The Third R. Austin Freeman Megapack

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The Third R. Austin Freeman Megapack Page 55

by R. Austin Freeman


  “And when do you think you’ll be able to fix it?”

  Mr. Gallett reflected. “Let’s see. Today’s Toos-day. It will take a full day to get them two slabs sawn off the block and trimmed to shape. Shall we say Friday?”

  “Friday will do perfectly. There is really no hurry, though I shall be glad to get the well covered and made safe. But don’t put yourself out.”

  Mr. Gallett promised that he would not, and Pottermack then departed homeward to resume his labours.

  As he re-entered his house, he picked the letter out of the letter-cage, and, holding it unopened in his hand, walked through to the garden. Emerging into the open air, he turned the letter over and glanced at the address; and in an instant a most remarkable change came over him. The quiet gaiety faded from his face and he stopped dead, gazing at the superscription with a frown of angry apprehension. Tearing open the envelope, he drew out the letter, unfolded it and glanced quickly through the contents. Apparently it was quite short, for, almost immediately, he refolded it, returned it to its envelope and slipped the latter into his pocket.

  Passing through into the walled garden, he took off his coat, laid it down in the summer-house and fell to work on the excavation, extending the circle into a square and levelling the space around the well to make a bed for the stone slab. But all his enthusiasm had evaporated. He worked steadily and with care; but his usually cheerful face was gloomy and stern, and a certain faraway look in his eyes hinted that his thoughts were not on what he was doing but on something suggested by the ill-omened missive.

  When the light failed, he replaced the hurdle, cleaned and put away the spade, and then went indoors with his coat on his arm to wash and take his solitary supper; of which he made short work, eating and drinking mechanically and gazing before him with gloomy preoccupation. Supper being finished and cleared away, he called for a kettle of boiling water and a basin, and, taking from a cupboard a handled needle, a pair of fine forceps, and a sheet of blotting-paper, laid them on the table with Mrs. Bellard’s tin box. The latter he opened and very carefully transferred the imprisoned snails to the basin, which he then filled with boiling water; whereupon the unfortunate molluscs each emitted a stream of bubbles and shrank instantly into the recesses of its shell.

  Having deposited the kettle in the fireplace, Mr. Pottermack drew a chair up to the table and seated himself with the basin before him and the blotting-paper at his right hand. But before beginning his work he drew forth the letter, straightened it out and, laying it on the table, read it through slowly. It bore no address and no signature; and though the envelope was addressed to Marcus Pottermack, Esq., it began, oddly enough, “Dear Jeff.”

  “I send you this little billy doo,” it ran on, “with deep regret, which I know you will share. But it can’t be helped. I had hoped that the last one would be in fact, the last one, whereas it turns out to have been the last but one. This is positively my final effort, so keep up your pecker. And it is only a small affair this time. A hundred—in notes, of course. Fivers are safest. I shall call at the usual place on Wednesday at 8 P.M. (‘in the gloaming, O! my darling!’) This will give you time to hop up to town in the morning to collect the rhino. And mind I’ve got to have it. No need to dwell on unpleasant alternatives. Necessity knows no law. I am in a devil of a tight corner and you have got to help me out. So adieu until Wednesday evening.”

  Mr. Pottermack turned from the letter, and, taking up the mounted needle, with the other hand picked out of the basin a snail with a delicate yellow shell (Helix hortensis, var. arenicola) and, regarding it reflectively, proceeded with expert care to extract the shrivelled body of the mollusc. But though his attention seemed to be concentrated on his task, his thoughts were far away, and his eyes strayed now and again to the letter at his side.

  “I am in a devil of a tight corner.” Of course he was. The incurable plunger is always getting into tight corners. “And you have got to help me out.” Exactly. In effect, the money that you have earned by unstinted labour and saved by self-denial has got to be handed to me that I may drop it into the bottomless pit that swallows up the gambler’s losings. “This is positively my final effort.” Yes. So was the last one, and the one before that; and so would be the next, and the one that would follow it, and so on without end. Mr. Pottermack saw it all clearly; realized, as so many other sufferers have realized, that there is about a blackmailer something hopelessly elusive. No transaction with him has any finality. He has something to sell, and he sells it; but behold! even as the money passes the thing sold is back in the hand of the vendor, to be sold again and yet again. No covenant with him is binding; no agreement can be enforced. There can be no question of cutting a loss, for, no matter how drastic the sacrifice, it is no sooner made than the status quo ante reappears.

  On these truths Mr. Pottermack cogitated gloomily and asked himself, as such victims often do, whether it would not have been better in the first place to tell this ruffian to go to the devil and do his worst. Yet that had hardly seemed practicable. For the fellow would probably have done his worst:-and his worst was so extremely bad. On the other hand, it was impossible that this state of affairs should be allowed to go on indefinitely. He was not by any means a rich man, though this parasite persisted in assuming that he was. At the present rate he would soon be sucked dry—reduced to stark poverty. And even then he would be no safer.

  The intensity of his revolt against his intolerable position was emphasized by his very occupation. The woman for whom he was preparing these specimens was very dear to him. In any pictures that his fancy painted of the hoped-for future, hers was the principal figure. His fondest wish was to ask her to be his wife, and he felt a modest confidence that she would not say him nay. But how could he ask any woman to marry him while this vampire clung to his body? Marriage was not for him—a slave today, a pauper tomorrow, at the best; and at the worst—

  The evening had lapsed into night by the time that all the specimens had been made presentable for the cabinet. It remained to write a little name-ticket for each with the aid, when necessary, of a handbook of the British Mollusca, and then to wrap each separate shell, with its ticket, in tissue paper and pack it tenderly in the small tin box. Thus was he occupied when his housekeeper, Mrs. Gadby, “reported off duty” and retired; and the clock in the hall was striking eleven when, having packed the last of the shells, he made the tin box into a neat little parcel with the consignee’s name legibly written on the cover.

  The house was profoundly quiet. Usually Mr. Pottermack was deeply appreciative of the restful silence that settles down upon the haunts of men when darkness has fallen upon field and hedgerow and the village has gone to sleep. Very pleasant it was then to reach down from the bookshelves some trusty companion and draw the big easy-chair up to the fireplace, even though, as tonight, the night was warm and the grate empty. The force of habit did, indeed, even now, lead him to the bookshelves. But no book was taken down. He had no inclination for reading tonight. Neither had he any inclination for sleep. Instead, he lit a pipe and walked softly up and down the room, stem and gloomy of face, yet with a look of concentration as if he were considering a difficult problem.

  Up and down, up and down he paced, hardly making a sound. And as the time passed, the expression of his face underwent a subtle change. It lost none of its sternness, but yet it seemed to clear, as if a solution of the problem were coming into sight.

  The striking of the clock in the hall, proclaiming the end of the day, brought him to a halt. He glanced at his watch, knocked out his empty pipe, lit a candle and blew out the lamp. As he turned to pass out to the stairs, something in his expression seemed to hint at a conclusion reached. All the anxiety and bewilderment had passed out of his face. Stern it was still; but there had come into it a certain resolute calm; the calm of a man who has made up his mind.

  CHAPTER II

  The Secret Visitor

  The following morning found Mr. Pottermack in an undeniably restless moo
d. For a time he could settle down to no occupation, but strayed about the house and garden with an air of such gravity and abstraction that Mrs. Gadby looked at him askance and inwardly wondered what had come over her usually buoyant and cheerful employer.

  One thing, however, was clear. He was not going to ‘hop up to town.’ Of the previous expeditions of that kind he had a vivid and unpleasant recollection; the big “bearer” cheque sheepishly pushed across the counter, the cashier’s astonished glance at it, the careful examination of books, and then the great bundle of five-pound notes, which he counted, at the cashier’s request, with burning cheeks; and his ignominious departure with the notes buttoned into an inside pocket and an uncomfortable suspicion in his mind that the ostentatiously unobservant cashier had guessed at once the nature of the transaction. Well, that experience was not going to be repeated on this occasion. There was going to be a change of procedure.

  As he could fix his mind at nothing more definite, he decided to devote the day to a thorough clear-up of his workshops: a useful and necessary work, which had the added advantage of refreshing his memory as to the abiding-places of rarely used appliances and materials. And an excellent distraction he found it; so much so that several times, in the interest of rediscovering some long-forgotten tool or stock of material, he was able to forget for a while the critical interview that loomed before him.

  So the day passed. The mid-day meal was consumed mechanically—under the furtive and disapproving observation of Mrs. Gadby—and dispatched with indecent haste. He was conscious of an inclination to lurk about the house on the chance of a brief gossip with his fair friend; but he resisted it, and, when he came in to tea, the housekeeper reported that the little package had been duly collected.

  He lingered over his tea as if he were purposely consuming time, and when at last he rose from the table, he informed Mrs. Gadby that he had some important work to do and was under no circumstances to be disturbed. Then once more he retired to the walled garden, and having shut himself in, dropped the key into his pocket. He did not, however, resume his labours in the workshop. He merely called in there for an eight-inch steel bolt and a small electric lamp, both of which he bestowed in his pockets. Then he came out and walked slowly up and down the grass plot with his hands behind him and his chin on his breast as if immersed in thought, but glancing from time to time at his watch. At a quarter to eight he took off his spectacles and put them in his pocket, stepped across to the well, and picking up the hurdle that still lay over the dark cavity, carried it away and stood it against the wall. Then he softly unbolted the side gate, turned the handle of the latch, drew the gate open a bare inch, and, leaving it thus ajar, walked to the summer-house, and, entering it, sat down in one of the chairs.

  His visitor, if deficient in some of the virtues, had at least that of punctuality; for the clock of the village church had barely finished striking the hour when the gate opened noiselessly and the watcher in the summer-house saw, through the gathering gloom, a large, portly man enter with stealthy step, close the gate silently behind him and softly shoot the upper bolt.

  Pottermack rose as his visitor approached, and the two men met just outside the summer-house. There was a striking contrast between them in every respect, in build, in countenance, and in manner. The newcomer was a big, powerful man, heavy and distinctly over-fat, whose sly, shifty face—at present exhibiting an uneasy smile—showed evident traces of what is commonly miscalled “good living,” especially as to the liquid element thereof; whereas his host, smallish, light, spare, with clean-cut features expressive of lively intelligence, preserved a stony calm as he looked steadily into his visitor’s evasive eyes.

  “Well, Jeff,” the latter began in a deprecating tone, “you don’t seem overjoyed to see me. Not an effusive welcome. Aren’t you going to shake hands with an old pal?”

  “It doesn’t seem necessary,” Pottermack replied coldly.

  “Oh, very well,” the other retorted. “Perhaps you’d like to kiss me instead.” He sniggered foolishly, and, entering the summer-house, dropped into one of the armchairs and continued: “What about a mild refresher while we discuss our little business? Looks like being a dry job, to judge by your mug.”

  Without replying, Pottermack opened a small cupboard, and taking out a decanter, a siphon, and a tumbler, placed them on the table by his guest. It was not difficult to see that the latter had already fortified himself with one or two refreshers, mild or otherwise, but that was not Pottermack’s affair. He was going to keep his own brain clear. The other might do as he pleased.

  “Not going to join me, Jeff?” the visitor protested. “Oh, buck up, old chap! It’s no use getting peevish about parting with a few pounds. You won’t miss a little donation to help a pal out of a difficulty.”

  As Pottermack made no reply but sat down and gazed stonily before him, the other poured out half a tumblerful of whisky, filled up with soda, and took a substantial gulp. Then he, too, sat silent for a time, gazing out into the darkening garden. And gradually the smile faded from his face, leaving it sullen and a little anxious.

  “So you’ve been digging up your lawn,” he remarked presently. What’s the game? Going to set up a flagstaff?”

  “No. I am going to have a sun-dial there.”

  “A sun-dial, hey? Going to get your time on the cheap? Good. I like sun-dials. Do their job without ticking. Suppose you’ll have a motto on it. Tempus fugit is the usual thing. Always appropriate, but especially so in the case of a man who has ‘done time’ and fugitted. It will help to remind you of olden days, ‘the days that are no more.’” He finished with a mirthless cackle and cast a malignant glance at the silent and wooden-faced Pottermack. There was another interval of strained, uncomfortable silence, during which the visitor took periodic gulps from his tumbler and eyed his companion with sullen perplexity. At length, having finished his liquor, he set down the empty tumbler and turned towards Pottermack. “You got my letter, I suppose, as you left the gate ajar?”

  “Yes,” was the laconic reply.

  “Been up to town today?”

  “No.”

  “Well, I suppose you have got the money?”

  “No, I have not.”

  The big man sat up stiffly and stared at his companion in dismay.

  “But, damn it, man!” he exclaimed, “didn’t I tell you it was urgent? I’m in a devil of a fix. I’ve got to pay that hundred tomorrow. Must pay it, you understand. I’m going up to town in the morning to pay. As I hadn’t got the money myself, I’ve had to borrow it from—you know where; and I was looking to you to enable me to put it back at once. I must have that money tomorrow at the latest. You’d better run up to town in the morning and I’ll meet you outside your bank.”

  Pottermack shook his head. “It can’t be done, Lewson. You’ll have to make some other arrangements.”

  Lewson stared at him in mingled amazement and fury. For a moment he was too astonished for speech. At length he burst out:

  “Can’t be done! What the devil do you mean? You’ve got the money in your bank and you are going to hand it over, or I’ll know the reason why. What do you imagine you are going to do?”

  “I am going,” said Pottermack, “to hold you to your agreement, or at least to part of it. You demanded a sum of money—a large sum—as the price of your silence. It was to be a single payment, once for all, and I paid it. You promised solemnly to make no further demands; yet, within a couple of months, you did make further demands, and I paid again. Since then you have made demands at intervals, regardless of your solemn undertaking. Now this has got to stop. There must be an end to it, and this has got to be the end.”

  As he spoke, quietly but firmly, Lewson gazed at him as if he could not trust the evidence of his senses. This was quite a new Pottermack. At length, suppressing his anger, he replied in a conciliatory tone:

  “Very well, Jeff. It shall be the end. Help me out just this time and you shall hear no more from me. I promise you that o
n my word of honour.”

  At this last word Pottermack smiled grimly. But he answered in the same quiet, resolute manner:

  “It is no use, Lewson. You said that last time and the time before that, and, in fact, time after time. You have always sworn that each demand should be positively the last. And so you will go on, if I let you, until you have squeezed me dry.”

  On this Lewson threw off all disguise. Thrusting out his chin at Pottermack, he exclaimed furiously: “If you let me! And how do you think you are going to prevent me? You are quite right. I’ve got you, and I’m going to squeeze you, so now you know. And look here, young fellow, if that money isn’t handed out to me tomorrow morning, something is going to happen. A very surprised gentleman at Scotland Yard will get a letter informing him that the late Jeffrey Brandon, runaway convict, is not the late J. B. but is alive and kicking, and that his present name and address is Marcus Pottermack, Esquire, of ‘The Chestnuts,’ Borley, Bucks. How will that suit you?”

  “It wouldn’t suit me at all,” Mr. Pottermack replied, with unruffled calm; “but before you do it, let me remind you of one or two facts. First, the run-away convict, once your closest friend, was to your knowledge an innocent man—”

  “That’s no affair of mine,” Lewson interrupted. “He was a convict, and is one still. Besides, how do I know he was innocent? A jury of his fellow-countrymen found him guilty—”

  “Don’t talk rubbish, Lewson,” Pottermack broke in impatiently. “There is no one here but ourselves. We both know that I didn’t do those forgeries and we both know who did.”

  Lewson grinned as he reached out for the decanter and poured out another half-tumblerful of whisky. “If you knew who did it,” he chuckled, “you must have been a blooming mug not to say.”

  “I didn’t know then,” Pottermack rejoined bitterly. “I thought you were a decent, honest fellow, fool that I was.”

 

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