Complete Works of E W Hornung
Page 255
“How can I, Rachel?” her husband asked quietly, indeed gently, yet with little promise of acquiescence in his tone. “I am not a detective, after all.”
But that was added for the sake of adding something, and was enough to prove Steel ill at ease, to the wife who knew him as no man ever had.
“A detective, no!” said she, readily enough. “But you are a rich man; you could employ detectives; you could clear your wife, if you liked.”
“Rachel, you know very well that you are cleared already.”
“That is your answer, then!” she cried scornfully, and snatched her eyes from him at last, without waiting for a denial. She was done with him, her face said plainly; he looked at her a moment, then turned aside with a shrug.
But Rachel’s eyes went swiftly round the room; they alighted for an instant upon Morna Woodgate, leaning forward upon the sofa where they had sat together, eager, enthusiastic, but impotent as a woman must be; they passed over the vicar, looking stolid as usual, and more than a little puzzled; but at last they rested on Langholm’s thin, stooping figure, with untidy head thrust forward towards her, and a light in his dreamy eyes that kindled a new light in her own.
“You, Mr. Langholm!” cried Rachel, taking a quick, short step in his direction. “You, with your plots and your problems that nobody can solve; don’t you think you could unravel this one for me?”
Her eyes were radiant now, and their radiance all for him. Langholm felt the heart swimming in his body, the brain in his head. A couple of long-legged strides to meet her nine-tenths of the way, and he had taken Rachel’s hand before her husband and her friends.
“Before God,” said Langholm, “I’ll try!”
Their hands met only to part. There was a sardonic laugh from Rachel’s husband.
“Do you forbid me?” demanded Langholm, turning upon him.
“Far from it,” said Steel. “I shall be most interested to see you go to work.”
“Is that a challenge?”
The two men faced each other, while the third man and the women looked on. It had sounded like a challenge to all but the vicar, though neither of the others had had time to think so before they heard the word and recognized its justice.
“If you like,” said Steel, indifferently.
“I accept it as such,” rejoined Langholm, dogging the other with his eyes. “And find him I will — the guilty man — if I never write another line — and if the villain is still alive!”
CHAPTER XX
MORE HASTE
There are eminent men of action who can acquit themselves with equal credit upon the little field of letters, as some of the very best books of late years go to prove. The man of letters, on the other hand, capable of cutting a respectable figure in action, is, one fears, a much rarer type. Langholm was essentially a man of letters. He was at his best among his roses and his books, at his worst in unforeseen collision with the rougher realities of life. But give him time, and he was not the man to run away because his equipment for battle was as short as his confidence in himself; and perhaps such courage as he possessed was not less courageous for the crust of cowardice (mostly moral) through which it always had to break. Langholm had one other qualification for the quest to which he had committed himself, but for which he was as thoroughly unsuited by temperament as by the whole tenor of his solitary life. In addition to an ingenious imagination (a quality with its own defects, as the sequel will show), he had that capacity for taking pains which has no disadvantageous side, though in Langholm’s case, for one, it was certainly not a synonym for genius.
It was 3.45 on the Monday afternoon when he alighted at King’s Cross, having caught the 9.30 from Northborough after an early adieu to William Allen Richardson and the rest. Langholm made sure of the time before getting into his hansom at the terminus.
“Drive hard,” he said, “to the Capital and Counties Bank in Oxford Street.”
And he was there some minutes before the hour.
“I want to know my exact balance, if it is not too much trouble to look it up before you close.”
A slip of paper was soon put into Langholm’s hand, and at a glance he flushed to the hat with pleasure and surprise, and so regained his cab. “The Cadogan Hotel, in Sloane Street,” he cried through the trap; “and there’s no hurry, you can go your own pace.”
Nor was there any further anxiety in Langholm’s heart. His balance was a clear hundred more than he had expected to find it, and his whole soul sang the praises of a country life. Unbusinesslike and unmethodical as he was, in everything but the preparation of MS., such a discovery could never have been made in town, where Langholm’s expenditure had marched arm-in-arm with his modest earnings.
“And it can again,” he said recklessly to himself, as he decided on the best hotel in the field of his investigations, instead of lodgings; “thank God, I have enough to run this racket till the end of the year at least! If I can’t strike the trail by then—”
He lapsed into dear reminiscence and dearer daydreams, their common scene some two hundred miles north; but to realize his lapse was to recover from it promptly. Langholm glanced at himself in the little mirror. His was an honest face, and it was an honest part that he must play, or none at all. He leaned over the apron and interested himself in the London life that was so familiar to him still. It was as though he had not been absent above a day, yet his perceptions were sharpened by his very absence of so many weeks. The wood pavement gave off a strong but not unpleasant scent in the heavy August heat; it was positively dear to the old Londoner’s nostrils. The further he drove upon his southwesterly course, the emptier were the well-known thoroughfares. St. James’s Street might have been closed to traffic; the clubs in Pall Mall were mostly shut. On the footways strolled the folk whom one only sees there in August and September, the entire families from the country, the less affluent American, guide book in hand. Here and there was a perennial type, the pale actor with soft hat and blue-black chin, the ragged sloucher from park to park. Langholm could have foregathered with one and all, such was the strange fascination of the town for one who was twice the man among his northern roses. But that is the kind of mistress that London is to those who have once felt her spell; you may forget her by the year, but the spell lies lurking in the first whiff of the wood pavement, the first flutter of the evening paper on the curb; and even in the cab you wonder how you have borne existence elsewhere.
The hotel was very empty, and Langholm found not only the best of rooms at his disposal, but that flattering quality of attention which awaits the first comer when few come at all. He refreshed himself with tea and a bath, and then set out to reconnoitre the scene of the already half-forgotten murder. He had a vague though sanguine notion that his imaginative intuition might at once perceive some possibility which had never dawned upon the academic intelligence of the police.
Of course he remembered the name of the street, and it was easily found. Nor had Langholm any difficulty in discovering the house, though he had forgotten the number. There were very few houses in the street, and only one of them was empty and to let. It was plastered with the bills of various agents, and Langholm noted down the nearest of these, whose office was in King’s Road. He would get an order to view the house, and would explore every inch of it that very night. But his bath and his tea had made away with the greater part of an hour; it was six o’clock before Langholm reached the house-agent’s, and the office was already shut.
He dined quietly at his hotel, feeling none the less that he had made a beginning, and spent the evening looking up Chelsea friends, who were likely to be more conversant than himself with all the circumstances of Mr. Minchin’s murder and his wife’s arrest; but who, as might have been expected, were one and all from home.
In the morning the order of his plans were somewhat altered. It was essential that he should have those circumstances at his fingers’ ends, at least so far as they had transpired in open court. Langholm had read the trial at the
time with the inquisitive but impersonal interest which such a case inspires in the average man. Now he must study it in a very different spirit, and for the nonce he repaired betimes to the newspaper room at the British Museum.
By midday he had mastered most details of the complex case, and made a note of every name and address which had found their way into the newspaper reports. But there was one name which did not appear in any account. Langholm sought it in bound volume after bound volume, until even the long-suffering attendants, who trundle the great tomes from their shelves on trolleys, looked askance at the wanton reader who filled in a new form every five or ten minutes. But the reader’s face shone with a brighter light at each fresh failure. Why had the name he wanted never come up in open court? Where was the evidence of the man who had made all the mischief between the Minchins? Langholm intended having first the one and then the other; already he was on the spring to a first conclusion. With a caution, however, which did infinite credit to one of his temperament, the amateur detective determined to look a little further before leaping even in his own mind.
Early in the afternoon he was back in Chelsea, making fraudulent representations to the house-agent near the Vestry Hall.
“Not more than ninety,” repeated that gentleman, as he went through his book, and read out particulars of several houses at about that rental; but the house which Langholm burned to see over was not among the number.
“I want a quiet street,” said the wily writer, and named the one in which it stood. “Have you nothing there?”
“I have one,” said the agent with reserve, “and it’s only seventy.”
“The less the better,” cried Langholm, light-heartedly. “I should like to see that one.”
The house-agent hesitated, finally looking Langholm in the face.
“You may as well know first as last,” said he, “for we have had enough trouble about that house. It was let last year for ninety; we’re asking seventy because it is the house in which Mr. Minchin was shot dead. Still want to see it?” inquired the house-agent, with a wry smile.
It was all Langholm could do to conceal his eagerness, but in the end he escaped with several orders to view, and the keys of the house of houses in his pocket. No caretaker could be got to live in it; the agent seemed half-surprised at Langholm’s readiness to see over it all alone.
About an hour later the novelist stood at a door whose name and number were not inscribed upon any of the orders obtained by fraud from the King’s Road agent. It was a door that needed painting, and there was a conspicuous card in the ground-floor window. Langholm tugged twice in his impatience at the old-fashioned bell. If his face had been alight before, it was now on fire, for by deliberate steps he had arrived at the very conclusion to which he had been inclined to jump. At last came a slut of the imperishable lodging-house type.
“Is your mistress in?”
“No.”
“When do you expect her?”
“Not before night.”
“Any idea what time of night?”
The untidy child had none, but at length admitted that she had orders to keep the fire in for the landlady’s supper. Langholm drew his own deduction. It would be little use in returning before nine o’clock. Five hours to wait! He made one more cast before he went.
“Have you been here long, my girl?”
“Going on three months.”
“But your mistress has been here some years?”
“I believe so.”
“Are you her only servant?”
“Yes.”
And five hours to wait for more!
It seemed an infinity to Langholm as he turned away. But at all events the house had not changed hands. The woman he would eventually see was the woman who had given invaluable evidence at the Old Bailey.
CHAPTER XXI
WORSE SPEED
Langholm returned to his hotel and wrote a few lines to Rachel. It had been arranged that he was to report progress direct to her, and as often as possible; but it was a very open arrangement, in which Steel had sardonically concurred. Yet, little as there was to say, and for all his practice with the pen, it took Langholm the best part of an hour to write that he believed he had already obtained a most important clew, which the police had missed in the most incredible manner, though it had been under their noses all the time. So incredible did it appear, however, even to himself, when written down, that Langholm decided not to post this letter until after his interview with the Chelsea landlady.
To kill the interval, he went for his dinner to the single club to which he still belonged. It was a Bohemian establishment off the Strand, and its time-honored name was the best thing about it in this member’s eyes. He was soon cursing himself for coming near the place while engaged upon his great and sacred quest. Not a “clubable” person himself, as that epithet was understood in this its home, Langholm was not a little surprised when half-a-dozen men (most of whom he barely knew) rose to greet him on his appearance in the smoking-room. But even with their greetings came the explanation, to fill the newcomer with a horror too sudden for concealment.
It appeared that Mrs. Steel’s identity with the whilom Mrs. Minchin had not only leaked out in Delverton. Langholm gathered that it was actually in one of that morning’s half-penny papers, at which he had not found time to glance in his hot-foot ardor for the chase. For the moment he was shocked beyond words, and not a little disgusted, to discover the cause of his own temporary importance.
“Talk of the devil!” cried a comparative crony. “I was just telling them that you must be the ‘well-known novelist’ in the case, as your cottage was somewhere down there. Have you really seen anything of the lady?”
“Seen anything of her?” echoed a journalist to whom Langholm had never spoken in his life. “Why, can’t you see that he bowled her out himself and came up straight to sell the news?”
Langholm took his comparative crony by the arm.
“Come in and dine with me,” he said; “I can’t stand this! Yes, yes, I know her well,” he whispered, as they went round the screen which was the only partition between pipes and plates; “but let me see what that scurrilous rag has to say while you order. I’ll do the rest, and you had better make it a bottle of champagne.”
The “scurrilous rag” had less to say than Langholm had been led to expect. He breathed again when he had read the sequence of short but pithy paragraphs. Mrs. Minchin’s new name was not given after all, nor that of her adopted district; while Langholm himself only slunk into print as “a well-known novelist who, oddly enough, was among the guests, and eye-witness of a situation after his own heart.” The district might have been any one of the many manufacturing centres in “the largest of shires,” which was the one geographical clew vouchsafed by the half-penny paper. Langholm began to regret his readiness to admit the impeachment with which he had been saluted; it was only in his own club that he would have been pounced upon as the “well-known novelist”; but it was some comfort to reflect that even in his own club his exact address was not known, for his solicitor paid his subscription and sent periodically for his letters. Charles Langholm had not set up as hermit by halves; he had his own reasons for being thorough there. And it was more inspiriting than the champagne to feel that no fresh annoyance was likely to befall the Steels through him.
“It’s not so bad as I thought,” said Langholm, throwing the newspaper aside as his companion, whose professional name was Valentine Venn, finished with the wine-card.
“Dear boy,” said Venn, “it took a pal to spot you. Alone I did it! But I wish you weren’t so dark about that confounded cottage of yours; the humble mummer would fain gather the crumbs that fall from the rich scribe’s table, especially when he’s out of a shop, which is the present condition of affairs. Besides, we might collaborate in a play, and make more money apiece in three weeks than either of us earns in a fat year. That little story of yours—”
“Never mind my little stories,” said Langholm
, hastily; “I’ve just finished a long one, and the very thought of fiction makes me sick.”
“Well, you’ve got facts to turn to for a change, and for once they really do seem as strange as the other thing. Lucky bargee! Have you had her under the microscope all the summer? Ye gods, what a part of Mrs.—”
“Drink up,” said Langholm, grimly, as the champagne made an opportune appearance; “and now tell me who that fellow is who’s opening the piano, and since when you’ve started a musical dinner.”
The big room that the screen divided had a grand piano in the dining half, for use upon those Saturday evenings for which the old club was still famous, but rarely touched during the working days of the week. Yet even now a dark and cadaverous young man was raising the top of the piano, slowly and laboriously, as though it were too heavy for him. Valentine Venn looked over his shoulder.
“Good God!” said he. “Another fact worth most folks’ fiction — another coincidence you wouldn’t dare to use!”
“Why — who is it?”
Venn’s answer was to hail the dark, thin youth with rude geniality. The young fellow hesitated, almost shrank, but came shyly forward in the end. Langholm noted that he looked very ill, that his face was as sensitive as it was thin and pale, but his expression singularly sweet and pleasing.
“Severino,” said Venn, with a play-actor’s pomp, “let me introduce you to Charles Langholm, the celebrated novelist— ‘whom not to know is to argue yourself unknown.’”
“Which is the champion non sequitur of literature,” added Langholm, with literary arrogance, as he took the lad’s hand cordially in his own, only to release it hurriedly before he crushed such slender fingers to their hurt.
“Mr. Langholm,” pursued Venn, “is the hero of that paragraph” — Langholm kicked him under the table— “that — that paragraph about his last book, you know. Severino, Langholm, is the best pianist we have had in the club since I have been a member, and you will say the same yourself in another minute. He always plays to us when he drops in to dine, and you may think yourself lucky that he has dropped in to-night.”