it be best?" she murmured with another laugh.
+
+"Then--you're going to marry me?" he asked.
+
+"Am I to answer--all at once?" she said.
+
+"One word will do!" he exclaimed, drawing her to him.
+
+"Ah!" she whispered as she lifted her face to his. "I couldn't say it
+all in one word. But--we've lots of time before us!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Talleyrand Maxim, by J. S. Fletcher
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM ***
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