Dive into the captivating world of detective fiction with *Call Mr. Fortune* by H. C. Bailey, a timeless classic that will keep you on the edge of your seat! ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐ Join the brilliant and unconventional detective, Reggie Fortune, as he unravels a series of intricate mysteries with his sharp intellect and unique methods. This story is a perfect blend of suspense, wit, and unexpected twists that will leave you guessing until the very end. ๐ญ๐
๐ **Story Highlights:**
– Meet Reggie Fortune, a detective like no other, who uses his medical knowledge and keen observation skills to solve crimes. ๐ฅ๐ฌ
– Follow along as he tackles a variety of cases, from murder to theft, each more puzzling than the last. ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐
– Enjoy the rich, descriptive storytelling that brings the characters and settings to life. ๐ผ๏ธ๐
– Experience the thrill of solving the mystery alongside Reggie, with plenty of red herrings and surprises along the way. ๐๐ถ๏ธ
๐ **Detailed Story Breakdown:**
– **Introduction to Reggie Fortune:** Get to know the eccentric and brilliant detective who is always one step ahead of the criminals. ๐ง ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ
– **The Cases:** Each case is a new adventure, filled with complex characters and intricate plots. ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐
– **The Resolution:** Watch as Reggie pieces together the clues to reveal the truth, often in the most unexpected ways. ๐งฉ๐
๐ข **Call to Action:**
– If you enjoyed this story, donโt forget to **like**, **comment**, and **subscribe** to our channel for more classic tales and thrilling mysteries! ๐๏ธ๐
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**Navigate by Chapters or Titles:**
00:00:36 Chapter 1.
00:43:48 Chapter 2.
01:31:08 Chapter 3.
02:15:40 Chapter 4.
02:58:16 Chapter 5.
03:42:27 Chapter 6.
In the quiet corners of London, where shadows stretch long and secrets linger, there exists a man whose brilliance is matched only by his unassuming demeanor. Meet Reggie Fortune, a detective with a keen mind and a heart full of curiosity. When a mysterious case lands on his doorstep, involving a cryptic message and a missing person, Reggie is drawn into a web of intrigue that will test his wits and resolve. Join us as we unravel the enigma in H. C. Bailey’s classic tale, ‘Call Mr. Fortune,’ where every clue leads deeper into the labyrinth of human nature and deception. Chapter 1. THE ARCHDUKEโS TEA. Mr. Reginald Fortune, M.A., M.B., B.Ch., F.R.C.S., was having a lecture from his father. โYou only do just enough,โ Dr. Fortune complained. โNever brilliant. No zeal. Now, Reginald, it wonโt do. Just enough is always too little. Take my word for it. And do be attentive to the Archduke. God bless you!โ โHave a good time, sir,โ said Mr. Reginald Fortune, and watched his father settle down in the car (a long process) beside his mother and drive off. They were gone at last, which Reginald had begun to think impossible, and the opulent practice of Dr. Fortune lay for a month in the virgin hands of Reginald. โBeautifully patient the mater is,โ Reginald communed with himself as he ate his third muffin. โFretful game to spend your life waitinโ for a man to get ready. Quaint old bird, the pater. Death-bed manner for a tummy-ache. Wonder the patients lap it up.โ But old Dr. Fortune was good at diagnosis, and he had his reasons for saying that Reggie lacked zeal. At Oxford, at his hospital, Reggie did what was necessary to take respectable degrees, but no more than he could help. It was remarked by his dean that he did things too easily. He always had plenty of time, and spent it here, there, and everywhere, on musical comedy and prehistoric man, golf and the newer chemistry, bargees and psychical research. There was nothing which he knew profoundly, but hardly anything of which he did not know enough to find his way about in it. Nobody, except his mother, had ever liked him too much, for he was a self-sufficient creature, but everybody liked him enough; he got on comfortably with everybody from barmaids to dons. He was of a round and cheerful countenance and a perpetual appetite. This gave him a solidity of aspect emphasized by his extreme neatness. Neither his hair nor anything else of his was ever ruffled. He was more at his ease with the world than a man has a right to be at thirty-five. It is presumed that he had never wanted anything which he had not got. Old Dr. Fortune possessed a small fortune and a rich practice, and Reggie enjoyed the proceeds and proposed to inherit both. The practice lay in that pleasant outer suburb of London called Westhampton, a region of commons and a large park, sacred to the well-to-do, and still boasting one or two houses inhabited by what auctioneers call the nobility. In Boldrewood, the best of these places, there lived at this moment in Reggie Fortuneโs existence the Archduke Maurice, the heir-apparent to the Emperor of Bohemia. You may remember that the Archduke came to live in England shortly after his marriage. It is, however, not true, as scandal reported, that his uncle the Emperor sent him into exile. There is reason to believe that the Archduchess, a woman equally vehement and beautiful, was not liked in several European courts. On her return from the honeymoon she made a booby trap for that drill serjeant of a king, Maximilian of Swabia, and for some weeks the Central Powers were threatening to mobilize. But she was a Serene Highness of the house of Erbach-Wittelsbach, which traces its descent to Odin, and had an independent realm of nearly two square miles, with parliament and army complete, and even the Emperor of Bohemia could not pretend that Maurice had married beneath him. History will affirm the simple truth that the Archduke and the Archduchess sought seclusion in England because they were bored to death by the Bohemian court, which was perpetually occupied in demonstrating that you can be very dull without being in the least respectable. The Archduke Maurice was a man of geniality and extraordinarily natural tastes. His garden–a long walk–a pint of beer in one of the old Westhampton inns made him a happy day. The Archduchess was not so simple, for she loved to drive her own car, a ferocious vehicle. But Archduchesses may not do that in Bohemia. Reggie, having eaten all the muffins, lit his pipe and meditated on the cases left him by his father. Old Mrs. Smythe had her autumn influenza, and old Talbot Browne had his autumn gout, and the little Robinsons were putting in their whooping-cough. A kindly world! . . . He was dozing in the dark when the telephone bell rang. Was that Dr. Fortune? Would he come to Boldrewood at once–at once. The Archduke had been knocked down by a motor-car and picked up unconscious. โPoor old pater!โ Reggie grinned, as he put his tools together. The pater would never forgive himself for being out of this. He loved a lord, did the pater, and since he had been called in to remove a fish bone from the archducal throat he could not keep the Archduke out of his conversation. The royal geniality of the Archduke, the royal disdain of the Archduchess–Dr. Fortune had been much gratified thereby, and Reggie was prepared to loathe their Royal Highnesses. Thank Heaven, the pater was safe on his holiday! If his head swelled so over an archducal fish bone, he would have burst over an archduke knocked down. Reggie was practical, if without sympathy; he made haste in his neat way, and the sedate chauffeur of Dr. Fortune was horrified by instructions to let the car rip. The streets of Westhampton are not adapted to this. The district has tried hard to keep itself rural still, and its original narrow winding lanes remain ill-lighted and overhung by trees. Boldrewood stands high, and its grounds border upon Westhampton Heath, across which there is one lamp per furlong. Just as Reggieโs car swung round to the heath it was stopped with a jerk. โWhatโs the trouble, Gorton?โ Reggie said to the chauffeur. Gorton was leaning sideways and peering into the gloom of the gutter. A gleam from the sidelight winked at a body which lay still. โGive me a turn,โ Gorton muttered. His face showed white. Reggie jumped out, but Gorton was quicker. โLumme, itโs the Archduke!โ he said, and his voice went up high. โDonโt be futile, Gorton.โ Reggie bent over the body. โGet the lamps on him.โ Gorton backed the car and the body came into the light. Its face was crushed. Gorton gasped and swallowed. โBut itโs not him neither,โ he muttered. After a minute Reggie stood up. โHe was a fine chap about an hour ago,โ he said gently. โAll over, sir?โ Reggie nodded. โSome hog done him in?โ โAs you say, Gorton. Running-down case. Big car. Took him in the back. Went over his head. But I donโt see how he got into the gutter.โ He walked round the body, moved it a little, and picked up two matches–unusual matches in England–very thin vestas with dark blue heads. โWhy did you think he was the Archduke, Gorton?โ โSuch a big chap, sir. Not many his measure. And thereโs something about the make of the poor chap thatโs very like. But thank Godโs itโs not the Archduke, anyway.โ โWhy?โ said Reggie, who was without reverence for Archdukes. โWell, letโs take him along.โ They brought the dead man to the lodge at the main gates of Boldrewood, and there left him with a message to be telephoned to the police. The hall at Boldrewood is in the Victorian baronial style, absurd but comfortable. Reggie was still blinking at the light when a woman ran at him. His first notion of the Archduchess Ianthe was vehemence. She came upon him, a great fur cloak falling away from her speed, panting, black eyes glowing, and then stopped short, and her pale face was distorted with passion. โDr. Fortune! You are not Dr. Fortune!โ she cried. โDr. Fortune, Junior, madame. My father is away, and I am in charge of his practice.โ She muttered something in a language he did not know, and looked as if she was going to kill him. His second notion of her was that she was wickedly beautiful. A Greek perfection in the pale face, but, Lord, what a temper! The daintiest grace of body, but it moved and quivered like a whip lash. โMy dear Ianthe!โ A man came smiling from behind the screen by the fire. He was tall and slight and dandyish: a lot of colour in his clothes, an odd absence of colour in him. A bright blue tie with an emerald in it, a bright blue handkerchief hanging half out of the pocket of the silver-grey coat. But his face had a waxy pallor, his hair, his moustache, and little pointed beard were so fair that they looked like patches of paint on a mask. โWe are much obliged by Dr. Fortuneโs coming so quickly.โ The Archduchess whirled round. โHe is too young,โ she said in German. โLook at him. He is a boy.โ โI beg your pardon, madame,โ said Reggie in the same language. โMay I see the patient?โ The man laughed. โI am sure we have every confidence in your skill, Dr. Fortune.โ All the laughter was smoothed out of his face. โAnd your discretion,โ he said in a lower voice. โI am the Archduke Leopold. You may be frank with me. And rely upon my help.โ Reggie bowed. โHow did the accident happen, sir?โ The Archduke turned to his sister-in-law. โYou know that I do not know,โ she cried. โI was out in the car.โ โAs my sister says, Dr. Fortune, she was out in the car.โ The Archduke paused. โShe drives herself. It is with her a little passion. My brother was out walking alone.โ โThose long walks! How I hate them!โ the Archduchess broke out. โAgain, it is with him a little passion. Well, he did not come back. I grew anxious. I am staying here, you understand. My sister was late too. I sent out servants. My brother was found lying in the road not far from the gate of the lodge. He remains unconscious. I fear—-โ He spread out his hands. โYou–you always fear!โ the Archduchess cried. They exchanged glances like blows. โMay I go up, madame?โ Reggie said solemnly. She whirled round and rushed away. โThe Archduchess is much agitated,โ said the Archduke. โIt is most natural,โ Reggie murmured. โMost natural. Pray follow me, Dr. Fortune. I will take you to my brother.โ The Archduke Maurice lay in a room of austere simplicity. A writing-table, a tiny dressing-table, three chairs, and a narrow iron bed were all its furniture. Only three small rugs lay on the floor. At the head of the bed a man stood watching. The Archduchess was on her knees, her face pressed to her husbandโs body, and she sobbed violently. The Archduke Leopold looked at Reggie, made a gesture towards her, and said, โMy dear Ianthe!โ She looked up flushed and tear stained. โI beg your pardon, madame. This is dangerous to the patient,โ Reggie said. She gave a stifled cry and rushed out of the room. The Archduke Leopold seemed to intend to stay, but in a moment the voice of the Archduchess was heard calling for him. โBetter go to her, sir. Keep her out of here,โ Reggie said, and turned to his patient. It was obvious that the Archduke did not relish so brusque an order. But the passionate voice was not to be denied. The man by the bed and Reggie took each otherโs measure. โEnglish?โ said Reggie. โYes, sir. Holt, I am. The Archdukeโs valet.โ โYou undressed him?โ โYes, sir. Was that wrong?โ โDepends how you did it.โ Reggie began his examination. The Archduke Maurice was a big man. That is a habit in his family. He had their fairness, but even in coma his cheeks showed more colour than his brother Leopoldโs, and his yellow hair and beard had a reddish glow. A bold, honest face with plenty of brow. Reggie went over his body with an anatomical enthusiasm for so splendid a specimen. โGet me some warm water, will you?โ Holt went out of the room. Reggie bent over the broad chest. From it, from just above the heart, he drew out a thin sliver of steel. He made a face at it and put it away. Holt came back, and there was sponging and bandaging. โYou washed him before, I see. Any one else touched him but you?โ โOnly carrying him, sir. Iโve been with him the whole time. I found him.โ โOh. Lying on his face, I suppose?โ โNo, sir. On his back. Just like he is now.โ โOh. Notice anything?โ โNo, sir, I wish I had. Iโd like to have the handling of the bounder that did it.โ โWell, well, we mustnโt get excited. Preserve absolute calm, Holt. Heโs well liked, is he?โ โWhy, sir, weโd do anything for him. He–oh, heโs a gentleman.โ โQuite so. You mustnโt leave him a moment. No one–see, no one–is to come into the room. Iโll be back soon.โ โVery good, sir. Beg pardon, sir.โ The good Holt flushed. โWhatโs the verdict?โ โItโs not all over yet!โ Reggie went downstairs. And it appeared to him that he interrupted the Archduke and the Archduchess in a quarrel. But the Archduke was very pleased to see him, effusive in offering a chair, and so forth. Reggie was not gratified. โI must have nurses, sir,โ he announced. โI should like another opinion.โ โYou see!โ the Archduchess cried. โIt is as I told you. This boy!โ โThe Archduchess is naturally anxious,โ the Archduke apologized. โBy all means nurses. But another opinion–you must have confidence in yourself, my good friend.โ โI have. But I want Sir Lawson Hunter to see the case. โ The Archduke shrugged. โIt is serious then, Dr. Fortune? We do not wish a great noise. Is it not so, Ianthe?โ โI would give my soul to be quiet,โ she cried. โQuite,โ said Reggie. โVery well. Discretion, then, you understand, my good friend.โ โIโll telephone to Sir Lawson at once.โ โIndeed? It is serious, then?โ โItโs a bad concussion.โ Reggie bowed and made for the door. โYou–Dr. Fortune—-โ the Archduchess cried. โWill he–what will happen?โ โThereโs no reason we shouldnโt hope, madame,โ Reggie said, and paused a moment watching them. Emotion plays queer tricks with faces. They were both in the grip of emotions. Sir Lawson Hunter is rather fat and his legs are rather short. His complexion is greyish and his eyes look boiled. People call him dyspeptic, though his capacious stomach has never known an ache: or imagine that he drinks, though alcohol and physicians are his chief abominations. His European reputation as a surgeon has been won by knowing his own mind. Reggie met him at the door and took him upstairs before that puzzling pair, the Archduke and the Archduchess, had a sight of him. โGlad you could come, sir. Itโs an odd case.โ โEvery case is odd,โ said Sir Lawson Hunter. โHe was knocked down by a car. The–โ โIf he was, I can find it out for myself. Damme, Fortune, donโt bias me. Most unprofessional. Thatโs the worst of general practice. You fellows must always be saying something.โ Reggie held his peace. He knew Sir Lawsonโs little ways, having been his house surgeon. The faithful Holt was turned out of the room. Sir Lawson Hunter went over the senseless body with his usual speed and washed his hands. โSplendid animal,โ he remarked. โThey run to that, these Pragas. I remember his uncleโs abdominal muscles. Heroic. Well. He was walking. A big car driven fast hit him from behind on the right side, fractured two ribs, and knocked him down. Impact of his head on the road has caused a serious concussion. That car should have stopped.โ Reggie smiled. โOh, one of the odd things is that it didnโt.โ โThereโs a damned lot of road hogs about, my boy.โ said Sir Lawson heartily. He was himself fond of high speed. โWell. They sent out, I suppose. Found him lying on his face unconscious.โ โNo, sir.โ โWhat?โ Sir Lawson jumped. โHe was lying on his back.โ โOh, thatโs absurd.โ โYes, sir. But Iโve seen his valet who found him.โ โThese fellows have no observation,โ Sir Lawson grunted, but there was some animation in his boiled eye. โDamme, Fortune, he ought to have been on his face.โ โYes, sir.โ โMiracles donโt happen.โ โNo, sir. โNow these abrasions on the legs. As if the car had been driven at him again while he lay. A queer thing. Or have there been two cars at him?โ โAnd there is this too, sir.โ Reggie held out the sliver of steel. โI saw the puncture. I was coming to that. Humph! Whoever put this in meant business.โ โAnd didnโt know his job. It slipped along the bone and missed everything.โ Sir Lawson turned the thing over. โA womanโs hatpin. About half a womanโs hatpin.โ โFresh fracture. Broke as it was pushed in.โ โTheyโre a wild lot,โ said Sir Lawson, and smiled. โYou have no nerves, Fortune?โ โI believe not, sir.โ โThis ought to be the making of you. You want shaking up. You must stay in the house. By the way, whoโs in the house?โ โThe Archduchess, of course—-โ โIanthe. Yes. Auntโs in a mad-house. Ianthe. Yes. Crazy on motoring. Drives her own car. And have you see Ianthe–since?โ Sir Lawson nodded at the body on the bed. โShe is very excited.โ โIs she really?โ Sir Lawson laughed. โIs she, though? How surprising!โ โShe is surprising, sir.โ โWhat? What? Be careful, my boy. Handsome creature, isnโt she?โ โYes, sir.โ Reggie declined to be amused. โThe Archduke Leopold is staying with them.โ โLeopold. Heโs the dandy entomologist. Heโs tame enough. Well, heโs the head of the house after this fellow. Better tell him.โ He blinked at Reggie. โYou have nurses you can trust? Well, weโll stay in the room till one comes, my boy. Our friend of the hatpin wonโt miss a chance. These Royal families theyโre a criss-cross of criminal tendencies. Hohenzollerns, Hapsburgs, Pragas, Wittelsbachs–look at the heredity.โ โThere was another running-down case here tonight. The man was killed–fractured skull. He was left on the road too. And another queer thing–he was much the same build as the Archduke Maurice.โ โGood Gad!โ Sir Lawson was startled out of his omniscient manner, an event unknown in Reggieโs experience. โThereโs something devilish in it, Fortune. One murder–the wrong man dead–and then try again at once the same way. Imagine the creature looking at that poor dead wretch and jumping on the car again to drive it on at the other man. Diabolical! Diabolical!โ โI donโt think I have much imagination, sir,โ said Reggie, who was not impressed by ineffective emotion. There was a gentle tap at the door, a nurse came and was given her instructions, and the two men went down to the Archduke Leopold. He had changed his clothes. He was now in a claret-coloured velvet which did violence to his complexion and his pale beard. He sat in the smoking-room with a book on the entomology of Java and a glass of eau sucrรฉe. He smiled at them and waved them to chairs. โI have to tell you, sir, that your brother lies in grave danger,โ said Sir Lawson. Reggie looked at him sideways. โAh, the concussion! It is serious, then? I am deeply distressed.โ โThe concussion is most serious. Thereโs another matter. In your brotherโs chest above the heart, at which it must have been aimed, we have found–this.โ โMon Dieu! It is a hatpin–a womanโs hatpin. But it is incredible! It is murder.โ โAttempted murder.โ โBut what do you suggest, sir? Do you accuse some one?โ โNot my function. That pin was driven at your brotherโs heart by some one. Can you tell me any more, sir?โ The Archduke buried his face in his hands. โI will not believe it,โ he muttered–โI will not believe it.โ After a little he controlled himself. โGentlemen, you have a right to my confidence. I will tell you everything. I trust you to do all that is possible for my poor brother and for the honour of our family, which to him, as to me, is dearer than life. You know that he is the heir to the throne of Bohemia. My uncle, the Emperor, has long been vexed with his living in England. I came here to persuade my brother to go back to his country. My poor brother had made his home here at the wish of the Archduchess, who dislikes the duties of royalty. He was passionately, madly, in love with her. But, alas! in these love marriages there is often difficulty. They were not of the same mind upon many things, and the Archduchess is of a vehement temper. I fear–but you will forgive me if I say no more. I take one small thing. My brother loved to go walking. The Archduchess is passionately fond of her motor-car, drives it herself, loves wild speed. My brother detested motor-cars. I fear that my coming gave them cause for fresh quarrels. My brother was ready to go back to Bohemia. The Archduchess was violently opposed to it. I confess to you, gentlemen, I have feared some scandal, some madness. I thought she would leave him. But this–it is appalling.โ โThe Archduchess was out in her motor-car tonight?โ Sir Lawson said. โYes. Yes. It is true. But this–must we think it?โ โWe have to think of nothing but our duty to our patient,โ said Sir Lawson. The Archduke grasped his hand. โYou are right. I thank you. I shall not forget your fidelity.โ The Archduchess whirled into the room. She, as Reggie remarked, had not cared to change her clothes. She had not even touched her hair, which was escaping in a wild disorder from under her hat. โThey will not let me see him,โ she cried. โLeopold—-โ โIt is by my instructions, madame,โ Sir Lawson said. โI am responsible for the Archdukeโs safety.โ She bit her lip. โIs he so hurt?โ she said unsteadily. โHe lies in very grave danger, madame. I permit no one in his room.โ She stared at him, her throat quivering, her great eyes bold and bright. Then with a little shrug she turned away and, plucking at the gold things which jingled from her waist, took out a cigarette and lit it. Reggie saw one of those foreign matches with the violet heads. Sir Lawson made his bow, and Reggie went with him to his car. โWhy did you tell them that the Archduke was in grave danger?โ he said. โHeโll be safer if they believe he is going to die,โ said Sir Lawson. โOh, do you think so?โ said Reggie, as the car shot away. Then he made an excellent supper and slept sound. He found his patient peaceful in the morning. No sign of consciousness yet, but more colour in the cheeks, a deeper breathing and a stronger pulse, more warmth. โThe Archduchess has come twice in the night to ask about him, doctor,โ the nurse said. โI told her he was no better.โ โDid she make a noise?โ Reggie frowned. โNo, she was very good.โ Reggie went out to take the air, and the air is not bad on the Westhampton heights. He made a good pace under the great beeches of Boldrewood, and came out on the open road across the heath. Just there he had found the dead man. A dull red stain could still be seen. It was farther on that the Archduke was struck. Just beyond the turn to Brendon. He found the place. There was a loosening of the road, as if a heavy car had been brought up sharply or made a violent swerve. He walked to and fro scanning the ground. Another of those foreign matches. He was just picking it up when a motor-car stopped a few yards away. Two men jumped out and came towards him. One was middle aged and singularly without distinction. The other had a youthful and very jaunty air, and it was only when he came near that Reggie saw the fellow was old enough to be his father. An actorโs face, with that look of calculated expression, and an actorโs way of dressing, a trifle too emphatic. His present part was the gay young fellow. โDr. Fortune, I think?โ He smiled all over his face. โI am Dr. Fortune.โ โReconstructing the crime, eh? Oh, you neednโt be discreet. Iโm Lomas–Stanley Lomas–Criminal Investigation Department, donโt you know? Sir Lawson Hunter came round to me last night. Patientโs doing well, I see. Thatโs providential. Just a moment–just a moment. โ He skipped away from Reggie to his companion, and they went over the ground. But Reggie thought them very superficial. Lomas skipped back again. โHe didnโt bleed, then. The other man did, though–the man you found.โ โIn the middle of the road. And I found him dead in the gutter.โ โItโs quaint what the criminal donโt think of. Iโm surprised every time. Did you find anything here?โ Reggie held out his match. โThere were two more like that by the other man.โ Lomas turned it over. โBelgian make. You buy them all over the Continent, donโt you know.โ โThe Archduchess carries them.โ โNow, thatโs very interesting. If you donโt mind Iโll walk up to the house with you.โ Upon the way he praised the beauties of nature and the quality of the morning air. As they came to the door of Boldrewood a big car passed them with the Archduchess driving alone. Lomas put up his eyeglass. โSheโs not overcome with grief, what?โ โNot quite.โ โMight be bravado, donโt you know.โ โI donโt know.โ โIt takes some of them that way,โ Lomas said pensively. He turned on the steps of the house and looked after the car as it wound in and out among the beeches. โStriking woman. Yes. Iโll come up to your room, if you donโt mind.โ โI thought you wanted to say something,โ Reggie said. Lomas did not answer till they were upstairs. โWell, no. Not to say anything,โ he resumed, and lit a cigarette. โI want another opinion, as you fellows say. Sir Lawson Hunter has made up his mind.โ โOh, he always does that.โ Lomas lifted an eyebrow. โWell, look at it. Somebody in a car laid for our Archduke. The other poor devil was cut down by mistake. And the somebody had nerve enough to go on. Thatโs striking. The Archduchess comes of pretty wild stock. In love or out of love she wouldnโt stick at a trifle. You find her matches by each body. You find a hatpin in the Archduke. Thatโs a blunder, what? Yes, but itโs a womanโs blunder. She finds he isnโt quite dead after all her trouble, she is desperate, and–_voilร _.โ He made a gesture of stabbing. โSo youโve made up your mind too, Mr. Lomas?โ Lomas blew smoke rings. โIโm wasting your time, doctor. I want to know–has it occurred to you–the Archduchess and the Archduke Leopold–working it together? If sheโs fallen in love with Leopold. That straightens it out, donโt you know.โ โGuess again,โ Reggie said. Lomas lit another cigarette. โWell, thatโs what I want to know. You saw them together just after the crime.โ He lifted an eyebrow. โNothing doing,โ said Reggie. โIโm afraid so. Iโm afraid so. Itโs a disturbing case, doctor. Nothing doing, as you say. If I had all the evidence in my hands, I expect thereโs no one I could touch. You canโt indict royalty. The Archdukeโs smash–well, letโs say itโs all in the family. But this poor devil they killed! Whoโs to pay for him? These royal dagoes come over and run amuck on an English road, and I canโt touch them. Disheartening, what? Thatโs the trouble, doctor.โ Reggie nodded and, as his breakfast made its appearance, Lomas rose to go. He would not have even coffee. โBetter get busy, donโt you know. We must see if we can put the fear of God into them. If theyโll go scurrying back to Bohemia itโs the best way out.โ He skipped off, his jauntiness put on again like a coat. Reggie was standing at the window with his after-breakfast pipe when the Archduchess brought her car back. She was very pale in spite of the morning air, and her face had grown haggard. โSomethingโll snap,โ Reggie was saying to himself, when a voice behind him said aloud, โNice car, sir.โ He jumped round and saw standing at his elbow the insignificant little companion of Mr. Lomas. โAfter all, thereโs nothing like an English car,โ said the little man. โOh. Youโve noticed that?โ Reggie said. โYou do notice something, then?โ โOf course we arenโt gifted, sir. But weโre professional. Something in that, donโt you think? Yes, sir, as you say: we have noticed something. It was a foreign car, and foreign tyres did the trick last night. And the Archduchess drives English. And yet–did you know we had the other half of the hatpin? I picked it up last night.โ He held out a scrap of steel with a big head of wrought silver. โGerman work, they tell me.โ โViennese,โ Reggie said. โYou know everything, sir. Such a convenience. But Vienna being quite near Bohemia, as Iโve heard–looks awkward, donโt it?โ โIs that what you came to say?โ โNot wholly, sir. No. I am Superintendent Bell. Mr. Lomas sent me to you. He considered you might find it convenient to have some one in the house who could keep an eye open.โ โVery kind of Mr. Lomas.โ There was a tap at the door. The Archduke Leopoldโs valet appeared. The Archduke Leopold was much surprised that Dr. Fortune had not brought him news of the patient. The Archduke Leopold desired that Dr. Fortune would come to him immediately. โReally?โ Reggie said. โDr. Fortuneโs compliments to the Archduke, and he is much occupied. He can give the Archduke a few moments.โ The valet, having the appearance of a man who has never been so surprised in his life, retired. โItโs a gift,โ Superintendent Bell murmured. โItโs a gift, you know. I never could handle the nobs.โ Reggie began to get together some odds and ends: a bottle full of tiny white tablets, a graduated glass, a jug of water, a hypodermic syringe. โYouโd better clear out, you know,โ he said to Superintendent Bell. โWill he come?โ โHeโll come all right,โ Reggie said, and took off his coat. When he turned, Superintendent Bell had vanished. โJust setting the stage, sir?โ said a voice from behind the curtain. โConfound your impertinence,โ Reggie growled. โHere—-โ But the Archduke came in. He was now a decoration in a russet brown. โYou are very mysterious, Dr. Fortune,โ he complained. โI expect more frankness, sir.โ โMy patient is my first consideration, sir.โ โI desire that you will consider my anxieties. Well, sir, how is my brother?โ โYou may give yourself every hope of his recovery, sir.โ The Archduke looked round for a chair and was some time in finding one. โThis is very good news,โ he said slowly, and slowly smiled. โ_Mon Dieu_, doctor, it seems too good to be true! Last night you told me to fear the worst.โ โLast night–was last night, sir,โ Reggie said. โThis morning we begin to see our way. All the symptoms are good. I believe that in a few hours the patient will be able to speak.โ โTo speak? But the concussion? It was so dangerous. But this is bewildering, doctor.โ โMost fortunate, sir. You might talk of the hand of Providence. Well, we shall see what we shall see. He may be able to tell you something of how it all happened. Youโll pardon me, Iโm anxious to prepare the injection.โ He dropped a tablet in the glass and poured in water. โFact is, this ought to make all the difference. Wonderful things drugs, sir. A taste of strychnine–one of these little fellows–and a man has another try at living. Two or three of โem–just specks, arenโt they?–sudden death. Excuse me a moment. I must take a look at the patient.โ He was gone some time. When he came back the Archduke was still there. โAll goes well, doctor?โ โI begin to think so.โ โI must not delay you. My dear doctor! If only your hopes are realized. What happiness!โ He slid out of the room. Reggie went to the table and picked up the glass of strychnine solution. From behind the curtain Superintendent Bell rushed out and caught his arm. โDonโt use it, sir,โ he said hoarsely. Superintendent Bell was flushed. โDonโt be an ass,โ said Reggie. He put the glass down, took up the bottle of tablets, turned them out on a sheet of paper, and began to count them. โGood Lord!โ said Superintendent Bell. โYou laid for him, did you? What a plant!โ โYou know, youโre an impertinence,โ Reggie said, and went on counting. โIโll get on to Mr. Lomas, sir,โ said the Superintendent humbly. โDonโt you telephone or Iโll scrag you.โ โTelephone? Not me. I say, sir, youโre some doctor.โ He fled. Reggie finished his counting and whistled. โHe did himself proud,โ said he. โThe blighter!โ He shot the tablets back into their bottle, found another bottle and poured into it the solution, and locked both away. โNumber one,โ he said, with satisfaction. โNow for number two.โ He went off to his patient and spent a placid half-hour chatting with the day nurse on dancing in musical comedy. But it was hardly half an hour before the Archduchess tapped at the door. Reggie opened it. โThis way, if you please, madame.โ He led the way to his room. โI have something to say.โ She stood before him, fierce, defiant, and utterly wretched. โI can promise you that the Archduke will recover consciousness.โ She caught at her breast. โHe–he will live?โ It was the most piteous cry he had ever heard. โHe will live, madame!โ She trembled, swayed, and fell. Reggie grasped at her, took her in his arms, and put her in a chair and waited frowning. . . . She panted a little and began to smile. Then faintly, softly, โNo, no. No more now. Ah, dearest.โ It was in her own language. She opened heavy eyes. โWhat is it?โ โThe Archduke has spoken, madame. He said–your name.โ Then she began to cry and, holding out both hands to Reggie, โLet me go to him–please–please.โ โNot now. Not yet. He must have no emotions. You will go to your room and sleep.โ โYou–you are a boy.โ She laughed through her tears, and thrust her hands into Reggieโs. โI beg your pardon, madame,โ Reggie said stiffly. The creature was absurdly adorable. โYou? Oh–Englishman.โ It was made plain to him that he was expected to kiss her hand. He did it like an Englishman. Then the other was put to his lips. He cleared his embarrassed throat. โI must insist, madame, you will say nothing of this to any one. Itโs necessary the household should suppose the Archduke still in danger.โ โWhy?โ A spasm crossed her face. โYou are afraid of Leopold!โ โAnd you, madame?โ Reggie said. โAfraid? No, butโ–she shuddered–โbut he is not a man.โ โHave no anxieties, madame. I have none,โ Reggie said, and opened the door. Then, โSheโs a bit of a dear,โ he said to himself, and rang for his lunch. Four times that afternoon the Archduke Leopold sent to ask for news of his brother, and each time Reggie answered that the patient was much the same. โLeopold will be doinโ some thinking,โ Reggie chuckled. โHappy days for Leopold.โ Towards tea-time the Hon. Stanley Lomas arrived jauntier than ever. โWell, doctor, been enjoying yourself, what?โ He shook hands heartily. โBest congratulations and all that. Sound scheme. Ve–ry sound scheme. Well, I expect youโll be glad to be rid of Leopold, what? I conceive I can put the fear of God into him now. Free hand, donโt you know. Letโs take him on.โ It was announced to the Archduke Leopold that the Hon. Stanley Lomas of the Criminal Investigation Department desired to confer with him. The Archduke, who was drinking tea, was pleased to receive Mr. Lomas. He also received Reggie. โDr. Fortune? You have something to tell me?โ โThere is no change, sir.โ โNo change yet! And you gave me such hopes this morning. These are anxious hours, Mr. Lomas.โ โI can imagine it, sir. But I hope to relieve some of your anxieties. I believe we shall discover who was responsible for last nightโs outrage.โ โSo! And so soon! But you are wonderful, you English police. You will sit down, Mr. Lomas.โ He looked at Reggie, whose lingering naturally surprised him. โIs there anything more, Dr. Fortune?โ โDr. Fortune is part of my evidence, sir,โ said Lomas. โIs it possible? But you interest me–you interest me exceedingly. Permit me one moment.โ He slid out of the room. Lomas turned in his chair and lifted an eyebrow at Reggie, who was settling his tie before an old Italian mirror. โProbably gone to change his clothes,โ Reggie said. โHeโs only worn one suit to-day.โ A footman brought in more tea-things, and a moment after the Archduke came back. โI am all impatience, Mr. Lomas. But pray take a more comfortable chair. Dr. Fortune–I recommend the chair by the screen. Let me give you some tea.โ He was all smiles. โHave you made arrangements to leave England, sir?โ Lomas said sharply. โMr. Lomas!โ โYou have time to catch the mail to-night.โ โI hope that I do not understand you, sir. You appear insolent.โ โOh, sir, there will be no delicacy in handling the affair. You went to Dr. Fortuneโs room this morning.โ The Archduke gave a glance at Reggie, who sat intent on stirring his tea. โHe was preparing an injection of strychnine for his patient.โ โHallo, whatโs that?โ Reggie cried, and nodded at the window. โOh, I suppose itโs the car, Lomas. Your fellows will have found her and brought her round.โ โThe car, sir?โ the Archduke said, and Lomas put up his eyeglass. โThe car that did the deed.โ The Archduke slid across to the window. Lomas, too, stood up and looked out. They turned and stared at Reggie, who was sipping his tea. Lomas frowned. โThereโs nothing there, Fortune.โ The Archduke smiled. โDr. Fortune has hallucinations,โ and he pulled out his handkerchief and dabbed his face, sat down, and drank his tea in gulps. โWeโll keep to the point, if you please.โ Lomas was annoyed. โDr. Fortune told you that two of his strychnine tablets would kill a man. He went out of the room. While he was gone you dropped half a dozen tablets into the injection prepared for your brother. I have to demand, sir, that you leave England by the next boat.โ The Archduke burst out laughing. โThe good Dr. Fortune! As you have seen, he has hallucinations. He hears what is not, dreams what never was. But if I were a policeman, Mr. Lomas, I should not make Dr. Fortune a witness. You become ridiculous.โ โHe is not the only witness, sir. One of my men was behind the curtain.โ The Archduke poured himself out another cup of tea. โMay I give you some more, Dr. Fortune? No? I fear you are malicious, my friend.โ He laughed a little. โAnd you, sir. We sometimes find a policeman corrupt in our country. We do not permit him to trouble us.โ โYou brought a German car into England, sir,โ Lomas said. โWhere is that car?โ โYour spies do not seem very good, Mr. Lomas. Come, sir, enough of this. I—-โ The Archduke started from his seat with a cry. His body was bent in a bow. A horrible grin distorted his face. He fell down and was convulsed. . . . He gasped; his pale cheeks became of a dusky blue. He writhed and lay still. . . . โSo thatโs that,โ Reggie said. โI wondered what he wanted with half a dozen.โ โWhat is it?โ Lomas muttered. โOh, strychnine poisoning. Heโs swallowed a grain or so.โ โMy God! Can you do anything?โ Reggie shrugged. โHeโs as dead as the table.โ . . . After a while, โWell! Itโs a way out,โ Lomas said. โBut I canโt understand the fellow.โ โOh, I donโt understand it all,โ Reggie admitted. โHe was out to kill his brother. That meant being Emperor. But why kill him now more than before? And the Archduchess. She is straight enough, I know. But just how she was to this fellow I donโt see.โ โThereโs not much in that,โ Lomas said. โMaurice couldnโt stand the Court, and it was common talk he meant to resign the succession. While he was quiet over here in England Leopold felt safe. But lately they tell me Maurice has been making up his mind to go back. Duty to his country, donโt you know? The Archduchess was strong against it. She hates all the business of royalty. But Maurice is a resolute sort of fellow even with a woman. Leopold came over to see what he could do. I suppose he set the Archduchess on to make Maurice give up the idea and stay quiet. They worked together–or thatโs the notion at the Bohemian Embassy. Sheโs a gipsy, what, but sheโs straight. She is not in this. It wasnโt her car. Well, when Leopold found there was nothing doing he set about the murder. He was a bad egg, donโt you know? There was a woman in Rome–they kicked him out there. But it was a sound scheme. He had it all straight–except the wrong tyres on his car. Good touch, the hatpin. Seemed like a woman in a rage. He knew a lot about women–one kind of woman.โ There was a tap at the door. The two walked forward. โSir Lawson Hunter, sir.โ The footman tried in vain to see the Archduke. โYes, bring him up,โ Reggie said. Sir Lawson bustled in. โNew case for you, sir.โ The two men moved apart and Sir Lawson saw the body. โPoisoned himself. Taken strychnine,โ Lomas said. โOh, donโt bias him,โ said Reggie. โHe doesnโt like that.โ โGood Gad!โ Sir Lawsonโs eyes bulged. โYes, that beats me, Fortune.โ Lomas waved his hand at the body. โI would have sworn he hadnโt the pluck.โ โOh, he hadnโt. He meant it for me. I changed the cups.โ โYou—-โ Lomas stared at him. โThat was when you heard the car!โ โThat was why I heard the car.โ โAnd you let him take the dose!โ โYes. Seemed fair. You see, I picked up that poor fellow he smashed last night.โ โGood Gad!โ said Sir Lawson. The footman was again at the door. Dr. Fortune was wanted at the telephone. โThereโs one here, isnโt there? Put me through.โ The footman, hardly able to speak at the sight of the dead Archduke, retired gulping. The bell rang. Reggie took up the receiver. โYes. Yes. At once,โ and he put it down. โI must be going. Serious case. Mrs. Jonesโs little girl may have German measles.โ Chapter 2. THE SLEEPING COMPANION. Birdie screamed like a sea-gull and leapt on to the stage. The audience rumbled the usual applause, and Dr. Reginald Fortune put up his opera-glasses. He considered himself a connoisseur in the art of music halls, and Birdie Bolton was unique and bizarre. She was no longer young, and had never been pretty. A helmet of black hair, a gaunt face which never smiled, a body as lean as a boyโs, which sometimes slouched and sometimes jerked–such were her charms. She wore nothing much above the waist but diamonds, and below it barbaric flounces in a maze of colour. She began to sing in a voice wildly unfit for the strange creature she looked–a small, sweet voice–and what she sang was a simple ditty about her true love forsaking her. And then she went mad. There was a shrieking chorus–can you imagine a steam whistle playing rag-time?–and a dance of weird, wild vehemence. The lean body was contorted a dozen ways at once, the long white arms whirled and stabbed. She seemed to be a dozen women fighting, and each of them a prodigy of force. It was not a pretty dance, but it had meaning. Birdie sank down panting on her crazy rainbow flounces and nodded at the audience which thundered at her. Dr. Reginald Fortune shut up his opera-glasses. โSheโs a bit of a wonder, you know,โ he said to the naval lieutenant who was his companion. โItโs a wild bird,โ the lieutenant agreed, and as the rest of the revue was merely frocks and the absence of frocks they went off to supper. In the morning, which was Sunday, Birdie Bolton came to see Dr. Reginald Fortune. It was her remarkable creed that she could not live in a noise, and so for years she had owned a house in the still rural suburb of Westhampton where Reggie and his father practised. The elder Dr. Fortune at first looked after her, but when Reggie came on the scene Miss Bolton, declaring with her usual frankness that she liked her doctors young, turned herself over to him. By daylight Miss Bolton dressed, and even overdressed, the part of a brisk British spinster. She was very tailor-made and severely tweedy, and thus looked leaner than ever. But her eyes retained a gleam of devilment. โYou gave us a great show last night,โ Reggie said. โWere you in front?โ said Miss Bolton, and made a face. โOh, Lord! Sorry. I was rotten.โ Reggie understood that his professional interest was required. โWhatโs the trouble?โ he said cheerfully. โThatโs your show,โ said Miss Bolton. โPut me through it.โ The conversation then became confidential and dull upon the usual themes of a medical examination. At last, โWell, you know, we donโt get to anything,โ Reggie said. โThis is all quite good and normal. Whatโs making you anxious?โ โDreams,โ said Miss Bolton. โWhy do I have dreams? I never dreamed in my life till now.โ โWhat sort of dreams?โ โOh, any old sort. Bally rot. One night it was a motor-bus chivvying me on the stage. One night Mayโ–May Weston was her companion–โMay would keep parrots in the bathroom. Then I hear a noise and wake up and there isnโt any noise.โ โDo you have this every night?โ โSnakes! Not much. Now and again. But I say, doc, itโs not fair. I donโt drink and I donโt drug. But Iโll be seeing pink rats if this goes on.โ โIs there anything worrying you just now?โ Was it possible that Miss Bolton blushed? Reggie could not be sure. โYouโre a bright boy, doc. Be good!โ She shook hands and gripped like a man. The big emerald she always wore ground into his fingers. โBirdie, the strong girl. Bye-bye,โ she laughed. On the next morning Reggie was just out of his bath when he was told that Miss Boltonโs housekeeper had rung up. Miss Bolton had had an accident and would he go at once. โTell Sam,โ said Reggie, and jumped into his trousers. Samuel Baker, a young taxi-driver whose omniscient impudence had persuaded Reggie to enlist him as chauffeur and factotum, had the car round and some sandwiches inside it by the time Reggie was downstairs. Neither he nor Reggie lost time. Normanhurst, Miss Boltonโs house, stands by itself in an acre or so of garden, and is in the mid-Victorian or amorphous style. As Reggie jumped out of the car, the housekeeper opened the door. She was a brisk, buxom woman; she looked, and perhaps was, just what a housekeeper ought to be. โWhatโs wrong, Mrs. Betts?โ Reggie said. โItโs very serious, sir. This way, please.โ She led the way to Birdie Boltonโs boudoir, stopped, took a key from her apron pocket, and unlocked the door. โHallo!โ Reggie said. โIโm afraid youโre going to have a shock, sir,โ said Mrs. Betts, and opened the door for him. Reggie went in. The sunlight flooded Birdie Boltonโs face, which was white. She lay on a sofa. She was in evening dress. There was an open wound in one side of her throat, and from it a red line lay across her bare shoulder, down her arm, to a purple stain on the carpet. Reggie went across the room in two strides and bent over her. She had been dead for hours. โWho found her, Mrs. Betts?โ โThe upper housemaid, sir. Sheโs been having hysterics ever since.โ โBah! Was the room just like this?โ โNo, sir. Miss Weston was asleep in that chair.โ โWhat?โ Reggie stared. The mistress murdered and the companion placidly asleep by her side–perhaps that would not have startled his calm mind. But he knew May Weston, and had written her off as a dull, simple creature–a cushion of a girl. โMiss Weston was asleep in that chair,โ the housekeeper repeated. โI saw her myself. I came in, sir, when Amelia–when the housemaid screamed. Miss Weston was in evening dress too. She didnโt wake at the screaming either–just stirred. I went to her and shook her, and โMiss Weston,โ I said, โwhateverโs this?โ I said, and she woke up and looked round her, sort of heavy, and she saw Miss Bolton lying there and the blood, and she screamed out, โI did it–oh, I did it,โ and she looked at me very queer and she fainted.โ Mrs. Betts stopped and stared at Reggie, waiting for him to express horror. โSo what did you do with her?โ said Reggie. Mrs. Betts swallowed. โI had her carried to her room. Dr. Fortune,โ she said with dignity. โI am told sheโs come to and been crying.โ โWell, thatโs natural, anyway,โ said Reggie. โNatural, indeed!โ Mrs. Betts tossed her head. โAnd what did you do next, Mrs. Betts?โ โI had nothing touched, sir. I locked up the room. And I telephoned to you and the police.โ โIโm sure you behaved admirably, Mrs. Betts,โ Reggie murmured. Mrs. Betts was appeased. โI could hardly bear it, sir. Such a sweet, good mistress as she was. A perfect lady with all her little ways, as you know, sir. And that Miss Weston! So soft and quiet as she seemed. I donโt mind saying, sir, I felt as if I was stone. Oh!โ She shuddered and shook. โVicious, I call it.โ Reggie was looking round the room. โI suppose it is murder, sir?โ said Mrs. Betts in a tone that suggested she would like to have the hanging of Miss Weston. โI suppose it is,โ Reggie said. He crossed to the chair in which Miss Weston had been found sleeping and picked up from the floor close by a pair of scissors and a pointed bodkin with an ivory handle. Both were clotted with blood. Ugly things. โAh!โ Mrs. Betts said. โThatโs what did it. Put โem down, sir. I left them there by her chair for the police to see.โ โYou think of everything, Mrs. Betts,โ said Reggie, and put them down and went back to the body of Birdie Bolton. That stab in the throat, it was โnot so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church doorโ; it was a small wound to be mortal. A small neat wound which had rare luck to slit the jugular vein. Reggie looked back at the bodkin and the scissors. He noticed that Mrs. Betts had gone out. There were other wounds. In half a dozen places the pallid shoulders and breast had bled. No one of these gashes was serious. They were just such as might be expected of those unhandy weapons, scissors and bodkin. It was that neat, lucky stroke at the throat which determined the fate of Birdie Bolton. The minor wounds suggested a struggle with some one in a passion, and that Miss Bolton had struggled Reggie found other evidence. The black evening dress had been dragged from one shoulder and torn, and there on that right shoulder were the blue marks of a hand that had gripped. Reggieโs examination became more minute. Two men bustled in. A hand tapped Reggieโs shoulder. โNow, sir, if you please.โ Reggie stood up and confronted a pompous, portly little man. โI am Dr. Fortune,โ Reggie said. โMiss Bolton was a patient of mine.โ โWas,โ said the little man, with emphasis. โShe is a case for an expert now, Dr. Fortune.โ โThatโs why I was examining her,โ said Reggie sweetly. The little man laughed. โA general practitioner is not much use to her now. Rather beyond you, isnโt it?โ โWell, Iโve not made up my mind,โ Reggie said. โDonโt worry. Donโt worry.โ He waved Reggie off, but Reggie did not go. โYouโll only be in our way, you know. Weโll let you know if we want you at the inquest. Just for formal evidence.โ Still Reggie did not move. โI am the divisional surgeon, sir,โ said the little man loudly. โI was wondering who you were,โ Reggie murmured. The little man swung round. โWeโll have the room cleared, inspector,โ he said. The detective inspector, who looked more like a policeman than seemed possible, strode heavily forward. โHope youโre not meaning to give trouble, doctor,โ he frowned. โOr Iโll have to take steps.โ โFancy!โ Reggie said. โWell, look where youโre going.โ He walked across to the window and looked out at the roses. โClear out, please.โ The inspector followed him. โZeal, all zeal,โ Reggie murmured, and went. There were two doors to the room. He did not use that by which they had come, but the other. He happened to know that it opened into Birdie Boltonโs bedroom. There was some one in the bedroom. A startled dark face peeped round the screen by the bed. It belonged to a smart ladyโs maid. โDear me, I thought this was the passage,โ Reggie said. โIt is Miss Boltonโs bedroom–poor Miss Bolton.โ The maid had a slight foreign accent. โOf course it is. And youโre her maid, of course. Flora, isnโt it?โ โYes, sir. Yes, doctor. Ah, you have seen Miss Bolton! You cannot do anything–no?โ โMiss Bolton is dead, Flora.โ โI was so fond of her,โ Flora sighed. โWell, I liked her. I suppose you heard nothing last night?โ โAh, no. She have sent me to bed. And I sleep so sound.โ Reggie nodded. โItโs a bad business, Flora. Take me to Miss Westonโs room, will you?โ โMiss Weston! Ah!โ Flora said, with tragic intensity. โHโm. You think she—-โ โI do not think. I feel,โ Flora said. โItโs a bad habit. Well—-โ And Flora led the way. She was a plump woman of some age, but still comely enough in a dark, heavy fashion. A tap at a door. โIt is the doctor, Miss Weston,โ from Flora. A sullen voice, โYou can come in,โ and in Reggie went. May Weston was a squalid sight. Her natural prettiness, the prettiness of fresh youth, the bloom of pink and white, the grace of full, soft line had all gone from her. She lay a shapeless heap on her bed, her evening dress still on and all crushed and crumpled and awry, her yellow hair half down and tousled, her face of a bluish pallor. โWhat do you want?โ She stared at Reggie heavily. โWell, this wonโt do, will it?โ Reggie smiled cheerfully and sat down beside the bed. โSo why are you like this?โ โHavenโt you heard?โ she cried. โIโve heard and seen,โ Reggie said. โI canโt do any more there. But perhaps I can here.โ He began to feel her pulse. โIโm not ill.โ โWell, you never know.โ He let her wrist go and bent over her. โSleep rather sound, donโt you?โ โOh!โ She shuddered. โWhy do you look at me like that?โ Reggie bent suddenly closer, and as suddenly sat up again. Then he laughed. โLike what, my dear?โ She stared at him and her lip quivered. โYou–you! Oh, do you think I can be mad?โ Reggie shook his head. โLetโs begin quite at the beginning. Letโs preserve absolute calm. You dined with Miss Bolton last night alone? After dinner you went to her boudoir? That would be about nine?โ โYes, yes. Mr. Ford came just after the coffee.โ โAh! And who is Mr. Ford?โ May Weston blushed abundantly. โWe–he has been here a good deal,โ she stammered. โOh, Dr. Fortune, it isnโt his fault.โ โYoung or old, rich or poor–what is he?โ โOf course heโs young. I suppose heโs rich. His father makes engines or something in Leeds, and he is in the London office.โ โSounds solid,โ Reggie agreed. โAnd why does Mr. Ford call at nine p.m.?โ Miss Westonโs blushes were renewed. โHe has been very often,โ she said, and wrung her hands. โI shall have to tell, doctor, shanโt I? Yes. He met Miss Bolton once at supper and then he used to come here.โ โAh! Good-looking fellow, is he?โ โOh, yes. He is very big and handsome.โ โAnd Miss Bolton liked him. Well, well.โ Reggie understood now why poor Birdie Bolton had been dreaming dreams of nights. โYes,โ said May Weston faintly. โOh, itโs a shame! But I must tell. She thought he came to see her, but—-โ โBut it was really to see you. Now, letโs get back to the coffee.โ โHe came last night. We were so gay. Miss Bolton–oh, poor Birdie!โ โWe canโt undo that, my dear. Letโs do what we can for her. Did he stay late?โ โRather. I donโt know. I was sleepy. But Birdie was so gay. And then–and then he went away and Birdie began to talk about him. I donโt know how it happened. She said something–and I felt I just had to tell her–I told her he had proposed to me. And then she was furious. Oh, have you ever seen her in one of her rages? She was terrible. She said dreadful things. And I–I felt as if I couldnโt do anything at all. I was dazed and faint and just sat. I know she hit me.โ โI saw the bruise,โ Reggie said gently, looking at the blue mark on her neck. โThen she stormed out of the room, and–oh, doctor, I donโt know–perhaps I fainted–it was as if I was all lead in that chair. I thought I was asleep. And then it was like a horrible, horrible dream–I saw her being killed. She was on the sofa, and some one was hitting at her. Oh, doctor, did I do it? Was it a dream? Did I really do it?โ โYou saw–or you dreamed–who was it struck her in your dream?โ โOh, I donโt know. It was just like a dream when you canโt tell. I know it was Birdie. But was it me killed her?โ The door was flung open. The detective inspector strode in. โMay Weston?โ He was more the policeman than ever. Reggie stood up. โHow civil you are!โ he said. โYou make yourself very busy, donโt you?โ The inspector glared. โDonโt you interfere with me. May Weston–I shall charge you with the murder of your mistress, Birdie Bolton. Get up off that bed now.โ โHeโs forgotten the rest of his part–โanything you say may be used in evidence against you,โ Miss Weston. So youโll say nothing, please.โ The inspector grew red and puffed, and advanced upon Reggie. โHere, you–you clear out of this. Youโre obstructing me in—-โ โIs it possible?โ Reggie drawled. โWell, it isnโt necessary, anyway.โ and he left the inspector still swelling. It is fair to him to add, what he has since protested, that he never liked May Weston. Pussy-cat is his name for her, and he is not fond of cats. From her room he went to the telephone in the hall, and there the inspector, still rather flushed, found him again. โAnd what might you be doing now, if you please?โ said the inspector, with constabulary sarcasm. โOh, Iโm talking to Miss Boltonโs solicitors. Hadnโt you thought of talking to Miss Boltonโs solicitors?โ โNever you mind what I thought of. Donโt you use that telephone again. I wonโt have it.โ โOh, yes, you will. Now Iโm going to talk to Superintendent Bell.โ The inspector was visibly startled. For Superintendent Bell was near the summit of the Criminal Investigation Department. โAny objection? No? How nice of you. . . . โ He conferred with the telephone, and at length: โDr. Fortune. Yes. Oh, is that you, Bell? So glad. I wish youโd come along here, Normanhurst, Westhampton. One of my patients murdered. No, not by me. Quite unusual case. Yes, it is the Birdie Bolton case. The inspector in charge is such a good, kind man. Sweet face he has. Youโll come right on? So glad.โ Reggie put down the receiver and smiled upon the puzzled inspector. โThatโs that,โ he said, and went out. Samuel, the chauffeur, put away his picture paper. โI want my camera,โ Reggie said, and Samuel touched his hat and drove off. Reggie sauntered into the garden. Normanhurst, as you know, is a low, spreading house of a comfortable Victorian dowdiness. There are–donโt count the attics–only two stories. It is old enough to be quite covered with climbing plants–ivy on the north, roses and a wistaria on the other sides. Birdie Boltonโs bedroom and boudoir looked to the south, and were on the ground floor. On the north of the house is the approach from the high road, a curling drive through a shrubbery. Birdie Boltonโs rooms looked out upon a rose-bed and a big lawn. About her windows climbed a big Gloire de Dijon. The roses beneath were of the newer hybrid teas, well cultivated, well chosen, and at their best–a fragrant pomp of red and gold. โHow she loved โem, poor soul,โ Reggie thought, and began to feel sentimental. That singular emotion was interrupted by the sound of a motor-car. He went back to the front of the house to meet it. A big car was drawing up. It contained two people–a uniformed chauffeur and a large young man who jumped out, rather clumsily, before the car stopped. He had the good looks of a hero of musical comedy, but an expression rather sheepish than fatuous, and a pallid complexion. โI think you are Mr. Ford.โ Reggie came close to him. โI am Dr. Fortune. Miss Bolton was a patient of mine. I hardly expected to see you so soon.โ โMiss Weston sent for me, sir.โ Mr. Ford recoiled, for Reggieโs face was very close to his. โDid she, though!โ Reggie murmured. โDid she really?โ Miss Weston had forgotten to tell him that. Pussy-cat! โWell, Flora telephoned for her. She said something terrible had happened, and Miss Weston wanted me. I say, doctor, what has happened?โ โJolly kind of Flora,โ Reggie said. โWell, Mr. Ford, Miss Bolton has been murdered.โ โMy God!โ said Mr. Ford, and became livid. โAnd Miss Weston has been charged with the murder.โ โOh, my God!โ Mr. Ford said again. โOh, damn!โ and put his hand to his head. โHere, let me go to her. โI donโt mind,โ said Reggie, and Mr. Ford plunged into the house. Reggie remained on the steps waiting for fresh arrivals. The goggled chauffeur moved his car on out of the way, descended, and behind a laurustinus lit a cigarette. Reggie, who never smoked them, sniffed disapproval and began to fill a pipe. A taxi-cab drove up, and out of it bounced a plump little man whose coat looked as if he wore stays. โI am Dr. Fortune,โ Reggie said. โAnd Iโm Donald Gordon, doctor,โ said the little man, who was emphatically a Jew. โMoss and Gordon.โ It was the name of Miss Boltonโs solicitors. โMany thanks for letting us know. Poor, dear Birdie. She was a peach. Letโs have all the facts, please.โ He had an engaging lisp. โThereโs a detective inspector inside. Like a bull in a china-shop.โ โHad some,โ said Mr. Donald Gordon. โCome on, doctor. Hand it out.โ โWell, letโs see the flowers,โ Reggie said, and walked him into the garden and began to tell him all that he knew. โSo heโs pinched Miss Weston, has he?โ the little Jew lisped. โHeโs a hustler.โ โOh, I expect heโs arrested Ford too, by now. Me and you in a minute. Heโs a zealous fellow. By the way, Gordon, who is Ford?โ โYes. Heโs a dark horse, ainโt he? I only met him once, doctor. You could see poor old Birdie was sweet on him.โ โOh, so Miss Weston was telling the truth about that.โ โWhy, didnโt you believe her, doctor?โ โDโyou know, I wonder if I believe anything Iโve heard in this house.โ โLike that, is it?โ Gordon lisped. โJust like that,โ said Reggie. A gravity had come over the perky little Jew, which he found very engaging. Mr. Gordon nodded at him. โBirdie was the one and only,โ he said, and Reggie nodded back. โNice flowers, doctor,โ a new voice said. Reggie turned to see the small insignificance of Superintendent Bell, greeted him heartily, introduced Mr. Gordon. โAm I _de trop_, as the French say?โ said Superintendent Bell. โNo? Thought it might be a council of war.โ โOh, is it war?โ Reggie said. โWell, you know, youโve quarrelled with Inspector Mordan.โ The Superintendent shook his head at Reggie. โI wouldnโt dare. He quarrelled with me.โ โSuch a pity.โ The Superintendent smiled and rubbed his hands. โI ought to tell you, doctor, I quite approve of everything that Inspector Mordan has done.โ โSplendid force, the police,โ Mr. Gordon lisped. โWonderful force. So forcible.โ โIncluding the arrest of Miss Weston?โ Reggie asked. โWell, well. Any one else youโd like to arrest?โ โAny one you suggest, doctor? Now I ask you–what would you have done?โ โOh, Iโm not in the force. โWe do have to be so careful,โ the Superintendent sighed. โThatโs a handicap, that is. I wonder why you wanted me, doctor?โ โIโm frightened of your inspector. Heโs not chatty. I want to photograph the body.โ The Superintendent turned to Gordon. โItโs a taste, you know, thatโs what it is. He likes corpses. Speaking as man to man, doctor, are you working with us?โ โMay I?โ โThatโs very handsome. Yes. Inspector Mordan, he has a kind of a manner, as you might say. Iโll speak to him. Is there anything youโd like to tell me, doctor?โ โNice flowers, arenโt they?โ Reggie nodded to the rose-bed under Birdie Boltonโs window. It was minutely neat. โLook as if theyโd been brought up by hand,โ said the Superintendent, but he looked at Reggie, not the roses. โAnything queer, sir?โ โThereโs that,โ Reggie said. He pointed to a spray of the Gloire de Dijon beside the window. It bore a bud; it had been broken, and the bud was limp and dead. โThat wasnโt broken last night,โ said the Superintendent. โNo. Thatโs whatโs interesting,โ said Reggie, and turned away. At the door and in the drive there was some congested traffic. Mr. Fordโs big car still waited. Reggieโs humbler car had come back with his camera. The taxis of Mr. Gordon and Superintendent Bell took up more room. And yet another taxi was trying to get to the steps. โWhoโs this, Superintendent?โ โI dare say itโll be for Miss Weston.โ โTaking her to Holloway at once? Well, well. I dare say itโs all for the best.โ But Miss Weston was not to go without a noise. Mr. Ford saw to that. At the head of the stairs he conducted an altercation with Inspector Mordan in which defiance, abuse, and profane swearing were his chief arguments. It was beastly stupid and it was damned impudence to arrest Miss Weston, and it was also beastly impudence and damned stupid, and so forth. In the midst of which the wretched girl was shepherded by two detectives downstairs. โMy God, you might as well arrest me!โ Mr. Ford cried, in final desperation. โPerhaps I will,โ said the Inspector heavily, and glowered at him. Mr. Ford paled and drew back. On the stairs below Miss Weston stopped and turned. โOh, Edmund, donโt,โ she said. โThey canโt hurt me. You know they canโt.โ Superintendent Bell drew Reggie aside. โThink that throws any light?โ Reggie said. โWell, not a searchlight,โ said the Superintendent. Miss Weston was driven off. Mr. Ford, looking dazed, came slowly downstairs, and to him went Gordon. โBetter get her a solicitor, you know,โ Gordon said. โBy Jove, thatโs it!โ Mr. Ford cried, and plunged out. The Inspector and the Superintendent exchanged glances and looked at Gordon. โWhy did you put him on to that, sir?โ said the Superintendent. โProfessional feeling, dear boy,โ Gordon smiled. โNice girl, ainโt it? I fancy my firm are Miss Boltonโs executors, and I fancy that bird is sole legatee.โ The Superintendent pursed his lips. The Inspector laughed. โIt grows, donโt it, sir? Just grows,โ he said. โI would like to get on,โ Reggie yawned. โThatโs right,โ said the Superintendent, and took the Inspector aside. Mr. Gordon, following Reggie to the boudoir, was distressed by the sight of the dead body, and said so. Reggie went on with his photography–first the stab in the throat, then the minor wounds, then the bruise on the shoulder. At which last Inspector Mordan found him. โTaking the wrong side, arenโt you?โ he sneered. โOh, Iโm taking all sides. Ever try it?โ Reggie said. โWell, have you done, doctor?โ the little Jew broke in. โCanโt we have her covered up?โ โIโll have the body removed, sir. If the doctor has quite done.โ said the Inspector. And so at last the body of Birdie Bolton was taken away to the mortuary, and Mr. Gordon, much relieved, flung open the windows and turned to his business, the secretaire and its papers. He worked quickly. . . . โNothing there but love-letters. Wonder where she kept her will?โ โThereโs a safe in the bedroom, I think,โ Reggie said. โYou bet there is. She had all her jewels in the house, I know, and she had some good stuff, poor old girl. Well, come on; hereโs her keys.โ They went into the bedroom, and the little Jew made for the safe. Reggie wandered across the room. It was a parquet floor with Persian rugs on it. He shifted one by the bedside. There was a small dark stain on the floor still not dry. An exclamation from Gordon made him turn. Gordon had the safe open, and the safe, but for some papers in disorder, was empty. โNot one bally bangle left!โ Gordon cried. โNot a sparkle of the whole outfit! Remember that ruby and diamond breastplate! Remember her pearls! And the stuff that Indian Johnny gave her! My hat! Somebodyโs had a haul.โ A spasm crossed his face. โI say, doctor, you were here when I opened the safe!โ โI was here,โ Reggie said stolidly. โI wasnโt surprised.โ The little Jew gasped. โYou remember that emerald she always wore? It wasnโt on the dead body.โ โOh, God!โ said Gordon, and with unsteady hands turned over the papers. โThatโs her script. More or less all there, I should say. Whereโs the will? I know she had her will. Drew it myself.โ โWhatโs that?โ Reggie said. The one untidy thing in that very tidy room, a paper lay by the fireplace. Gordon picked it up. โHere we are! Yes, โMay Grace Weston, my companion.โ Thatโs the document. Crumpled up and torn!โ He whistled. โAs if Birdie was destroying it and then–biff!โ โJust as if sheโd been destroying it,โ Reggie agreed. โThat puts the lid on, donโt it!โ said the little Jew. โMiss Weston-oh, lor, thereโs a soft kid if you ever had one. Just shows you you never know with girls, doctor. Girls, girls, girls! Well, weโd better tell these bally policemen.โ So Inspector Mordan, vastly to his satisfaction, was told, and Superintendent Bell, appearing from nowhere, heard, and agreed to search the house for the stolen jewels. โYou gentlemen come too, please.โ He cocked an eye at Reggie. โWant to keep me under observation?โ Reggie grinned back. โWant you to identify what we find,โ said the Inspector. โYouโll find something all right,โ said Reggie. But he showed little interest in the search, mooning after their men in and out of servantsโ bedrooms and yawning in corners. Inspector Mordan had gone straight to Miss Westonโs room, and from it he came glowing with triumph. He called for his Superintendent, he collected Reggie and Gordon. โYou gentlemen happen to recognize that?โ He opened his big hand and showed the ring with the big emerald which Birdie Bolton had loved. โThatโs it,โ Gordon cried. โThatโs Birdieโs. Coo! What a stone, ainโt it?โ โIn Westonโs room,โ the Inspector proclaimed, โon the floor; just under the bed, in Westonโs room.โ โOnly that and nothing more?โ Reggie murmured. โYes, whereโs the rest, Mordan?โ said Superintendent Bell. The Inspector smote his thigh. โBy George, I see it! I let that rascal Ford see the wench alone. Heโs gone off stuffed with the swag.โ โThatโs a thought,โ Reggie admitted, and the Superintendent lifted an eyebrow at him. โYou ought to have Ford watched. No, I mean it. If I was you, Inspector, Iโd have his place watched night and day.โ The Inspector was visibly gratified. โI know my business, thank you,โ he said. โI say, doctor–it is growing, isnโt it?โ โOh, yes, as if it was forced,โ Reggie smiled. โWhat do you mean?โ The Inspector flushed. โYou see, youโre so witty, Mordan,โ said the Superintendent. โAnd thatโs that,โ Reggie yawned. โYou donโt really want me any more. Good-bye. Oh, Inspector–I donโt want you to be disappointed. The murder wasnโt done in that room where you found the body. Good-bye!โ โWasnโt done—-โ The Inspector stared after him. โGood Lord, heโs mad!โ โBetter get him to bite you, Mordan,โ said the Superintendent. That party did not meet again till the day of the inquest. Before the court met, Superintendent Bell called on Reggie and found him in a bad temper. This was unusual, and equally unusual in the Superintendentโs experience was a pallor, a certain tension, across Reggieโs solid, amiable face. A civil question about his health brought a snappish answer. It seemed to the Superintendent that Dr. Fortune had been making a night of it. โWell, what is it?โ Reggie snarled. โGot anything to tell me?โ โIโve been rather disappointed,โ the Superintendent said meekly. โMore fool you. I told you to watch Ford.โ โThatโs it, sir. Were you pulling my leg?โ โOh, damn it, man, this is serious! Miss Bolton was a patient of mine. I donโt let any one but me kill my patients.โ โVery proper, Iโm sure,โ the Superintendent agreed. โBut we have watched him, doctor. Nothing doing.โ โSet a man to stand on his doorstep, I suppose. Whatโs the good of that?โ โAs you say,โ the Superintendent agreed. โWeโve picked up one thing, though. Just before the murder his father turned him down for wanting to marry this girl Weston. He hasnโt a penny except from his father. That might have made him desperate–him and the girl. It does grow, you know, doctor.โ โQueer case,โ Reggie grunted. โGoing to the inquest? Sorry I canโt drive you down. My chauffeurโs taking a day off.โ So they walked to the coronerโs court, and on the way Superintendent Bell used his large experience in the art of extracting confidences in vain. But Reggie mellowed, perceptibly mellowed, as he baffled Superintendent Bell. The court was crowded to its last inch. The coroner was conscious of his importance, and made the most of it in a long harangue. The divisional surgeon was more pompous than ever, and made it a point of honour to use terms so technical that all his evidence had to be translated to the jury, and the coroner and he argued over the translation. โWhat a life, ainโt it?โ Mr. Gordon murmured in Reggieโs ear. At last came what the evening papers called โDramatic Evidenceโ: the housemaid who had found the body and had hysterics over again as she described it; Mrs. Betts, who had found May Weston sleeping beside it, waked her, and heard her say, โI did it–oh, I did it!โ โSensation in Courtโ was the cross-head for that. The coroner looked over his glasses at the jury, and the jury muttered together, and May Weston came into the box. With the manner of a chaplain at an execution the coroner warned her that she need not give answers that would incriminate her. โI want to tell you everything,โ she said. She was very pale in her black, and listless of manner, but quite calm. What she told was the queer story she had told Reggie, but she was not allowed to tell it her own way. The coroner badgered her with continual questions designed to make the queerness of it seem queerer. He made her nervous, confused her, frightened her. โYou bother me so that I donโt know if Iโm telling the truth or not,โ she quavered. Then, in the language of the newspapers, โanother sensation.โ Mr. Ford, large and red, started up and roared, โI ought to be there, sir. Let her alone. I ought to be there.โ Reggie put his head between his hands and bowed himself, groaning. Every one else was much excited by Mr. Ford. He was pulled down in his seat. The coroner rebuked him with awful majesty. The foreman of the jury wanted to know if he would be called. The coroner pronounced that the court would most certainly require Mr. Ford to explain himself–and came back to May Weston. โThe fool that he is, heโs done the trick, though,โ Reggie muttered to Mr. Gordon, and Gordon nodded and grinned. For after this interruption the coroner handled May Weston much more gently, almost indulgently, as a good man sorry for a womanโs weakness. And he was soon done with her. โAny questions?โ He looked at the lawyers. Reggie bent forward and whispered to the solicitor appearing for Miss Weston. That large, bland man stood up. โNow, Miss Weston, about that coffee.โ He had his reward. Every one in the court, and Miss Weston not least, stared surprise at him. Slowly he extracted from her (she seemed bewildered at each question) the whole history of that after-dinner coffee. Coffee had been brought to the boudoir just before Mr. Ford came; no one but she had expected Mr. Ford; another cup was brought for Mr. Ford; Mr. Ford and she had both drunk their coffee. Miss Bolton–why, no, Miss Bolton had not. Miss Bolton had been very gay, and in doing a few steps of a dance had upset her coffee. โNo more questions, sir.โ The large solicitor sat down smiling. The coroner was visibly unable to understand him, and made a great business with his papers. It was now long after tea-time. โI suppose we shanโt finish to-day, gentlemen?โ the coroner suggested. โQuite impossible, sir,โ said the large solicitor cheerfully. โI have some long medical evidence. Dr. Fortune, Miss Boltonโs physician. The first medical man who saw the lady. The first medical man who saw Miss Weston.โ The court rose. Reggie, with Gordon at his heels, went out by the solicitorโs door and found Superintendent Bell waiting for him. โNow are you playing the game, doctor?โ said Superintendent Bell sadly. โFor keeps,โ Reggie laughed. โCome and dine with me. Bring Mordan. Heโs so genial.โ โWe do have to take these little things so seriously,โ the Superintendent murmured. But a party of four, the Superintendent and the large Inspector, Reggie and the little Jew, packed themselves into a taxi-cab and drove into town. Reggie was full of elegant conversation. He grew iris, and told them all about iris, with appendices on the costumes in revue. Once or twice Superintendent Bell tried to turn his attention to serious subjects. Vainly. At last Inspector Mordan broke out with, โI say, doctor, whatโs the wheeze about the coffee?โ โThe Inspector touches the spot. Care not, all will be known ere long. Thereโs a jolly little iris from the Himalayas—-โ Reggie returned with enthusiasm to horticulture. โWhere are you taking us, doctor?โ said the Superintendent. The taxi, which had for some little time been running through the city, seemed to intend coming out on the other side–a locality promising no good dinner. As he spoke, it turned into Liverpool Street Station. โLiverpool Street, by George!โ the Inspector said. โThis is a bean-feast. Going to take us to Epping Forest, doctor?โ โWe may have to go farther,โ Reggie said, and Gordon laughed. โAre you in this, sir?โ The Inspector turned on him. โProfessional secret, dear boy.โ Reggie led the way to the station dining-room. โI donโt know the cook. But letโs hope for the best. A tirinโ day, an active evening. Strength is what we need. Strength without somnolence. Salmon, I see. Lamb chops, I would add. One of your younger ducks would comfort me. Do you sleep after Burgundy, Inspector? A warm night, as you say. Larose is a genial claret. Let us all be genial.โ โWell, youโre a bit supercilious,โ the Inspector complained. โHow can you say so? I am keeping all the glory for you. Glory on ice. All ready for Inspector Mordan. So gather you roses while you may. Talking of roses, what do you think of the hybrid Austrian briers?โ He explained what he thought of them to a silent audience, sliding gracefully into an appreciation of salmon eaten at Waterford, at Exeter, and at Berwick. Few are the men who will not talk about food. The detectives produced much valuable experience of bourgeois cookery, and the dinner went merrily. In its later stages Reggie became silent and watched the clock. He seemed to grudge Inspector Mordan his cheese, and as soon as it was swallowed made a move. โWell, doctor, I did think we should have had some coffee,โ the Inspector chuckled. But Reggie was already making for the door. By the door stood his chauffeur looking for him. Reggie beckoned impatiently to the detectives and followed the chauffeur out. He led them to the main line departure platforms. It was near the time of the Harwich boat-train. A dark, wiry man was registering some luggage for Amsterdam. By his side stood a veiled woman of full figure. Both he and she carried suit-cases. As the man turned round he bumped into Reggie, who was looking the other way, and seemed to have some difficulty in disentangling himself. He glared at Reggie and hurried away. The woman was ahead of him. Reggie grabbed Superintendent Bell. โSee that pair. Take them both. Picking my pocket. Get the bags.โ Bell and Mordan hurried after the pair. Bell tapped the manโs shoulder, and he jumped round. โI thought so. Youโll come with me to the station, my man,โ said Superintendent Bell, with admirable calm. โWhat is it?โ the man cried. His accent was slightly foreign. โWhat station? What do you mean?โ โYou know all right,โ said the Superintendent. โI am Superintendent Bell of Scotland Yard.โ โI do not know at all,โ the man protested. โWhat do you want with me?โ The woman saw Reggie. She hissed something to the man in a foreign argot, and turned to run. The Superintendent laid hold of her. Inspector Mordan closed with the man. The Inspector was large and brawny, but at the end of a moment he was on his back and the man making off. Reggie dived for his legs in the manner of Rugby football, and they went down together. The railway police came on the scene. The man was handcuffed, and he and the woman and the two detectives packed into a cab. Reggie and Gordon followed in another to the police station in Old Jewry. When they arrived, the two prisoners were already in the charge-room and the woman was protesting vehemently, to the great edification of the uniformed inspector at the desk and a plain-clothes friend of his, and the embarrassment of Superintendent Bell and Inspector Mordan. It was an outrage. Why did they assault her and her husband? Why? They were respectable people. She would not endure it. โOh, Flora, Flora!โ Reggie shook his head at her. The woman whirled round on him. โYou! Ah, it is you, then, the doctor. You are a traitor. You are a wicked villain. I spit upon you.โ And she did. The man said something to her in the strange foreign argot they seemed to use between themselves, and she was silent. The plain-clothes man came forward grinning. โWhy, Bunco! It is my dear old pal, Bunco! What have they got you for now, old thing?โ The man scowled. Dusty and bruised from the scuffle and in the ignominy of handcuffs, he had still a certain arrogant dignity. He was well made for all his slightness, and the strength which had upset Mordan showed in his poise. It was a dark, aquiline face with a good brow, but passionate and cruel. โWhat is the charge, doctor?โ said Superintendent Bell. โOh. On the seventh instant–murder of Wilhelmina, otherwise Birdie Bolton,โ Reggie drawled. โBetter search them.โ โIt is a lie!โ Flora screamed; and continued to scream. Reggie and Gordon were smoking in another room when Bell and Mordan came back with the results of the search. A suit-case was put on the table, opened, and seemed to be full of light, a mass of jewels. โCan you identify, gentlemen?โ Mordan said. Superintendent Bell laid on the table a sheath knife. An unusual knife, rather long, rather narrow, rather stiff. โIโll identify that,โ Reggie said, and took it up. โThatโs the thing that killed her!โ โCoo!โ said Mr. Gordon. โYouโve got a real head, doctor. This is Birdieโs bunch all right. Swear to those rubies anywhere.โ โWhoโs the man?โ said Reggie. Superintendent Bell sat down with a bump. โHe asks me that.โ He appealed to the company. โI put it to you. He asks me that! The woman–sheโs Miss Boltonโs maid, of course. But the man—-โ โOh, heโs Fordโs chauffeur. I told you to watch Ford. But you only sat on the steps of his flat. Youโve given me a lot of trouble, you know. I was up all last night. Chauffeur doesnโt sleep in, of course. But who is he?โ โWe call him Bunco in the Force,โ said the Superintendent meekly. โHeโs a jewel thief. Quite in the front of the profession. American-Austrian, I think. I believe Nastitch is his name–Alexander Nastitch or Supilo.โ โCroat, I think,โ Reggie said. โThis knife–they use โem down that way.โ โCoo! Tell us something you donโt know,โ said the little Jew. Reggie laughed. You may have noticed that he had his vanities. He passed his cigar-case round. โWhere will I begin?โ said he. โAt the beginning, please.โ Mordan grinned. โThe Inspector touches the spot as ever. Well, it hasnโt been quite fair. I had the start of you. On the day before the murder Birdie Bolton consulted me. She hadnโt been sleeping well. Heard noises at night. Now you see your way, donโt you? No? Dear, dear. And I showed you that broken rose! Well, well. These two beauties, Flora and Nastitch, I suppose they got their situations to have a go for the jewels. Nastitch, as Fordโs chauffeur, would have an excuse for hanging round the house and a car to use. Heโs had the car out of the garage till the small hours several times. I think he got in by the window last week–more than once, perhaps. And each time poor Birdie stirred. Better for her if she hadnโt, poor girl. But they didnโt mean murder, bless โem. So they chose to drug her. There was morphia in that coffee. As you heard to-day, Birdie didnโt drink hers. Another rotten chance. So May Weston went to sleep while Birdie was storming at her. Birdie raged off to her room. Whether she got out that will and tore it, weโll never know. It may have been Floraโs little game. Nastitch came in, reckoning she was sure to be sound, and Flora was with him, I think. Birdie was very wide awake. There was a struggle and he stabbed her. Heโs a hot-tempered devil, as you saw to-day.โ โThis is all very pretty, doctor, but it ainโt all evidence,โ Mordan said. โYouโre so hasty. When she was dead, they took her into the boudoir where the Weston girl was asleep. They laid her on the couch and stabbed at her with her scissors and the bodkin. Filthy trick. That was what May Weston saw in the opium dream. Then I suppose they cleared the safe, and Nastitch went off. Flora annexed the emerald ring. Her perquisite, I suppose. Now, you shall have your evidence. When I came to the body, I saw those scissors never did the business. Ever tried killing anybody with scissors, Inspector? Poor game. No. We wanted something like this.โ He fingered the knife affectionately. โJust like this. Also somebody had left his mark on Birdie–a queer hand–a hand that wasnโt quite all there–long fingers with no top joint. Did you notice Mr. Nastitchโs left hand?โ The detectives looked at each other. โThat was in a burglary in New York,โ said the Superintendent. โHe escaped out of a window, and a constable smashed his hand on the sill.โ โSo I photographed the wound and the bruise. Well, when I saw Weston, I saw she had really been drugged. Contracted pupils, bluish pallor. Morphia. Same symptoms in Ford. Why should they drug themselves and not drug Birdie? That ruled them out. Also, I surprised Flora in Birdieโs bedroom doing something by the bed. When I browsed round afterwards I found a wet bloodstain under a clean rug. When Flora knew the Weston girl was arrested and the jewels had been missed, she chucked the ring into Westonโs room. While you were searching the house, I drifted into Miss Floraโs room. Several medicine bottles about. One of โem empty. That had carried a strong solution of morphia. So I set my chauffeur to watch for Flora. And that night she went off to the lodgings of Nastitch. Sheโs been buzzing round ever since. Well?โ โWell, sir, itโs a good thing you didnโt take to crime,โ said Superintendent Bell. โOh, thatโs much harder,โ said Reggie. Chapter 3. THE NICE GIRL. Some are born great, some achieve greatness, some have greatness thrust upon them. That was Dr. Reginald Fortuneโs trouble. He had become a specialist, and, as he told anybody who would listen, thought it an absurd thing to be. For he was interested in everything, but not in anything in particular. And it was just this various versatility of mind and taste which had condemned him to be a specialist. Obviously an absurd world. The Criminal Investigation Department, solicitors, and others dealing with those experiments in social reform which are called crimes, by continually appealing to his multifarious knowledge and his all-observant eye, turned Dr. Reginald Fortune, general practitioner at Westhampton, into Mr. Fortune of Wimpole Street, specialist in–what shall we say?–the surgery of crime. And Reggie Fortune, though richer for the change, was not grateful. He liked ordinary things, and any day would have gladly bartered a murder for a case of chicken-pox. This accounts for his unequalled sanity of judgement. Reggie was in that one of his clubs which he liked best, because no member of it knew anything about his profession. He had just completed an animated discussion on the prehistoric art of the French Congo, and was going out, when the tape machine buzzed and clicked at his elbow, and he stopped to look. โMurder of Sir Albert Lunt,โ said the tape and, โOh, my aunt!โ said Reggie. The tape continued the conversation–thus: โSir Albert Lunt, the well-known mining magnate, was found dead this afternoon in the deer park of his estate at Priorโs Colney, Bucks. The body was discovered by an employee, in circumstances which suggested foul play. A medical examination led to the conclusion that the deceased had been shot. The local police have the case in hand, and search is being actively prosecuted for—-โ Words failed the tape, and it relapsed into a buzz. Reggie stared at it with gloomy apprehension. โI believe the beggars get murdered just to bother me,โ he was reflecting, when a jovial tea-merchant (wholesale–that club is a most respectable club) clapped him on the shoulder, and asked what the news was. โThey only do it to annoy because they know it teases,โ said Reggie, and held up the tape. โAlbert Lunt!โ said the tea-merchant, and whistled. โWell, he wonโt be missed!โ โDonโt you believe it,โ Reggie groaned, and went out. Upon his way home the passionate interest which the world, expressing its emotions on newspaper placards, took in Sir Albert Lunt was heaped upon him. When he let himself in, his factotum, Samuel Baker, was hovering in the hall. โOh, donโt look so alert, Sam. Itโs maddening,โ Reggie complained. Samuel Baker grinned. โYouโll want all the papers, sir?โ โI suppose so!โ โIโm getting each edition as they come along, sir. Would you like a photograph of Sir Albert?โ โGo away, Sam.โ Reggie waved at him. โGo quite away, Sam. Do you know one reason why many fellows get murdered? Itโs because other fellows canโt live up to them.โ As he changed, Reggie looked through the papers. They were eloquent upon Sir Albert Lunt. His career, even when treated with the delicacy due to those who die rich, was a picturesque subject. Sir Albert Lunt, with his surviving brother Victor, had gone out to South Africa in the early days of diamonds. His first vocation was discreetly veiled. Some references to his life-long passion for sport reminded the knowing of the story that he and his brother had been in the front rank of the profession which works with three cards, the thimble, and the pea. Sir Albert, always in close alliance with Victor, had come out into daylight in the second stage of the diamond fields, when the business man was following in the steps of lucky adventurers. It had been Sir Albertโs habit through life to appear in the second stage of things. The polite newspaper biographies called this prudence and sound judgment. He had always been fortunate in reaping other peopleโs harvests. There were strange tales of his devices at Kimberley and Johannesburg, and just a hint of a clash with Cecil Rhodes, in which Rhodes had said what he thought of the Brothers Lunt with a certain gusto. So ways that were dark and tricks that were anything but vain in Kimberley and Johannesburg made Albert Lunt a millionaire. He was not satisfied. South Africa was too small for him. Or was it too hot for him? He had spread his โoperationsโ round the world. He was โinterestedโ in some Manchurian tin and the copper belt of the Belgian Congo. โOne of our modern Empire builders,โ as the evening papers sagely said. How Sir Albert came by his title was a problem left in decent obscurity. Much was said of the magnificence of his life in England, his rococo palace not quite in Park Lane, his pantomime splendours at Priorโs Colney–the ball-room which was in the lake, and the dining-room which was panelled in silver. The knowing reader could divine that Sir Albert had lived not only blatantly but hard and fast. โYah,โ said Reggie Fortune. Just as he was putting on his coat, Sam arrived with a photograph of Sir Albert, and Reggie sat down to it. A plump man of middle height, rather loudly dressed; a long, heavy face, rather like a horseโs, but with protruding eyes–commonplace enough. It was only the expression which made Reggie examine the fellow more closely. Under the photographic smirk was a look of insolence and conceit of singular force. The man who owned that would never allow any creature a right against him. Behold the secret of Sir Albert Luntโs success. And โOh, Peter, I donโt wonder some one murdered the animal,โ said Reggie. โJustifiable porcicide.โ On which he went off to dinner with his sister, who had married a man in the Treasury, and gave him the pleasant somnolent evening you would expect. When he came back there were two telegrams waiting for him. Number one: โWas called in to Lunt case. Desire consult you. Lady Lunt also anxious your opinion.–GERALD BARNES.โ Number two: โDesire consult you Lunt case. Please see me Priorโs Colney morning.–LOMAS.โ Reggie whistled. โLet โem all come,โ said he. Gerald Barnes had been house surgeon when Reggie was surgical registrar at St. Simonโs Hospital, and had gone into practice somewhere in Buckinghamshire. The Hon. Stanley Lomas was the head of the Criminal Investigation Department. โHave they had a scrap?โ Reggie smiled to himself. โLots of zeal at Priorโs Colney. Sam! The car after breakfast. Weโll go and see life.โ And he went to bed. But in the morning, just as he was finishing breakfast, he was told that Nurse Dauntsey wanted to see him and said it was most urgent. Nurse Dauntsey was at St. Simonโs Hospital and had a partiality for Reggie, who (quite paternally) liked her for being gentle and kindly and pretty. A trim figure, a pair of honest grey eyes, a wholesome complexion, and an engaging red mouth were the best of Nurse Dauntseyโs charms, but there was a simplicity about her which commended them. โTypes of English Beauty.–Third Prize, Nurse Dauntsey,โ somebody said once. And it was felt to be just. On this morning Nurse Dauntseyโs nice face was troubled, and she had lost her usual calm. โOh, Mr. Fortune, will you help me?โ She rushed at Reggie. โItโs the Lunt case.โ โNow what in wonder have you to do with the Lunt case?โ Nurse Dauntsey blushed. โIโm engaged, Mr. Fortune,โ she said. โWell, heโs a very lucky man. And I hope youโre a lucky girl.โ โOh, I am,โ said Nurse Dauntsey, with conviction. โHe has been arrested. They say he murdered Sir Albert Lunt. Mr. Fortune, you will help us?โ โWho in creation is the lucky man?โ โHis name is Vernon Cranford. Heโs a mining engineer. Oh, heโs been everywhere. Heโs a born explorer, you know. He discovered a copper mine in Portuguese East Africa, one of the richest mines in the world. He came home last year and told Sir Albert Lunt about it, and Sir Albert sent him out to show the place. There was a sort of expedition, you know. And then, somehow, on the way up country Vernon was left behind. The other men tricked him. And when he got back to Mozambique he found that the other men had claimed the place was theirs. They had–what do you call it?–secured the concession, the rights in it. Wasnโt it a shame? Vernon was just furious. I donโt know quite how it happened. He only came back on Monday. I know he thought it was Sir Albert Luntโs fault. He said he was going to see him and have it out with him. He was going to see him yesterday. And then, last night, I had this note from him.โ She held it out, then couldnโt bear to let it out of her hands, and so read it to him. โโDEAR JO,–You mustnโt worry. Luntโs been found shot, and the police have pinched me. Take it easy and go slow, and weโll comb it all out.–Yours, V.โโ Nurse Dauntsey gazed at Reggie with very big eyes. โSounds as if he knew his own mind,โ Reggie murmured. โAnd all this beinโ thus, you want me to take up the case. Why?โ Nurse Dauntsey was startled. โBut to get him off, of course–to defend him.โ โYes. But donโt letโs be previous. Speakinโ frankly, did he do it?โ Nurse Dauntsey stood up. โI am engaged to him, Mr. Fortune,โ she said with dignity. โQuite. Thatโs the best thing I know about him. But I donโt know much else.โ โAnd I am sure heโs not guilty.โ โThat kind of man, is he?โ โJust that kind of man,โ said Nurse Dauntsey, and her eyes glowed. โHe couldnโt do anything that wasnโt fair and clean.โ โThen heโd better have a solicitor. Do you suppose heโs got one?โ โHeโd never think of such a thing.โ โMake him have Moss and Gordon. Ask for Donald Gordon, and say I sent you.โ โBut I want you, Mr. Fortune. You know thereโs no one like you.โ โI blush. We both blush.โ Reggie smiled at her. โWell, nurse, two other people have called me into the Lunt case.โ Nurse Dauntsey cried out, and her nice face was piteous. โTake it easy and go slow, as V. Cranford says. Iโm going down to Priorโs Colney now to find out who Iโm acting for. Oh, my dear girl, donโt cry. Iโm guessing it may be you. Now you be a good girl, and take Donald Gordon to him.โ Nurse Dauntsey held out her hands. โOh, Mr. Fortune, donโt go against him,โ she cried. Safe in his car, Reggie communed with himself. โSheโs a lamb. But disturbing to the intellects. Well, well. Iโll have to make Brer Lomas sit up and take notice.โ It was a clear cold morning of early spring, and Reggie shrank under his rugs. He had no love for east winds. He thought that there should be a close time for murders. He was elaborating a scheme by which the murder and the cricket seasons should be conterminous, when, at about twenty-five miles from London, they passed a horrible building. It was some distance from the high road, perched on the top of a small hill. It was of very red brick and very white stone, so arranged as to suggest the streaky bacon which might be made of a pig who had died in convulsions. It was ornate with the most improbable decorations, colonnades, battlements, a spire or so, oriel windows, a dome, Tudor chimneys, and some wedding-cake furbelows. Reggie writhed and called to his factotum, who was sitting beside the chauffeur. โSam, who had that nightmare?โ โThat must be Colney Towers, sir. Mr. Victor Luntโs place.โ Reggie groaned. โAnd Victor yet lives!โ A mile or two farther on they ran into a village which, before ruthless fellows stuck garden-city cottages on to it, must have been placid and pretty. The car drew up at an honest Georgian lump of red brick which bore the plate of Dr. Gerald Barnes. Gerald Barnes was a ruddy young man who looked and dressed like a farmer. โI say, this is very decent of you. Jolly day, isnโt it?โ he bustled. โHave you a fire, Barnes–a large fire? Put me on it,โ said Reggie. โAnd donโt be so cheerful. It unnerves me.โ Still in his fur coat, Reggie planted himself in front of the consulting-room hearth. โNow, what do you want me for?โ โWell, itโs not so much me, though Iโd like your opinion. Itโs more Lady Lunt. Medically speaking, itโs a pretty straight case. Lunt was shot in the chest and the bullet lodged in the spine, .38 revolver bullet. So thereโs not much doubt about the cause of death, what? But there are one or two odd things. The right thumb seems to be sprained. Thereโs a nasty wound over the left eye–seems to have been made by a blow.โ โSounds messy. Where do I come in?โ โWhy, I donโt quite see my way through it. If a fellow had a pistol ready to use, why bash the beggar? Itโs a futile sort of wound too, nasty mess, but not dangerous. But youโd better see the body, Fortune.โ โOh, let me thaw. So Lady Luntโs not satisfied with the police?โ โNo, by Jove, she isnโt. I say, Fortune, how did you know that?โ โGenius, just genius. And whatโs Lady Lunt like?โ โWell, you know, she isnโt quite a lady. And yet she is in big things. He married her about ten years ago, somewhere on the Continent. But sheโs English. She was a dancer or singer or something. Pretty low class, I believe. She was awfully handsome–big, dark, dashing type. She hasnโt kept her looks, but sheโs still striking. She was pretty rowdy at first–went the pace like he did. He was an awful old bounder, you know. But for a good while now sheโs been different–quiet and serious–looking after things down here, good work on the estate–that sort of thing. She quietened him down too, but he was pretty bad. I think she was getting him in hand slowly, but she must have been having a rotten time for years.โ โAnd what does Lady Lunt want now?โ โIโm hanged if I know,โ said Barnes, after some hesitation. โShe thinks thereโs more in it than the detectives see, and sheโs not satisfied about this arrest.โ โNow go easy. Two other people have called me in, and I donโt know who Iโll act for. So donโt spoil anybodyโs game. Lomas wired for me—-โ โLomas! So Scotland Yard isnโt so mighty cocksure.โ โDid Lomas seem so? Rude fellow. And then thereโs V. Cranford.โ โCranfordโs got to you already! Heโs lost no time.โ โOh, heโs in very good hands. Now letโs take a walk. Youโll show me where Lunt was killed, and Iโll have a look at him.โ Reggie shed his fur coat and became brisk. It was his bailiff who had found Sir Albert Lunt, taken the news to the house, and telephoned for Gerald Barnes. Sir Albert Lunt had been walking back from his home farm across the park, which was an undulating stretch of turf over chalk, broken here and there by some fine beeches and coverts of gorse and bramble. A gravel path ran straight from the home farm to the main chestnut avenue. Barnes halted at a place where the turf was trampled in half-frozen footprints. Reggie looked round him. โHumph! Well out of sight of any house. Nobody heard the shot?โ โNobody noticed it. Itโs a good way from the house, you see, and a mile from the farm. A shot or so–whatโs that in the open country? You often hear a gun somewhere.โ โQuite. Whereโs that path go to?โ Reggie pointed to a track across the turf diverging from the gravel. โThat? Oh, over to Victor Luntโs place. His park–he calls it a park too, but itโs a small affair–almost joins this, you know.โ โWell, well, letโs see the body,โ Reggie yawned, and they marched on to Priorโs Colney. It had once been a comely place in a staid eighteenth-century fashion. โOh, my only aunt!โ Reggie groaned. โLooks like your grandmother put into the Russian ballet.โ It was loaded with excrescences of contorted ornament still raw and new against the mellow solemnity of the original homely house. A motor-car stood at the door. While they were detaching hats and sticks in the hall, they could hear some one being told that Lady Lunt was not leaving her room. Then, being shown out, came a bulky man muffled in a fur coat with a big Astrakhan collar. He had a large head and a long face of unhealthy complexion. Across the forehead from right eyebrow to hair was a red furrow. He had prominent, pale eyes. โWho is the sportsman with the scratched face?โ Reggie said, as the door shut on him. โOh, thatโs Victor Lunt. Been inquiring after Lady Lunt, I suppose.โ โBright and brotherly,โ Reggie murmured. There appeared briskly a man of grave and military aspect, who was presented to Reggie as Radnor Hall, Sir Albert Luntโs secretary. Radnor Hall (in a faintly American accent) was very glad to see Mr. Fortune; hoped for Mr. Fortuneโs company to lunch; after which, Lady Lunt was most anxious to see Mr. Fortune. โI want to see the body,โ Reggie said gruffly. So to the body he was taken, and saw that Gerald Barnes was right enough: there could be no doubt of the cause of death. A pistol bullet, fired from some little distance, had entered the chest and lodged in the spinal vertebrรฆ. Sir Albert Lunt might not have died on the instant. He could not have lived long. But that mortal wound was tiny. What made the dead man look horrible was the gash in his forehead and the bruise round it. And over that Reggie frowned and pondered. โShowy, isnโt it, very showy?โ he complained. Such a hurt a man might get by falling on a stone. But Sir Albert Lunt had fallen on his back on the turf. If some one had hit him with a stone or some such jagged thing–but why should any man take a stone who had a pistol and was not afraid to use it? โIf there was any sense in it, Iโd say it was a fake,โ Reggie grumbled. He gave up the wounds at last and moved round the body. โOh, youโre looking at the wrong hand,โ Barnes said. โAm I though?โ โYes, this is the one where the thumbโs sprained–the right hand.โ โWell, you know, he seems to have been busy with his hands. What did you make of this?โ Barnes came to look. The fingers of the left hand were bent towards the thumb as if the dead man had been plucking at something. โNot much in that, is there?โ โWhat was he wearing?โ โRough brown overcoat–brown tweeds.โ โOh, ah!โ Delicately Reggie extracted from the stiff fingers some little curly, black tufts. โWell, thatโs queer,โ Barnes said. โLooks like coarse hair.โ โYou know youโve got imagination.โ Reggie put the stuff very carefully in his pocket-book. โSome oppressed worker from the compounds at Johannesburg–came all the way to Priorโs Colney for vengeance–threw a stone at him–shot him–and then butted him. Thorough fellow, very thorough.โ โWhat is it, then?โ Barnes said sulkily. โSeek not to proticipate. Hallo!โ The interruption was the Hon. Stanley Lomas, Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department, dapper and debonair. โAh, Fortune, good man. Why didnโt you ask for me? Iโm at the inn in the village.โ โThatโs very haughty of you. Why not in the house? Have you put Lady Luntโs back up? Or has she put up yours?โ โOh, best to have a free hand, donโt you know? Well, what do you make of it?โ Reggie shrugged. โCurious features, what? What I want to know is, was that blow on the head before the shot or after?โ โWhat you want is not a surgeon, itโs a clairvoyant. Anyway, you donโt want me. Youโve got your man.โ โHave I?โ Lomas put up his eyeglass. โYou mean Cranford? Now how did you know about Cranford?โ โSorry, Lomas. Nothing doing. Iโm the independent expert this time.โ Lomas frowned. โMy dear fellow! Oh, my dear fellow! Unless youโre acting for some one, youโve no business here, donโt you know.โ โIโm acting for some one all right–for V. Cranford.โ โHallo! Youโve made up your mind?โ Barnes cried. Lomas dropped his eyeglass. โAh! Well, well. Things must be as they may, what? Itโs a pity. Afraid youโve made a bad break this time, Fortune. Itโs a straight case.โ โI wonder,โ Reggie said. โMy dear fellow, Iโd hate you to be at a disadvantage.โ Lomas seemed suddenly to have become older, paternal, protective. โWell–itโs not strictly official–but I may tell you weโve found the pistol. It was in Cranfordโs rooms.โ โA Smith-Southron .38? Fancy! I donโt suppose thereโs more than half a million of them in circulation. Itโs a good gun. Iโve got one myself somewhere. โMy dear fellow!โ Lomas was young and jaunty again. โWhy try to bluff me? Lunt was killed by a particular kind of pistol. And we find the particular man to whom all suspicion points owns one of these pistols. Itโs quite simple, donโt you know?โ โYes, oh, yes, โDoosid lucid, doosid convincing.โ But I wonder why you want to convince me?โ That was the first skirmish over the Lunt case, and Reggie, Gerald Barnes discreetly excusing himself, ate a little _tรชte-ร -tรชte_ lunch with Radnor Hall–not in the silver panelled dining-room. When the servants were gone, โI donโt want to hear anything under false pretences, Mr. Hall,โ Reggie explained. โI shall act in this case for Cranford.โ โIs that so?โ Radnor Hall rubbed his back hair. โI guess Iโll take you right in to Lady Lunt.โ Lady Lunt stood in front of the fire with a cigarette in her mouth. She was a big woman, a little flat of figure and gaunt of face, but still handsome. She thrust a hand on Reggie, gripped his hand, and shot a โGlad to see you,โ at him. Reggie was sorry he could not act for Lady Lunt, but had to consider that Cranford had the first claim on him. โI donโt mind,โ she cried. It seemed her habit to be explosive. โIf youโre against the police, thatโs good enough for us. Eh, Radnor?โ โSure,โ said Radnor Hall, who was watching Reggie closely. โI want you to hear what weโve got to say about the case,โ the lady explained. โWe think it matters.โ โQuite a lot,โ said Radnor Hall. Lady Lunt nodded at him, and he began. โYou see, Mr. Fortune, Sir Albert left everything to Lady Lunt.โ Reggie murmured that it was very natural. โAs Lady Lunt regards the proposition, itโs up to her to see that justice is done about the murder.โ โJustice, see?โ Lady Lunt broke in vehemently. โAnd not have some poor devil hanged because the police think heโs an under dog and donโt count.โ Radnor Hall frowned at her. โMr. Fortune will realize when we make the position clear.โ โSorry, Radnor. You go on.โ Lady Lunt threw her cigarette away and dropped into a chair. โWell, sir, to commence.โ Radnor Hall smoothed his black hair. โThis firm never was Albert Lunt. It was Lunt Brothers. The late Sir Albert he was sure master. He put in the git up and git. But quite a lot of the head work came from Mr. Victor Lunt. And lately, Sir Albert having largely relapsed into living on his rents, Mr. Victor Lunt has had considerable control. Now, sir, speaking as man to man, I would wish to say that the methods of Lunt Brothers have been complex–highly complex. I conjecture that in early days Albert and Victor were both out for scalps. But in my time, Sir Albert having mellowed, largely mellowed–under prosperity and certain influences—-โ โOh, donโt blether, Radnor,โ Lady Lunt exploded. โWell, Mr. Fortune, Sir Albert has lately showed a tendency to more conservative methods of finance. Mr. Victor Lunt has gone on putting in his sharp head work. There has been friction, sir–some friction. Now in this affair of Cranfordโs–without prejudice, I would like to say that Mr. Cranford has been hardly used by Lunt Brothers.โ โHeโs been damnably cheated,โ said Lady Lunt. โThereโs a point of view,โ said Radnor Hall. โLady Lunt had put her point of view to Sir Albert. Well, sir, the Cranford case was largely handled by Mr. Victor Lunt. I wouldnโt say Sir Albert disavowed the methods used. But he considered Mr. Victor was taking too much control. Words passed. And we find Sir Albert shot. Thatโs the proposition, Mr. Fortune.โ Reggie smiled. Reggie put the tips of his fingers together and over them looked very blandly at the military face of Radnor Hall. โYour view is that Sir Albert was murdered by his brother Victor,โ he said. Lady Lunt started and looked at Radnor Hall. Radnor Hall gave no sign of surprise. โPitch up another, doctor,โ he smiled back. โNo, sir. Your guess, not mine. Iโm giving out facts.โ โOh, cut it out, Radnor,โ said Lady Lunt. โWell, well.โ Reggie surveyed her benignly. โAnd so Sir Albertโs death leaves Victor in control of the firm?โ โSir Albertโs share comes to me,โ Lady Lunt said. โFive-eighths. Iโm master now.โ โA responsibility,โ Reggie murmured. โIf I understand one cause of quarrel between the brothers was that Victor resented your influence, madame, which Sir Albert encouraged you to use?โ โYes, thatโs the proposition,โ said Radnor Hall. โYou know itโs not,โ Lady Lunt cried. โThey both hated me to meddle.โ โIs that so?โ Reggie said dreamily. โAnd you were asking me to find out who murdered Sir Albert?โ โNo, I wasnโt,โ Lady Lunt flashed at him. โI was asking you to save this poor boy Cranford.โ โAh well, letโs hope itโs the same thing.โ Reggie stood up. โI can play about in the park, I suppose? Many thanks.โ And he did play about in the park till dusk, and when he went back to London, Sam, the factotum, was not with him. In the evening Donald Gordon rang him up. Donald Gordon thought Cranford was a bit of a tough, but was going to act for him. It would be a fruity case. He had arranged a consultation with Cranford at the prison to-morrow, and hoped Reggie would be there. What did Reggie think of the case? โRotten,โ said Reggie, and rang off. The fact is that from first to last the Lunt case annoyed him. He never saw his way through it, and has always called it one of his failures. The one thing which he did, he will tell you, was to grasp that the police were mucking it–to divine that whoever killed Sir Albert and however he–or she–did it, it was not a simple, common bit of pistolling. He was right about nothing else. His apology is that he has no imagination. At this stage he was prepared to believe anything. When he went gloomily to bed it was with the conviction that if he were Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department he could make it–or fake it–into a hanging matter for โany one of the bally crowdโ. The unknown Cranford, the enigmatic Victor, Lady Lunt, Radnor Hall, you could put each of them in the dock–or several of them together. Lady Lunt stood to gain most by the death–or perhaps Radnor Hall–what were her relations with Radnor Hall? Cranford had the worst quarrel with the dead man–or perhaps brother Victor. In favour of Cranford was only the oddity of the business, and nice Nurse Dauntsey . . . a lamb. . . . Comfortable visions of her sent him to sleep. Seen in the gaunt room at the prison, the unknown Cranford came up to expectation. He was a dark fellow, lean and powerful, with a decisive jaw. The little Jewish solicitor, Donald Gordon, became nervous before him. โMiss Dauntsey says Iโm devilish obliged to you, doctor,โ said Cranford sharply. โSo I am. You understand I admit nothing.โ โThatโs the best way,โ the little Jew lisped. But Cranford told his story and admitted a good deal. He had offered his discovery of copper to Lunt Brothers, and been sent out to Mozambique with a party of their men. On the way up country he had gone out of camp to shoot for the pot. Out of the bush came a native spear and broke in his thigh. By the time he struggled back to camp, there was no camp. The party had gone on with the food and the baggage, his baggage too, in which was the map of his copper belt. He was left wounded and alone in the bush. After some desperate days he struggled into a native village, and lay there a month before he could travel. When he came back to Mozambique he found that Lunt Brothers were enrolled as the owners of all the copper belt. He sailed for England. There was in him, he confessed–no, proclaimed–the single purpose of getting his own back from Sir Albert Lunt. And so his first day in England took him to the office of Lunt Brothers. Victor Lunt received him. Victor Lunt had been civil, even sympathetic, but had nothing to offer. Victor Lunt admitted that they had jumped his claim, did not conceal that the trick had been planned by Sir Albert Lunt, agreed that Cranford had been damnably swindled; but gave him no hope that Sir Albert Lunt would do anything. โYou didnโt kill Victor, anyway?โ Reggie said. โVictor? Poor beast, thereโs nothing to him. Heโs all talk,โ said Cranford. โAlbert ran that show. Victor as good as told me so. Said he was just a clerk in Albertโs office. So I told him a few things about Albert. Poor devil, he was in a funk. He got cold feet. Said I had better go right on to Albert. Albert was down at Priorโs Colney. Would I go to Albert? I would so. And I did.โ โYes. By train. You got to Colney Road Station 12.20,โ Reggie said. โYou came back by the 2.5.โ โThatโs so.โ Cranford stared at him. โYou know something, doctor. I walked up to Priorโs Colney. Flunkey said Albert was out. I walked back and caught the 2.5.โ There was silence for a moment. Then the little Jew said, โThatโs the story. Youโll have to tell it in the witness-box, you know.โ โCan do,โ said Cranford. โThatโs nice,โ the little Jew lisped. โNow you know some fellow will ask you–donโt you tell me if you donโt want–did you murder Albert Lunt?โ โI did not, sir.โ The little Jew rubbed his hands. โThatโs nice, ainโt it, doctor? That gives us a free hand.โ He got up. โWell, doctor, any questions?โ โI wonder what coat you were wearing, Mr. Cranford?โ Reggie said. โCoat? Brown raincoat. Devilish cold it was too. Only coat Iโve got. Iโve not had time to fit out for an English spring.โ โQuite. Weโll carry on, then.โ Reggie got up too. โItโs shaping all right, Mr. Cranford. Shouldnโt worry.โ โNot me. Tell Miss Dauntsey,โ Cranford said. Outside in their car, โWhatโs the verdict, doctor?โ Gordon said. โHeโs telling the truth,โ Reggie said. โFancy!โ And they became technical. On the day of the inquest Reggie went down to Priorโs Colney, but the inquest he did not attend. The Hon. Stanley Lomas noticed that, and remarked on it with surprise to Donald Gordon. It was the one thing in a successful day which gave Mr. Lomas concern. But at the close of that day Mr. Lomas, going back to the inn for his car and his tea, found Reggie eating buttered toast. โI envy you. Fortune, donโt you know.โ Lomas sat down beside him. โOh, Mr. Lomas, sir,โ Reggie mumbled. โGo along with you.โ โI envy your stomach,โ Lomas explained, put up his eyeglass and surveyed the buttered toast more closely. โO Lord! And after a bad day too! Youโve heard the verdict. What? Wilful murder against Cranford.โ โAnd all is gas and gaiters. And hooroar for Scotland Yard. And you shall pay for my tea.โ โIt was the pistol did for him you know.โ Lomas smiled as a man who can afford to smile. โChildhoodโs years are passing oโer us, Lomas,โ Reggie murmured. โSoon our schooldays will be done. Cares and sorrows lie before us, Lomas. Hidden dangers, snares unknown. Iโve found the real pistol, old thing. Good-bye.โ Lomas caught him up outside. โI say, Fortune. Without prejudice–whatโs your line?โ โSeek not to proticipate,โ Reggie smiled. โThis gentleman is paying for my tea, Mary. You would be so hasty, you know.โ Mr. Lomas drank whisky and soda. That was the second skirmish in the Lunt case. The general action was fought at the assizes. The interest in it began with the cross-examination of Victor Lunt. Victor Lunt, called for the prosecution, made a good impression. He looked harassed and in ill-health, affected as a good brother should be by a brotherโs death. But he had command of himself, proved that he had brains as well as the heart displayed by his dull eye and flabby face, he was lucid and to the point. He showed no malice against Cranford. Cranford had called on him on the morning of the murder, complained bitterly of his treatment by Sir Albert Lunt, used violent language about Sir Albert, demanded to know where Sir Albert was, and gone away. Such was Mr. Luntโs evidence in chief. Then arose a small and pallid barrister with a priggish nose. He would ask Mr. Lunt to carry his mind back to some earlier transactions. So the story of the expedition to Mozambique was brought out and, such was the simplicity of the priggish little man, the harassed mouth of Mr. Lunt was made to explain that Lunt Brothers had annexed Cranfordโs discovery, and that the expedition of Lunt Brothers had left him to die in the bush. โAre you justifying the murder?โ said counsel for the Crown. โYou will understand my friendโs uneasiness, gentlemen,โ says the little barrister, and pinned Mr. Lunt to the statement that it was Sir Albert who had planned this iniquitous scheme. โAnd when Cranford had gone, Mr. Lunt, of course you warned your brother at once this desperate fellow was on his track. No? Curious. Yet you went down in your motor to your own house at Colney Towers, not much more than a mile away. You reached the house between 12 and 12.30? Perhaps? Oh, donโt begin to forget things now. What did you do then?โ As far as he remembered Mr. Lunt took a stroll. โOn your oath–did you not go and meet your brother?โ Mr. Lunt (who had sat down) started up to deny it. He had not gone outside his own park. โWould it surprise you to hear that on the path from your house to Sir Albertโs there were found next day fresh footprints which your boots fit?โ Mr. Lunt often walked that way. โWhat clothes were you wearing?โ Mr. Lunt could not remember. He went as he was. โYou donโt deny you were wearing a coat with an Astrakhan collar?โ Mr. Lunt could not say–he had such a coat–he did often wear it. โVery well. And, as you were saying, you have had quarrels with your brother about the policy of the firm?โ โNot quarrels, no,โ Mr. Lunt protested eagerly, and struggled to explain them away. โOn the day after the murder you had a large scratch on your forehead which was not there before the murder?โ Mr. Lunt could not remember the scratch. Anybody might have a scratch. He was let go. And the jury looked at each other. After lunch, first witness for the defence, came Lady Lunt to say that the scheme to trick Cranford had been Victorโs, and that on many subjects there were bitter quarrels between Victor and Albert. Radnor Hall corroborated. Reggie followed, and brought the crisis of the battle. Mr. Fortune, eminent in his profession, had examined the body. Clutched in the left hand were some black tufts–fragments of Astrakhan. When he visited the scene of the crime he had found on the brambles close by other tufts of Astrakhan. He had traced recent footprints which corresponded exactly to the size of a pair of Mr. Albert Luntโs boots. He produced measurements and casts. In the depths of one of the neighbouring coverts he had found a Smith-Southron .38 magazine pistol, from which three shots had been fired. And a vigorous cross-examination could do nothing with these facts. Then came other witnesses to prove that Victor Lunt had been wearing Astrakhan, and Cranford a raincoat. Last witness for the defence–Cranford himself. Last question for the defence–โOn your oath, did you murder Albert Lunt?โ โOn my oath, no.โ The once-confident counsel for the Crown went delicately now. It was plain enough that he thought his case did not justify him in pressing the prisoner hard. โWhen you were told Albert Lunt was out you made no further attempt to see him. Why?โ โI thought it was a plant. I thought the two of them were putting me off.โ โSo you went straight back to town?โ โYes. I caught the 2.5. You know that.โ Counsel for the Crown gave it up. A speech of sledgehammer logic from the priggish little barrister, exhibiting Cranford as a man much wronged, and Victor Lunt as the villain of the piece–a speech the more effective from its studied absence of passion. A summing up from the judge dead against Victor Lunt. A quick verdict of Not Guilty. Cheers in court. Nurse Dauntsey crying and laughing and feeling blindly for Reggie Fortuneโs hand. In the corridor outside, โThatโs a case, my boy, thatโs a case.โ The little Jew solicitor jumped and gurgled. โSome sensation! What, Mr. Lomas, some sensation in the Yard.โ โBaddish break, Lomas. โZeal, all zeal, Mr. Easy,โโ Reggie grinned. โWhy the devil couldnโt you give it me?โ Lomas thrust by in a hurry. โGet on, Bell–get on.โ Superintendent Bell, his lieutenant, shook his head at Reggie. That night after dinner a card was brought in to Reggie Fortune. โFor Godโs sake see me,โ was scrawled above โMr. Victor Lunt.โ Reggie went down to his consulting-room. Victor Lunt was in distress. The fat face which in the morning had been pale was now crimson and sweating. He breathed heavily; he seemed swollen. โYou must expect nothing from me, Mr. Lunt. I have done with your case,โ Reggie said. โYouโll hear what Iโve got to say. You must hear my side, doctor. It was you who set them on me. My God, there may be a warrant out for me any moment. Doctor, for Godโs sake–you donโt want to send me to the gallows. I never did it. I swear I never did.โ โI have said nothing but the truth about what I found. The facts are the facts, Mr. Lunt. Defend yourself against them. I can do nothing for you.โ โBut the facts lie, doctor. God love you, you wouldnโt go to hang an innocent man. Iโll tell you the truth, by God I will.โ Reggie sat down. โI canโt take up your case, Mr. Lunt. I am committed. Anything you tell me is at your own risk. If you can convince me that youโre innocent itโs my duty to do what I can for you. But I advise you to hold your tongue.โ โDonโt you see?โ Victor Lunt was almost screaming. โIf they hang me itโs you thatโs done it. Will you listen now?โ โGo on, sir.โ Victor Lunt mopped his face, tried to speak, and stuttered. โI did go out that day.โ The words came in a half-articulate rush. โI wanted to see what Cranford had done to Bert. And in the park I found Bert lying shot. He had a pistol in his hand.โ โDo you want me to believe he shot himself?โ Reggie frowned. โO God, I donโt know. I swear itโs the truth, doctor. He was lying there shot with a pistol in his hand. When I bent over him he grabbed at me. โYou swine,โ he said, and he lifted his hand to shoot. Then I bashed his face with a stone. But he shot and it cut my head. That was the scratch, doctor. My God, you do see things. I grabbed the pistol and wrenched it away from him.โ โThe sprained thumb,โ Reggie muttered. โThen I heard the death-rattle.โ Victor Lunt shuddered, and again he could not command his speech. โI lost my head, doctor. I ran away. I chucked the pistol away. I donโt know what I did. Doctor, I swear itโs Godโs truth.โ He started up. โWhat do you mean to do now?โ For Reggie sat silent looking at him. โIf itโs the truth, Mr. Lunt, I advise you to tell it.โ โIt is the truth. Donโt you know itโs the truth? O God!โ โI am not God, Mr. Lunt.โ Victor Lunt screamed. Two men had come into the room. โMr. Victor Lunt? I am Superintendent Bell. I hold a warrant—-โ Victor Lunt fell upon the hearth. They rushed at him, dragged him out of the fire. . . . โApoplexy,โ Reggie said. โI thought it was coming.โ The detectiveโs eyebrows asked him a question. Reggie shook his head. โThis warrant wonโt run,โ said Superintendent Bell. โWhat was he doing here, sir?โ โAsking for mercy,โ Reggie said. โHeโs taking the case to a higher court. I wonder. I wonder.โ And that night Victor Lunt died. . . . A few days afterwards Reggie gave a little dinner to Cranford and Nurse Dauntsey, and Nurse Dauntsey in a shy evening-frock was adorably happy. And in due time, โHave another peach,โ Reggie said. โDo you want to see me blush, Mr. Fortune?โ But she took another. โYou can do pleasant things with the stones–he loves me, he loves me not.โ โItโs not interesting any more,โ said Nurse Dauntsey, and looked demure. โIโm off to British Columbia next week,โ Cranford announced. โAlone?โ said Reggie, with his eye on Nurse Dauntsey. โThis year, next year,โ Nurse Dauntsey counted. โMay I have five peaches, Mr. Fortune?โ โIโm sure you know whatโs good for you. So youโre dropping the Mozambique copper claim, Cranford?โ โLady Lunt offered to turn it over to me. I couldnโt touch it.โ โOf course not,โ said Nurse Dauntsey. โGood thing for me Victor Lunt didnโt stand his trial,โ Cranford said. โYes. It would have kept you in England.โ Reggie lit a cigar. โI should have had to tell the whole story.โ Reggie stared at him. โYes. Thatโs the proposition, sir. It was the case you put up against him got me off.โ โI put up nothing,โ Reggie cried. โEverything I had against Victor was true, and he knew it was true. Thatโs what broke him. He had a queer story of his own though,โ and Reggie told them Victor Luntโs version of the crime. โIโve wondered how much of that was true. He wanted me to believe Albert committed suicide, you see. And thatโs impossible.โ โMaybe it was all true,โ Cranford said. โPoor beggar. He went through it.โ โI didnโt feel merciful,โ Reggie said. โWhatever was the way of it, he meant to get his brother murdered. He worked you up and sent you off to do it. He meant the murder. No, I didnโt feel merciful. And yet–I wonder.โ โI always meant to put you wise,โ Cranford said. โYouโll pardon me. I couldnโt afford to give anything away. And I told you no lies. I didnโt murder Albert Lunt. But I killed him. Fair and clean, sir. On my soul itโs as good a bit of work as ever I did. He was a yellow dog. It was up to me to wipe him out. This is the way of it, doctor. When they said he wasnโt at Priorโs Colney I laid to wait for him, and then I saw him coming across the park. I met him and I told him off. I had it all cut out. He had to have his chance, though he gave me none. I had two guns. One for him, one for me. I offered him the pick, and he snatched and fired at me while I had the other gun by the muzzle. He was sure trash. Then he put in another miss and I stretched him. Thatโs my tale, sir.โ โAnd itโs just as well you didnโt try it on a jury,โ Reggie said. Cranford started up. โMr. Fortune, sir, Iโm considerably in your debt. But if you call me a liar—-โ โOh, no, no.โ โDโyou call me a coward, then? I would have it all out if Victor had come to trial.โ โYouโve run straight,โ Reggie said. โI sure have,โ Cranford fumed. โDo sit down, dear,โ said Nurse Dauntsey in her nice, gentle voice. On her Reggie turned. โAnd you knew all the time!โ He shook his head at her. โYes, of course, Mr. Fortune.โ She looked surprised. โCranford, my congratulations,โ said Reggie. โNever trust a really nice girl unless youโre marrying her. Perhaps you knew that.โ Chapter 4. THE EFFICIENT ASSASSIN. There was a silence that might be felt. The judge put on the black cap. The prisoner gave a queer cackle of laughter. And Mr. Reginald Fortune, the surgeon whose evidence had convicted him, yawned and stole out of court. The Sunday School murder, one of the most popular crimes of our generation, had bored Mr. Fortune excessively, and now that the Sunday School Superintendent was safely on his way to the hangman Mr. Fortune desired to forget all about it at once. He stood on the steps of the Shire Hall, lighting a cigar. A large young man, who had been struggling to get in, detached himself from the guardian policeman and ran at him. โFortune! My God!โ he said emotionally. โI thought Iโd never get at you. I say, come somewhere where we can talk.โ Mr. Fortune looked down through his smoke with sleepy eyes. โOne moment. One moment,โ he murmured. โOh, ah. Youโre Charlecote–Beaver Charlecote. Well, and whatโs the best with you, Beaver?โ โItโs murder, old man,โ Charlecote muttered. โEverybodyโs doing it.โ Mr. Fortune frowned at him. โWhoโs slain now?โ โItโs my father.โ โMy dear chap! Oh, my dear chap!โ Mr. Fortune was startled into sympathy. โI say Fortune–for Godโs sake—-โ Charlecote gasped. โQuite. Quite,โ said Mr. Fortune, linked arms with him, and marched him off. When Reggie Fortune ambled through his four years at Oxford, Geoffrey Charlecote was one of the great men of his college, a cricket blue, socially magnificent, and even suspected of brains. The Charlecote family dated from the Victorian age. When the building of railways began, Geoffreyโs grandfather was a navvy. He became a contractor, made half a million, and died. Shares of his practical ability, his originality, his driving power, and his disdain for the ten commandments (he was a mean old sinner) were inherited in different proportions by his three descendants. Stephenson Charlecote, his son, had one child, Geoffrey, and was also the guardian of an orphan nephew, Herbert. Stephenson Charlecote was a capable man of business. In his hands the family wealth increased. His only ambition was that the family should get on in the world. So it was Eton and Oxford for Geoffrey, Harrow and Cambridge for his cousin Herbert. Herbert emerged elegant and ordinary. In spite of Eton and Oxford, Geoffrey disturbed his father by showing signs of originality. He was bored by the big house in Mayfair, he would not bother himself with society, he scoffed at going into Parliament. This freakish obstinacy roused the hereditary temper in Stephenson Charlecote, who was the more angry with his son because his nephew Herbert obeyed him in all things, and was successful in the most pompous drawing-rooms. The breaking-point came when Geoffrey discovered that he wanted to go abroad and be a sculptor. Stephenson Charlecote raged and decreed that he should not. And Geoffrey went. All this Reggie Fortune, who never forgot anything when he wanted it, knew at the back of his mind. The rest Geoffrey told him as his car took them back to London. โMy God, Fortune, itโs ghastly! I found him lying dead in the street outside my place. I stepped in his blood. The old guvโnor!โ โQuite. Quite,โ said Reggie Fortune. โNow begin at the beginning.โ โWhat is the beginning?โ โWell, you quarrelled, didnโt you?โ โHe quarrelled. Oh, that sounds blackguardly. I dare say it was my fault. Yes, we had a big row. Damn it, man, what do you mean? Do you think I—- Oh, I say, this is loathsome. I believe thatโs what the police think. The old guvโnor!โ โYes. But this donโt help him,โ said Reggie Fortune placidly. โFrom the beginning, please.โ Geoffrey Charlecote stared at him, gulped, and became more coherent. โWell, after the row I went abroad. Paris, Rome, Munich. I kept up a little place in Chelsea, too. I never saw the old man, and we didnโt write. I suppose Iโve been a brute.โ โHard stuff in the Charlecote family. What?โ โYes. Iโm sorry, Fortune–I swear Iโm sorry.โ โGut it out,โ said Reggie Fortune. โWell, in Munich I married.โ He flushed. โYou know, sheโs an angel, Fortune.โ โQuite. German angel?โ โNo. Sheโs Italian. She came to Munich singing. And we met, and in a month we were married. I tell you, Fortune, Iโve been a different man since. Itโs as if sheโd given me a soul, you know.โ โDid you tell your father that?โ โIt was she made me write to my father again. Lucia–she canโt bear being in a quarrel. Sheโs so gentle, any sort of bad feeling hurts her. So she brought me to try and make it up. I wrote to the old man and he answered–just a short, civil, formal note. But Lucia was sure it would lead to something, and so we came back to England. Then I wrote to him again, and he came to see us in Chelsea. That was a week ago–just a week ago to-day. He was pretty stiff and standoffish, but he took to Lucia. Everybody does, you know. Fortune, old man, sheโs wonderful. I thought he seemed a good deal aged, but he was just as brisk and sharp as ever. He had us to dine with him on Monday. And then–well, last night he called on us again, came about four, stayed a long time. And he was so jolly and genial. And afterwards I went out to post some letters, and there he was, lying not a dozen yards from our door. Heโd been stabbed. He was in a pool of blood. Good God! It was awful.โ โYes. Yes. Seems to be a quiet street where you live.โ โVinton Place–itโs a little cul-de-sac.โ โIt was dark when he left? And you heard nothing? Yes. I wonder who his money goes to?โ โWhat the devil do you mean?โ Geoffrey cried. โWell, thatโs quite a fair question,โ said Reggie Fortune placidly. โIf Iโm actinโ for you, and if you like, I will, I look only to your interests. If Iโm acting for Scotland Yard–and if itโs a hard case, theyโll call me in–Iโm only concerned to get the truth out, whoever suffers.โ โAnd do you think I donโt want the truth?โ Geoffrey cried. โWhat are you hinting at? Do you mean I murdered him?โ โPreserve absolute calm,โ said Reggie Fortune. โIโm not calm. What a beast I should be if I was calm. I want the thing cleared up, man. I want my father to have justice. Whether you act for me or act for the police itโs the same thing.โ โIf you take it that way, Iโll act for the police, Beaver,โ said Reggie placidly. Geoffrey Charlecote stared at him. โThatโs enough, thanks,โ he said. โStop the car. I wonโt worry you any more, Mr. Fortune.โ โMr. be blowed. Donโt be an ass, Beaver. Itโs a bad business. Letโs make the best of it.โ โWill you stop the car?โ Geoffrey said loudly, and stood up. โFive miles from nowhere? Oh, go easy.โ But Geoffrey turned and opened the door. So the car was stopped, and Geoffrey Charlecote left forlorn in his rage on the road. Reggie Fortune lay back and sighed. โPoor beggar. I wonder. Poor beggar,โ he said. And when he came back to Wimpole Street the first thing he did was to ring up the Hon. Stanley Lomas, the Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department. As a consequence you behold him sitting under the French prints in the study of Mr. Lomas. โI thought youโd be on to this, donโt you know?โ Lomas said. โItโs a pretty case. Wealthy old gentleman, impecunious heirs, sudden death. Thatโs natural enough. But impecunious heirs donโt stab much–not in England.โ โYes. Youโre intelligent, Lomas. But youโre prejudiced. You always believe in the obvious.โ โThe obvious is what happens.โ โOh, Peter! If it did, we wouldnโt want a Criminal Investigation Department. Well, now, this is what Iโve got. Check it, please. Geoffrey quarrelled with the old man–went away, commenced artist, and married an Italian girl–at her wish tried to make it up with the old man–old man was willing, called on Geoffrey twice, and after the second visit Geoffrey found him stabbed and dead just outside.โ โThatโs all right,โ Lomas nodded. โAn odd thing is, just before the murder the old man remade his will in favour of Geoffrey. When they quarrelled, he had a will drawn up which left everything to the nephew Herbert. Under this last will Herbert gets twenty thousand, and all the rest goes to Geoffrey. It was only signed on the morning of the murder. โThereโs a deuce of a lot of unknown quantities in this equation,โ Reggie said. โSilly, futile things facts are. This set will do for anything you please. As soon as he knew the will was in his favour, Geoffrey does the old man in. Or when he heard there was a new will cutting him out, Herbert sees red and knifes the old man. By the way, Lomas, I suppose the old boy was stabbed?โ โWhat? Oh, damme, donโt be clever. He was stabbed all right. The divisional surgeon and his own doctor, Newton, they both went over the body. Stabbed in the throat. Weโve got the weapon, too. Sort of stiletto or dagger.โ Reggie cocked an eye at the head of the Criminal Investigation Department. โSounds Italian,โ he murmured. โIt is Italian.โ โAnd Geoffrey married an Italian wife.โ โAn Italian singer–a singer at cafes. Thatโs the kind she was. Yes, thatโs the proposition.โ โLomas, old thing, you ought to write melodramas. The diabolical Italian singer, she leapt out of the dark, she pulled a d–dagger from her stocking, and she fell upon the dear, kind old gentleman and left him weltering in his gore. Then she put the dagger down, so the gifted detective could find it, and went back to dinner.โ โIt is silly, isnโt it?โ Lomas grinned. โBut there it is, donโt you know?โ โI donโt know,โ said Reggie Fortune.โ I donโt know anything. I was born of poor common-sensible parents, and this is all crazy. I suppose he really was stabbed?โ โYou will harp on that. Go and look at him in the morning. Hang it, man, the family doctor and the divisional surgeon they ought to know if thereโs a hole in him or not.โ โBut why–why? Geoffrey–the Italian wife–they were on velvet anyway. The disappointed nephew–well, I suppose he still had his allowance while the old man lived. Do you know anything about Nephew Herbert?โ โMan about town–Society tame cat–usual vices, what? Plays a bit high. Heโs nothing in particular.โ โDonโt sound like a lurking stabber,โ Reggie admitted. โPeople donโt do these things. Thatโs the trouble. Queer case.โ โI suppose the old man hadnโt a lurid past?โ Lomas shook his head. โMost respectable old bird.โ Reggie stood up and gave himself a full glass of soda water. โThe extraordinary efficiency of the assassin,โ he said carefully. โLomas, old dear, observe the extraordinary efficiency of the assassin. Mr. S. Charlecote comes out of his sonโs house. A few yards from the door somebody kills him so quickly, so neatly, that he donโt make one sound. And then this extraordinarily efficient assassin leaves his dagger for you to find. โWho says he didnโt make a sound?โ โYes. Geoffrey and his angel wife. Yes. Only them and no one else. Thatโs a flaw. Little essays in the obvious by S. Lomas. Well, itโs me for the corpse, then.โ And so in the morning he called at the mortuary. He was slightly surprised to find the divisional surgeon and Dr. Newton waiting for him. He returned thanks. โIs there anything to which youโd like to draw my attention, gentlemen?โ โItโs a plain case, to my mind,โ said the divisional surgeon. โI am always glad to have a specialistโs opinion,โ said Dr. Newton. โOf course, this sort of thing is rather out of my line. I confess I can hardly approach it calmly.โ โQuite. Quite. Most distressinโ. I suppose you knew him well, doctor?โ โAn old patient, Mr. Fortune. I may say an old friend.โ โAh, yes. You know the family, of course.โ โThey were once such an affectionate family,โ said Dr. Newton. โItโs really terrible.โ He sighed. He was a florid, bearded man with a sentimental expression and manner. โPoor Charlecote! He never seemed to bear up after Geoffrey broke with him. But who would have thought that strange escapade would have ended like this?โ โSo you think Geoffrey did the trick?โ โI beg your pardon!โ Dr. Newton was horrified. โYou put words into my mouth, Mr. Fortune. No, no. A most invidious suggestion.โ โMurderโs rather an invidious business,โ said Reggie placidly. โCome, doctor, what do you think of Geoffrey?โ โI have never been able to conceal from myself, Mr. Fortune, that there is an odd strain in Geoffrey, as it were something abnormal or thrawn–a certain violence of temperament.โ โIn the blood, perhaps.โ โPerhaps. And yet there was nothing of it in his father. Or in his cousin Herbert.โ โCousin Herbert. Yes. What about Cousin Herbert?โ Dr. Newton laughed. โFrankly, Mr. Fortune, you baffle me. Because there is nothing about Herbert. A very worthy young man, no doubt, but colourless, quite colourless.โ Reggie nodded. โNo.โ Dr. Newton pursued his own train of thought. โIn my own speculations on the affair–this most deplorable affair–I find myself continually confronted by an unknown quantity, a mysterious entity, Geoffreyโs Italian wife.โ โAh, there you have it,โ said the divisional surgeon heartily. Reggie looked at them, nodded, and without more talk led the way to the body. It did not occupy him long. Two wounds had sufficed to make an end of Stephenson Charlecote. One in the throat, which had pierced the carotid artery; one in the chest, which had reached the heart. Superintendent Bell, in attendance from Scotland Yard, produced the weapon found by the body–a long, thin dagger or stiletto, obviously capable of causing the wounds, obviously Italian in origin. Reggie finished his examination and turned to the two doctors, who were waiting on him reverently. โAnything in particular occur to you, gentlemen?โ โQuite straightforward, I think.โ The divisional surgeon shrugged. โTechnically speaking, a very neat bit of work.โ โI would go even further,โ said Dr. Newton. โThe crime seems to have been committed with remarkable skill and determination.โ โThe extraordinary efficiency of the assassin,โ Reggie murmured. โYes. Touched the spot every time.โ โIt would almost seem to suggest some experience in the use of this weapon,โ said Dr. Newton. โThat is indicated.โ Reggie nodded at him. โYes. Deceased been in good health lately?โ โI have been treating him for some time for gastric trouble–a persistent gastric catarrh. It was troublesome, but hardly serious.โ And upon that Reggie got rid of them and was left alone with Superintendent Bell. Superintendent Bell cocked an oldish but still bright eye. โAnd the next thing, sir?โ said he. โI am feeling depressed, Bell. Do you ever have feelings? I feel this is all wrong.โ โWell, sir, the evidence is thin, very thin.โ โEvidence? Oh, my aunt, we havenโt come to evidence yet. Iโm uncomfortable. Everything seems wrong way up. Why did anybody kill the old man? He was making friends with Geoffrey again and anyway he had enough to live on. Herbert had an allowance and something of his own, too. Nobody else stood to gain by his death.โ โIf you leave out the Italian girl, sir.โ โIt keeps coming back to her,โ Reggie said mournfully. โBut why? Suppose he was nasty to her when he called. Would she run out and stab him in the street? I wonder. Did he know some horrid secret about her past? What is her past, Bell?โ โPretty short, sir, anyway. Sheโs not more than eighteen. She was a cafรฉ singer, all right. But we have nothing against her. In my experience theyโre no worse than others.โ โAnd thatโs that. Have you seen his papers?โ โBetter come up to the house, sir. His solicitor will be there. But I understand thereโs nothing in them. Very few private papers at all.โ โWell, well. I suppose he was murdered.โ Superintendent Bell stared. โMr. Lomas said you were harping on that. Pretty clear, sir, isnโt it?โ โI suppose so,โ said Reggie drearily. โBut itโs all wrong, Bell, itโs all wrong. โ At the dead manโs house, his solicitor, old Sir Thomas Long, was busy in the library, and helping him, to Reggieโs surprise, was Herbert Charlecote. Herbert revealed himself as a pallid, dandyish man, punctiliously polite. Colourless–Dr. Newton hit him off to the life. Herbert was very gratified to make Mr. Fortuneโs acquaintance. โI donโt know whether to hope you can throw any light on this miserable affair, sir?โ Reggie shook his head. โYour uncle was stabbed, and died immediately of the wounds. That is the whole case, Mr. Charlecote. I suppose you canโt help us?โ โI am bewildered. Quite dazed, Mr. Fortune.โ Reggie nodded and lingered, and Herbert discreetly left him with the solicitor. โWell, Mr. Fortune?โ Sir Thomas took off his glasses and pursed his lips. โNothing. Well, Sir Thomas?โ โNothing, sir.โ โAh. That was a little odd, wasnโt it?โ Reggie nodded at the door by which Herbert had gone out. โMr. Herbert Charlecote offered to help me. He used to act as his uncleโs secretary. It was hardly for me to point out that there might be objections, if he was afraid of none.โ โDoes he know of the new will?โ โNeither he nor his cousin Geoffrey. Mr. Herbert, I infer, believes himself sole heir, and Mr. Geoffrey believes himself disinherited.โ โAnd yet, just after the new will is made the old man is murdered! Oh, itโs all wrong,โ Reggie said peevishly. โAn odd case. A very odd case, Mr. Fortune.โ Sir Thomas put on his eyeglasses again. โBut Iโm afraid I canโt help you.โ Superintendent Bell opened the door. But Reggie seemed reluctant to go, and on the stairs he loitered so much that the Superintendent turned–โAnything doing, sir?โ โThat gastric catarrh,โ Reggie murmured. โLetโs see the valet.โ The valet, an oldish man, was found. He testified that Mr. Charlecote had been much upset by the quarrel with Geoffrey. Mr. Charlecote had complained a good deal about his health. But there were no particular symptoms. Dr. Newton had been attending him for a long while. But the valet did not think that he had done Mr. Charlecote any good. For one thing, Mr. Charlecote did not take his medicine. There had been a good deal of medicine. Mr. Charlecoteโs instructions were always to pour it down the sink. โAnd thatโs that,โ said Reggie as they went out. โWe donโt get anywhere, sir, do we?โ the Superintendent sympathized. โAnything you suggest?โ โHow does it strike Superintendent Bell?โ โLooks like a bad case, sir. One of those where the criminal has all the luck. Verdict, persons unknown.โ โSo Scotland Yard leaves it at that?โ โUnless Mr. Fortune has something up his sleeve.โ โNary card. But you know weโve missed something, Bell.โ โHave we, indeed, sir? And where shall we look for it?โ โOh, watch out. Watch everybody.โ โLife is short, sir,โ said Superintendent Bell gloomily, and with that they parted. The Superintendent was a true prophet. The sensational inquest upon Stephenson Charlecote ended in an unsatisfactory verdict of murder by some person or persons unknown. It was obvious that public opinion, and the coroner, as the voice thereof, directed suspicion against Geoffrey. He made a bad witness. He was agitated, nervous, and under the coronerโs hostile examination lost his temper. When he was asked if he knew that his father had on the morning of the murder made a will leaving everything to him, he displayed a violent agitation, swore (not merely as a witness but with profane oaths) that he knew nothing about it, insulted the coroner, and roared out a declaration that he would not touch the money, which disgusted everybody as a bit of false melodrama. If distrust and dislike were grounds for hanging a man, the jury would have made an end of Geoffrey, but the evidence, as Lomas complained, could not hang a yellow dog. And the next day, Reggie Fortune, bland as ever, called on Geoffrey. It was a very humble house in a Chelsea cul-de-sac. The aged servant who took in Reggieโs name left him on the doorstep, from which he had the glimpse of a narrow bare hall and uncarpeted stairs. He was kept waiting some time, and heard confused noises. When at last he was shown into the studio he met signs of storm. Geoffrey was flushed and visibly in the sulkiest of tempers, his wife pale and tired. โWell, what is it now?โ Geoffrey growled. His wife smiled. โMr. Fortune? That is so kind. If you would please sit down. Some tea, yes?โ And Reggie was saying to himself. โOh, my aunt! She isnโt a woman, sheโs a child.โ For Lucia Charlecote was so frail, of such a simplicity, that she looked rather like an angel in one of the primitive Italian pictures than a woman. โShut up, Lucia,โ Geoffrey growled. โWhat do you want here, Mr. Fortune? Trying a bit of your detective work?โ โYouโre rather difficult, arenโt you?โ Reggie said mildly. โYou know, you told me you wanted to have the truth brought out, justice for your father, all that sort of thing. Well, Iโm still on it.โ โMuch good youโve done, havenโt you?โ โI donโt mind confessinโ weโve missed something.โ โMissed! Yes, you havenโt quite hanged me, thanks. Youโve only made everybody think I murdered my father. And so that donโt satisfy you! Thanks very much!โ โWell, are you satisfied?โ said Reggie. โYou know, youโre not fair. Iโm makinโ every allowance. But youโre not fair. If you want the thing cleared up, youโve got to give us something more. And thatโs why Iโm here. Now, is there anything new?โ โOh, go to the devil!โ โGeoffrey!โ Lucia, standing behind him, touched his shoulder. โMr. Fortune is very kind. He desires to help us,โ and she smiled and nodded at Reggie. โOh, hold your tongue, baby. Mr. Fortuneโs a damned tricky policeman, and he can take his tricks to another market.โ โBut you are impossible!โ Lucia cried. โMr. Fortune, you see what I have to live with. This great bear!โ She rumpled Geoffreyโs hair, and he made an exclamation of disgust and dashed her hand away. โBut yes, Mr. Fortune, there is something new. This great animal, he desires not to take his fatherโs money. He writes to the lawyer to say he will not have it. But I forbid him. I say it is mad. Say if I am right, Mr. Fortune. What is the fatherโs it is the sonโs. And Geoffrey, he has done nothing. But if he says he will not take itโ–she made a fine theatrical gesture–โpeople will think it is because he is guilty. Is it not, Mr. Fortune?โ โWhy canโt you hold your tongue?โ Geoffrey snarled at her, and turned to glare at Reggie. โThereโs a pretty story for you. And whatโs your beastly detective trade make of that?โ โYou know, Mrs. Charlecote, heโs always in such a hurry,โ Reggie said confidentially. โVery disturbinโ, isnโt it? You are difficult, Charlecote, old thing. Is your mind capable of receivinโ a thought? Yes. Well just suppose that I may have refused to act for you, because it would be better for the son and heir I shouldnโt be actinโ to his order.โ โWhat the deuce do you mean?โ โWell, I donโt quite know, you know. Do you? Is there anything you really want to tell me?โ โI never want to see you again.โ โGeoffrey!โ his wife protested. โOh, heโs not chatty this afternoon, Mrs. Charlecote. So sorry.โ Reggie extricated himself from her offers of tea, and slid away. But he was annoyed. Against his will, the opinion of Dr. Newton forced itself into his mind. โAn odd strain in Geoffrey, as it were something abnormal or thrawn, a certain violence of temperament.โ It was so. Confound the oily old family doctor. Why did Geoffrey want to give up the money? Mere quixotry? A passionate desire to clear himself from the ill-fame of profiting by the old manโs death? Probably, oh, probably. But there was a feeling called remorse found in human nature. And why did the angel wife tell Geoffrey to keep the money? She ought to want her husband clear of ill-fame. You would expect a woman to care more about that than the man himself. And you would expect a woman to share her husbandโs rage with the horrid man who had not stuck up for him. Instead of which the angel wife was very anxious to keep on good terms with that horrid man. Because he represented the police? Or why else? She had a dubious way with her, the angel wife. Reggie was worried–a rare state for him–and he took himself to his least sociable club. He was sitting there, glowering at a scientific American paper, when the voice of Lomas addressed him. โCare killed a cat, Reginald. Why so blue?โ Reggie sat up. โLife is real, life is earnest, Lomas. And the grave is not the goal. Thatโs because of our filthy profession, which is always bothering the corpses. Come away. I am worried. I am going to worry you.โ As they walked in St. Jamesโs Park, Reggie told him of the queer talk in the studio. โI want comfort, Lomas, old thing,โ he concluded. โComfort me.โ โMy dear Fortune! Itโs quite clear, what? Unsatisfactory case, profoundly unsatisfactory. But itโs quite clear. I always thought those two were in it. Probably the sweet young wife did it, or put Geoffrey up to it. Now he funks and she doesnโt. Women carry off these things better than men, donโt you know?โ โI donโt know. I donโt know anything. Lomas, old dear, you are grateful and comfortinโ, you really are. I knew youโd say that. And I know itโs all wrong.โ โMy poor dear fellow! You never will reconcile yourself to an unsatisfactory case. Itโs so common too–a case you canโt act on while you know itโs sound.โ โOh, Peter! You can always act on a sound case.โ โYouโre so young,โ Lomas smiled indulgently. โWeโve missed something, donโt you see?โ โAnd what have we missed, Reginald?โ Reggie pulled him up and looked at the ducks. For a long time he looked at the ducks. Then, โCousin Herbert,โ he said. โThe evasive, elusive Cousin Herbert. Why do we never come up against Cousin Herbert?โ โBecause he had nothing to do with it, what?โ โBecause we havenโt looked for him.โ Lomas gave an impatient laugh. โThis is absurd, my dear fellow. That pallid, tame cat of a man!โ โYou let some of your fellows sniff round him.โ โMy dear Fortune! Of course they have. Heโs quite a blameless sort of fellow. Plays a bit, spends a bit–nothing more.โ โOh, he wanted money–did he?โ โMy dear Fortune, youโre right off the wicket. He had an alibi. He was with some people at Maidenhead at the time of the murder. โOh, my aunt, anybody can have an alibi,โ Reggie grumbled. Lomas laughed and shook his head. โIt wonโt do, Reginald. Donโt try to be subtle.โ โWell, that isnโt your complaint,โ Reggie snarled, and for once they parted in nasty tempers. Three days afterwards a telephone message called him to Scotland Yard, and he found Lomas in conference with Superintendent Bell. โAh, hereโs the prophet,โ Lomas smiled. โDo you remember–in the Charlecote murder–you backed Herbert both ways? Well, the latest from the course is that Herbert has vanished.โ โThen itโs damned careless of you. I told you to watch him. Youโre not intelligent in the force, but, hang it, you might be active.โ โHis valet reports him disappeared. He had a dinner engagement last night. Didnโt come home to dress for it. Didnโt come home at all. He went out after lunch yesterday, and hasnโt been seen since.โ Reggie sat down. โOne of your larger cigars would do me, good, Lomas,โ he said, and helped himself. โOh, Mr. Lomas, sir, this is so sudden. Cousin Herbert was feeling nervous, no doubt. But why this dramatic exit? What gave Cousin Herbert cold feet yesterday?โ Superintendent Bell coughed. โI was wondering, sir, if Mr. Fortune had taken any steps on his own with regard to Herbert. To alarm him, so to speak.โ โNary step. Why the blazes didnโt you watch him?โ โAfter all, sir, weโve not a thing against him.โ โNot now?โ โWell, sir, itโs not criminal to disappear. But I donโt mind saying itโs odd, quite odd.โ โOh, I expect Geoffrey and the angel wife murdered him too. Just to round it off, Lomas, old thing.โ โYouโre very merry and bright,โ Lomas grumbled. โI wish youโd tell me how this helps us. Why should he bolt now?โ โThere is another unknown quantity somewhere,โ Reggie admitted. The telephone claimed Lomas. He took it up, and his face was eloquent as he listened. He put it down again very gently. โAfraid youโre right out of it, Fortune. Herbert Charlecote didnโt bolt. Herbert Charlecote has been found drowned in the Basingstoke Canal.โ โGood Lord, sir!โ the Superintendent exclaimed. โPretty conclusive, what?โ Lomas shrugged. โAnd why the Basingstoke Canal?โ said Reggie placidly. โLots of nice places to drown in nearer home. I ask you, why the Basingstoke Canal?โ Lomas and his Superintendent looked at each other. โIt really is a crazy case,โ Lomas said slowly, โI donโt quite—-โ Reggie jumped up. โOh, come on. Letโs go and look at him. My carโs outside. Where is he?โ โWoking. Half a minute.โ Lomas rang his bell and turned to his papers. So Reggie went down first. He dismissed his chauffeur with some long instructions, and himself took the chauffeurโs seat. Superintendent Bell joined him. โDarker and darker, sir, isnโt it?โ โChangeable weather,โ Reggie said. โCome on, Lomas, all aboard! Are we downhearted? No!โ The car shot forward. And when it stopped in Woking: โIs my hair white, Fortune?โ Lomas said. The two stood humbly aside while the expert was busy with the corpse. โAs often as Iโve seen this game, sir, Iโll never like it,โ Bell said, and Lomas nodded. But Reggie Fortune whistled as he worked. When he turned from the body and put a scrap of something in his pocket-book–โWell, what is it?โ Lomas said. โHe was drowned, I suppose?โ โHe was drowned all right–about tea-time last night. Say at dusk. Now for the scene of death. Where is it?โ โJust by a bridge on a by-road somewhere between here and Byfleet Station.โ โI ask you, why does a gentleman of fashion about to commit suicide come and look for a bridge on a by-road somewhere between here and Byfleet Station?โ โSomebodyโs took some pains in this Charlecote business,โ the Superintendent said. Reggie laughed. โThe Superintendent touches the spot–as ever. Come on!โ He stopped his car some distance from the bridge, and they went forward on foot. โThereโs a big car been over here,โ Bell said. โYet you wouldnโt think it was much of a motor road.โ It was a narrow gravel road and very loose. Just below the steep pitch of the bridge a car had been stopped, and in stopping or starting again had torn up the loose gravel. Thence to the canal was only half a dozen yards. The path was much trampled and the grass and bushes by the bank beaten down. โAll that may have been done fishing him out,โ Bell said. โBut that donโt explain the car. They took him off in a wood cart. I suppose since motors were invented there never was one came down this road and stopped just here.โ โNot till last night,โ Lomas nodded. โSo somebody,โ said Reggie, โsomebody put Herbert in a car, brought him down here, and chucked him in. Who was somebody? Geoffrey and the angel wife, eh, Lomas, old thing?โ โSomebody put in some fine work, what? He wouldnโt have been found for weeks or for ever, but a barge came along and stirred him up. And they donโt have a barge along here once a month.โ โYes, thereโs plenty of brains about somewhere. Well, letโs get busy. Herbertโs happy home comes next.โ The car again broke the law on the way back. Herbert Charlecote had lived in a big block of flats several stories up. โDid himself pretty expensively, donโt you know,โ Lomas said, looking round the elaborate room. โHeโs paid for all now, sir,โ said Superintendent Bell. โDo you know, I donโt feel sentimental about dear Herbertโs doom,โ Reggie smiled. โYouโd better get on to his papers. I want a man on the โphone,โ and he went out and was gone some time. When he came back he sat himself down in the window-seat and opened the big casements. There was a low stone sill which held a box of flowers. The smell of oak-leaf geranium and verbenas came into the room. โRather oily scents, arenโt they?โ Reggie said. โIโm afraid he was rather oily, the late Herbert. How are you getting on?โ โHe was certainly pressed for money,โ Lomas said. โHereโs his pass-book and a letter from his bank manager complaining that heโs overdrawn again. The ยฃ20,000 he came in for under his uncleโs will–he wanted it badly.โ โAnd yet as soon as he knows of that will he goes and gets drowned. Suggestive, isnโt it?โ Reggie smiled. โIโm hanged if I know what it suggests.โ Lomas stared at him. โOh, my dear Lomas! Somebody expected Herbert was going to get more than ยฃ20,000 by his uncleโs death; going to scoop the whole estate. Only he didnโt. So heโs found dead. Can you make out from that pass-book when Herbert got into difficulties?โ โAbout nine months ago. Heโs been living with nothing in the bank ever since.โ โAbout nine months ago. Then for nine months his uncle did nothing to help him. The murdered uncle wouldnโt help the impecunious nephew. Well, Lomas, old thing?โ โI suppose youโre playing some hand of your own,โ Lomas frowned. Superintendent Bell came forward. โHereโs a sort of betting-book, sir. He put his luck at cards in it too. He was some gambler.โ โAny names?โ Lomas said quickly. โAll sorts of names, sir. Nothing instructive, so to speak. You might say thatโs curious.โ He pointed to a page on which, in a large, blank space, appeared the one letter, โN.โ Reggie leapt from the window-seat and rang the bell. โAs ever the Superintendent touches the spot,โ he laughed. Herbert Charlecoteโs man-servant, pallid and frightened, answered the bell. โNow, my man, in one minute Dr. Newton will be at the door; you will let him in; he will ask for Mr. Herbert Charlecote; you will say nothing to him, nothing at all, and Superintendent Bell will be out in the hall to see that you do say nothing; you will show Dr. Newton in here. Go on, Bell. Look after him.โ He bustled them out. โSo โNโ stands for Newton, does it?โ Lomas said. โHow do you know heโll come?โ โBecause heโs just driven up in his car. Because I โphoned to say Mr. Herbert Charlecote was asking for Dr. Newton. Now you get in there.โ He thrust Lomas into an inner room. Dr. Newton, more florid than ever, hurried in, and pulled up short at the sight of Reggie. โMr. Fortune? Oh, delighted to meet you.โ He was out of breath. โBut I thought I was to see Mr. Charlecote.โ โDid you though? That was very sanguine of you.โ โI donโt understand you, Mr. Fortune. Are you here professionally?โ โFor the Criminal Investigation Department.โ โReally, though, really?โ Dr. Newton was still short of breath. โAnd it was you wanted to see me? Anything I can do, of course.โ โYou can tell me what was your little bet with Herbert Charlecote.โ Dr. Newton lost some of his colour. โYou bewilder me, Mr. Fortune. I am not a betting man. Pray explain yourself. And I must request you to take a different tone.โ โWhere is Herbert Charlecote?โ โWell, where is he?โ Dr. Newton echoed. โI confess I donโt understand the situation. I am told over the telephone that Mr. Charlecote wishes to see me, and—-โ โThat gave you a bad quarter of an hour, didnโt it? Thereโs worse coming, Newton. Yesterday afternoonโ–Reggie strolled round the table and put himself between Dr. Newton and the door–โyesterday afternoon you took Herbert Charlecote for a drive in your car. When you came to the Basingstoke Canal, a nice lonely place by the Basingstoke Canal, you clapped a chloroformed wad on his mouth, and when he was senseless you dropped him into the water and left him there to finish by drowning. It was a neat thing, Newton. But he was fished out, Newton, and Iโve been all the morning with him, Newton.โ Dr. Newton began to laugh. โDo you really wish me to take this tale seriously, Mr. Fortune? Then I must refer you to my legal advisers. I am sure that you will see that I must.โ He made for the door. โNot much,โ Reggie said, and stood in his way. Dr. Newtonโs bland expression changed. He tried to push past and, failing, sprang on Reggie. The two locked together and swayed across the room. Reggie freed himself a moment and stooped. Dr. Newton went out of the open window. As Lomas broke into the room they heard the thud of his fall on the stones. โGood God, did he throw himself out?โ Lomas cried. โNo, I pitched him out,โ Reggie said, smoothing his hair. Lomas rushed out of the room. Reggie, lounging after him, went to the telephone. In the forecourt of the flats the body of Dr. Newton lay. Lomas and Bell and the hall porter were fidgeting with it, a little crowd on the pavement gaping at them, when Reggie arrived. โYou donโt really want me,โ he said, but he bent by the body. โItโs all over. His neckโs broken. Fractured skull also. But that doesnโt matter.โ Bell stood up and blew a police whistle. โDonโt do that. Donโt do it,โ said Reggie irritably, his first sign of troubled nerves. โI have telephoned for the ambulance and all that. Why donโt you think of things beforehand?โ Superintendent Bell was startled out of his wonted composure. โGod bless my soul!โ he exclaimed, and stared at Reggie. And Lomas took Reggieโs arm. โCome upstairs, Fortune, please,โ he said gravely. Reggie let himself be taken up to Herbert Charlecoteโs room, and when he was there again flung himself down on the couch. โThirdly and lastly,โ said he. โAnd thatโs the end of the Charlecote case, Lomas, old dear.โ โOh, donโt take that tone,โ Lomas cried. โWeโre in a very difficult position, Fortune.โ โMy dear Lomas! Oh, my dear Lomas! We have emerged with credit from a most difficult case. We have tracked and caught a very cunning criminal, who, when taxed with the murders of which he was guilty, became desperate, and committed suicide by flinging himself from a fourth-story window.โ โYou said you threw him out.โ โLomas, dear, my little jokes arenโt evidence.โ โYouโll have to give evidence at the inquest, you know.โ Reggie nodded. โYouโll tell this suicide story?โ โSure,โ said Reggie. Lomas wiped his forehead. โDamn it, man, I canโt leave it like this,โ he cried. โOh, donโt be so pedantic. The scoundrel had two murders at least on his soul. We hadnโt evidence enough to hang him. He was much too dangerous to live, and he gets his neck broke quietly and without scandal. Whatโs worrying you?โ โAnd what evidence have you got?โ โAh, now reason resumes her sway. Letโs begin at the beginning. Herbert Charlecote, rather less than a year ago, was at his wit’s end for money. His uncle wouldnโt give him any. Remember the betting-book and pass-book. But at that time he was his uncleโs heir. He arranged with the family doctor, Newton, to have the old man killed. Newton would want to be paid. Probably the arrangement was a bet. Suppose Herbert bet Newton ten thousand to one his uncle wouldnโt die within the year. Remember the โNโ in the betting-book. Newton began treating the old man for gastric catarrh. Sent him gallons of medicine. Probably that was poison. But nothing happened because the old man didnโt take it. Remember the valet said he had it all put down the sink. I suspect old Charlecote didnโt much care for his family doctor. The time began to run out. And then came the reconciliation with Geoffrey. There was no time to lose. If the will was altered in Geoffreyโs favour, no use in killing the old man. So Newton had to hustle. He was pretty neat. He chose an Italian knife, and did the killing close to the house where the Italian Mrs. Geoffrey lived. But he did it. Remember the extraordinary efficiency of the assassin. Neat piece of surgery, that murder. And then the bottom fell out of the bucket. The will had been altered. Herbert only got twenty thousand. Hardly enough to pay his debts. And so he wouldnโt stump up Newtonโs price. Newton would cut up rough, of course. He threatened, I suppose, and Herbert threatened back. You know, I donโt fancy the late Newton was a man to take kindly to being bilked. It may have been revenge. It may have been that he thought Herbert would give him away. Anyway, he took Herbert out in his car yesterday afternoon. Now weโre coming to evidence which is evidence, Lomas. Newton was out in his car yesterday afternoon. I sent my chauffeur to make inquiries. And Newton drove himself. And his car fits the marks on that road–24 Dunois Orleans, two steel-studded Blake tyres. When they got to that bridge, I suppose Newton stopped the car, pretended there was something wrong, got down, and prepared a chloroformed wad of cotton wool. He clapped that on Herbert, anaesthetized him, and dropped him in the canal. I found scraps of the wool in Herbertโs mouth and nostrils. Thatโs the case, Lomas, old thing. Come and have tea. Thereโs rather decent muffins at the Academiesโ.โ โGood God!โ said Lomas. โMuffins!โ Chapter 5. THE HOTTENTOT VENUS. It was a night in June. The Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department was pensive. โDid you ever want to marry, Fortune?โ he murmured. โOften; but never one at a time.โ Reggie Fortune looked curiously at his host. The dinner had been good, the claret very good, the cigars were of the most benignant. But still–โWhy this touch of sentiment, Lomas?โ said he. โSome students say women have no minds,โ Lomas murmured drowsily. โBut thatโs partiality. The trouble is, women arenโt human beings. Consider the parallel case of the dog. He is intelligent. But he sets different values on things from our values. Inhuman values. Think of bones, cats, boots. It is so also with women.โ โโI love a lassieโ–but she ate my best pumps. Lomas, my good child, are you merely drivelling or shall we come to something soon?โ โI am much exposed to women,โ said the Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department pathetically, and roused himself. โBut this is a family skeleton. I have a sister, Fortune. She is intelligent. She is almost as omniscient as you, my dear fellow, and much more practical. But she can be quite maddening. She is maddening me now. Unfortunately she has no husband. She had too much intelligence. She owns a princely school at Tormouth. I believe it makes her as rich as Rockefeller. She certainly does herself very well. A month ago she wrote to me that a strange thing had happened. In the night one of the mistressโs rooms had been turned upside down.โ โDo they rag much at girlsโ schools?โ Reggie yawned. โIt might be picturesque.โ โMy wonderful sister wanted me to tell her what it meant. Iโm not proud, Fortune. I know my limitations. I did not see myself in a girlsโ school. Especially as an official. Now she has been writing to me that there are extraordinary developments. The room of another mistress has been upset.โ โThey do rag in girlsโ schools! Another advance of women. Oh, they’ll have the vote soon.โ โYou show levity, Fortune. My sister would not like it. This is a crime. A number of photographs were taken–photographs of girls at the school. And there is no clue to the criminal.โ โThe great Tormouth mystery. Leader in the _Daily Scream_–โBrains for Scotland Yard.โ But the independent expert found a pink hairpin in the mouth of the dachshund next door but two and brought the foul deed home to the junior curate.โ โI envy your spirits, Fortune,โ Lomas sighed. โYou have no sister–no maiden sister.โ And the desultory conversation turned feebly to something else. In fact, both men were feeling the strain of that tangled and squalid crime, the Pimlico murder. They had at last contrived to hang (you remember it) the reluctant borough councillor; but only Reggie Fortune could take a holiday. As he was going, he said that he thought of motoring in Devonshire. โYouโd better call on my sister and investigate her case.โ Lomas smiled sourly. โIf it is a case. Sometimes I think itโs a dream.โ โRagging in Girlsโ Schools. By our Special Commission. โOrrible Revelations.โ Lomas shook his head. โIโm afraid my sister wonโt take to you. Sheโs not flippant.โ โLomas, donโt be improper. A flippant headmistress. I blush.โ A few days later Reggie Fortune drove into Tormouth, liked it, liked its hotel, and called on the Hon. Evelyn Lomas. Miss Lomas was her brotherโs sister in face and shape, correctly handsome, slight, dapper, not the least like her brother in manner. She was frankly middle-aged, brisk and direct. โSo glad you could spare time, Mr. Fortune. โ She sat down to her writing-table. โMy brother tells me I can have every confidence in your discretion.โ โSo good of him,โ Reggie murmured. He was annoyed with Lomas. He had meant only to make friends with the good lady. It appeared that he was to be an official investigator of the silly girlsโ school mystery. An embarrassing position. And Miss Lomas was visibly without humour. โYou will understand that discretion is essential in this case, Mr. Fortune. Anything in the nature of publicity would be unpardonable. You look very young.โ โI try to be,โ Reggie said modestly. Miss Lomas coughed. โThese are the facts, Mr. Fortune.โ With minute and tiresome detail Reggie heard it all over again and learnt nothing new. One mistressโs room turned upside down in the night, nothing spoilt or taken–an interval–another mistressโs room turned upside down and a number of photographs of girls taken. Only that and nothing more. Reggie was bored, and let his eyes wander from the intensity of Miss Lomas. When at last she stopped, frowning at his lack of attention, and waited in angry majesty for him to say something– โAre you interested in archaeology?โ was what he said. โI beg your pardon,โ said Miss Lomas, in an awful voice. โI was wonderinโ about this,โ Reggie murmured, and took up from her table a little yellowish thing modelled into something like the shape of a woman. โFascinatinโ, isnโt she?โ โIt seems to me childish or disgusting, Mr. Fortune,โ Miss Lomas snapped at him. โIt has nothing to do with the case. But I am afraid my affairs merely amuse you, Mr. Fortune.โ โOh, please, please,โ Reggie protested. โYou see, youโre so lucid, Miss Lomas. These odd affairs are hardly ever lucid. Anything may have to do with anything. Just consider. You tell me that in your school there has been happening something unusual.โ โExtraordinary, unprecedented, and disturbing,โ Miss Lomas cried. โAnd then I find this lyinโ about–a Hottentot Venus in a girlsโ school–thatโs very highly unusual.โ โThe thing is just a little ivory idol,โ said Miss Lomas and took it from him and looked at it with disgust. It was crudely and oddly shaped, like a childโs modelling. โItโs not ivory, and probably it wasnโt an idol,โ Reggie snapped. His excellent temper found Miss Lomas trying. โItโs a horseโs tooth, and was no doubt carved as a doll or a work of art. But how did it come into a girlsโ school?โ โI quite agree that it is most unsuitable. I should myself call it indecent. That is why I keep it on my desk.โ (Reggie mastered a smile.) โIt was found recently in the library. No doubt one of the girls having relations in India or Africa was given the thing as an odd savage trinket. She lost it and, recognizing that it was an undesirable thing, is afraid to claim it. As a matter of school discipline I am disturbed and annoyed. I cannot conceive that it concerns you, Mr. Fortune.โ โItโs the only thing that interests me,โ said Reggie. He was tired of the lady. โYou donโt understand the question, madame. This isnโt the kind of trinket any one can pick up. Itโs a jewel. This little ladyโ–he handled her affectionately–โsheโs fifteen thousand years old. Sheโs palรฆolithic. Thereโs only a few of her in the world. Some Frenchman called her type the Hottentot Venus, because sheโs a little like the women of that tribe. But the woman she was modelled on may have been an ancestor of yours or mine.โ โI think not, Mr. Fortune.โ Miss Lomas was horrified. โWe have had time to improve on her, madame,โ Reggie bowed. โThis is the point. Outside national museums, there are only half a dozen collections which own one of these ladies. Whoโs the quaint savant that gives them to a schoolgirl to play with? May I see the names of your girls?โ โI only accept pupils with the highest references, sir,โ said Miss Lomas, overawed but fuming. So Reggie was allowed to inspect her register. He studied it in vain. No name suggested connection with any of the few archaeologists likely to own a Hottentot Venus. He gave it up. โWell, sir?โ Miss Lomas was triumphant and disdainful. โI am very much obliged to you for your courtesy. I regret exceedingly that I have troubled you with my affairs. I need not ask you to waste any more of your valuable time on the case that I foolishly submitted to you.โ โBut, my dear Miss Lomas, Iโm just gettinโ interested,โ said Reggie, with an engaging smile. โYou know, my first thoughts were that your children had been ragging.โ โReally, Mr. Fortune! Your way of putting things! Please understand that the girls in my school do not โragโ–as you call it. I think my sex leaves that to young men, Mr. Fortune.โ โWomen are so revoltinโ nowadays,โ Reggie murmured. โI wonder–you have no new woman in the flock? No bold, bad rebel?โ The face of Miss Lomas answered him. โI thought so. We must have the second solution. Somebody wanted somebodyโs photograph.โ โBut why? Why should one girl want to steal photographs of the other girls? Itโs nonsensical.โ โOh, itโs all nonsense,โ Reggie agreed cheerfully. โItโs gibberish till we find the key. But hereโs one odd thing for certain, the Hottentot Venus. I expect to find a lot more before weโve done.โ โDo you wish to alarm me, Mr. Fortune?โ โIโm only tryinโ to keep you interested. Now all these things have happened recently. Has any one new come to the school recently? Any new servant? Any new teacher? Well, any new girl?โ โItโs very unusual to have any new girls this term. But we have had one–Alice Warenne. She came with the highest introductions, Mr. Fortune. The Countess of Spilsborough asked me to take her.โ โAnd who are Alice Warenneโs people?โ โHer father is English but lives abroad. A distinguished-looking man, obviously well off. He has friends, as you see, in the best society. Her mother, I believe, has been long dead. She was brought up in France, and speaks French better than English. But this is all waste of time, Mr. Fortune. Alice Warenne is a delightful girl–a sweet nature. I canโt imagine anything against her. Pray donโt form idle prejudices.โ โAnd has anybody called to see Alice Warenne since the affair of the photographs?โ Miss Lomas showed some surprise. โDear me, Mr. Fortune–now you mention it, yes. Her father was over in England and came down to see her a few days ago. He had another man with him, I remember.โ โAnother? Do fond fathers often bring a faithful friend down to see how their daughters are growing?โ โNow you mention it, I suppose it is unusual.โ Miss Lomas looked at Reggie with apprehension. โStill, itโs quite reasonable, Mr. Fortune.โ โWell–if he were a brother–or a selected fiancรฉ.โ โReally, Mr. Fortune! Alice is a child. Not more than sixteen. This other man was older than her father. I wish I could remember his name.โ โSo do I,โ Reggie agreed. โIt was nothing uncommon, I think. He was rather an uncommon-looking man–big and handsome, but artistic or Bohemian in his clothes.โ โAnd after the fond father and the faithful friend saw Alice you found this little ladyโ–he held up the Hottentot Venus–โin the library?โ โIt was–the day after,โ Miss Lomas cried. โGood gracious!โ โWe are getting on, arenโt we?โ Reggie smiled. โBut I wonder where we are getting to?โ โThey saw her in the library. I shall certainly ask Alice for an explanation,โ Miss Lomas said. Reggie put the Hottentot Venus in his pocket and smiled at her. โIโm sure youโre much too wise. Letโs say nothing till we can say something sensible. I should like to see Alice. Just โfor to admireโ, you know.โ โThe girls will be in the playing-field now.โ โDelightful. Suppose you walk me through. Treat me as if I was intendinโ to be a parent.โ โI beg your pardon?โ said Miss Lomas, with emphasis. โOh, I mean a fond father cominโ to see if it was all nice enough for my darlinโ daughter. Donโt let Alice think Iโm interested in her.โ โVery well, Mr. Fortune.โ Miss Lomas went off for her hat. The playing-field was a pleasant place set about with old oaks, in the freshest of their leaves then, through which there were glimpses of the sunlit Devon sea. Comely girls in white, clustered, arms in the air, at basket ball, or ran and smote across the tennis-courts. Reggie paused and sank down on a seat. โThis is very soothinโ and pretty,โ he murmured. โHere are our young barbarians all at play. Why will they grow up, Miss Lomas? Theyโre so much more satisfying now.โ Miss Lomas stared at him. โNaturally they grow up,โ she explained. โThey canโt be children all their lives.โ โSome of us never were,โ Reggie sighed. โCharming, charming. Like the young things in Homer, what? The maidens and the princess of the white arms they fell to playing at ball. Charming–especially that one. Yes. Which did you say was Alice?โ โThat is Miss Warenne.โ Miss Lomas pointed with her sunshade to two girls arm in arm. One was a tall creature, a woman already in body and stately, with a fine, bold face, and red-brown hair that glowed. โWhy, sheโs a goddess!โ Reggie said. โOh, dear, no,โ said Miss Lomas. โThatโs Hilda Crowland. Alice is the little one.โ โLetโs go and look at the basket ball,โ Reggie suggested, and to do that walked across the field on a line which brought them for a moment face to face with little Alice Warenne. She was a tiny creature, and had appropriately a round baby face. She was dark and plump and dimpled. But although her hair was not yet up, she need not have been younger than her magnificent companion. Reggie Fortuneโs interest in basket ball was soon exhausted. They went back across the field at an angle which brought them again face to face with Alice Warenne and her imposing friend, and while they passed, Reggie (rather loudly) was asking Miss Lomas questions about the school games and the school time-table. As soon as they were out of hearing of the two girls he broke this off with a sharp, โGreat friends are they, those two?โ โThey are always together,โ Miss Lomas admitted. โAnd who is the magnificent creature?โ โHilda Crowland? Why, sheโs been with me for years.โ โAnd sheโs the bosom friend of this girl, whoโs only been here a couple of months!โ โNow you mention it, that is odd, Mr. Fortune.โ โOh, Lord, everythingโs odd!โ Reggie said irritably. โWho is Hilda Crowland?โ โWell, her mother is a widow and very well off, I believe. She lives in Cornwall. Hilda came to me through Lady de Burgh. Of course you understand, Mr. Fortune, that that implies irreproachable family connections.โ โI dare say. I dare say. Well, Miss Lomas, itโs a queer case. I will take it up and go into it further. Something is being planned rather elaborately in which your school, probably a girl in your school, is concerned. It may be a matter outside your responsibilities. It may be something unpleasant.โ โGood gracious, Mr. Fortune, what do you suggest?โ Miss Lomas was rather excited than alarmed. โI donโt suggest anything. I have no information. The trouble is, Miss Lomas, you know nothing about your girls.โ โReally, Mr. Fortune! As I have told you, I insist upon—-โ โGood references. Anybody can find good references. Did your brother never tell you about the Prime Ministerโs butler? He came from an Archbishop.โ โIs there anything you advise me to do?โ โBe ordinary. Absolutely ordinary. I shall stay in Tormouth at present. Iโm at the โBristol.โโ So he left Miss Lomas rather ruffled, but under that deeply gratified, because her case really was a serious case, her acumen was vindicated, her brother put to shame. Her school found her more masterful than ever. Reggieโs room at the โBristolโ had a balcony which looked on the sea. There he sat before an empty plate which had held muffins, and lit one of his largest cigars. โNow where the devil have I seen that little minx before?โ said he. Upon that question he concentrated his mind, and (omitting the adventures into blind alleys) his thoughts were like this: โTypewriting . . . why does sweet Alice suggest typewriting? . . . _mes petites manches de satinette_ . . . my little satinette sleeves . . . now what in wonder is that? . . . Oh, my aunt! She was the demure little typist in that play at the Variรฉtรฉs last year. What was her name? Alice Ducher! . . . Oh, Peter! A soubrette from the Variรฉtรฉs in a blameless English girlsโ school! Ye stately homes of England! Give me air!โ He took from his pocket the Hottentot Venus and contemplated her severely. โI donโt know which of you is worse, darling,โ he said. โYou or Mlle Ducher. What are you at, anyway? Lord, I wouldnโt have thought she had anything to do with palรฆolithic dolls! Whatโs the connection, darling?โ The Hottentot Venus was naturally silent. Reggie sighed and put her away, and began to contemplate the beauties of nature. Tormouth, you know, is placed upon an agreeable bay, its sands are white, and its headlands of a dark rock which in a flood of sunshine discover gleams of crystal amid a reddish glow. So Reggie saw them as the western sky grew crimson and the flood-tide sparkled in a thousand golden jewels. A delectable scene. It was laborious to go on thinking. Tormouth is an anchorage favoured by yachts, and though it was early summer two or three white craft lay out in the bay. Reggie went into his room and came out again to the balcony with a binocular. The influence of the evening was upon him and he felt a need of futile diversion. He focused the glasses upon the yachts. There was a big schooner and two steam-boats–one a small packet with the white ensign of the R.Y.S., the other a big craft under the Italian flag. He could not make out the names. A waiter came to take his tea away. โI want the local paper. And do you keep Shearnโs Yacht List?โ Both were brought. The yachts in Tormouth Bay were reported as _Sheila_, _Lorna_, and _Giulia_. He turned them up in the list and whistled. The owner of the _Giulia_ was the Prince of Ragusa. โThis is getting relevant,โ said he. The Prince of Ragusa, hereditary ruler of some ten square miles and fabulously wealthy, was known to the learned as a zealous archรฆologist. He was one of the half-dozen men in the world whose collection might contain a Hottentot Venus. But, unless his reputation belied him, he was very unlikely to know or care anything about a soubrette from Paris. And why should he send his Hottentot Venus to a girlsโ school? โStill several unknown quantities,โ Reggie reflected. And yet there was the Hottentot Venus in the Tormouth school and there off Tormouth lay the Prince of Ragusa. โI think weโll make Brer Lomas sit up and take notice,โ said Reggie, and devoted himself to the composition of Latin prose. Thus: โDe academia sororis nonnihil timeo nec quid timean certe scio. Sunt qui conjurarint et fortasse in flagitium. Si quid improvisum vel mihi vel academiae eveniret principem de Ragusa et navem eius capere oporteret.โ This he wrote on telegraph forms, and with his own hand presented to the lady at the post office, who was justly horrified. โBut what language is it?โ she protested. โThere you have me,โ Reggie confessed. โIt would like to be Latin, but I left school when I was young.โ The lady sniffed but, looking at it again, saw that it was addressed to Scotland Yard, and said, โAh, I understand.โ โI wish I did,โ Reggie murmured. For the sense of that mysterious telegram is: โI am anxious about your sisterโs school, and donโt quite know what I am afraid of. There is a conspiracy on foot which may be criminal. If anything unforeseen happens to me or the school, catch the Prince of Ragusa and his yacht.โ โYes. Nuts to crack for Lomas,โ said Reggie. And he went to dinner. It is now necessary to employ the narrative of Miss Somers, B.Sc. On the next day there was a lecture given in the Tormouth assembly rooms by Mr. Horatio Bean, the photographer of a recent expedition to the Arctic regions. To such edifying entertainments Miss Lomas was accustomed to send her girls. Miss Somers, B.Sc., was in charge of the detachment which marched to the assembly rooms on this occasion. Her narrative, purged of emotion unfit for a female bachelor of science, goes like this: She noticed nothing till the pictures began–that is, till the room was darkened. Then two girls got up in a hurry. One of them, who was Alice Warenne, whispered to her as she passed that Hilda Crowland didnโt feel very well. Alice was going out with her and would look after her. They went. At the close of the lecture, one of the attendants approached Miss Somers and said he had been asked to tell her that the two young ladies had gone back to the school. Upon this naturally follows the report of Constable Stewer of the Tormouth borough police. To this effect: Was on duty 3.30 p.m. on the quay; motor-launch from Italian yacht came in and lay by number one steps; two young ladies came in a hurry and entered launch; gentleman who had been smoking cigar in vicinity thrust paper and half-crown into my hands, saying โConstable, wire that immediateโ; gentleman then took flying leap into launch, which was already shoved off, and engine started; launch steered for Italian yacht; returned to station to make report. The paper when examined by inspector on duty was found to bear these words: โLomas, Scotland Yard. Two girls on _Giulia_. Me too.–F.โ A telegram was sent. About tea-time Scotland Yard telephoned to know whether the yacht _Giulia_ was still at Tormouth. A serjeant hurrying to the harbour found P. C. Stewer back at his post watching a smudge of smoke on the horizon. About that time Miss Lomas called at the police station to ask if anything had been heard or seen of two of her girls. So we leave the inspector almost exploding with a sense of the importance of his office. โMille pardons, mademoiselle,โ said Reggie, as he arrived in the launch and grabbed at his hat and, involuntarily, sat down upon Miss Crowland. With a firm and friendly hand she assisted him to recover his balance. She was in all respects made to sustain shocks. Her grey eyes smiled at him. A man–an oldish, solemn man who was horrified–confronted Reggie. โYou cannot come here, monsieur,โ he cried in French. โI dare to assure you of the contrary,โ says Reggie in the same language. โThis is a private launch.โ โPerfectly. Of the Prince of Ragusa. It is why I have arrived. I have news for the Prince of Ragusa–news which will surprise him marvellously.โ The solemn man was embarrassed. โNevertheless I protest, sir.โ โI make a note of your protest,โ said Reggie, and bowed. The solemn man bowed–and seemed satisfied. Reggie sat down beside the little Alice Warenne, who had been watching all this very demurely, a contrast to Miss Crowland, who was frankly amused. โPermit a lover of art to address you, mademoiselle,โ said he. โI desire infinitely to thank you for the great pleasure which you have given me.โ โHow, sir? I do not understand.โ She looked more a baby than ever. โYour little sleeves of satinette,โ Reggie murmured. โYour adorable little sleeves of satinette.โ And then she laughed, and Reggie knew that he had made no mistake. She was the soubrette of the Variรฉtรฉs. The laugh of Mlle Ducher was unforgettable. โI am a great artist, sir, am I not?โ Hilda Crowland smiled at her. โMonsieur is a friend of yours, Alice?โ she said in English. โAll in good time. Only an admirer at present, darling.โ She gave Reggie a glance which was not the least childish. โI dare to hope,โ Reggie said, and again she laughed. They were alongside the yacht. The ladies were handed to the gangway, and Reggie went up it close on their heels. There seemed to be a deputation waiting for them on deck, a middle-aged deputation which, on the coming of the girls, bared its grey and bald heads. Two men stood out from it who lifted their caps, but put them on again, one a young fellow of a sprightly air, the other grey and grave, with a certain assured stateliness. At him Alice made a saucy curtsy. He came forward and took Hilda Crowlandโs hand. โMy dear child,โ he said in English, โbe very welcome,โ and he kissed her on both cheeks. She flushed faintly. โI do not understand you, sir.โ She withdrew herself. โI present to you your cousin, the Comte de Spoleto.โ The young man smiled at her and kissed her hand. The elder man turned to the others. โGentlemen–I receive to-day my daughter, the Duchesse de Zara.โ One by one they came forward and were presented and kissed the wondering girlโs hand. And at the end of them marched Reggie and stood before His Highness the Prince of Ragusa, who became immediately the most amazed of men. โI do not know you, sir,โ he said, with intense disgust. โWho is this, Audagna?โ He turned to the man who had been on the launch. โI represent her mother,โ said Reggie. A wave of emotion shook the deputation. Hilda flushed and looked at Alice, who laughed. His Highness stood very stiff. โI have not desired that her mother should be represented,โ he announced. โI cannot defend the conduct of your Highness,โ said Reggie blandly. โI do not admit your right to be here, sir,โ the Prince cried. โThat makes your conduct still more suspicious,โ said Reggie. โSuspicious!โ The Prince gasped and turned upon the others. โHe says suspicious!โ Horror overwhelmed them all. The Prince was the first to recover his self-control. โBe pleased to follow me, sir,โ he said, with awful courtesy. โHilda, my dear child.โ He gave her his arm. โSpoleto!โ The family party and Reggie went down to His Highnessโs cabin. Only Hilda was asked to sit, and in perfect calm she sat. Nothing but a shade more colour in her cheeks, a brighter gleam in her eye, confessed that her stately head deigned to take any interest in her strange situation. The Prince of Ragusa turned to Reggie. โI do not yet know your name, sir.โ So Reggie gave him a card. โMr. Reginald Fortune–a lawyer, sir?โ โI am a surgeon. But letโs hope we shanโt need my professional qualifications.โ โIt is very well. You are here to represent my wife. I do not allow that my wife has any right to share my plans for my daughter. But since you have intruded, sir, I do not choose to conceal my intentions. I have resumed my control of my daughter because she is now of an age to take her proper place at my side, to perform her duty to her family, and to carry out the plans which I have formed for her.โ โAdmirable. And shall we hear Miss Crowlandโs intentions in the matter?โ Reggie looked at the girl. โBe pleased to speak of my daughter as the Duchesse de Zara.โ A throb passed through the yacht. Reggie looked out of the port-hole and saw the water sliding by. โSo weโre off,โ he smiled. โThe yacht sails immediately for Ragusa. I shall not be able to put you ashore, sir. For any discomfort you undergo be pleased to blame yourself and your employer. I see a rashness in your actions which I should have expected from my wife.โ Reggie chuckled. โWell, well. And, of course, you donโt like being rash!โ โOn our arrival at Ragusa you may, if you choose, remain and be present at my daughterโs marriage.โ โOh. Shall I be present, sir?โ said Hilda, with a dangerous meekness. โMy dear child!โ His Highness said affectionately. โMr. Fortune–you have the happiness to be present at the betrothal of my daughter, the Duchesse de Zara, to my nephew, the Comte de Spoleto.โ It was Reggie who preserved an appropriate calm. He only gave one chuckle. โHow? But–but it is incredible!โ Spoleto cried in French, and recoiled, gesticulating. The Prince flushed and glared at him. Hilda stood up. โThis is ridiculous, sir,โ she said, and was pale. โRidiculous, that is the word,โ Spoleto cried. โBe silent, Spoleto. My dear child, you do not understand.โ โI understand enough. You say you are my father. I think I ought to know my father. I–I do not mind knowing you. But this–it is absurd and insulting. I will not hear any more about it. This gentleman–I know nothing about him.โ She surveyed Spoleto with disdain. โI do not wish to make his acquaintance.โ โThank you very much,โ Spoleto cried. โHilda! Be pleased to remember that you are now to do your duty as my daughter. I do not permit disobedience.โ โItโs no use to talk so,โ said Miss Crowland. โI am not a baby.โ His Highness, whose grey hair was becoming dishevelled, made a violent gesture. โEnglish! She is as English as her mother.โ โOh. If you are going to say things against my mother I will go,โ said Miss Crowland. โYou came from my mother, sir. I should like to speak to you.โ Reggie bowed and opened the door for her. As they went out he heard Spoleto say in French, โDo you see, my uncle, this does not do,โ and then a storm. The house of Ragusa was divided against itself in throes. On deck, Miss Crowland seemed to have some difficulty in making up her mind what to say. โDoes my mother know about this?โ she broke out at last. โThatโs between you and your conscience, isnโt it?โ Reggie smiled. โI havenโt told her anything, but she has never told me anything,โ Miss Crowland said fiercely. โHow did she come to send you here?โ โSome rather odd things happened at school, you know.โ โDid they?โ said Miss Crowland, in delighted amazement. โWhat things?โ โI wonder if you know who little Alice Warenne really is? She is an actress from the Theatre des Variรฉtรฉs in Paris.โ Miss Crowland laughed. โShe was employed to get a photograph of you, to find out all about you, to arrange for you to be kidnapped like this, and to persuade you to come aboard. โMonsieur is a detective!โ Alice slid up between them. โOh, but a very great detective.โ โI knew all that. Except that she is an actress.โ Miss Crowland turned to her. โAre you an actress?โ โDarling!โ Alice laughed all over her baby face. โThat is the prettiest compliment, is it not, M. the detective?โ โIf you think she has cheated me, she has not. She told me that the Prince of Ragusa said he was my father, and that he wanted me to come on his yacht. My mother never would tell me anything about my father. I didnโt think that was fair. So I came. And now, Mr.–Mr. Fortune, what will my mother do?โ โWhat shall we all do?โ Reggie laughed. โYouโre in a hole and your motherโs in a hole, and the Prince of Ragusa is in the deepest hole of the three.โ โExcepting always M. the detective,โ Alice laughed. โLook, monsieur–the beautiful England–she vanishes! Adieu, the respectable country and the nice policemen!โ โDo you imagine you are here to look after me?โ said Miss Crowland fiercely. โThink of me as a mother,โ said Reggie, and she went away in a rage. โWell, monsieur?โ Alice laughed at him. โYou are making friends everywhere. You are content?โ โIf I had a razor and a clean shirt,โ Reggie said. โAlas, monsieur, I have none. I do not play–how do you call them?–principal boys. Bon voyage, monsieur.โ She tripped away. It was made clear to Reggie that he was not going to be popular on board. The retinue of the Prince avoided him emphatically. The royal family remained below. He was taken to a cabin, and there dinner was served him. โAnd not a bad dinner either,โ said Reggie, as he went on deck again. It was dark and a moonless night. The yacht was meeting a southerly breeze and the first of the ocean swell and grew lively. Reggie had the deck to himself. He was nearly at the end of his cigar before any one disturbed his humorous meditations. โMr. Fortune? You amuse yourself?โ It was the Comte de Spoleto. โI can smile.โ โIn effect, my friend, we are ridiculous. My uncle he is a dreamer–a student. He sees a thing in his mind, it is logical, it is to his desire, and he conceives it done. He has been like that always. A temperament! He is not a man of the world.โ โI guessed that,โ Reggie murmured. โBut what to do? The situation is impossible, my friend. Conceive my feelings. This young girl–she is fresh, she is superb as a morning in the mountains–and by me she is exposed to this humiliation. And I–whatever I do, I am ludicrous. I beg of you, my friend, believe that I feel it. Imagine my position.โ โImagine mine. You might lend me a razor. But hardly a tooth-brush.โ โHe will not touch land before Spain. Oh, yes, he is capable of it, my friend. But this young girl—-โ โDid you bring a tooth-brush for her?โ โThere is everything for her. Maids, clothes. Oh, he has thought of everything, my uncle. He calls it her trousseau. What a man!โ โBetter mutiny. Seize the yacht. Can you navigate? I canโt. That was always the trouble in the pirate stories.โ โMutiny? They would all die for him. Oh, you are laughing at me. _Mon Dieu!_ my friend, this is very serious. I beg of you, confide in me. You must have some plan. I promise you, I desire nothing better than to restore mademoiselle to her mother. I—-โ โSpoleto!โ They turned. The Prince of Ragusa stood at the head of the companion. โMy dear uncle—-โ โSpoleto! You are a traitor. You—-โ โThat is not true!โ โYou plot against me with this fellow. It is incredible. It is villainous. It is treachery.โ โSir, I will take that from no man.โ โYes, you will take it. You will—-โ It seemed to Reggie that His Highness was about to box his nephewโs ears. Reggie let himself go as the yacht pitched. They all jostled together. His Highness vanished down the companion with a crash. โNow youโve done it,โ said Reggie. Spoleto exclaimed, peered at the body lying below, showed Reggie a white face, and hurried down. Reggie followed slowly. His Highness was already surrounded by servants and his suite. โWhen you have all finished, Iโll tell you where heโs hurt,โ said Reggie incisively. โAh, yes, you are a surgeon,โ Spoleto cried. โStand aside, stand aside. The gentleman is a surgeon. Tell me, is he dead?โ His Highness had begun to groan. โDonโt be futile,โ said Reggie, and knelt and began to straighten out the heap. The process caused His Highness anguish. โYes. He canโt walk. We must get him to bed to examine him.โ It was an elaborate process and punctuated with lamentations . . . when at last His Highness lay stripped in bed and groaning faintly, โMy aunt, what a patient!โ Reggie grimaced to himself. โI think I am everywhere a bruise, Mr. Fortune,โ the Prince groaned. โThat scoundrel Spoleto!โ โThat wonโt do, sir. Iโm sure he meant nothing,โ said Reggie, with admirable magnanimity. โThe–the yacht pitched. Now about the elbow.โ He began handling it skilfully. โAh! Yes. Yes, it is certainly the elbow that is most painful. But my knee also gives me great pain. And my head aches violently.โ โThe knee. Yes. The knee is badly bruised. There may be—- Ah, well, I can make you more comfortable for the time, sir. But it is my duty to tell you frankly I am anxious about the arm. I must have that elbow X-rayed at once. I am afraid thereโs a fracture. A small operation may be necessary. Just a screw in, you know.โ โA screw in my elbow!โ the Prince screamed. โI suppose you donโt wish to lose your arm,โ Reggie said sternly. โLose my right arm! Good God, Mr. Fortune! You donโt mean—-โ โI mean that I must have an X-ray of your elbow immediately and surgical resources at my disposal or I wonโt answer for the consequences. The yacht must make for harbour at once.โ โAm I in danger, Mr. Fortune?โ โI hope to save your arm if you give me the chance.โ โI am in your hands, Mr. Fortune,โ said the Prince feebly. โOh! If you could do something to stop this neuralgic pain in my arm—-โ In fact, Reggie had a difficult time with him, which you may think was only fair. It was very late before His Highness (who took a morbid interest in his limbs) could be got to sleep; very late–or early–before Reggie went to bed, but all the while the _Giulia_ was steaming back to Tormouth, and when Reggie came on deck again โpink and beautifulโ, as he remarked to his mirror, thanks to a razor and linen of Spoletoโs, the brown Tormouth headlands loomed through the morning haze. Already upon deck were Spoleto and Hilda, walking together, negotiating, as it appeared, a defensive alliance. โThis is very gratifyinโ,โ said Reggie. โHow is my uncle, Mr. Fortune?โ said Spoleto. โStill asleep, thank Heaven.โ โHe is not in any danger?โ said Hilda. โWell, you know, heโs so anxious about himself.โ โI should never forgive myself if anything happened!โ Spoleto cried. โOh, I should, you know, I should,โ Reggie murmured thoughtfully. They did not attend to him. โBut you are not to blame.โ Hilda was interested in Spoleto. โYou are not to blame for anything.โ โYou say that!โ Spoleto cried. โThank you, my cousin,โ and he kissed her hand. โOh, but you are absurd,โ said Hilda, and flushed faintly and turned away. Spoleto made a gesture of despair. โQuite, quite,โ Reggie said. โSo weโd better have breakfast.โ During that meal he might have heard, if he had listened, the full history of the emotions of the Comte de Spoleto. He escaped from them to visit his patient. The Prince was much cheered by a night of sleep, still excessively interested in his injuries, but now hopeful about them. He gave great honour to Reggieโs treatment of the case. โMy dear sir, I must consider it providential that you were on board. Oh, but certainly providential. โWell, sir, the affair might have taken a different turn without me,โ Reggie admitted modestly. โIndeed, yes,โ said His Highness. โGood God, Mr. Fortune, and how I resented your appearance yesterday!โ He became thoughtful. โI think what annoyed me most was that any one should have discovered my plans.โ He gazed at Reggie. โAre you free to tell me, Mr. Fortune? I am much interested to know what brought you here. Did Hilda say anything to her mother? Or is there a traitor in my camp? Spoleto–that little actress?โ โHereโs the traitor, sir.โ Reggie took out of his pocket the Hottentot Venus. โGood heavens!โ The Prince took her affectionately. โMy new palรฆolithic Venus.โ โYou left her in the library at the Tormouth school. There are not many men in the world who have a Hottentot Venus to lose. So she suggested to me that the Prince of Ragusa was taking action with regard to Hilda Crowland.โ โYou have a great deal of acumen, Mr. Fortune,โ said the Prince, and the sound of the cable broke off the conversation. There is a hospital at Tormouth. The Comte de Spoleto went on shore to bring off its X-ray man. Reggie stretched himself in a deck chair to wait events. They were not long in arriving. A shore boat brought off the Hon. Stanley Lomas, dapper as ever, and a woman whom Reggie identified by her hair and her magnificent figure as the mother of Hilda–Mrs. Crowland–the Princess of Ragusa. Reggie went down the gangway to meet them. Lomas sprang out of the boat. The Princess was handed out and went up the gangway. โGood God, Fortune!โ Lomas shook hands. โYouโre a wonder! How did you bring them back?โ โGenius–just genius.โ The Princess had met her daughter who was not abashed. โHilda! Why do you do this extraordinary thing?โ And Hilda said quietly, โI wanted to know my father.โ โYou make us all ridiculous,โ the Princess cried. โI donโt feel that.โ Hilda put up her chin. โMay I present Mr. Fortune, maโam?โ Lomas put in. Reggie bowed. โI am sorry to tell you, madame, that the Prince has had an accident. A fall down the companion. He is in bed. I am waiting for an X-ray to be taken of his arm. But I assure you there is no cause for alarm.โ โI am not alarmed,โ said the Princess. โI wish to see him.โ โCertainly. You will not forget that I have told him I represent you.โ โIt was an impertinence, Mr. Fortune,โ said the Princess, and swept to the companion. The door of the Princeโs cabin was shut on her. โJam for the Prince.โ Reggie made a grimace at Lomas. โStrictly speaking, whatโs my _locus standi?_โ said the Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department. โDonโt funk, Lomas. I dare say sheโll murder him. Thatโs where you come in.โ So they were depressed till the return of the anxious Spoleto with his X-ray man. Reggie descended upon the Prince and Princess. She was sitting upon his bed. She was smiling. She kissed her hand to His Highness as she went out. All which Reggie observed with a face of stone. โI am infinitely your debtor, Mr. Fortune,โ His Highness beamed. โYou are not married, no?โ โIt becomes every day less probable,โ said Reggie grimly. โOne never knows the beauty of a womanโs nature till one is suffering,โ said His Highness. The X-rays were put to work on the arm, and the operator and Reggie went off to the yachtโs dark room. As the plate came out, โI see no injury, Mr. Fortune,โ the operator complained. โFancy that,โ said Reggie. Outside the dark room the Princess was impatiently waiting. โWell, Mr. Fortune?โ โWell, madame, there will be no need of an operation.โ The Princess frowned at him. โI suppose I am much obliged to you, Mr. Fortune. I wish to hear more of your part in the affair.โ Reggie, he has confessed, trembled. The Princess swept on. She opened the door of the music-room. She revealed Hilda and Spoleto. Hilda was being vehemently kissed. Reggie fled. Professional instinct, he explains, took him back to his patient. โI am very pleased to tell you, sir, that there is no serious injury to the arm. Rest and good nursing are all that is now needed.โ His Highness laughed like a boy and began to chatter–all about himself. Reggie broke in at the first chance. โIt is a satisfaction to me that I leave you in such good spirits, sir.โ His Highness overflowed with gratitude. He did not know how to thank Mr. Fortune–what to offer him. โIf I might have this little lady, sir.โ Reggie took up the Hottentot Venus. โIt would be a pleasant memento of an interesting adventure.โ And so he went off with the Hottentot Venus in his pocket. He hurried on deck to the uneasy Lomas. โYou were right, Lomas. You are always right. We have no _locus standi_. And whereโs that shore boat?โ They embarked hurriedly and rowed away from the royal house of Ragusa. โIn heaven,โ said Reggie, โthere is neither marrying nor giving in marriage. Thatโs why Iโm going there. Look at herโ–he produced the Hottentot Venus–โsheโs the only sensible woman I ever knew. Lomas, my dear old man, do you know you will have to explain all this to your sister?โ The Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department groaned aloud. Chapter 6. THE BUSINESS MINISTER. PHASE I.–THE SCANDAL โโOh, to be in England now that Aprilโs here,โโ said Reggie Fortune as, trying to hide himself in his coat, he slipped and slid down the gangway to his native land. The Boulogne boat behind him, lost in driving snow, could be inferred from escaping steam and the glimmer of a rosette of lights. โThe Flying Dutchmanโs new packet,โ Reggie muttered, and hummed the helmsmanโs song from the opera, till a squall coming round the corner stung what of his face he could not bury like small shot. He continued to suffer. The heat in the Pullman was tinned. He did not like the toast. The train ran slow, and whenever he wiped the steamy window he saw white-blanketed country and fresh swirls of snow. So he came into Victoria some seven hours late, and it had no taxi. He said what he could. You imagine him, balanced by the two suit-cases which he could not bear to part with, wading through deep snow from the Tube station at Oxford Circus to Wimpole Street, and subsiding limp but still fluent into the arms of Sam his factotum. And the snow went on falling. It was about this time, in his judgment 11 p.m. on 15th April, that a man fell from the top story of Montmorency House, the hugest and newest of the new blocks of flats thereabouts. He fell down the well which lights the inner rooms and, I suppose, made something of a thud as his body passed through the cushion of snow and hit the concrete below. But in the howl of the wind and the rattle of windows it would have been extraordinary if any one had heard him or taken him for something more than a slate or a chimney pot. He was not in a condition to explain himself. And the snow went on falling. Mr. Fortune, though free from his coat and his hat and his scarf and his gloves, though scorching both hands and one foot at the hall fire, was still telling Sam his troubles when the Hon. Stanley Lomas came downstairs. Mr. Fortune said, โHelp!โ โHad a good time?โ said Lomas cheerily. โDid you get to Seville?โ โOh, Peter, donโt say things like that. I canโt bear it. Have the feelings of a man. Be a brother, Lomas. Iโve been in nice, kind countries with a well-bred climate, and I come back to this epileptic blizzard, and hereโs Lomas pale and perky waiting for me on the mat. And then youโre civil! Oh, Sophonisba! Sophonisba, oh!โ โI did rather want to see you,โ Lomas explained. โI hate seeing you. I hate seeing anything raw and alive. If you talk to me I shall cry. My dear man, have you had dinner?โ โHours ago.โ โThat wasnโt quite nice of you, you know. When you come to see me, you shouldnโt dine first. It makes me suspect your taste. Well, well! Come and see me eat. That is a sight which has moved strong men to tears, the pure ecstasy of joy, Lomas. The sublime and the beautiful, by R. Fortune. And Sam says Elise has a _timbale de foie gras_ and her very own _entrecรดte_. Dine again, Whittington. And we will look upon the wine when it is red. My Chambertin is strongly indicated. And then I will fall asleep for a thousand years, same like the Sleeping Beauty.โ โI wish I could.โ โLomas, old dear!โ Reggie turned and looked him over. โYes, you have been going it. You ought to get away.โ โI dare say I shall. That is one of the things Iโm going to ask you–what you think about resignation.โ โOh, Peter! As bad as that?โ Reggie whistled. โSorry I was futile. But I couldnโt know. Thereโs been nothing in the papers.โ โOnly innuendoes. Damme, you canโt get away from it in the clubs.โ They had it out over dinner. Some months before a new Government had been formed, which was advertised to bring heaven down to earth without delay. And the first outward sign of its inward and spiritual grace was the Great Coal Ramp. Some folks in the City began to buy the shares of certain coal companies. Some folks in the City began to spread rumours that the Government was going to nationalize mines district by district–those districts first in which the shares had been bought. The shares then went to a vast price. โAll the usual nauseating features of a Stock Exchange boom,โ said Reggie. โNo. This is founded on fact,โ said Lomas. โThatโs the distinguishing feature. It was worked on the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Whoever started the game had exact and precise information. They only touched those companies which the Government meant to take over; they knew everything and they knew it right. Somebody of the inner circle gave the plan away.โ โโPolitics is a cursed profession,โโ said Reggie. Lomas looked gloomily at his Burgundy. โPoliticians are almost the lowest of Godโs creatures,โ he agreed. โI know that. Iโm a Civil servant. But I donโt see how any of them can have had a finger in this pie. The scheme hadnโt come before the Cabinet. Everybody knew, of course, that something was going to be done. But the whole point is the particular companies concerned in this primary provisional scheme. And nobody knew which they were but the President of the Board of Trade and his private secretary.โ โThe President–thatโs Horace Kimball.โ โYes. No politics about him. Heโs the rubber king, you know. He was brought in on the business men for a business Cabinet cry. He was really put there to get these nationalization schemes through.โ โAnd he begins by arousing city scandal. Business men and business methods. Well, well! Give me the politicians after all. I was born respectable. I would rather be swindled in the quiet, old-fashioned way. I like a sense of style.โ โQuite–quite,โ said Lomas heartily. โBut I must say I have nothing against Kimball. He is the usual thing. Thinks he is like Napoleon–pathetically anxious you should suppose he has been educated. But he really is quite an able fellow, and he means to be civil. Only heโs mad to catch the fellow who gave his scheme away. I donโt blame him. But itโs damned awkward.โ โIf only Kimball and his private secretary knew, either Kimball or the private secretary gave it away.โ โMy dear Fortune, if you say things like that, I shall break down. That is the hopeless sort of jingle I say in my sleep. I believe Kimballโs honest. Thatโs his reputation. As keen as they make โem, but absolutely straight. And why should he play double? He is ridiculously rich. If he wanted money it was idiotic to go into the Government. He would do much better for himself in business. No; he must have gone into politics for power and position and so on. And then at the start his career is mucked by a financial scandal. You canโt suppose he had a hand in it. Itโs too mad.โ โRemains the private secretary. Donโt Mr. Kimball like his private secretary?โ โOh, yes. Kimball thinks very well of him. I pointed out to Kimball that on the facts we were bound to suspect Sandford, and he was quite huffy about it–said he had the highest opinion of Sandford, asked what evidence I had, and so on.โ โVery good and proper, and even intelligent. My respects to H. Kimball. What evidence have you, Lomas, old thing?โ โYou just put the case yourself,โ said Lomas, with some irritation. โOnly Kimball and Sandford were in the secret. Itโs impossible in the nature of things Kimball should have sold it. Remains Sandford.โ โOh, Peter! Thatโs not evidence, thatโs an argument.โ โI know, confound you. But there is evidence of a sort. One of Sandfordโs friends is a young fellow called Walkden, and heโs in one of the firms which have been running the Stock Exchange boom.โ โItโs queer,โ said Reggie, and lit a pipe. โBut it wouldnโt hang a yellow dog. โDo you think I donโt know that?โ Lomas cried. โWe have nothing to act on, and theyโre all cursing me because we havenโt!โ โMeaning Kimball?โ โKimball–Kimballโs calling twice a day to know how the case is going on, please. But the whole Governmentโs on it now. Minutes from the Home Secretary–bitter mems. from the Prime Minister. They want a scapegoat, of course. Governments do.โ โFind us some one to hang or weโll hang you?โ โI told you I was thinking of resigning.โ โBecause they want to bully you into making a case against the private secretary–and you have a conscience?โ โLord, no. Iโd convict him to-day if I could. I donโt like the fellow. Heโs a young prig. But I canโt convict him. No; I donโt think they want to hang anybody in particular. But they must have somebody to hang, and I canโt find him.โ โIt isnโt much in my way,โ Reggie murmured. โThe Civil Service frightens me. I have a brother-in-law in the Treasury. Sometimes he lets me dine with him. Meditations among the Tombs for Reginald. No. It isnโt much in my way. I want passion and gore. But you intrigue me, Lomas, you do indeed. I would know more of H. Kimball and Secretary Sandford. They worry me.โ โMy God, they worry me,โ said Lomas heartily. โThey are too good to be true. I wonder if thereโs any other hidden detail in the wood pile?โ โWell, I canโt find him.โ โHope on, hope ever. Donโt you remember it was the dowager popped the Bohun sapphires? And donโt you resign. If the Prime Minister sends you another nasty mem., say you have your eye on his golf pro. A man who putts like that must have something on his conscience. And donโt you resign for all the politicians outside hell. It may be they want to get rid of you. Iโll come and see you to-morrow.โ โI wish you would,โ said Lomas. โYou have a mighty good eye for a face.โ โMy dear old thing! I never believe in faces, thatโs all. The only one I ever liked was that girl who broke her sister-in-lawโs nose. But Iโll come round.โ Comforted by wine and sympathy, Lomas was sent away to trudge home through a foot of snow. And the snow went on falling. PHASE II.–THE PRIVATE SECRETARY The snow lingered. Though hoses washed it out of the highways, in every side street great mounds lay unmelted, and the park was dingily white. Reggie shivered as he got out of his car in Scotland Yard, and he scurried upstairs and put himself as close as he could to Lomasโs fire–ousting Superintendent Bell. โIโm waiting for you,โ said Lomas quietly. โThereโs a new fact. Three thousand pounds has been paid into Sandfordโs account. It was handed in over the counter in notes of small amounts yesterday morning. Cashier fancies it was paid in by a stoutish man in glasses–couldnโt undertake to identify.โ โItโs a wicked world, Lomas. That wouldnโt matter so much if it was sensible. Some day I will take to crime, just to show you how to do it. Who is Sandford, what is he, that such queer things happen round him?โ โI donโt know so much about queer, sir,โ said Superintendent Bell. โI suppose this three thousand is his share of the swag.โ โThatโs what weโre meant to suppose,โ Reggie agreed. โThatโs what I resent.โ โYou mean, why the devil should he have it put in the bank? He must know his account would be watched. Thatโs the point I took,โ said Lomas wearily. โWell, sir, as I was saying, itโs the usual sort of thing,โ Superintendent Bell protested. โWhen a city gang has bought a fellow in a good position and got all they can get out of him, it often happens they donโt care any more about him. Theyโd rather break him than not. It happened in the Bewick affair, the Grantley deal—-โ He reeled off a string of cases. โWhat I mean to say, sir, there isnโt honour among thieves. When they see one of themselves in a decent position, theyโll do him in if they can. Envy, thatโs what it is. I suppose weโre all envious. But in my experience, when a fellow isnโt straight he gets a double go of envy in him. I mean to say, for sheer spiteful envy the crooks beat the band.โ Reggie nodded. โDo you know, Bell, I donโt ever remember your being wrong, when you had given an opinion. By the way, what is your opinion?โ Superintendent Bell smiled slowly. โWe do have to be so careful, sir. Would you believe it, I donโt so much as know who did the open-air work in the Coal Ramp. There was half a dozen firms in the boom, quite respectable firms. But who had the tip first, and who was doing the big business, I know no more than the babe in arms.โ โYes, thereโs some brains about,โ Lomas agreed. But Reggie, who was watching the Superintendent, said, โWhatโs up your sleeve, Bell?โ The Superintendent laughed. โYou do have a way of putting things, Mr. Fortune.โ He lit a cigarette and looked at his chief. โI donโt know what you thought of Mr. Sandford, Mr. Lomas?โ โMore do I, Bell,โ said Lomas. โI only know heโs not a man and a brother.โ โWhat I should describe as a lonely cove, sir,โ Bell suggested. โChiefly interested in himself, you might say.โ โHeโs a climber,โ said Lomas. โWell, well! Who is Sandford–what is he, that all the world donโt love him?โ Reggie asked. โWho was his papa? What was his school?โ โWell, now, itโs rather odd you should ask that, sir,โ said Superintendent Bell. โHe didnโt have a school. He didnโt have a father,โ said Lomas. โFirst he knows he was living with his widowed mother, an only child, in a little village in North Wales–Llan something. He went to the local grammar-school. He was a kind of prize boy. He got a scholarship at Pembroke, Oxford. Then Mrs. Sandford died, leaving him about a pound a week. He got firsts at Oxford, and came into the Home Civil pretty high. Heโs done well in his Department, and they canโt stand him.โ โGood brain, no geniality, if you take my meaning,โ said the Superintendent. โI hate him already,โ Reggie murmured. โThatโs quite easy,โ said Lomas. โWell, heโs a clever second-rater, thatโs what it comes to.โ โPoor devil,โ Reggie murmured. โThereโs swarms of them in the service. The only odd thing about Sandford is that he donโt seem to have any origins. Like that fellow in the Bible who had no ancestors–Melchizedek, was it? Well, Mrs. Sandford had no beginning either. She wasnโt native to Llanfairfechan–thatโs the place. She came there when Sandford was a small kid. Nobody there knows where from. He says he donโt know where from. Nobody knows who his father was. He says he donโt know. He says she left no papers of any sort. She had an annuity, and the fifty pounds a year she left him was in Consols. He never knew of any relations. Nobody in Llan-whatโs-its-name can remember anybody ever coming to see her. And she died ten years ago.โ โYou might say it looked as if she wanted to hide,โ said Superintendent Bell. โBut, Lord, you canโt tell. Might be just a sorrowful widow. It takes โem that way sometimes.โ โHas anybody ever shown any interest in Melchizedek?โ said Reggie. โO Lord, no! Nobody ever heard of him out of his Department. And there they all hate him. But heโs the sort of fellow you canโt keep down.โ โPoor devil,โ Reggie murmured again. โYou wonโt be so damned sympathetic when youโve met him,โ Lomas said. A slip of paper was presented to him. โHallo! Hereโs Kimball. I thought he was leaving me alone too long. Well, weโve got something for him to-day.โ โHe has a large fat headโ: thus some perky journalist began a sketch of the Rt. Hon. Horace Kimball. And he faithfully reported the first elementary effect of seeing Mr. Kimball, who looked a heavy fellow, with the bulk of his head and neck supported on a sturdy frame. But on further acquaintance people discovered a vivacity of movement and a keenness of expression which made them uncomfortable. Yet he had, as I intend you to observe, a bluff, genial manner, and his cruellest critics were always those who had not met him. For the rest, he aimed at a beautiful neatness in his clothes, and succeeded. He rushed in. โWell, Lomas, if we donโt make an end of this business, itโll make an end of us,โ he announced, and flung himself at a chair. โAnything new?โ โI have just been discussing it with Mr. Fortune.โ โThatโs right. Want the best brains we can get.โ He nodded his heavy head at Reggie. โWhat do you make of it?โ โI donโt wonder you find it harassing,โ Reggie said. โHarassing! Thatโs putting it mildly. Iโve lost more sleep over it than I want to think about.โ He became aware that Reggie was studying him. โDoctor, arenโt you?โ he laughed ruefully. โIโm not a case, you know.โ โI apologize for the professional instinct,โ Reggie said. โBut it does make me say you ought to see your doctor, sir.โ โMy doctor canโt tell me anything I donโt know. Itโs this scandal thatโs the matter with me. You wouldnโt say I was sentimental, would you? You wouldnโt take me for an innocent? Well, do you know, Iโve been in business thirty years, and Iโve never had one of my own people break faith with me. Thatโs what irritates me. Somebody in my own office, somebody close to me, selling me. By God, itโs maddening!โ โWhom do you suspect?โ said Reggie. Kimball flung himself about, and the chair creaked. โDamn it, man, weโve had all that out over and over again. I canโt suspect any one. I wonโt suspect any one. But the thingโs been done.โ โAs I understand, the only people who knew the scheme were yourself and Sandford, your secretary?โ โIโd as soon suspect myself as Sandford.โ โYesterday three thousand pounds in notes was paid by somebody, who didnโt give his name, into Sandfordโs account,โ said Lomas. โGreat God!โ said Kimball, and rolled back in his chair, breathing heavily. โThatโs what I wouldnโt let myself believe.โ โHave you got any brandy, Lomas?โ said Reggie, watching his pallor professionally. Lomas started up. Reggie reached out and began to feel Kimballโs pulse. โDonโt do that,โ said Kimball sharply, and dragged his hand away. โGood Lord, man, Iโm not ill! No, thanks, Lomas, nothing, nothing. I never touch spirits. Iโll be all right in a moment. But it does rather knock me over to find Iโve got to believe it was Sandford.โ He struggled out of his chair, walked to the window, and flung it up and dabbed at his forehead. He stood there a moment in the raw air, took a pinch of snuff, and turned on them vigorously. โThereโs no doubt about this evidence, eh? We canโt get away from it?โ โIโm afraid we must ask Sandford for an explanation,โ said Lomas. โMost unpleasant thing I ever did in my life,โ Kimball said. โWell, thereโs no help for it, I suppose. Still, he may have a perfectly good explanation. Damn it, I wonโt make up my mind till I must. Iโve always found him quite straight–and very efficient too. Cleverest fellow I ever had about me. Send for him then; say Iโll be glad to see him here. Come now, Lomas, what do you think yourself? He may be able to account for it quite naturally, eh?โ โHe may. But I canโt see how,โ Lomas said gloomily. โCan you?โ โI suppose you think Iโm a fool, but I like to believe in my fellows,โ said Kimball, and they passed an awkward five minutes till Sandford came. He looked a good young man. He was rather small, he was very lean, he wore eyeglasses. Everything about him was correct and restrained. But there was an oddity of structure about his face: it seemed to come to a point at the end of his nose, and yet his lower jaw looked heavy. He made graded salutations to Kimball his chief and to Lomas. He looked at Reggie and Superintendent Bell as though he expected them to retreat from his presence. And he turned upon Kimball a glance that bade him lose no time. Kimball seemed to find some difficulty in beginning. He cleared his throat, blew his nose, and took another pinch of snuff. โI donโt know if you guess why I sent for you,โ he broke out. โI infer that it is on this matter of the gamble in coal shares,โ said Sandford precisely. โYes. Do you know of any new fact?โ โNothing has come before me.โ โWell, thereโs something I want you to explain. I dare say you have a satisfactory explanation. But Iโm bound to ask for it.โ โI have nothing to explain that I know of.โ โItโs been brought to my knowledge that yesterday three thousand pounds in notes was paid into your account. Where did it come from?โ Sandford took off his eyeglasses and cleaned them, and put them on again. โI have no information,โ he said in the most correct official manner. โGood God, man, you must see what it means!โ Kimball cried. โI beg your pardon, sir. I have no notion of what it means. I find it difficult to believe that you have been correctly informed.โ โYou donโt suppose I should take up a charge like this unless I was compelled to.โ โThereโs no doubt of the fact, Mr. Sandford,โ said Lomas gloomily. โIndeed! Then I have only to say that no one has any authority to make payments into my account. As you have gone into the affair so carefully, I suppose you have found out who did.โ โHe didnโt give his name, you see. Can you tell us who he was?โ Lomas said. โI repeat, sir, I know nothing about the transaction.โ โAnd thatโs all you say?โ โI need hardly add that I shall not accept the money.โ โYou know the matter canโt end there!โ Kimball cried. โCome, man, youโre not doing yourself justice. Nothing could be worse for you than this tone, canโt you see that?โ โI beg your pardon, sir. I do not see what you wish me to say. You spoke of making a charge. Will you be so good as to state it?โ โIf you must have it! This boom was begun on information which only you had besides myself. And immediately after the boom this large sum is paid secretly into your account. You must see what everybody will say–what I should say myself if I didnโt know you–that you sold the plan, and this money is your price. Come, you must have some explanation for us–some defence, at least.โ โI say again, sir, I know nothing of the matter. I should hope that what scandal may say will have no influence upon any one who knows my character and my career.โ โGood God, man, weโre dealing with facts! Where did that three thousand pounds come from?โ โI have no information. I have no idea.โ For the first time Reggie spoke. โI wonder if you have a theory?โ โI donโt consider it is my duty to imagine theories.โ โDo you know any one who wants to ruin you? Or why any one should?โ โI beg your pardon. I must decline to be led into wild speculations of that kind.โ Kimball started up. โYou make it impossible to do anything for you. I have given you every chance, remember that–every chance. Itโs beyond me now. I can only advise you to consider your position. I donโt know whether your resignation will save you from worse consequences. Iโll do what I can. But you make it very hard. Good morning. You had better not go back to the office.โ โI deny every imputation,โ said Sandford. โGood morning, sir.โ Half apologetically Kimball turned to the others. โThereโs nothing for it, I suppose. Weโll have to go through with it now. Youโll let me have an official report. The fellowโs hopeless. Poor devil!โ โI canโt say he touches my heart,โ said Lomas. Kimball laughed without mirth. โHe canโt help himself,โ he said, and went out. โI shouldnโt have thought Kimball was so human,โ said Lomas. โWell, sir, he always has stuck to his men, I must say,โ said Superintendent Bell. โI wonder he could stick to Sandford for a day.โ โThat Mr. Sandford, he is what you might call a superior person,โ Bell chuckled. โFunny how they brazen it out, that kind.โ โYes, I donโt doubt he thinks he was most impressive. Well, Fortune, thereโs not much here for you, Iโm afraid.โ Reggie had gone to the window and was fidgeting there. โI say, the windโs changed,โ said he. โThatโs something, anyway.โ PHASE III.–THE MAN UNDER THE SNOW The porter of Montmorency House, awaking next morning, discovered that even in the well of his flats, where the air is ever the most stagnant in London, the snow was melting fast. After breakfast he saw some clothes emerging from the slush. This annoyed him, for he cherished that little court. The tenants, he remarked to his wife, were always doing something messy, but dropping their trousers down the well was the limit. He splashed out into the slush and found a corpse. After lunch Reggie Fortune, drowsing over the last published play of Herr Wedekind, was roused by the telephone, which, speaking with the voice of Superintendent Bell, urged him to come at once to the mortuary. โWhoโs dead?โ he asked. โSandford hanged himself in red tape? Kimball had a stroke?โ โItโs what you might call anonymous,โ said the voice of the Superintendent. โJust the sort of case you like.โ โI never like a case,โ said Reggie, with indignation, and rang off. At the door of the mortuary Superintendent Bell appeared as his car stopped. โYouโre damned mysterious,โ Reggie complained. โNot me, sir. If you can tell me who the fellow is, Iโll be obliged. But what I want to know first is, what was the cause of death. Youโll excuse me, I wonโt tell you how he was found till youโve formed your opinion.โ โWhat the devil do you mean by that?โ โI donโt want you to be prejudiced in any way, sir, if you take my meaning.โ โDamn your impudence. When did you ever see me prejudiced?โ โDear me, Mr. Fortune, I never heard you swear so much,โ said Bell sadly. โDonโt be hasty, sir. I have my reasons. I have, really.โ He led the way into the room where the dead man lay. He pulled back the sheet which covered the body. โWell, well!โ said Reggie Fortune. For the dead manโs face was not there. โYouโll excuse me. I shouldnโt be any good to you,โ said the Superintendent thickly, and made for the door. Reggie did not look round. โSend Sam in with my things,โ he said. It was a long time afterwards when, rather pale for him, his round and comfortable face veiled in an uncommon gravity, he came out. Superintendent Bell threw away his cigarette. โGhastly, isnโt it?โ he said with sympathy. โMad,โ said Reggie. โCome on.โ A shower of warm rain was being driven before the west wind, but he opened everything in his car that would open, and told the chauffeur to drive round Regentโs Park. โCome on. Bell. The rain wonโt hurt you.โ โI donโt wonder you want a blow. Poor chap! As ugly a mess as ever I saw.โ โI suppose Iโm afraid,โ said Reggie slowly. โItโs unusual and annoying. I suppose the only thing that does make you afraid is whatโs mad. Not the altogether crazy–thatโs only a nuisance-but whatโs damned clever and yet mad. An able fellow with a mania on one point. I suppose thatโs what the devil is, Bell.โ โGood Lord, sir,โ said Superintendent Bell. โWhat I want is muffins,โ said Reggie–โseveral muffins and a little tea and my domestic hearth. Then Iโll feel safe.โ He spread himself out, sitting on the small of his back before his study fire, and in that position contrived to eat and drink with freedom. โIn another world, Bell,โ he said dreamily–โin another and a gayer world it seems to me you wanted to know the cause of death. And you didnโt want me to be prejudiced. Kindly fellow. But thereโs no prejudice about. Itโs quite a plain case.โ โIs it indeed, sir? You surprise me.โ โThe dead man was killed by a blow on the left temple from some heavy, blunt weapon–a life-preserver, perhaps; a stick, a poker. At the same time, or immediately after death, his face was battered in by the same or a similar weapon. Death probably occurred some days ago. After death, but not long after death, the body received other injuries, a broken rib and left shoulder-blade, probably by a fall from some height. Thatโs the medical evidence. There are other curious circumstances.โ โJust a few!โ said Bell, with a grim chuckle. โYouโre very definite, sir, if I might say so. I suppose he couldnโt have been killed and had his face smashed like–like he did–by the fall?โ โYou can cut that right out. He was killed by a blow and blows smashed his face in. Where did you find him?โ โHe was found when the snow melted this morning in the well at Montmorency House.โ โUnder the snow? That puts the murder on the night of the fifteenth. Yes, that fits; that accounts for his sodden clothes.โ โThereโs a good deal it donโt account for,โ said Bell gloomily. โI saw him just as he was found?โ Bell nodded. โSomebody took a lot of pains with him. He was fully dressed–collar and tie, boots. But a lot of his internal buttons were undone. And thereโs not a name, not even a makerโs name, on any of his clothes. His linenโs new and donโt show a laundry mark. Yes, somebody took a lot of pains we shouldnโt know him.โ โI donโt know what youโre getting at, sir.โ โDonโt you? Is it likely a man wearing decent clothes would not have his linen marked and his tailorโs name somewhere? Is it likely a man who had his tie and collar on wouldnโt do up his undershirt? No. The beggarโs clothes were changed after he was killed. That must have been a grisly business too. Heโs not a tender-hearted fellow who did this job. Valet the body youโve killed and then bash its face in! Well, well! Have some more tea?โ โNot me,โ said Bell, with a gulp. โYou talked about a madman, sir, didnโt you?โ โOh, no, no, no. Not the kind of mad that runs amuck. Not homicidal mania. This isnโt just smashing up a chapโs body for the sake of smashing. Thereโs lots of purpose here. This is damned cold, calculating crime. That kind of mad. Some fellowโs got an object that makes it worth while to him to do any beastliness. Thatโs the worst kind of mad, Bell. Not homicidal mania–that only makes a man a beast. Whatโs here is the sort of thing that makes a man a devil.โ โYouโre going a bit beyond me, sir. Itโs a bloody murder, and thatโs all I want.โ โYes, thatโs our job,โ said Reggie thoughtfully. Together they went off to Montmorency House. โHow would you describe deceased, sir?โ said Bell. โMan of about fifty, under middle height, inclined to be stout, unusual bald.โ โIt ainโt much to go by, is it?โ Bell sighed. โWe donโt so much as know if he was clean shaved or not.โ โHe was, I think. I saw no trace of facial hair. But itโs rash to argue from not finding things. And he might have been shaved after he was killed.โ โAnd then smashed? My Lord! And they smashed him thorough too, didnโt they?โ โVery logical bit of crime, Bell.โ โLogical! God bless my soul! But I mean to say, sir, we havenโt got much to go on. Suppose I advertise thereโs a man of fifty missing, rather short and stout and bald, I shall look a bit of an ass.โ โWell, I wouldnโt advertise. Heโd had an operation, by the way–on the ear. But I wouldnโt say that either. In fact, I wouldnโt say anything about him just yet. Hold your trumps.โ โTrumps? What is trumps then, Mr. Fortune?โ โAnything you know is always trumps.โ โYouโll excuse me, but itโs not my experience, sir.โ They came to Montmorency House, where detectives were already domesticated with the porter, and had done the obvious things. The body, it was to be presumed, had fallen from one of the windows opening on the well. The men who had flats round the well were all accounted for, save one. Mr. Rand, tenant of a flat on the top story, had not been seen for some days. Ringing at Mr. Randโs door had produced no reply. โWell, we do seem to be getting a bit warmer,โ said Superintendent Bell. And his subordinate in charge of the inquiries at the flats beamed and rubbed his hands, and remarked that Rand seemed to have been a mysterious chap–only had his flat a few weeks, not used it regularly, not by any means; no visitors to speak of, civil but distant. โThat sounds all right,โ said Bell, and looked at Reggie. โWhat was he like?โ said Reggie. โMiddle size to biggish, wore glasses, well dressed, brown hair, which he wore rather long, they say,โ the inspector reeled off glibly. โThatโs put the lid on,โ said Bell. โWonโt do for the corpse, Warren. Not a bit like it. Well, sir, where are we now?โ He turned to Reggie. โYou will go so fast,โ Reggie complained, and sat down. โIโm pantinโ after you in vain. Whatโs the primary hypothesis, Bell?โ โSir?โ โDo we assume the corpse is Rand, or that Rand chucked the corpse out of window?โ โAh, thereโs that,โ said the inspector eagerly. โWe hadnโt worked on that.โ โWe havenโt worked on anything, if you ask me,โ said Bell gloomily. โWhatโs your opinion then, Mr. Fortune?โ โThe primary hypothesis is that weโre looking for an able, masterful madman. Therefore my opinion is that the whole thing will look perfectly rational when weโve got it all combed out–grantinโ the madmanโs original mad idea.โ โAm I to go round London looking for a rational madman?โ Bell protested. โMy dear chap, you could catch โem by the thousand. Thereโs nobody so damned rational as the lunatic. Thatโs where he falls down. Do not be discouraged. Heโs logical. He donโt keep his eye on the facts. That is where we come in.โ โWeโve come in all right, but we donโt seem like getting out,โ Bell grumbled. โIโm keeping my eye on the facts all right. But they wonโt fit.โ โYouโre very hasty to-day, Bell,โ said Reggie mildly. โWhy is this?โ โI can see that fellowโs face,โ Bell muttered. โWell, well! Heโs told us all he can, poor devil. Weโll get on, if you please. Because Randโs away, it donโt follow that Randโs the corpse. It might have come out of some other tenantโs window. Know anything about the other tenants?โ โAll most respectable, sir,โ said the inspector. โMy dear man, the whole affair is most respectable. Do get that into your head. I dare say weโll find the corpse was a conveyancer murdered by a civil servant. A crime of quiet middle-class taste. What sort of fellows are the other fellows?โ โWell, sir, thereโs a retired engineer, and a young chap, just married, in the Rimington firm, and a naval officer, and several young doctors with consulting-rooms in Harley Street, and one of the Maynards, the Devonshire family. Thatโs all with any rooms on the well. Iโve seen โem all, and, if you ask me, theyโre right out of it; theyโre not the sort, not one of them.โ โI dare say,โ said Reggie. โThey donโt sound as if they would fit. None of them heard anything?โ โNo, sir; thatโs queer, to be sure.โ โIt happened the night of the blizzard. You wouldnโt have noticed a bomb. Well, who was Rand?โ โThatโs what no one knows, sir. Heโd only been here a few weeks. Theyโre service flats, you know, and furnished. He gave a bankerโs reference. Bank says he has no money reason to be missing. Quiet, stable account. Income from investments. Balance three hundred odd. But the bank donโt know anything about him. Heโs had an account for years. He used to live off Jermyn Street, apartment-house. The landlady died last year.โ โAnd the landlady died last year,โ Reggie repeated. โHeโs elusive, is Mr. Rand. Same like our corpse. But is Rand missing, Bell? Heโs not been seen for a few days. Thereโs not much in that. He never used his flat regularly.โ โAnd, so far as we know, deceased isnโt Rand.โ โWell, I donโt know quite as far as that,โ said Reggie. โGood Lord, the porter who found him didnโt recognize the body.โ โRemember his face.โ โMy God, donโt talk about his face.โ โSorry, sorry. Well, I dare say the porter was upset too.โ โYes, but the porter said Rand was biggish, and the bodyโs on the small side. The porter said he had a lot of hair, and the bodyโs absolutely bald.โ โMy dear chap, give a man a straight back and a bit of manner and lots of fellows think heโs biggish–while heโs alive. And a man thatโs absolutely bald is just the man to wear a wig.โ โI thought we were to go by facts,โ Bell said gloomily. โAnd so we are, Bell. Just a-going to begin, Mr. Snodgrass, sir. No rash haste.โ โHave you got something up your sleeve?โ โNot one little trump. Oh, my dear Bell, how can you? Did I ever? My simple open heart is broken.โ โYouโre damned cheerful, arenโt you?โ โMy dear man, I never made you swear before. My dear Bell! Sorry. Letโs get on. Letโs get on. I want to call on the elusive Rand.โ There was nothing individual about the rooms of Mr. Rand. He had been content with the furniture supplied by the owners of the place, which was of the usual wholesale dullness. Reggie turned to the manager of the flats. โI suppose thereโs nothing in the place Mr. Rand owns? Not even the pictures?โ โThe pictures were supplied by the contractors for the furniture, sir. So—-โ โThe Lord have mercy on their souls,โ said Reggie. โSo there is nothing of the tenantโs personal property except his clothes.โ โHe is elusive, our friend Rand,โ Reggie murmured, wandering about the room. โSmoked rather a showy cigar. Drank a fair whisky. Doesnโt tell us much about him. Do the servants come here every day?โ The manager was embarrassed. โWell, sir, in point of fact, weโre short-handed just now. Not unless theyโre rung for. Not unless we know the tenantโs using the rooms.โ โDonโt apologize, donโt apologize. In point of fact, they havenโt been here sinceโ–he looked critically at some dust upon a grim bronze–โsince when?โ โI should say some days,โ said the manager, with diffidence. โI should say a week. No matter. Many thanks.โ Superintendent Bell with some urgency ushered the manager out. When he had done that he turned upon his inspector. โConfound you. Warren, what do you want to stare at the waste-paper basket for? That chap would have seen it if Mr. Fortune hadnโt got interested in the smokes and drinks.โ Reggie laughed and the inspector abased himself. โVery sorry, sir. Didnโt know I stared. But it is so blooming odd.โ Bell snorted and lifted the basket on to the table. It was nearly full of black burnt paper. โWhy did they burn it in the basket?โ said the inspector. โBecause the fireplaces are all gas stoves, I suppose,โ said Bell. โBut I donโt know why they couldnโt leave the stuff on the hearth.โ โBecause this is a tidy crime,โ said Reggie. โNice, quiet, middle-class crime. No ugly mess. I told you that.โ The Superintendent gazed at him. โNow what can you know, you know?โ โI donโt know. I feel. I feel the kind of man that did it. Donโt you? Iโll lay you odds he came of a neat, virtuous, middle-class home.โ The Superintendent started. โWho are you thinking of?โ โYou are so hasty to-day, Bell. I havenโt got a โwhoโ. Still anonymous is the slayer. But Iโll swear Iโve got his character.โ โHave you, though!โ said Bell. โTidy fellow! Donโt make a mess! Remember that face?โ โOh, I said he was mad.โ โWell, Iโm not yet. Iโm only feeling what I can feel.โ He began to examine the burnt paper. โLetters mostly. Some stoutish paper. Some stuff looks a bit like a notebook. Thatโs all weโll get out of that.โ โWell, except the one thing. Whoever did that was clearing up. Clearing up something that might have left traces that might have been dangerous. Same like he cleared up the dead manโs face. Donโt you see? Somebody and some affair had to be absolutely abolished.โ โYes. What was it?โ โWe maynโt ever know that,โ said Reggie slowly. โI believe you,โ said Bell, and laughed. โI feel that, sir.โ The inspector and he began to examine the room in detail, opening drawers and cupboards. But except for tobacco and spirits they found no trace of Mr. Rand. Nothing had been broken open, but nothing was locked. โNo keys on the deceased, were there, Mr. Fortune?โ said Bell suddenly. โAnd thatโs a point, too. Very few men go about without any keys.โ โWell, hang it, very few men go about without any money,โ Reggie expostulated. โThe corpse hadnโt a copper. You can take it the way we found him wasnโt the way he used to go about. Heโd do his vest up, for instance.โ โAh,โ said Bell sagely. โYouโve got it all in your head, I must say. Thatโs the thing about you, Mr. Fortune, if you donโt mind my saying so. Youโve always got a whole case in your mind at once; thereโs some of us only see it in bits, so to speak.โ Reggie smiled. He understood that Superintendent Bell was repenting of having lost his temper, and was anxious to make it up. โI never found so good a fellow to work with as you. Bell,โ he said. โYou always keep a level head.โ Superintendent Bell shook it and stared at Reggie. โNot to-day. As you know very well, Mr. Fortune, begging your pardon. Iโve been rattled, and thatโs the truth. Ought to know better at my time of life, to be sure. Iโve seen a good deal, too, you might say. But thereโs some things Iโll never get used to. And that chapโs face upset me.โ Reggie nodded. โYes. I was sayinโ–the only things that make you afraid are the mad things. And the only thing that does you good is to fight โem. Thatโs why Iโve cheered up.โ โThatโs right, sir. Well, now, these facts of yours. Thereโs no papers anywhere. All burnt in that basket. Rather odd there is not so much as a book.โ โI donโt think he was a man of culture, the elusive Rand. But youโve missed something, havenโt you?โ โI dare say,โ Bell grinned. โI generally do when youโre about.โ โThereโs not a sign the murder was done in this room.โ โOh, I saw that all right. But we hadnโt any reason to think it was.โ โNo,โ Reggie sighed, โNo. So tidy. So tidy.โ And they went into Mr. Randโs bedroom. That also was tidy. No trace of a struggle, of blood. That also had no papers, no books, nothing personal but clothes. โSpent a good deal at his tailorโs,โ said Bell, looking into a well-filled wardrobe, and read out the name of a man in Savile Row. โHallo. Theyโre not all the same make. Some cheaper stuff. Why, whatโs the matter with his boots, sir?โ For Reggie was taking up one pair after another. โNothing. All quite satisfactory. About a nine and rather broad. The corpse wore about a nine and had a broad foot. Whatโs that about his clothes? Different tailors? Are the clothes all the same size? All made for the same man?โ Suit after suit was spread out on the bed. They were to the same measure; they all were marked โW. H. Randโ. โQuite satisfactory,โ Reggie purred. โTheyโd fit the corpse all right. Pretty different styles, though. He dressed to look different at different times. He is elusive, is W. H. Rand.โ They began to open drawers. There was the same abundance, the same variety of styles in Mr. Randโs hosiery. โYes, he meant to be elusive,โ Reggie murmured. โAnything from a bookmaker to a churchwarden at a funeral. 16ยฝ collars, though. And thatโs the measure of the corpse. Is all the linen marked?โ It was, and with ink, so that the mark could only be removed by taking out a piece of the stuff. โIf the corpse is Rand, where the devil did his shirt come from?โ said Reggie. โThe slayer unpicked the name from his coat. That was one of the Savile Row suits. But the shirt? Did the slayer bring a change of linen with him? Provident fellow, very provident.โ Bell, on his knees by a chest of drawers, gave a grunt. โLord, hereโs a drawer tumbled. And thatโs the first yet. Itโs new stuff, too–not worn.โ Reggie bent over him and whistled. โNot marked. Same sort of stuff as the corpse wears. And the drawerโs left untidy. The first untidy drawer. Well, well. Everybody breaks down somewhere. He began to be untidy then. When he got to the shirt and the vest.โ He shivered and turned away to the window. โThis damned place looks out on the well,โ he cried out, and turned back and sat down. โBah! The slayer did that, I suppose,โ he muttered, and sprang up. โBelieve in ghosts, you men?โ โGood Lord, sir, donโt you start giving us the jumps!โ said Bell. Reggie was at the dressing-table. โSorry, sorry,โ he said over his shoulder, opening and shutting drawers. Then he turned with something in his hands. โThat wasnโt such a bad shot of mine, Bell. Hereโs a wig. The corpse is uncommon bald. The elusive Rand had lots of brown hair. Hereโs a nice brown wig.โ โThereโs no blood on it!โ Bell cried. โNo. I guess this is Mr. Randโs second best. The one he had on when he was killed wouldnโt look nice now.โ โThat about settles it,โ Bell said slowly. โWe havenโt seen the bathroom,โ said Reggie. Bell looked at him and shrugged. โNot likely to be much there, sir,โ said the inspector. โThere could be,โ said Reggie gravely, and led the way. It was a bathroom of some size but no luxury. Only the sheer necessities of bathing were provided. The lower half of the walls was tiled, the floor of linoleum. Reggie stopped in the doorway. โAnything strike you about it, Bell?โ โLooks new, sir.โ โYes. Nice and clean. Tidy, donโt you know. But thereโs no towels and no sponge. Yet in the bedroom everything was ready for Rand to sleep there to-night–pyjamas, brushes and comb, everything. Didnโt he use towels? Didnโt he have a sponge?โ โWhat do you mean, sir?โ โThis is where the slayer cleared up after the murder. And he took the dirty towels and the bloody sponge away with him. Tidy fellow–always tidy. Just wait, will you?โ And he went into the bathroom on all fours. About the middle of the room he stopped, and pored over the linoleum, and felt it with the tips of his fingers. Then he stood up and went to the window, opened it, and looked out. He examined the sill, and then sat himself on it in the manner of a window cleaner, and began to study the window frame. After a minute or two he pulled out a pocket-knife, and with great care cut a piece of wood. He put this down on the edge of the porcelain basin, and resumed his study. When he had finished he went down again on his hands and knees, and wandered over the floor. He made an exclamation, he lay down on his stomach, and stretched underneath the bath. When he stood up he had in his hand something that glittered. He held it out on his palm to Bell. โWhatโs that, sir? A match-box?โ โIt might be. A gold match-box–provisionally. No name. No initials. On opening–we find inside–a little white powderโ–he smelt it, put a fragment on the tip of his finger and tasted–โwhich is cocaine. Well, come in, Bell, come in. See what you can make of the place. I canโt find a finger-print anywhere.โ He slipped the gold box into his pocket. The two detectives came in, and went over the room even more minutely than he. โThereโs nothing that tells me anything,โ said Bell. Reggie sat on the edge of the bath. โWell, well, I wouldnโt say that,โ he said mildly. โItโs not what we could wish, Bell. But there are points–there are points.โ โAll right, sir. Call Mr. Fortune,โ Bell grinned. โI donโt say itโll ever go into court. But some things we do know. The dead man is Rand, the elusive Rand. He had papers worth burning. He was killed by a powerful man with one or two blows, probably in the sitting-room. After death he was stripped and dressed in the unmarked clothes, probably here. For his body was brought where a mess could be cleaned up, to have the face smashed in. You can see the dents in the linoleum where his head lay. And then he was pitched out by that window. Thereโs a bit of animal matter, probably human tissue, on that scrap of wood. Then the slayer packed up everything that was bloody and went off; and one of โem–the tidy slayer or the elusive Rand–one of โem used cocaine.โ Superintendent Bell shrugged his shoulders. โIt donโt take us very far, sir, does it? It donโt amount to so much. What I should call a baffling case. I mean to say, we donโt seem to get near anybody.โ Reggie grunted, got off the bath, and taking with him his bit of wood, went back to the sitting-room, the two detectives in silent attendance. There he tumbled Mr. Randโs cigarettes out of their box, and put his bit of wood in it. โI suppose thereโs nothing more here,โ he murmured, his eyes wandering round the room. โTry it with the lights on. Switch on, inspector. . . . No. Ah, whatโs that?โ He went to the gas fire and picked out of its lumps of sham coal a scrap of gleaming metal. The next moment he was down on his knees, pulling the fire to pieces. โGive me an envelope, will you?โ he said over his shoulder, and they saw he was collecting scraps of broken glass. โWhat is it, sir?โ โThatโs the bridge of a pair of rimless eyeglasses. And if weโre lucky we can reconstruct the lenses. When Rand was hit, his glasses jumped off and smashed themselves. Thatโs the fourth thing the slayer didnโt think of.โ โYou donโt miss much, Mr. Fortune. Still, it is baffling, very baffling. Even now, we donโt know anybody, so to speak. We donโt even know Rand. What was Rand, would you say? It was worth somebodyโs while to do him in. I suppose he knew something. But what did he know? Who was Rand?โ Reggie was putting on his overcoat. He collected his envelope and his cigarette box and put them away, looking the while with dreamy eyes at Superintendent Bell. โYes,โ he said; โyes, thereโs a lot of unknown quantities about just now. Who the devil was Rand? Well, well! I think that finishes us here. Will you ring for the lift, inspector?โ When he was left alone with Bell, he still gazed dreamily at that plump, stolid face. โYes. Who the devil was Rand? And if you come to that, who the devil is Sandford?โ โGood Lord, Mr. Fortune, do you mean this business is that business?โ โWell, thereโs a lot of unknown quantities about,โ said Reggie. PHASE IV. –THE CHARGE When they talked about the case afterwards, Reggie and Lomas used to agree that it was a piece of pure art. โCrime unstained by any vulgar greed or sentiment; sheer crime; iniquity neat. An impressive thing, Lomas, old dear.โ โSo it is,โ Lomas nodded. โOne meets cases of the kind, but never quite of so pure a style. Upon my soul, Fortune, it has a sort of grandeur–the intensity of purpose, the contempt for ordinary values, the absolute uselessness of it. And it was damned clever.โ Reggie chose a cigar. โGreat work,โ he sighed. โAll the marks of the real great man, if it wasnโt diabolical. He was a great man, but for the hate in him. Just like the devil.โ โYouโre so moral,โ Lomas protested. โDonโt you feel the beauty of it?โ โOf course Iโm moral. Iโm sane. Oh, so sane, Lomas, old thing. Thatโs why I beat the wily criminal. And the devil, God help him.โ โYes, youโre as sane as a boy,โ Lomas nodded. But all that was afterwards. Everything that was done in the case is not (though you may have feared so) written here. We take it in the critical, significant scenes, and the next of them arrived some days after the discovery of the corpse. Lomas was in his room with Superintendent Bell, when Kimball came to them. He was brisker than ever. โAnything new, is there? Have you hit on anything? I came round at once, you see, when I got your note. Delighted to get it. Much better to have all the details cleared up. Well, what is it?โ โIโm afraid Iโve nothing for you myself,โ said Lomas. โThe fact is, Fortune thought you might be able to give him some information on one or two points.โ โI? God bless me, you know all that I know. Where is he, then, if he wants me?โ And Reggie came. โHave you been waitinโ?โ he said, with his airiest manner. โSo sorry. Things are really rollinโ up, you know. New facts by every post. Well, well.โ He dropped into a chair and blinked at the party. โWhat are we all doinโ here? Oh, ah! I remember.โ He smiled and nodded at Kimball. โIt was that fellow I wanted to ask you about.โ Kimball, as was natural, did not relish this sort of thing. โI understood you had something important on hand. Iโve no time to waste.โ โWhy, itโs so jolly hard to understand whatโs important and what isnโt, donโt you know? But it all comes out in the end.โ โYou think so, do you? This is the coal affair?โ โI wouldnโt say that,โ Reggie answered thoughtfully. โNo, I wouldnโt say that. After all, the Coal Ramp isnโt the only pebble on the beach.โ โThen why the devil do you bother me?โ Kimball cried. Reggie sat up suddenly. โBecause this is something you must know.โ He rearranged his coat and slid down into the chair again, and drawled out what he had to say. โSome time the end of last year–point of fact–last December–beinโ quite precise, from fifth to twenty-ninth–in one of the nursinโ-homes in Queen Anne Street–speakinโ strictly, No. 1003–there was a man beinโ operated on by Sir Jenkin Totteridge for an affection of the middle ear. This chap was called Mason. You went to see him several times. Who was Mason?โ Kimball stared at him with singular intensity. Then he swung half round in his chair with one of his characteristic jerky movements, and pulled out his snuffbox. He took a pinch. โYouโve found a mareโs nest,โ he said, with a laugh, and took another pinch. As he spoke, Reggie sprang up with some vehemence, bumping into his arm. โSorry–sorry. A mareโs nest, you say? Now what exactly do you mean by that?โ Kimball stood up too. โI mean youโre wasting my time,โ he said. โThat isnโt what I should call an explanation,โ Reggie murmured. โFor instance, do you mean you didnโt go to see Mason?โ โDonโt letโs have any more of this damned trifling,โ Kimball cried. โCertainly I went to see Mason.โ โGood! Who is he?โ โJack Mason is a fellow I knew in my early days. I went up and he didnโt. Iโve seen little of him this ten years. When he had that operation, poor chap, he wrote to me, and I went to see him for the sake of old times. And what the devil has it to do with Scotland Yard?โ โMason is the man who was found at the Montmorency House flats with his face smashed in.โ โGod bless my soul! Mason! Poor chap, poor chap! But what are you talking about? The papers said that was a man called Rand.โ โMason, otherwise Rand. Rand, otherwise Mason. Who was Mason, and why did somebody kill him?โ Kimball made one of his jerky gestures. โKilled, was he? I thought he fell out of the window.โ โHe was murdered.โ โGood God! Old Jack Mason! Itโs beyond me. I havenโt a notion. You know this upsets me a good deal. Iโve seen little of him for a long time. I can hardly believe heโs gone. But why the devil did he call himself Rand?โ โWhat was he?โ said Reggie sharply. โGod bless me, I couldnโt tell you,โ Kimball laughed. โHe was always very close. An agent in a small way, when I knew him–colonial produce, and so forth. I fancy he went in for building land. Comfortably off always, but he never got on. Very reserved fellow. Loved to be mysterious. No. I suppose it isnโt surprising he used two names.โ โWhy was he murdered?โ said Reggie. โI canโt help you. โThatโs all you can say?โ โYes. Afraid so. Yes. Let me know as soon as you have anything more. Good morning, good morning.โ He bustled out. โA bit hurried, as you might say,โ said Superintendent Bell. Reggie picked up a paper-knife and fell on his knees. He rose with some fragments of white powder on the blade. โI suppose you saw me jog his arm,โ he said. โAnd thatโs cocaine.โ He tumbled Lomasโs paper-clips out of their box and put the stuff in. โDo you remember the first time we had him here, he took snuff? I thought he was rather odd about it and after it, and I went over to the window where he stood to see if I could find any of the stuff he used. But heโd been careful. He is careful, is Kimball.โ โHe is damned careful,โ Lomas agreed, and began to write on a scribbling-pad, looking at each word critically. There was a pause. โBeg your pardon, sir,โ said Superintendent Bell. โYou talked about the murder being a madmanโs job. Do you mean Mr. Kimball, being a dope fiend, is not responsible for his actions?โ โO Lord, no. Kimballโs not a dope fiend. He uses the stuff same like we use whisky. Heโs not a slave to it yet. Say heโs a heavy drinker. Itโs just beginninโ to interfere with his efficiency. Thatโs why he left the box behind in the bathroom; thatโs why heโs a little jerky. But heโs pretty adequate still.โ โYou talked about mad. You were emphatic, as you might say,โ Bell insisted. โWhat might you have in your mind, sir? Mr. Kimballโs generally reckoned uncommon practical.โ โHe isnโt ordinary mad,โ said Reggie. โHe donโt think heโs Julius Cรฆsar or a poached egg. He donโt go out without his trousers. He donโt see red and go it blind. But there is something queer in him. I doubt if theyโre physical, these perversions. Call it a disease of the soul.โ โAh, well, his soul,โ said Bell gravely. โI judge heโs not a Christian man.โ โI wish I did know his creed,โ said Reggie, with equal gravity. โIt would be very instructive.โ Lomas tapped his pencil impatiently. โWeโre not evangelists, weโre policemen,โ he said. โAnd what do we do next?โ โTake out a warrant and arrest Kimball,โ said Reggie carelessly. Bell and Lomas looked at each other and then at him. โI donโt see my way,โ said Lomas. โThe corpse can be identified as Mason. Iโll swear to the operation. Totteridge will swear itโs the man he operated on as Mason. Kimball admits several visits to Mason. In the room from which the corpse was thrown was a gold snuff-box containing cocaine. Shortmanโs will swear that box is their make and exactly similar to a box sold to Kimball. And Kimball takes cocaine. Itโs a good prima facie case.โ โYes. Did you ever see a jury that would hang a man on it?โ โWe do have to be so careful,โ Bell murmured. Reggie laughed. โAnd Kimballโs a Cabinet Minister.โ โDamn it. Fortune, be fair!โ Lomas cried. โIf I had a sound case against a man, he would stand his trial whoever he was. I donโt wink at a fellow whoโs got a pull. You know that. But thereโs a reason in all things. I canโt charge a Cabinet Minister with murder on evidence like this. What is it after all?โ He picked up his scribbling-pad and read: โโThree circumstances–Kimball knew the murdered man; a snuff-box like Kimballโs was found on the scene of the murder; that snuff-box held cocaine, and cocaine is what Kimball uses.โ Circumstantial evidence at its weakest. Neither judge nor jury would look at it. Thereโs no motive, thereโs no explanation of the method of the crime. My dear chap, suppose you were on the other side, youโd tear it to ribands in five minutes.โ โOn the other side?โ Reggie repeated slowly. โIโm not an advocate, Lomas. Iโm always on the same side. Iโm for justice. Iโm for the man whoโs been wronged.โ Lomas stared at him. โYes. Quite–quite. But we generally take all that for granted, donโt we? My dear chap, you mustnโt mind my saying so, but you do preach a good deal over this case.โ โI had noticed the same thing myself,โ said Superintendent Bell, and they both looked curiously at Reggie. โWhy am I so moral? Because the thingโs so damned immoral,โ said Reggie vehemently. โWhatโs most crime? Human. Human greed, human lust, human hostility. But this is diabolical. Sheer evil for evilโs sake. Lomas, Iโll swear, when we have it all out, weโll find that it still looks unreasonable, futile, pure passion for wrong.โ โMeaning Mr. Kimball mad. You do come back to that, sir,โ Bell said. โNot legally mad. Probably not medically mad. I mean he has the devil in him.โ โReally, my dear Fortune, you do surprise me,โ Lomas said. โI perceive that in all things you are too superstitious. The right honourable gentleman hath a devil! It isnโt done, you know. This is the twentieth century. And youโre a scientific man. Consider your reputation–and mine, if you donโt mind. What the devil are we to do? Try exorcism?โ โYou wonโt charge Kimball?โ Lomas signified an impatient negative. โVery well. You say you donโt let a man off because heโs in the Government. Suppose you had a prima facie case like this against a nobody. Suppose I brought you as good grounds for arresting Sandford. Wouldnโt you have him in the dock? On your conscience now!โ Again Bell and Lomas consulted each otherโs faces. โI wonder why you drag in Sandford?โ said Lomas slowly. โHeโs in it all right. I asked you a question.โ โWell, if you insist. One might charge a man on a prima facie case, to hear his defence.โ Reggie struck his hand on the table. โThere it is! A man who is nobody–he can stand trial. Not a Cabinet Minister. Oh dear, no!โ โMy dear fellow, the world is what it is. You know very well that if I wanted to charge Kimball on this evidence it would be turned down. I couldnโt force the issue without a stronger case. Do have some sense of the practical.โ Reggie smiled. โIโm not blaming you. I only want to rub it in.โ โThanks very much. We are to suspect Kimball, I suppose.โ โLike the devil, and watch him.โ โI see. Yes, I think we shall be quite justified in watching Mr. Kimball. But, my dear fellow, you are rather odd this morning. If you want Kimball watched, why the devil do you handle him so violently? You know, you almost accused him of the murder. Anything more likely to put him on his guard I canโt imagine.โ โYes, yes. I think I made him jump,โ said Reggie, with satisfaction. โQuite intentional, Lomas, old thing. Heโs on his guard all right. But he donโt know how little we know. I meant to put him in a funk. I want to see what a funk will make him do.โ Lomas looked at him steadily. โFor a very moral man,โ he said, โyou have a good deal of the devil about you.โ โI think I ought to say, Mr. Fortune,โ said Bell, โweโve all been in a hurry to judge Mr. Kimball. I said things myself. And I do say heโs not a Christian man–an unbeliever, Iโm afraid. But I had ought to say too, he lives a very clean life. Always has. Temperate, very quiet style, a thorough good master, generous to his employees, and always ready to come down handsome for a good cause.โ โWho is Kimball, Bell?โ said Reggie quietly. โSir?โ Bell stared. โHeโs always been known, sir. Started in Liverpool on the Cotton Exchange. Went into rubber. Came to London. Thatโs his career. All quite open and straight.โ โAnd we donโt know a damned thing about him.โ โWell, really, Fortune, youโre rather exacting. Youโre after his soul, I suppose,โ said Lomas, with something like a sneer. โWho is Kimball?โ Reggie insisted. โThereโs two unknown quantities. Who is Kimball? Who is Sandford?โ โIโm afraid you want the Day of Judgment, my dear fellow,โ said Lomas. โโUnto whom all hearts are open, all desires knownโ–that sort of thing. Well, we canโt ring up the Recording Angel from here. Itโs a trunk call.โ โI know youโre worldly. But you might know your world. Look about, Lomas, old thing. Iโve been looking about.โ He took out a newspaper cutting. Lomas read: โโSANDFORD. Any one who can give any information about Mrs. Ellen Edith Sandford, resident Llanfairfechan from 1882-1900, formerly of Lancashire, is urgently begged to communicate with XYZ.โโ He looked up. โOf Lancashire? Thatโs a guess?โ Reggie nodded. โNorth Wales is mostly Lancashire people.โ โWell, thereโs no harm in it. Do you want us to advertise for Kimballโs wet nurse?โ โAnd his sisters and his cousins and his aunts. Yes. All in good time. But watch him first. Watch them both.โ He nodded, and sauntered out. Lomas lit a cigarette and pushed the box to Bell. Both men smoked a minute in silence. Then Lomas said, โThatโs a damned clever fellow. Bell.โ โYes, sir.โ โIโve often thought he was too clever by half. But, damme, I donโt remember thinking he was uncanny before.โ โI have noticed it,โ said Bell diffidently, โin a manner of speaking. Of course he does know a lot, does Mr. Fortune, a rare lot of stuff. But thatโs natural, as were. What upsets you is the sort of way he feels men. Itโs as if he had senses you havenโt got. Very strange the way he knows men.โ PHASE V.–THE REPLY Their admiration for Reggie Fortune received a shock the next day. It came by telephone. Just after his late and lazy breakfast, Reggie was rung up from Scotland Yard. Bell spoke. Mr. Lomas thought that Mr. Fortune would like to know that Sandford had gone down to Mr. Kimballโs place. Reggie answered, โOh, Peter!โ In a quarter of an hour he was in Lomasโs room asking for confirmation. There was no doubt. The detective watching Sandfordโs chambers had followed him to Victoria, and heard him take a ticket to Alwynstow, Kimballโs place, and was gone with him. โSo thatโs the next move,โ said Lomas, โand if you can tell me what it means I shall be obliged to you.โ Reggie dropped his hand on the table. โNot a guess,โ he said. โHow can a man guess? We donโt even know how much they know, or whether one knows what the other knows. I could fancy Sandford–whatโs the use? โโSo runs my dream. But what am I? An infant crying in the night, An infant crying for the light, And with no language but a cry.โ Same like you, Lomas.โ โI notice you are not so much the moral sage this morning,โ Lomas said sourly. โLomas, dear, donโt be unkind. I canโt abear it. I wish to God I was down there!โ โDamn it, weโve got two men down there now–one on Sandford, one on Kimball. Theyโll be knocking their heads together. What the devil do you think you could do?โ โNothing. Lord, donโt I know it? Nothing. Thatโs what makes me peevish.โ Lomas said severely that he had work to do, and Reggie left him, promising to come back and take him out to lunch, which he received as if it were a threat. But when Reggie did come back, Superintendent Bell was in the room and Lomas listening to the telephone. Bell looked oddly at Reggie. Lomas raised a blank and pallid face from the receiver. โSandford has murdered Kimball,โ he said. โOh, Peter! I wonder if heโs brought it off,โ Reggie murmured. โHas he brought it off after all?โ He bit his lip. Lomas was talking into the telephone. Asking for details, giving instructions. โHold the line. Cut that out,โ said Reggie. โWeโll go down, Lomas, please. Tell your chap to meet us at the house. My carโs here.โ Lomas gave the orders and rang off. โIโll have to go, I suppose,โ he agreed. โOne doesnโt kill Cabinet Ministers every day. Moreโs the pity. Damn the case! Thereโs nothing in it, though, Fortune. Sandford was walking up to the house. He met Kimball in the lane. They were crossing the ornamental water in the park when they had a quarrel. Kimball was thrown in. He called out, โYou scoundrel, you have murdered me.โ When they got Kimball out he was dead. Thatโs all. Iโm afraid it washes your stuff about Kimball right out.โ โWell, well,โ Reggie drawled, looking through his eyelashes. โWhere is he that knows, Lomas? From the great deep to the great deep he goes, Lomas. Weโll get on.โ โWhat about lunch?โ โDamn lunch!โ said Reggie, and went out. The other two, who liked food far less than he but could not go without it, lingered to collect sandwiches, and found him chafing in the driverโs seat. They exchanged looks of horror. โIโm too old for Mr. Fortuneโs driving, and thatโs a fact,โ Bell mumbled. โWhen I got out alive after that day at Woking I swore Iโd never go again,โ said Lomas. But they quailed before Reggieโs virulent politeness when he asked them if they would please get in. . . . It is in the evidence of Lomas that they only slowed once, when an old lady dropped her handkerchief in the middle of Croydon. He is in conflict with the statement of Bell as to the most awful moment. For he selects the episode of the traction-engine with trucks at the Alwynstow cross-roads, and Bell chooses the affair of the motor-bus and the caravan at Merstham. They agree that they arrived at Alwynstow Park in a cold sweat. A detective came out on the steps to meet them, and watched reverently Bell and Lomas helping each other out. Reggie ran up to him. โWhich are you?โ โBeg pardon, sir? Oh, Iโm Hall. I had Mr. Kimball. It was Parker had Mr. Sandford.โ He turned to Lomas. โGood morning, sir. I tried to get you on the telephone, but they said you were on your way down.โ โOh, youโve been on the telephone too?โ โWhen I heard what Parkerโs information was I rung up quick, sir. Itโs a very queer business, sir.โ โWhere is Parker? And whereโs Sandford? I suppose youโve arrested him?โ โWell, no, sir. Not strictly speaking. We detained him pending instructions.โ โDamme, youโre very careful. Parker saw the murder committed, didnโt he?โ โWell, sir, if I may say so, thatโs drawing conclusions. I donโt understand Parker would go as far as that.โ โGood Gad!โ said Lomas. โWhere the devil is Parker?โ โKeeping Mr. Sandford under observation, sir, according to instructions. Beg your pardon, sir. Iโve heard his story, and I quite agree it all happened like that. But you havenโt heard mine.โ Lomas looked round him. The house was too near. โWeโll walk on the lawn,โ he announced. โNow then. Parker says the two men quarrelled on the bridge over the lake and Kimball was thrown in, and as he fell he called out, โYou scoundrel, youโve murdered me!โ And you say that isnโt murder.โ โDid Serjeant Parker say โthrown inโ?โ said Hall, with surprise in his face and his voice. โI believe he didnโt,โ said Lomas slowly. โNo. He said Kimball was thrown off, and as he fell in he called out.โ โThatโs right, sir,โ said Hall heartily. โBut I reckon there is more to it than that. When Mr. Kimball came out this morning I was waiting for him in the park. It was rather touch and go, because he had some men at work above the lake. He went down that way to the station. As he was crossing the bridge he tried the rails. Itโs very odd, sir, but a bit of the bar–itโs a sort of rustic stuff–was that loose it came off in his hand. He put it back and went on. He met Mr. Sandford in the road and turned back with him. I had to get out of the way quick. I judged they were coming back to the house, so I did a run and dropped over the fence, and was away on the other side of the lake. Then I went into the rhododendrons and waited for them to pass. You see, sir, Parker had to keep well out of sight behind, and I was as near as makes no matter. Well, if youโll believe me, it was Mr. Kimball made the quarrel, and all in a minute he made it. One minute they were walking quite friendly, the next he whips round on Mr. Sandford and he called him a bad name. I couldnโt hear all, he was talking so quick, but there was ugly words in it. Then he made to strike Mr. Sandford, and Mr. Sandford closed and chucked him back, and into the water he went just where that same rail that he looked at was loose. But itโs true enough as he fell he called out, โYou scoundrel, youโve murdered me!โโ โWell, well. So he didnโt bring it off after all,โ said Reggie. โWe trumped his last card.โ โSir?โ said the detective. โYou were the trump,โ said Reggie. โOh, my aunt, I feel much better! I wonder if thereโs any lunch in these parts? What about it, Lomas, old thing?โ โIโm damned if I understand,โ said Lomas. โI want Sandford. Letโs go up to the house.โ They found Sandford sitting in an easy-chair in the dead manโs library. He was reading; to Reggieโs ineffable admiration he was reading a book by Mr. Sidney Webb on the history of trade unions. Serjeant Parker, the detective, made himself uncomfortable at the table and pored over his notebook. โAll right, all right, Parker. Quite understood.โ Lomas waved him away. โGood afternoon, Mr. Sandford. Sorry to detain you. Most unfortunate affair.โ โGood afternoon. It is not necessary to apologize,โ said Sandford, completely himself. โI realize that the police must require my account of the affair. Yesterday afternoon Mr. Kimball rang me up at my rooms. I did not learn from where he was speaking. He said that my affair–that was his phrase–my affair had taken a new turn, and he wished me to come and see him here this morning. He named the train by which I was to travel. I thought it strange that he should bring me into the country, but I had no valid ground of objection. Accordingly I came this morning. I thought it strange that he sent no conveyance to meet me. I started to walk to the house. In the lane he met me walking. He talked of indifferent things in a rather broken manner, I thought, but that was common with him, and yet I was surprised he did not come to the point. He was, however, quite friendly until we reached the bridge over the lake. Then without any warning or reason he turned upon me and was violently abusive. His language was vulgar and even filthy. He attempted to strike me, and I defended myself. I was, in fact, a good deal alarmed, for he was, as you know, much bigger and heavier than I, and he was in a frenzy of rage. To my surprise, I may say my relief, I was able to resist him. I pushed him off–really, you know, it seemed quite easy–and the hand-rail behind him gave way and he fell into the water. As he fell he called out, โYou scoundrel, you have murdered me!โ I can only suppose he was not responsible for his actions.โ โMuch obliged,โ said Lomas. โIโm afraid youโve had a distressing time.โ โIt has been a remarkable experience,โ said Sandford. โMay I ask if there is any reason why I should not return to town?โ โNo, no.โ Lomas looked at him queerly. โYou have an uncommon cool head. Theyโll want your evidence at the inquest, of course. But itโs fair to say I quite accept your story.โ โI am obliged to you,โ said Sandford, in a tone of surprise, as if he could not conceive that any one should not. โI am told there is a train at 3.35. Good afternoon.โ โOne moment. One moment,โ said Reggie. โDo you know of any reason in the world Kimball had to hate you?โ โCertainly not,โ said Sandford, in offended dignity. โOur relations were short and wholly official. I conceive that he had no reason to complain of my services.โ โAnd yet he meant to murder you or have you hanged for his murder.โ โIf he did, I can only suppose that he was out of his mind.โ โWas he out of his mind when he worked the Coal Ramp to ruin you?โ โDear me,โ said Sandford, โdo you really suggest, sir, that Mr. Kimball was responsible for that scandalous piece of finance?โ โWho else?โ โBut really–you startle me. That is to say, as a Minister he betrayed the secrets of the department?โ โWell, he didnโt stick at a trifle, did he?โ โThe poor fellow must have been mad,โ said Sandford, with grave sympathy. โYes, yes. But why was he mad? Why did he hate you? My dear chap, do search your memory. Can you think of any sort of connection between Kimball and you?โ โI never heard of him till he became prominent in the House. I never saw him till he came into the office. Our relations were always perfectly correct. No, I can only suppose that he was insane. Is it any use to try to discover reasons for the antipathies of madness? I have not studied the subject, but it seems obvious that they must be irrational. I am sorry I cannot help your investigations. I believe I had better catch my train. Good afternoon.โ โYou know, I begin to like that fellow. Heโs so damned honest,โ said Reggie. โCold-blooded fish,โ said Lomas. โBegad, he donโt know how near he was to dead. Did you ever hear anything less plausible than that yarn of his? If we didnโt know it was true we wouldnโt believe a word of it. Good God, suppose Hall hadnโt been down here watching! We should have had the outside facts. Sandford, who had been accused and suspended by Kimball, suddenly comes down to Kimballโs house, meets him, quarrels with him, and throws him into the lake.โ โAnd the men working in the park a little way off just saw the struggle, just heard Kimball call out that he was murdered,โ said Reggie. โDonโt forget the men. Theyโre a most interesting touch. He always thought of everything, did Mr. Kimball. He had them there, just the right distance for the evidence he wanted. I donโt know if you see the full significance of those men working in the park.โ Lomas sat down. โI donโt mind owning I thought they were accidental.โ โMy dear chap! Oh, my dear chap, there was very little accidental in the vicinity of the late Kimball. They were there to give evidence that would hang Sandford. And that proves Kimball didnโt mean to throw Sandford into the lake. He wanted to be thrown in, he wanted to be killed, and get Sandford hanged for it.โ โI suppose so,โ Lomas agreed. โItโs a case thatโs happened before. And you couldnโt always say the creatures that planned it were mad.โ โNot legally mad. Not medically mad. I always said that. No, I donโt know that itโs even very strange. Quite a lot of people would be ready to die if they could get their enemies killed by their death. Only they donโt see their way. But he was an able fellow, the late Kimball.โ โAble! I should say so. If our men hadnโt been here, Sandford would have been as good as hanged. Nobody could have believed his story. Why did he come here? There could be no evidence of Kimballโs telephone call. What did Sandford come for? Thereโs no reasonable reason. Kimball put him under a cloud, he was furious, he meant murder, and did it. The jury wouldnโt leave the box.โ โThatโs right, sir,โ said Superintendent Bell. โIf it wasnโt for Mr. Fortune heโd be down and out. What you might call a rarity in our work, that is, to save a man from a charge of murder before it comes along.โ โHow do you mean?โ Reggie seemed to come back from other thoughts. โOh, because I told you to have Kimball watched. Well, it was pretty clear he wasnโt the kind to go about without a chaperon. We took that trick. I suppose Kimballโs thinking, wherever he is, that we won the game. But I wouldnโt say that–I wouldnโt say that. Why did he hate Sandford?โ โMy dear fellow, the man was mad.โ โYou mean he didnโt like the way Sandford does his hair–or he thought Sandford was a German spy. No. He wasnโt that kind of mad. Thereโs something we donโt know, Lomas, old thing. I dare say itโs crazy enough. Iโll bet you my favourite shirt itโs something the ordinary sane man feels.โ โIf we are to go looking for something crazy which sane men feel!โ said Lomas. โSpeakinโ broadly, all the human emotions,โ said Reggie. โDidnโt you ever hate a man because he married a girl who was pretty? Donโt be so godlike.โ โThey werenโt either of them married, sir,โ said Bell, in grave surprise. โHow do you know?โ Reggie snapped. โNo, I donโt suppose they were. But we donโt know. We donโt know anything. Thatโs why I say we havenโt won the game. Well, well. For Godโs sake letโs have some food! There was a modest pub in the village. I saw it when you let off your futile scream at the traction-engine. Letโs go. I donโt seem to want to eat Kimballโs grub.โ PHASE VI.–JANE BROWN Two or three days after Lomas received an invitation to lunch in Wimpole Street. โI owe you one,โ Reggie wrote. โI owe myself one. I want to forget the high tea of Alwynstow. Do you remember the pickles? And the bacon? What had that pig been doing? A neurasthenic, I fear. A student of the Nematoda.โ So naturally when Lomas came his first question was what may Nematoda be. โNever mind,โ Reggie sighed. โItโs a painful subject. A disgusting subject. Same like what we make our living by. They are among the criminals of animal life. Real bad eggs. A sad world, Lomas, old thing. Letโs forget all about crime.โ They did. For an hour and a half. At the end of which Lomas said dreamily, โYouโre a remarkable fellow, Fortune. I donโt know how you can retain any brain. You do yourself so well. Yes, most seductive habit of life. I meant to say something when I came. What was it? I believe you have talked of everything else in creation. Ah, yes, did you ever hear of the Kimball case? Well, I think we have combed it all out.โ โHave you, though?โ Reggie sat up. โYes. Weโve been dealing with a stockbroker or two. Iโm really afraid there was a little bullying. We hinted that there might be developments about a certain murder case. And two of them began to talk. Weโve got Rand-Masonโs past.โ โOh, that!โ Reggie said. โQuite obvious, wasnโt it? Kimball meant to use this coal scheme to ruin Sandford. He sent Mason, who had probably been his go-between in other financial things, to give the brokers the tip. It was also Rand-Mason who paid the money into Sandfordโs account. Remember the stout man in glasses. Then probably he struck for better pay or they had a row. Anyway, he threatened to give the show away. Kimball couldnโt trust him any more. Darenโt trust him. So he wiped Rand-Mason out. Is that right, sir?โ โIโm not omniscient myself. But certainly Rand-Mason was the man who put the brokers on to it. There is not much doubt he went to Sandfordโs bank. By the way, Kimball had several big sticks. His valet says he liked weight.โ โI dare say. Had Kimball any papers?โ โNot a line that throws light on this. As you know everything, Iโd like to hear why Kimball tried this murder plan last instead of first?โ โHow can you be so unkind, Lomas? I keep telling you I donโt know anything. I come and shout it in your ear. I donโt know the thing that really matters. Who was Kimball? Who is Sandford? What is he that Kimball couldnโt bear him? I said that at the beginning. I say it now in italics. Good Lord, you can hear Kimball laughing at us!โ โDonโt be uncanny.โ โWell, Iโm not really sure he is laughing at us. Wait a while. But why did Kimball try murder last instead of first? Oh, thatโs easy. He was an epicure in hate! He didnโt want mere blood. He wanted the beggar to suffer–to be ruined, not just dead. Hence he went to break Sandford. Then Rand-Mason complicated the affair. Kimball had a murder on his back and I scared him. He thought we had enough to convict him or that weโd get it. He said to himself, โIโm for it, anyway. Iโll have to die. Well, why shouldnโt my death hang Sandford?โ And he played that last card.โ โI suppose so,โ Lomas agreed. โIn a way itโs all quite rational, isnโt it?โ โI always said it would be. Grant that it was worth anything to ruin Sandford and Kimballโs a most efficient fellow. But why was it worth anything to ruin Sandford?โ โAh, God knows,โ said Lomas gravely. โYes. I wonder if Jane Brown does.โ He handed Lomas a letter. โDEAR SIR,–Your advertisement for information about Mrs. Ellen Edith Sandford. I have some which is at your service if you can satisfy me why you want it.–Yours truly, JANE BROWN.โ โI should say Jane is a character,โ said Lomas. โYes, she allured me. I told her who I was and she said sheโd come to tea.โ She kept her appointment. Reggie found himself facing a large young woman. In her construction nature had been very happy. She had decorated its work with admirable art. She was physically in the grand style, but she had a merry eye, and her clothes were not only charming but of a sophisticated elegance. Reggie, there is no doubt, stared at her for a moment and a half. โMiss–Jane–Brown,โ he said slowly. โI havenโt brought my godfathers and godmothers, Mr. Fortune,โ she smiled. โBut I am Jane Brown really. I always felt I couldnโt live up to it. I see you know me.โ โIf seeing were knowing, I should know Miss Joan Amber very well. Itโs delightful to be able to thank her for the real Rosalind–all the Rosalind there is.โ She made him a curtsy. โIโm lucky. I didnโt think youโd be like this. I expected an old man with glasses and—-โ โThis,โ said Reggie maliciously–โthis is the Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department–Mr. Lomas.โ Lomas let his eyeglass fall. โI also am young enough to go to the theatre. I shall go on being young so long as Miss Amber is acting.โ โMay I sit down?โ said she pathetically. โYouโre rather overwhelming. I thought it would be terrific and severe and suspicious. But you know you are bland–simply bland.โ โThis is your fault, Lomas,โ said Reggie severely. โI have often been called flippant and even futile, but never bland before–never bland.โ โIt is a tribute to your maturity, my dear Fortune.โ Her golden eyes sent a glance at Reggie. โMature!โ she said. โI suppose you are real? Oh, letโs be serious. I am Jane Brown, you know. Amber–of course I had to have another name for the stage–Amber because of my hair.โ She touched it. โAnd your eyes,โ said Reggie. โNever mind,โ said she, with another glance, but the gaiety had gone out of them. โMy father was a doctor in Liverpool. He is worth twenty thousand of me, and he never made enough to live on. A poor middle-class practice, the work wore him out by the time he was fifty, and now heโs an invalid in Devonshire. He canโt walk upstairs even–heart, you know. And he simply pines to work. Oh, I know this doesnโt matter to you, but I canโt forget it. If only people were paid what theyโre worth! I beg your pardon. This isnโt business-like. Well, he was the doctor the Kimball family went to. Old Mr. Kimball was a clerk, and the son, the man who was drowned the other day, began like that too. The old people died about the time young Mr. Kimball and his sister grew up. She kept house for her brother. He began as a broker and got on. In a way–my father always says that–in a way he was devoted to her. Nothing he could pay for was too good for her. He always wanted her with him. But he made awful demands on her. She mustnโt have any interests of her own. She mustnโt make any friends. Like some men are with their wives, you know. Horrible, isnโt it?โ She turned upon Reggie. โCommon form of selfishness. Passing into mania. Not only male, you know. Some mothers are like that.โ โYes, I know they are. But itโs worst with men and their wives.โ โThe wife canโt grow up. The children can,โ Reggie agreed. โIt is exactly that,โ said she eagerly. โYou understand. Oh, well, this isnโt business-like either. Ellen Kimball fell in love. He was just an ordinary sort of man, a clerk of some sort–Sandford was his name. Horace Kimball was furious. My father says Sandford was nothing in particular. There was no special reason why she should marry him or why she shouldnโt. He was insignificant.โ โHeredity.โ Reggie nodded to Lomas. โI beg your pardon?โ โYour father understood men. Miss Amber.โ โIndeed he does. Of course Horace Kimball did the absurd thing, said she mustnโt marry, abused Sandford, and so on, and of course that made her marry. Unfortunately–this really seems to be the only thing against her–unfortunately she was married in a sly, secret sort of way. She didnโt tell her brother sheโd made up her mind, or when the marriage was to be or anything. She simply slunk out of his house and left him to find out. I suppose he had terrified her, poor thing, or his bullying made her sullen,โ said Miss Amber. โIt was rather feeble of her. Only one hates to blame her. Her brother was furious. My father says that he never saw such a strange case of a man holding down a passionate rage. He thought at one time that Horace Kimball would have gone mad. The thing seemed like an obsession. Doesnโt it seem paltry? A man wild with temper because he was jealous of his sister marrying!โ โMost jealousy is paltry.โ Lomas shrugged. โJealous of his sister marrying,โ Reggie repeated. โYes, I dare say seven men in ten are. Common human emotion. Commonest in the form of mothers hating their sonsโ wives, Miss Amber. Still, men do their bit. Fathers proverbially object to daughters marrying. Brothers–well, thereโs quite a lot of folklore about brothers killing their sistersโ lovers. Yes, common human emotion.โ โI think jealousy is simply loathsome,โ said Miss Amber, with a quiver of her admirable nose. โWell, itโs fair to say Horace Kimball seemed to get over the worst of his. He just lost himself in his business, my father says. He wouldnโt see his sister again, not even when her child was born (it was a boy). He simply swept her out of his life. Even when Sandford got into trouble, he wouldnโt hear of helping her. My father quarrelled with him over that. He said to my father, โSheโs made her bed, and they can all die in itโ. Oh, I know heโs dead, and one oughtnโt to say things. But I call that simply devilish.โ โYes, I believe in the devil too,โ said Reggie. โDevilish! Youโre exactly right, Miss Amber. Sandford got into trouble, did he? What was that?โ โIt was some scandal about his business. A breach of trust in some way. His employers didnโt prosecute, but they dismissed him in disgrace. My father doesnโt remember the details. It was giving away some business secrets.โ Reggie looked at Lomas. โThatโs very interesting,โ he said. โInteresting! Poor people, it was misery for them. Sandford was ruined. My father says he never really tried to make a fresh start. He just died because he didnโt want to go on living. And his wife broke her heart over it. She seemed like a woman frightened out of her senses, my father says. She got it into her head that it was all her brotherโs fault, that he had planned the whole thing. It was absurd, of course, but can you wonder?โ โI donโt wonder,โ said Reggie. โShe was deadly afraid of her brother. She made up her mind that he would be the death of her baby too. So she ran away from Liverpool and hid in a little village in North Wales, Llanfairfechan, and nobody knew where she had gone. She had a little money of her own, and her husband had been well insured. She had just enough, and she lived quite alone in a cottage off the road to the mountains, and there she died. My father says her son did rather well. He got scholarships to Oxford, and my father fancies he went into the Civil Service, but he lost sight of him after the mother died.โ โIโm infinitely obliged to you. Miss Amber,โ said Reggie, and rang for tea. โOh, no, donโt! I always thought that poor womanโs story was too miserably sad. I donโt know why you wanted it–no, no, Iโm not asking–but if it could set anything right, or do anybody any good, it seems somehow to make it better. It wouldnโt be so uselessly cruel.โ โOver the past the gods themselves have no power,โ Reggie said. โWe canโt help her, poor soul. I dare say itโs something to her to know that her son is safe and making good–in spite of all the devilry.โ โSomething to her–of course it is!โ said Miss Amber, and looked divine. โThereโs that,โ said Reggie, watching her. โYou wonโt mind my saying professionally that you have been very useful. Miss Amber,โ said Lomas. โYou have cleared up what was a very tiresome mystery. I was being bothered. Thatโs a serious disturbance of the machinery of Empire.โ He succeeded, as he desired, in setting the conversation to a lighter tune. He made Miss Amberโs eyes again merry. He did not prevent Reggie from looking at her. โYou must promise me another opportunity to thank you,โ he said, as she was going. โDear me, I thought you had been doing nothing else,โ said she demurely, and looked at the table and made a face. โOh, Mr. Fortune, what, what a tea! I leave all my reputation behind me. Men hate to see women eat, donโt they? But do men always make teas like this?โ โIโve a simple mind. I live the simple life.โ She looked at him fairly. โYou said simple. Do you know how I feel? I feel as if I hadnโt a secret left all my own,โ and she swept away. He was a long time gone letting her out. โAnd thatโs that,โ Reggie said when he came back. โReally?โ Lomas was dim behind cigar smoke. โAll quite natural now, isnโt it?โ โMy dear fellow, you knew it all and you knew it right. You told me so. Kamerad, kamerad.โ Reggie lit his pipe. โJealously, hate, mania. He broke the man the girl married. Curious that affair, wasnโt it? Even the great criminal, he runs in a groove, he keeps to one kind of crime. The same dodge for the son that he used for the father. Then either he lost track of the mother or he preferred to hurt her through the son. He was an epicure in his little pleasures. The son came along. I dare say Kimball took that department because the son was in it. And then he was ready to smash everything for the sake of his hate–damage his own career, do a filthy murder, die himself, if he could torture his sisterโs child. Yes. The devil is with power, Lomas.โ โI fancy you annoy him a little, my dear Fortune. But how can you believe in the devil? You have just seen–her.โ Reggie smiled. โShe is a woman, isnโt she?โ โI think you might act on that theory. When is it to be?โ โLomas, old thing, youโre not only bland, youโre obvious. Which is much worse.โ As the final pieces of the puzzle fall into place, Reggie Fortune emerges once again as the master of deduction, his quiet brilliance shining through the fog of mystery. The case is closed, but the echoes of its twists and turns linger, a testament to the complexity of the human heart. Thank you for joining us on this journey through H. C. Bailey’s ‘Call Mr. Fortune.’ If you enjoyed this tale of intrigue and insight, don’t forget to subscribe to Storytime Haven for more captivating stories. Until next time, keep your wits sharp and your curiosity alive.
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