Afternoon Tea Mysteries, Volume Two: A Collection of Cozy Mysteries (Four thrilling novels in one volume!)

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Afternoon Tea Mysteries, Volume Two: A Collection of Cozy Mysteries (Four thrilling novels in one volume!) Page 97

by Marion Bryce


  When he ventured to look at her again, it was over the shoulder of a stalwart Highlander, whose large frame effectually concealed all of the little detective except his hat and eyes. A further surprise was in store for him. The lady had lifted her veil and displayed the features of the girl he had watched in the library on the preceding night.

  Gimblet had seen enough. He turned away, and found Juliet at his elbow.

  She would have passed him by, absorbed in her sorrow for the father she had found and lost in the space of one short hour, but he laid her hand upon her arm.

  “Tell me,” he begged, “who are those two ladies waiting for the boat?”

  Juliet’s eyes followed the direction of his own.

  “Those,” she said, “are Mrs. Clutsam and Miss Julia Romaninov.”

  “Ah,” Gimblet murmured. “They were among your fellow-guests at the castle, weren’t they?”

  “Yes.”

  Juliet’s reply was short and a little cold. She could not understand why the detective should choose this moment to question her on trivial details. It showed, she considered, a lamentable lack of tact, and involuntarily she resented it.

  “But surely you told me that every one had left Inverashiel,” persisted Gimblet, unabashed.

  He seemed absurdly eager for the information. No doubt, Juliet reflected bitterly, he admired Julia. Most men would.

  “Mrs. Clutsam lives in another small house of my father’s, near here,” she replied stiffly. “She asked Miss Romaninov to stay with her for a few days till she could arrange where to go to. This disaster naturally upset every one’s plans.”

  “She has a beautiful face,” said Gimblet. “Who would think—” he murmured, and stopped abruptly.

  “Perhaps you would like me to introduce you?”

  Juliet spoke with lofty indifference, but the dismay in Gimblet’s tone as he answered disarmed her.

  “On no account,” he cried, “the last thing! Besides, for that matter,” he added truthfully, “we have met before.”

  “Then you will have the pleasure of renewing your acquaintance,” Juliet suggested mischievously. Gimblet had shown himself so genuinely aghast that her resentful suspicions had vanished.

  “I expect to have an opportunity of doing so,” he agreed seriously. “That young lady,” he went on in a low, confidential tone, “played a trick on me that I find it hard to forgive. I look forward, with some satisfaction, to the day when the laugh will be on my side. I admit I ought to be above such paltry considerations, but, what would you? I don’t think I am. But please don’t mention my presence to her, or her friend. I imagine she has not so far heard of it.”

  “I won’t if you don’t like,” said Juliet. “I don’t suppose I shall see them to speak to. But why do you feel so sure she doesn’t know you are here?”

  “Oh, how should she?” Gimblet returned evasively. “I don’t suppose my presence would appear worth commenting upon to anyone but yourself or Lord Ashiel, unless Lady Ruth should mention it.”

  “I don’t think she will,” said Juliet. “She said she could not speak to anyone to-day, and she and Mark have gone off together in his own boat. I said I would walk home.”

  “Won’t you drive with me?” Gimblet suggested.

  He had hired a “machine” from the distant village of Inverlegan to carry him to and from the funeral. But Juliet preferred to walk, finding in physical exercise the only relief she could obtain from the aching trouble that oppressed and sickened her.

  Gimblet drove back alone to the cottage. He had much to occupy his thoughts.

  Once back in his room he turned his mind to the writing on the sheet of paper.

  “Remember that where there’s a way there’s a will. Face curiosity and take the bull by the horn.”

  The message, as Gimblet read it, was as puzzling as if it had been completely in cipher.

  If certain of the words possessed some arbitrary meaning to which the key promised by Lord Ashiel would have furnished the solution, there seemed little hope of understanding the message until the key was found. The word “way,” for instance, might stand for another that had been previously decided on, and if rightly construed probably indicated the place where the papers were concealed. “Will,” “face,” “curiosity,” “bull” and “horn” were likely to represent other very different words, or perhaps even whole sentences.

  Without the key it was hopeless to search along that line; such search must end, as it would begin, in conjecture only. He would see if anything more promising could be arrived at by taking the message as it was and assuming that all the words bore the meaning usually attributed to them. For more than an hour Gimblet racked his brains to read sense into the senseless phrases, and at the end of that time was no wiser than at the beginning.

  “Where there’s a way there’s a will.” Was it by accident or design that the order in which the words way and will were placed was different from the one commonly assigned to them? Had Lord Ashiel made a mistake in arranging the message? Or did the “will” refer to his will and testament? If so, why should he take so roundabout a way of designating it? Doubtless because something more important than the will was involved; indeed, if anything was clear, from the ambiguous sentence and the precaution that Ashiel had taken that though it fell into the hands of his enemies it should convey nothing to them, it was that he considered the mystification of the uninitiated a matter of transcendental importance. It was plain he contemplated the possibility of the Nihilists knowing where to look for his message; and at the thought Gimblet shifted uneasily in his chair, remembering his first encounter with their representative.

  “Face curiosity and take the bull by the horn.” Perhaps those words, as they stood, contained some underlying sense, which at present it was hard to read in them. What it was, seemed impossible to guess. To take the bull by the horn, is a common enough expression, and might represent no more than a piece of advice to act boldly; on the whole that was not likely, for would anyone wind up such a carefully veiled communication with so trite and everyday a saying, or finish such an obscure message with so ordinary a sentiment?

  “Face curiosity,” however, was perhaps a direction how to proceed. The only trouble was to know what in the world it meant!

  Whose curiosity was to be faced? The behaviour of members of a Nihilist society could hardly be said to be impelled by that motive. Gimblet could not see that anyone else had shown any symptom of it. Had “curiosity,” then, some other meaning?

  The detective, as has been said, was an amateur of the antique. When not at work, a great part of his time was passed in the neighbourhood of curiosity shops, and the merchandise they dealt in immediately occurred to him in connection with the word.

  Did the dead man refer to some peculiarity of the ancient keep? Was there, perhaps, the figure or picture of a bull within the castle whose horn pointed to the ultimate place of concealment? It would have seemed, Gimblet thought, that the hidden receptacle in the secret stair was difficult enough to find; but the reason the papers were not placed in there was plain to him after a minute’s reflection. It was doubtless because they were too bulky to be contained in the shallow drawer. At all events, there was certainly another hiding-place; and, on the whole, the best plan seemed to be to see if the castle could produce any curiosity that would offer a solution of the problem.

  To the castle, accordingly, he went, and asked to see Lord Ashiel. He was shown into the smoking-room, where Mark was kneeling on the hearth-rug surrounded by piles of folded and docketed papers. The door of a small cupboard in the wall beside the fireplace stood open, revealing a row of deep shelves stacked with the same neat packets.

  “Still hunting for the will, you see,” he said, looking up as Gimblet entered, “I’m beginning to give up hope of finding it, but it’s a mercy to have something to do these days.”

  “Rather a tedious job, isn’t it?” said the detective, looking down at the musty tape-bound bundles.

&
nbsp; “Well, it gives one rather a kink in the back after a time,” Mark admitted. “But I shan’t feel easy in my mind till I’ve looked through everything, and I’m getting a very useful idea of the estate accounts in the meantime. It is rather a long business, but I’m getting on with it, slow but sure. There are such a fearful lot.”

  “Are all these cupboards full of papers?” Gimblet asked, looking round him at the numerous little doors in the panelling.

  “Stuffed with them, every blessed one of them,” Mark replied rather gloomily. “And the worst of it is, I’m pretty certain they’re nothing but these dusty old bills and letters. But there’s nowhere else to look, and I know he kept nearly everything here.”

  Gimblet sauntered round the room, pulling open the drawers and peeping in at the piles of documents.

  “What an accumulation!” he remarked. “None of these cupboards are locked, I see,” he added.

  “No, he never locked anything up,” said Mark. “I’ve heard him boast he never used a key. Do you know, if one had time to read them, I believe some of these old letters might be rather amusing. It looked as if my grandfather and his fathers had kept every single one that ever was written to them. I’ve just come across one from Raeburn, the painter, and I saw another, a quarter of an hour ago, from Lord Clive.”

  “Really,” said Gimblet eagerly, “which cupboard were they in? I should like to see them immensely some time.”

  “They were in this one,” said Mark, pointing to the shelves opposite him.

  Gimblet stood facing it, and looked hopefully round him in all directions for anything like a bull. There was nothing, however, to suggest such an animal, and he reflected that interesting though these old letters might be it would be going rather far to refer to them as curiosities. Suddenly an idea struck him.

  “I suppose you haven’t come across anything concerning a Papal Bull?” he inquired.

  “No,” said Mark, looking up in surprise. “It’s not very likely I should, you know.”

  “No, I suppose not,” said Gimblet. “Still, you old families did get hold of all sorts of odd things sometimes, and your uncle was a bit of a collector, wasn’t he?”

  “Uncle Douglas,” said Mark, “not he! He didn’t care a bit for that kind of thing. You can see in the drawing-room the sort of horrors he used to buy. He was thoroughly early Victorian in his tastes, and ought to have been born fifty years sooner than he was.”

  “Dear me,” said Gimblet. “I don’t know why I thought he was rather by way of being a connoisseur. Well, well, I mustn’t waste any more time. I wanted to ask you if you would mind my going all over the house. I may see something suggestive. Who knows? At present I have only examined the library and your uncle’s bedroom.”

  “By all means,” said Mark. “Blanston will show you anything you want to see. Oh, by the by, you like to be alone, don’t you? I was forgetting. Well, go anywhere you like; and good luck to your hunting!”

  On a writing-table in one of the bedrooms, Gimblet found a paper-weight in the bronze shape of a Spanish toro, head down, tail brandishing, a fine emblem of goaded rage. But there was nothing promising about the round mahogany table on which it stood: no drawer, secret or otherwise could all his measurings and tappings discover; the animal, when lifted up by the horn and dangled before the detective’s critical eye, proclaimed itself modern and of no artistic merit. It was like a hundred others to be had in any Spanish town, and by no expanding of terms could it be considered a curiosity.

  Except for this one more than doubtful find, he drew the whole house absolutely blank. There were very few specimens of ancient work in the castle, which like so many other old houses had been stripped of everything interesting it contained in the middle of the nineteenth century, and entirely refurnished and redecorated in the worst possible taste. With the exception of some family portraits, the lacquered clock in the library was the one genuine survival of the Victorian holocaust, and though Gimblet passed nearly half an hour in contemplating it he could not see any way of connecting it with a bull, nor was he a whit the wiser when he finally turned his back on it than he had been at the beginning.

  CHAPTER XV

  Blanston, to whom he appealed, could give no useful information. Yes, some of the plate was old, but that was all at the bank in London. Mrs. Haviland, his lordship’s sister, had liked it on the table when his lordship entertained in his London house, and it had not been carried backwards and forwards to Scotland since her ladyship’s death.

  He knew of nothing resembling a bull in his lordship’s possession, unless it was the picture of cows that hung in the drawing-room opposite the one of the dead stag.

  Gimblet had already exhausted the possibilities of that highly varnished oil-painting, and he went forth from the house in a state of deep dejection.

  As he descended the drive he heard his name called, and looking back perceived the short, sturdy figure of Lady Ruth hurrying down the road behind him.

  “If you are going back to the cottage, Mr. Gimblet,” she panted, “let us walk together. I ran after you when I saw your hat go past the window, for I couldn’t stand those frowsty old papers of Mark’s any longer.”

  Gimblet waited till she came up, still talking, although considerably out of breath.

  “We will go by the road, if you don’t mind,” she said, “the lochside is rather rough for me. I have been paying a visit of charity, and very hard work it is paying visits in the country when you don’t keep a conveyance of any kind, and I really can’t afford even a donkey. You see the Judge’s income died with him, poor dear, in spite of those foolish sayings about not being able to take your money with you to the better land, where I am sure one would want it just as much as anywhere else, for the better life you lead, the more expensive it is. No one could be generous, or charitable, or unselfish, with nothing to give up or to give away. That’s only common sense, and I always say that common sense is such a help when called upon to face problems of a religious kind.

  “My uncle was a bishop and a very learned theologian, I assure you; but he always held that it was impious to apply plain common sense to matters so far above us, and that is why he and my poor husband were never on speaking terms; not from any fault of the Judge’s, who had been trained to think about logic and all that kind of thing which is so useful to people at the Bar.

  “But it takes all sorts to make a world, as he often used to say to himself, and if every one was exactly alike one would feel almost as solitary as if the whole earth was empty and void, while, as for virtues and good qualities, they would automatically cease to exist, so that a really good man would simply long to go to hell and have some opportunity to show his goodness. That always seemed very reasonable to me, but I am just telling you what my husband used to say, because I really don’t know much about these things, and he was such a clever man, and what he said was always listened to with great interest and respect at the Old Bailey. If it hadn’t been, of course he would have cleared the court.

  “But as I was telling you, his money went with him, though I know he always meant to insure his life, which is such a boring thing to think of when a man has many calls on his purse. And so, I live, as you see, in a very quiet way up here, and sometimes get down to the South for a month or six weeks in the winter, where I have many kind friends. But I find the hills rather trying to my legs as time goes on, and I don’t very often walk as far as I have to-day. Still charity, as they say, covers a multitude of miles, and I really thought it my duty to come and see how poor Mark was bearing up all alone at Inverashiel. I was afraid he would be terribly unhappy, poor boy, so soon after the funeral, and Juliet Byrne having refused him, and everything. Though of course he can’t be pitied for inheriting Inverashiel, such a lovely place, is it not? And quantities of property in the coal district, you know, besides. He is really a very lucky young man.”

  “It is indeed a most beautiful country,” Gimblet observed, as Lady Ruth’s breath gave out completely, a
nd she stopped by the roadside to regain it. He was deep in thought, and glad to escape the necessity of frequent speech.

  “Yes,” she said, as they moved slowly on, “I had a delightful walk here, and found him much more cheerful than I had feared. It is such a good thing he has all those papers to look over. It is everything, at a time like this, to have an occupation. It is so dreadful to think of dear David with absolutely nothing to do in that horrid cell. I wonder if they allow him to smoke, or to keep a tame mouse, which I remember reading is such a comfort to prisoners. I do hope, Mr. Gimblet, that you will soon be able to get him out of it.”

  Before Gimblet could reply, the silence was broken by the rumble of wheels; and a farmer’s cart came up behind them, driven by a thin man in a black coat, who had evidently attended the funeral earlier in the day. The road, at the point they had reached, was beginning to ascend; and the stout pony between the shafts slowed resolutely to a walk as he leant against the collar. The man lifted his hat as Lady Ruth wished him good day.

  “I saw you at the funeral, Angus McConachan,” she said. “A sad business. A terrible business.” And she shook her head mournfully.

  The farmer stopped the willing pony.

  “That it is, my leddy,” he assented. “It’s a black day indeed, when the heed o’ a clan is struck doon by are o’ his ain bleed. It’s a great peety that the lad would ha’ forgot what he owed to his salt. But I’m thinkin’ they’ll be hangin’ him afore the year’s oot.”

  “Oh, Angus,” cried Lady Ruth, in horrified tones, “don’t talk in that dreadful way. I’m quite, quite sure Sir David never had any part in the thing. It’s all a mistake, and this gentleman here is going to find out who really fired the shot.”

  “Well, I hope ye’ll be richt, my leddy,” was all the farmer would commit himself to, as he gathered up the reins. Then he hesitated, looking down on the hot, flushed countenance of the lady in the road beneath him. “If yer leddyship will be tackin’ a seat in the machine,” he hazarded, “it’ll maybe save ye the trail up the brae.”

 

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