In the Mayor's Parlour Part 30
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"To be sure; but that's just what you've got to find out," retorted Brent. "You ought to go to Mrs. Marriner's laundry and make an exhaustive search of her books, lists, and so on till you get some light--see?"
"Mrs. Marriner has, I should say, a hundred customers," remarked Hawthwaite.
"Don't matter if Mrs. Marriner's got five hundred customers," said Brent. "That's got to be seen into. If you aren't going to do it, I will. Whoever it was that was in that Mayor's Parlour tried to burn a blood-stained handkerchief there. That handkerchief was Wellesley's.
Wellesley swears he was never near the Mayor's Parlour. I believe him!
So that handkerchief got by error into the box or basket of some other customer of Mrs. Marriner. Trace it!"
He rose and moved towards the door, and Hawthwaite nodded.
"We'll make a try at it, Mr. Brent," he said. "But, as I say, to work on a slight clue like that----"
"I've known of far slighter clues," replied Brent.
Yet, as he went away, he reflected on the extreme thinness of this clue--it was possible that the handkerchief had pa.s.sed through more hands than one before settling in those of the person who had thrown it on the hearth, stained with Wallingford's blood, in the Mayor's Parlour.
But it was a clue, and, in Brent's opinion, _the_ clue. One fact in relation to it had always struck him forcibly--the murderer of his cousin was either a very careless and thoughtless person or had been obliged to quit the Mayor's Parlour very hurriedly. Anyone meticulously particular about destroying clues or covering up traces would have seen to it that the handkerchief was completely burnt up before leaving the room. As it was, it seemed to Brent that the murderer had either thrown the handkerchief on the hearth, seen it catch fire and paid no more attention to it--which would denote carelessness--or had quitted the place immediately after flinging it aside, which would imply that some sound from without had startled him--or her. And, was it him--or was it her? There were certain features of the case which had inclined Brent of late to speculating on the possibility that his cousin had been murdered by a woman. And, to be sure, a woman was now in the case--Mrs. Mallett.
If only he knew why Mrs. Mallett went to see the doctor and the Mayor....
But that, after all, was mere speculation, and he had a busy morning before him, in relation to his election business. He had been continuously engaged all the time when at three o'clock he hurried to the Castle Grounds to meet Queenie. He found her in her usual haunt, a quiet spot in the angle of a wall, where she was accustomed to sit and read.
"Well, and why 'urgent'?" asked Brent as he dropped on the seat at her side.
"To make sure that you'd come," retorted Queenie. "Didn't want to leave it to chance."
"I'm here!" said Brent. "Go ahead with the business."
"Did you see the _Monitor_ last night and that facsimile they gave away with it?" inquired Queenie.
"I did! Saw the facsimile before it was published. Peppermore showed it to me."
"Very well--that's the urgent business. I know whose machine that letter--the original, I mean--was typed on!"
"You do? Great Scott! Whose, then?"
"Uncle Simon Crood's! Fact!"
"Whew! So the old fossil's got such a modern invention as a typewriter, has he? And you think----"
"Don't think--I know! He's had a typewriter for years; it's an old-fas.h.i.+oned thing, a good deal worn out. He rarely uses it, but now and then he operates, with one finger, slowly. And that letter originated from him--his machine."
"Proof!" said Brent.
Queenie took up a book that lay on the seat between them and from it extracted a folded copy of the _Monitor's_ facsimile. She leaned nearer to Brent.
"Now look!" she said. "Do you notice that two or three of the letters are broken? That _M_--part of it's gone. That _O_--half made. The top of that _A_ is missing. More noticeable still--do you see that the small _t_ there is slanting the wrong way? Well, all that's on Uncle Simon's machine! I knew where that letter had originated as soon as ever I saw this facsimile last night."
She laid aside the supplement and once more opening her book produced a sheet of paper.
"Look at this!" she continued. "When Uncle Simon went out to the tannery this morning, I just took advantage of his absence to type out the alphabet on his machine. Now then, you glance over that and compare the faulty letters with those in the facsimile! What do you say now?"
"You're a smart girl, Queenie!" said Brent. "You're just the sort of girl I've been wanting to meet--the sort that can see things when they're right in front of her eyes. Oh, my! that's sure, positive proof that old Simon----"
"Oh!" broke in Queenie sharply. "Oh, I say!"
Before Brent could look up, he was conscious that a big and bulky shadow had fallen across the gravelled path at their feet. He lifted his eyes.
There, in his usual raiment of funereal black, his top-hat at the back of his head, his hands behind him under the ample skirts of his frock-coat, his broad, fat face heavy with righteous and affectedly sorrowful indignation, stood Simon Crood. His small, pig-like eyes were fixed on the papers which the two young people were comparing.
"h.e.l.lo!" exclaimed Brent. He was quick to see that he and Queenie were in for a row, probably for a row of a decisive sort which would affect both their lives, and he purposely threw as much hearty insolence into his tone as he could summon. "Eavesdropping, eh, Mr. Crood?"
Simon withdrew a hand from the sable folds behind him, and waved it in lordly fas.h.i.+on.
"I've no words to waste on impudent young fellers as comes from n.o.body knows where," he said loftily. "My words is addressed to my niece, as I see sitting there, a-deceiving of her lawful rellytive and guardian. Go you home at once, miss!"
"Rot!" exclaimed Brent. "She'll go home when she likes--and not at all, if she doesn't like! You stick where you are, Queenie! I'm here."
And as if to prove the truth of his words he slipped his right arm round Queenie's waist, clasped it tightly, and turned a defiant eye on Simon.
"See that?" he said. "Well! that's just where Queenie stops, as long as ever Queenie likes! Eh, Queenie?"
The girl, reddening as Brent's arm slipped round her, instinctively laid her free hand on his wrist. And as he appealed to her he felt her fingers tighten there with a firm, understanding pressure.
"That's all right!" he whispered to her. "We've done it, girlie--it's for good!" He looked up at Simon, whose mouth was opening with astonishment. "Queenie's my girl, old bird!" he went on. "She isn't going anywhere--not anywhere at all--at anybody's bidding, unless she likes. And why shouldn't she be here?"
It seemed, from the pause that followed, as if Simon would never find his tongue again. But at last he spoke.
"So this here is what's been going on behind my back, is it, miss?" he demanded, pointedly ignoring Brent and fixing his gaze on Queenie.
"A-carrying on with strangers at my very gates, as you might say, and in public places in a town of which I'm chief magistrate! What sort o'
return do you call this, miss, I should like to know, for all that I've done for you? me that's lodged and boarded and clothed you, ever since----"
"What have I done for you in return?" demanded Queenie with a flash of spirit. "Saved you the wages of a couple of servants for all these years! But this is the end, if you're going to throw that in my teeth----"
Brent drew Queenie to her feet and turned her away from Simon. He gave the big man a look over his shoulder.
"That's it, my friend!" he said. "That's the right term--the end! Find somebody else to do your household drudgery--this young lady's done her last stroke for you. And now don't begin to bl.u.s.ter," he added, as Simon, purpling with wrath, shook his fist. "We'll just leave you to yourself."
He led Queenie away down a side-path, and once within its shelter, put a finger under her chin, and lifting her face, looked steadily at her.
"Look here, girlie," he said. "You heard what I whispered to you just now? 'It's for good!' Didn't I say that? Well, is it?"
Queenie managed to get her eyes to turn on him at last.
"Do you mean it?" she murmured.
"I just do!" answered Brent fervently. "Say the word!"
"Yes, then!" whispered Queenie.
She looked at him wonderingly when he had bent and kissed her.
In the Mayor's Parlour Part 30
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In the Mayor's Parlour Part 30 summary
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