For a moment there was just one picture in every mind – Miss Cara dead at the foot of the stairs in her own house. But not killed by any fall from those stairs – struck down here by this rusty bar in this strange place. Stephen stepped over the bar and threw the light ahead.
Mr. Tampling’s excitement had reached a dizzying height. He now saw what Candida had seen, but far more brightly illumined – the cave or niche which had closed the passage, the iron-bound box that filled it, the raised lid and the Treasure within. The light dazzled on the golden dish, the candlesticks, the stones of a fabulous necklace. It struck fire from the stones – blood-red fire. And then -
He saw the skeleton hand that had clutched at the Treasure and fallen upon death – the bones and the rags which were all that were left of Alan Thompson. And nearer, right across their path, Candida Sayle, her face hidden against the arm thrown out to save herself as she fell.
The lamp was thrust on Major Warrender, and Stephen was on his knees, saying her name.
‘Candida – Candida – Candida!’
She came back to the sound of his voice, and she was never to forget it. After the darkness that had been like death, after the burial of hope and life itself, to wake with his arms about her and his voice calling her name -
She opened her eyes, and the place was light. Stephen was holding her as if he would never let her go. She said,
‘I found the treasure – don’t touch it – it killed poor Alan – ’
Chapter Forty-one
Joseph came into the drawing-room, his dark skin yellow and damp with sweat. Miss Olivia was working at her embroidery. She looked up and said sharply,
‘What is the matter?’
‘They are down in the cellar – they have found the opening!’
‘Impossible!’
His voice grated.
‘I tell you they have found it! The Inspector came up – he went to the bedroom and fetched the constable. I followed them to the top of the cellar stairs. From there I can see that the secret door is open and that they are all there. The Inspector and the young man stay, and the others go down into the passage. You know what they will find. What do we do – what do we say?’
She looked at him directly.
‘Do? Say? We have only to be perfectly clear and firm, and to be very much surprised. There are some passages in the house which have always been a family secret, but we do not know of any others – if there is one in the cellar, we know nothing about it. There have been stories about a treasure, but I have never believed them. If there was anyone so foolish as to go looking for it, he did so at his own risk. If he met with a fatal accident, it was without any knowledge or responsibility of mine. And if Miss Sayle was foolish enough to follow his example, I cannot hold myself responsible for that.’
‘She will say – ’
‘She can say anything she likes, and she can prove nothing at all. She will say she drank a glass of milk and after that she remembers nothing. And the answer is that she was walking in her sleep. It is either that, or she has made up the whole story. She has found out something about the passages – she has been working on the family papers, and she takes it into her head to explore at night when everybody is asleep. A much more likely story than that she was drugged and shut up there in the dark to die.’
He said in an approving voice,
‘It is a good story – if they will believe it.’ Then, after a pause, ‘Anna is the one I am afraid of.’
‘She is a fool – and she knows nothing.’
He said in what was almost a pettish voice,
‘She looks at me as if – as if – ’
‘As if what?’
‘As if she found me – horrible!’
Her glance just touched him scornfully.
‘Perhaps she does – perhaps – ’ She spoke suddenly and vehemently. ‘How did my sister die?’
He stood his ground.
‘I have told you. She walked in her sleep. I followed her in case she should come to harm. She was wringing her hands and saying, “I can’t find him – I can’t find him!” She went down into the cellar and opened the secret door. I could not let her down into such a place alone – I went after her. When she came to where the Treasure is she saw Mr. Alan lying there, and she cried out. His hand was on the necklace, and she went to take hold of it. The lid of the chest came down and struck her, and she died. I pushed it up, and I pulled her away, but she was dead. I came and told you, and we carried her to where she was found. You know all this.’ There was a sense of unbearable strain. They were too much intent upon one another to have been aware that the door behind the tall black lacquer screen had opened. There was no design in that soft opening. It was not Miss Silver’s wont to enter or leave a room with any jarring sound, but when she heard Miss Olivia say, ‘How did my sister die?’ she came no more than one step inside the door and put up a hand to check the advance of Mr. Tampling, who was immediately behind her. They stood there upon the thresh-hold, listening, and heard Joseph tell his tale, and when he had said, ‘You know all this,’ they heard Miss Olivia answer him. The words came tense with feeling.
‘I know what you have told me.’
Joseph said, ‘I have told you the truth.’
Within the room, and beyond their sight, Miss Olivia let the embroidery-frame drop upon her knee. The hand which held the needle came down too, the thread of scarlet silk trailing. She said,
‘You are lying.’
‘Madam!’
Her eyes were on him, sombre and intent.
‘You are lying. You say she was walking in her sleep. I have seen her walk like that, and so have you. Are you going to tell me that she took a torch in her hand to light her through a dream? But you say you saw her go down into the cellar and open the secret door. There are lights in the house, but what light is there in that dark place?’
He said on a stubborn note,
‘I had a torch.’
‘I tell you, you had not! You would not have dared to follow her with a torch in your hand – you would not have dared!’
‘Do you think I followed her in the dark?’
‘I do not! It was she who had the torch. And she was not walking in her sleep, she was awake, because it had come to her that Mr. Alan must be there. I did not think that she would ever dare to go into that place alone. She had gone once with me, and she came near to fainting with fright. I did not think she would ever go alone.’
He said with impatience,
‘What does it matter who had the torch? The rest is as I said.’
‘No.’
The word was like a blow and he exclaimed against it.
‘Is this a time to question and to quarrel? We have to know what we are to do, what we are to say.’
‘I must have the truth from you. My sister did not die as you have said. There was no hand there for her to touch – there were only bones. Do you ask me to believe that she would have touched dead bones? I tell you she would have fainted, or she would have screamed and run away. And she would have done nothing to set off the spring and let down the lid of the chest upon her head. I think she cried out and turned to run away. I think you tried to stop her, perhaps to reason with her, and she would not listen. I think you had to stop her because you could not stop her mouth. I think she died because you knew what she might tell.’
He cried out.
‘I never laid a hand on Mr. Alan!’
‘There was no need to lay a hand upon him. He snatched at the Treasure and it killed him, as it has killed before, and may again.’
His voice rose.
‘And who showed him the way to the Treasure? It was not Miss Cara! And who else knew the secret? Only you, madam – only you! You showed him how to open the door, and if the Treasure had not killed him he would have died down there as Miss Sayle was meant to die! No food, no water, and no way out – it would not have taken long!’
There was a silence. Miss Olivia broke it.
‘If you had not followed me that night you would have known nothing, and you could have done nothing. You have been a long time in my service. Not as long as Anna, but long enough. I think you killed my sister. How do you expect me to reward you for that?’
He stood staring at her. She went on in the same toneless voice.
‘If my plan had succeeded, I would have rewarded you and sent you away, but now – if Candida lives, there is nothing for either of us. She will have Underhill, and she will marry and have children to come after her. She should have been dead, but I think she is alive, and there is nothing more that I can do. So you shall have your reward for killing my sister.’
It was when Joseph cried out that he had never laid a hand on Alan Thompson that Inspector Rock came up quietly behind Miss Silver and Mr. Tampling. At Miss Olivia’s words he pushed past the end of the screen and strode into the room.
Chapter Forty-two
Candida lay on her bed and Stephen knelt beside her. Her hand clung to his. If she shut her eyes she might slip back into the dream again. He said, ‘I won’t let you,’ and she held his hand.
Anna came in with a tray, and she drank the most delicious draught she had ever tasted – hot milky tea to assuage her thirst and comfort her parched throat. Anna was crying. She tried not to, but the tears ran down. She took up one of Candida’s hands and kissed it, and went away back to the kitchen to boil an egg and make toast. When she was gone, Candida caught at Stephen’s arm.
‘Will you take me away from here? I can’t stay in this house. I don’t want to see it again – ever!’
He said,
‘You shan’t – I’ll see to that. Louisa Arnold will take you in. I’ll drive you out there as soon as you’ve had something to eat.’
She was sitting up now with his arm round her.
‘I’m all right – I’m quite strong – I only want to get away.’
She pressed against him and dropped her voice. ‘It was Alan Thompson – there in the passage – wasn’t it?’
He nodded.
‘I expect so. There’s a spring that brings the lid of the chest down if anyone touches the Treasure. He grabbed at it, and it killed him.’
‘How – horrible! But it wasn’t – murder – ’
He said slowly and doubtfully, ‘I – don’t – know – ’
‘What do you mean?’
‘I don’t think anyone laid hands on him. But do you think Miss Olivia meant to let him live and marry her sister? How do you suppose he knew how to open that hidden door? We only found it by a lucky chance, and that’s not the sort of thing you would expect to happen twice.’
‘Aunt Cara might have shown him the way.’
‘If she had she would have warned him not to touch the treasure. There’s a rhyme about it, isn’t there -
‘ “Touch not nor take,
For dear life’s sake”?’
‘Yes – yes, there is.’
He said grimly,
‘I think Miss Olivia showed him the secret door, and I think she meant him to touch – and take what was coming to him.’
A shudder ran over her.
‘Let’s get away, Stephen – quickly, quickly!’
Louisa Arnold was most agreeably thrilled. Apart from the fact that she had an extremely kind heart, her house was to be enlivened by a love affair, the solution of a three-years-old mystery, and by a really shocking scandal. The love affair showed every sign of leading up to an early wedding, and since Stephen was certainly a cousin, and Candida an orphan, from what house could they more suitably be married? She had her mother’s wedding-veil laid away in lavender – and there could never have been a happier marriage than hers to dear Papa. As to the solution of the mystery, there seemed to be no doubt that the skeleton found in Underhill was that of poor Alan Thompson, and in regard to the scandal, there really never had been one of so resounding a nature. Was it possible that Miss Olivia Benevent was actually suspected of having murdered her sister?
There was a school of thought which answered this question in the affirmative but softened the conclusion by declaring Miss Olivia to be out of her mind. By others the part of first murderer was assigned to Joseph, and a good many people discovered that they had always thought there was something sinister about him. It having become known that Miss Silver had accompanied the police during their search of Underhill, Louisa Arnold found herself in the enviable position of being considered a positive Fount of Information. It was gratifying in the extreme, but she did feel that dear Maud might have given her a little more to come and go upon. Discretion was all very well, but who more reliable than one’s own cousin?
And to sum it all up, ‘Dear Papa always told me everything.’
At the news that the inquest had been adjourned, Miss Louisa restrained herself no longer.
‘Do you mean to tell me that nobody has been arrested?’
Miss Silver had embarked upon a jumper in a particularly pleasing shade of blue for her niece Ethel Burkett. About an inch of it stuck out from the needles like a frill. The wool was exceptionally soft, and she was trying a new pattern. She looked mildly at Louisa and said,
‘Joseph Rossi has been detained.’
‘Detained! And what’s the good of that, I should like to know! Do you mean to tell me that he didn’t murder poor Cara and then pretend she had been killed by falling down the stairs?’
‘The police will have to decide whether there is a case that they can take into court.’
Miss Louisa tossed her head.
‘He probably killed poor Alan Thompson too!’
‘I do not think so.’
Louisa Arnold leaned forward.
‘Do you know, I saw one of those chests in a museum. I am so vexed that I can’t remember where it was, but it was during that trip that Papa and I took the year after Mamma died. We only had a fortnight, and we saw so many places that they all ran together in my head and I can’t remember where I saw that chest, but it was just like what everyone is saying about the one at Underhill. There was a spring in the lid, and if you touched anything in the chest there was a horrible sort of hasp that came down and hit you. And they say that this is what Alan Thompson must have done. Unless you really do think Joseph killed him.’
Miss Silver made no reply, and after a moment Louisa continued her speculations.
‘Do you know, the thing I find hardest to understand is the part about poor Cara. I just can’t believe she went down into a dark cellar in the middle of the night – unless she was walking in her sleep. Do you think she was?’
‘I think she was looking for Alan Thompson, but whether she was awake or asleep, I cannot say. She may have been suspecting his death for a long time. She may have been very much afraid, and she may suddenly have felt that she could not bear the suspense any longer.’
There was a pause. Louisa’s voice went down into a whisper. She said,
‘Do you think – Olivia killed her?’
‘Oh, no. There was no reason for her to do so. Miss Cara’s death was the greatest misfortune that could have happened to her.’
‘Well, it wasn’t the chest. Cara wouldn’t have touched it with poor Alan lying there dead.’
‘No.’
The whisper became insistent
‘Then it was Joseph.’
Miss Silver said, ‘That is not for us to say.’
Miss Arnold flushed. The effect, with her white hair and blue eyes, was becoming, but it conveyed the fact that her patience was now exhausted.
‘And I suppose you will not talk about Olivia either?’
‘I believe it would be better if we did not discuss her at the moment, Louisa.’
Louisa Arnold really was obliged to leave the room.
Others were, unfortunately, compelled to discuss Miss Olivia Benevent. When all was said and done, there was only the slightest evidence on which to build a case against her. Miss Silver and Mr. Tampling had stood behind a screen and heard Joseph and Miss Olivia acc
use one another. What they said could be true, or it could be false, for each denied what the other had said. When, just at the end, Miss Olivia said, ‘If Candida lives, there will be nothing for either of us. She will have Underhill, and she will marry and have children to come after her. She should have been dead, but I think she is alive, and there is nothing more that I can do.’ When she said that, there was an admission which could perhaps have been used. But it rested upon Miss Silver’s evidence alone, since Mr. Tampling, appealed to for confirmation, declared himself unable to supply it. They were at some distance from the speakers, and he felt himself quite unable to swear to anything that had been said. Not that he wished to cast any doubt upon Miss Silver’s recollection. She appeared to be a most accurate and observant person, but he must really not be asked to swear to anything himself.
And then, whilst all this was going on, Olivia Benevent died. There was no blurring of her senses. She had set aside a legacy for Joseph, a legacy for Anna, and she asked to see Candida Sayle. But Candida was out, and when she came she came too late. They did not tell her of Miss Olivia’s last words. She sat propped up against half a dozen pillows, and when she knew that Candida would be too late she used her hard-won breath to say,
‘I wanted to curse her. She would have remembered that.’
Chapter Forty-three
Miss silver had rather a touching interview with Mr. Puncheon. She was hardly prepared for the warmth of his gratitude or the generous size of the fee which he pressed upon her acceptance.
‘It will be very good of you if you will take it,’ he said. ‘My sister is comfortably provided for, and I have no other kith or kin. If poor Alan had been different and had lived, I should have left him what I have, so it is only right that you should accept a proper reward for clearing his name. The false accusation against him killed my wife. It not only did that, but – ’ He hesitated, took off his glasses, and looked at her with moistened eyes. ‘I wonder if you will understand me when I say that it seemed to come between us. I could take no comfort in recollecting the happy times we had had together – the trouble about Alan seemed to cloud it all. But now that he is cleared, I have that comfort again. I think I told you that I was very fond of my wife. Perhaps you can understand how I feel.’
The Benevent Treasure Page 24