When we had settled ourselves in an empty compartment and began to charge our pipes as the train moved off, I returned to the question of our tactics.
“What do you propose to do, Thorndyke, if this fellow tries to follow us home? Shall we let him run us to earth, or shall we lose him?”
“I see no reason why we should make a secret of who we are and where we live. That is apparently what Blake wants to know—that is, if this man is really shadowing us.”
“But,” I urged, “isn’t it generally wiser to withhold information until you know what use is going to be made of it?”
“As a rule, it is,” he admitted. “But it may happen that the use made of information by one party may be highly illuminating to the other. We may assume that Blake wants to know who we are simply because he suffers from an obsession of suspicion and thinks that we were in his grounds for some unlawful purpose. But he may have some other object, and if he has, I should like to know what it is; and the best way to find out is to let him have our names and address.”
To this I assented, though I was a little mystified. The man Blake was no concern of ours, and it did not seem to matter in the least what suspicions of us had got into his thick head. However Thorndyke probably knew his own business—and meanwhile the presence of this sleuth-hound provided an element of comedy of which I was far from unappreciative, and which my sedate colleague enjoyed without disguise.
When we alighted at Marylebone, we walked quickly to the barrier, but having passed through, we sauntered slowly to the main exit.
“Do you think Polton’s spectacles would be very conspicuous?” I asked.
My colleague smiled indulgently. “The new toy has caught on,” said he, “and it would be undeniably useful at the present moment. No, put the spectacles on. The discs are hardly noticeable to a casual observer.”
Accordingly I slipped the appliance on as we strolled out into the Marylebone Road and was able, almost immediately, to report progress.
“He is watching us from the exit. Which way are we going?”
“I think,” replied Thorndyke, “as he is a country cousin, we will make things easy for him and give him a little exercise after the confinement of the train. The Euston Road route is less crowded than Oxford Street.”
We turned eastward and started at an easy pace along the Marylebone Road and Euston Road, keeping on the less-frequented side of the street. I was a little self-conscious in regard to the spectacles, but apparently no one noticed them; and by their aid I was able to watch with astonishing ease our artless follower and to amuse myself by noting his conflicting anxieties to keep us in view and himself out of sight. We turned down Woburn Place, crossed Queen Square to Great Ormond Street and proceeding by Lamb’s-Conduit Street, Red lion Street, Great Turnstile, Lincoln’s Inn, and Chancery Lane, crossed Fleet Street to Middle Temple Lane. Here we slowed down, lest the sleuth-hound should lose us, and as we were now in our own neighbourhood, I removed the spectacles and restored them to their owner.
At the entrance to Pump Court we separated, Thorndyke proceeding at a leisurely pace towards Crown Office Row while I hurried through the court; and having halted in the Cloisters to make sure that the sleuth was not pursuing me, I darted through Fig-Tree Court and across King’s Bench Walk to our chambers, where I found Polton laying a sort of hybrid tea and supper.
To our trusty assistant I rapidly communicated the state of affairs (including the triumphant success of the magic spectacles, at which his face became a positive labyrinth of ecstatic wrinkles); and having provided ourselves with field-glasses, we stationed ourselves at the laboratory window, from whence we had the gratification of watching Thorndyke emerge majestically from Crown Office Row, followed shortly by the man in the velveteen coat, whose efforts to make himself invisible brought Polton to the verge of apoplexy.
“Hadn’t I better follow him and see where he goes to, sir?” the latter suggested.
The suggestion was put to Thorndyke when he entered, but was rejected.
“I don’t think we want to know where he goes from here,” said he. “But still, seeing that he has come so far, it might be kind of you, Polton, to go down and give him a chance of obtaining any information that he wants.”
Polton needed no second bidding. Clapping on his hat, he set forth gleefully down the stairs. But in a minute or two he was back again, somewhat crestfallen.
“It’s no go, sir,” he reported. “I found him copying the names on the door-post in the entry, and I think he must have got them all down, for when he saw me, he was off like a lamplighter.”
Thorndyke chuckled. “And to think,” said he, “that our friend, the squire, could have got all the information he wanted by the simple expedient of asking for our cards. Verily, suspicious folk give themselves a deal of unnecessary trouble.”
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Mr. Brodribb’s Embassy
There is a certain psychological phenomenon known to those financial navigators who have business on the deep and perilous waters of the Stock Exchange as “jobbing backwards.” It is not their monopoly, however. To ordinary mortals—who describe it as “prophesying after the event”—it has been familiar from time immemorial, and has always been associated with a degree of wisdom and certainty strangely lacking in prophecy of a more hasty and premature kind.
Reviewing the curious case of which this narrative is the record, I am tempted to embark on this eminently satisfying form of mental exercise. But when I do so, I am disposed to look with some surprise at the very conspicuous deficiency in the power of “jobbing forward” which I displayed while the events which I am chronicling were in progress. Now, I can see that all the striking and significant facts (only they then appeared neither striking nor significant) which enabled Thorndyke, from the very first, to pursue a steady advance along a visible trail, were in my possession as much as they were in his. But, whereas in his hands they became connected so as to form a continuous clue, in mine they remained separate, and apparently unrelated fragments. At the time, I thought that Thorndyke was hiding from me what material evidence he had. Now it is obvious to me (as also to the acute reader, who has, no doubt, already pieced the evidence together) that he not only concealed nothing, but actually gave me several of the very broadest hints.
So, despite the knowledge that I really possessed, if I had only realised it, I remained utterly in the dark. All that I knew for certain was that Winifred was encompassed by dangers; that human wolves prowled about her habitation and dogged her footsteps when she went abroad.
But even these perils had their compensations, for they gave an appearance of necessity to the constant companionship that my inclinations prompted. It was not a mere pilgrim of love that wended his way daily to Jacob Street, but an appointed guardian with duties to discharge. In the personally-conducted tours through the town, on business connected with the drawings that Winifred continued to produce with unabated industry, I was carrying out an indispensable function, since she was not permitted to go abroad without an efficient escort; and thus duty marched with pleasure.
Intimate, however, as my relations with Winifred had become, and recognised now even by Percy, I abstained from any confidences on the subject of our investigation of the murder. That was Thorndyke’s affair, and although he had made no stipulation on the subject, I had the feeling that he expected me to keep my own counsel, as he certainly did himself. Accordingly, in describing our visit to Beauchamp Blake—in which both she and Percy were intensely interested—I said nothing about the man whom I had seen in Aylesbury.
One exception I had nearly made, but thought better of it. The occasion arose one afternoon when we were examining and criticising her latest drawing. As we stood before the easel, a shaft of sunlight, coming in through the great window, struck a part of the drawing and totally altered the character of the colouring. I remarked on the change of colour produced by the more intense illumination.
“Yes,” said she, “and that rem
inds me of a very odd discovery that I made the other day and that I meant to tell you about.” She unfastened the silken cord by which she wore the mysterious locket suspended from her neck, and opening the little gold volume, held it in the sunbeam so that the light fell upon the coil of hair that it enclosed.
“Do you see?” she asked, looking at me expectantly.
“Yes,” I answered. “In the sunlight the hair seems to have quite a distinct blue tint.”
“Exactly!” she exclaimed. “Now isn’t that very remarkable? I have often heard of blue-black hair, but I thought it was just a phrase expressing intense blackness without any tinge of brown. But this is really blue, quite a clear, rich blue, like the colour of deeply-toned stained glass. Do you suppose it is natural? It can hardly be a dye.”
It was then that I had nearly told her of Thorndyke’s discovery and his strange and cryptic utterances on the subject. But a principle is a principle. The fact had been communicated to me by him, and I did not feel at liberty to disclose it without his sanction, though, to be sure, there was nothing confidential about it. His examination of the locket had been, apparently, a matter of mere curiosity. For Thorndyke was so constituted that he could not bring himself willingly to leave a problem unsolved, even though its solution promised no useful result. To him the solution was an end in itself, undertaken for the pleasure of the mental exercise. And this locket evidently held a secret. To what extent he had mastered that secret, I could not guess. Nor did I particularly care. It was not my secret, and I had no taste for working out irrelevant puzzles.
“I should hardly think the blue colour can be natural,” said I, and then, by way of compromise, I added: “but I expect Thorndyke could tell you. When you come to see us again you had better show it to him and hear what he says about it.”
I took the locket from her hand and looked it over with half-impatient curiosity, remembering Thorndyke’s exasperating advice, and recalling his reference to the hallmark on the back, I turned it over and scrutinised the minute device.
“You are looking at the hallmark, or the goldsmith’s ‘touch,’ or whatever it is,” said Winifred. “It is rather curious. I have never seen one like it before. It certainly is not an ordinary English hallmark. Let me get you a magnifying-glass.”
She fetched a strong reading-glass, and through this I examined the mark more minutely. But I could make nothing of it. It consisted of four punch-marks, of which the first was a capital A surmounted by a small crown and bearing two palm-leaves, the second a kind of escutcheon bearing the initials A.H. surmounted by a crown, and over that a fleur-de-lis; the third bore simply a capital L, and the fourth the head of some animal which looked like a horse.
“It is a curious and unusual mark,” said I, handing back to her the locket and the glass, “but it conveys no information to me beyond the suggestion that the locket is apparently of foreign workmanship, probably French or Italian. But,” I added, with a malicious hope of seeing my reverend senior cornered, “you had better ask Thorndyke about it when you come. He is sure to be able to tell you all about it.”
“He seems to be a sort of human encyclopaedia,” Winifred remarked as she refastened the locket. “I shall adopt your advice and consult him about that hair, but I shan’t be able to come this week. There is quite a big batch of drawings to be done, and that means some long working days. Perhaps you can arrange an afternoon in the latter part of next week for the oracular tea-party.”
I promised to ascertain my colleague’s arrangements and to fix a day, but the promise was left unredeemed and the “oracular tea-party” was thrust into the background by new and more stirring events, which began to cast their shadows before them that very evening. For, when I entered our chambers, behold Mr. Brodribb and Sir Lawrence Drayton settled in armchairs by the fire, in company with the small table and the inevitable decanter. Evidently some kind of conference was in progress.
“Ha!” said Brodribb. “Here is the fourth conspirator. Now we are complete. I have been devilling for your respected senior, Anstey, and I have called to report progress. Also, as you see, I have captured Sir Lawrence and brought him along as he seemed to be an interested party.”
“He is a somewhat mystified party at present,” said Drayton, “but probably some explanations are contemplated.”
“They are going to begin as soon as Anstey has filled his glass,” said Brodribb, bearing in mind, no doubt, the laws of conviviality as expounded by Mrs. Gamp; and as the stipulated condition was complied with, he proceeded: “It was suggested to me by Thorndyke a short time ago that the tenure of the Beauchamp Blake property would be put on a more satisfactory footing if the missing title-deeds could be recovered.”
“More satisfactory to the present tenant, you mean,” said Drayton.
“More satisfactory to everybody,” said Brodribb.
“That would depend on the nature of the documents recovered,” Sir Lawrence remarked. “But let us hear the rest of the suggestion.”
“The suggestion of our learned and Machiavellian friend was that, since the documents are believed to be hidden somewhere in the house, it would be a good plan to have a systematic survey of the premises carried out by some person who has an expert knowledge of secret chambers and hiding-places.”
“Do you know of any such person?” Drayton asked.
Brodribb smiled a fat smile and replenished his glass. “I do,” he replied “and so do you. Thorndyke himself is quite an authority on the subject; and, of course, the suggestion was that the survey should be made and the search conducted by him. Naturally. You can guess why, I suppose?”
“I can’t,” said Drayton, “if you are suggesting any reason other than the one you have given.”
“My dear Drayton,” chuckled Brodribb, “can you imagine Thorndyke embarking on a search of this kind without some definite leading facts? No, no. Our friend has got something up his sleeve. I’ve no doubt that he knows exactly where to put his hand on those documents before he begins.”
“Do you, Thorndyke?” Sir Lawrence asked, with an inquisitive glance at my colleague.
“Now,” the latter replied, “I put it to you, Drayton, whether it is likely that I, who have never been in this house in my life, have never seen a plan of it, and have no knowledge whatever of its internal construction or arrangement, can possibly know where these documents are hidden.”
“It certainly doesn’t seem very probable,” Drayton admitted, and it certainly did not. But still I noted that Thorndyke’s answer contained no specific denial, a circumstance that apparently did not escape Brodribb’s observation, for that astute practitioner received the reply with an unabashed wink and wagged his head knowingly as he savoured his wine.
“You can think what you like,” said he, “and so can I. However, to proceed: the suggestion was that I should put the proposal to the present tenant, Arthur Blake, and expound its advantages, but, of course, say nothing as to the source of the inspiration. Well, I did so. I wrote to him, pointing out the desirability of getting possession of the deeds, and suggesting that he should call at my office and talk the matter over.”
“And how did he take it?” asked Drayton.
“Very calmly—at first. He called at my office yesterday and opened the subject. But he didn’t seem at all keen on it; thought it sounded rather like a wild-goose chase—until I mentioned Thorndyke. Then his interest woke up at once. The mention of a real, tangible expert put the matter on a different plane; gave it an air of reality. And he had heard of Thorndyke—read about him in the papers, I suppose—and, of course, I cracked him up. So in the end he became as keen as mustard and anxious to get a start made as soon as possible. And not only keen on his own account. To my surprise, he raised the question of the other claimant, Peter Blake’s son. Of course he knew about Peter Blake’s claim, although it was before his time, and it seems that he read the newspaper report of the curious statement that Miss Blake—Peter’s daughter—made at the inquest on Sir Lawre
nce’s brother. Well, in effect, he suggested—very properly, as I thought—that Miss Blake might like to be present when the search was made.”
“I certainly think,” said Drayton, “she should be, if not actually present, at least represented. There might be some documents affecting her brother directly.”
“That was his point, and he authorised me to invite her to be present and to make all necessary arrangements. So the question is, Thorndyke, when can you go down and find the documents?”
“I am prepared to begin the search the day after tomorrow.”
“And with regard to Miss Blake? You are acquainted with her, I think?”
“Yes,” replied Thorndyke. “We can communicate with her. But my feeling is that it would hardly be desirable for her to be present while the actual survey is being made. It may be a tedious affair, and we shall get on with it better without spectators. Of course I shall know if anything is found and shall probably ascertain its nature; and in that case she can be informed.”
Drayton nodded, but he did not seem quite satisfied. “I suppose that will do,” said he, “though I would rather that she were directly represented. You see, Thorndyke, you are acting for Blake, and if Anstey goes with you, he is your coadjutor. I wonder if Blake would object to my looking in later in the day. I could, as I have to go down to Aylesbury the day after tomorrow. What do you say, Brodribb?”
“I see no objection,” was the reply, “in fact, I will take the responsibility of inviting you to call and see what progress has been made.”
“Very well, then,” said Drayton, “I will come about four. I shall go down by car, and when I have finished with my client, I can easily take Beauchamp Blake on my way home. And for that matter,” he added, “I don’t see why Miss Blake shouldn’t come with me. My client’s wife could entertain her while I am transacting the business, and then she could come on with me to the house. How does that strike you, Thorndyke?”
“It seems quite an admirable arrangement,” my colleague replied. “She will be saved the tedium of waiting about and she will have the advantage of your advice if any delicate inquiries have to be made.”
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