LEAD TRUMPS.
Naturally, under these circumstances,
it was all in vain that Guy Waring pursued his investigations
into Montague Nevitt’s whereabouts. Neither
at Plymouth nor anywhere else along the skirts of Dartmoor
could he learn that anything more had been seen or
heard of the man who called himself “Mr. McGregor.”
And yet Guy felt sure Nevitt wouldn’t go far
from Mambury, as things stood just then; for as soon
as he missed the pocket-book containing the three thousand
pounds, he would surely take some steps to recover
it.
Two days later, however, Gilbert Gildersleeve
sat in the hotel at Plymouth, where he had moved from
Ivybridge after—well, as he phrased it
to himself, after that unfortunate accident. The
blustering Q.C. was like another man now. For
the first time in his life he knew what it meant to
be nervous and timid. Every sound made him suppress
an involuntary start; for as yet he had heard no whisper
of the body being discovered. He couldn’t
leave the neighbourhood, however, till the murder
was out. Dangerous as he felt it to remain on
the spot, some strange spell seemed to bind him against
his will to Dartmoor. He must stop and hear what
local gossip had to say when the body came to light.
And above all, for the present, he hadn’t the
courage to go home; he dared not face his own wife
and daughter.
So he stayed on and lounged, and pretended
to interest himself with walks over the hills and
up the Tamar valley.
As he sat there in the billiard-room,
that day, a young fellow entered whom he remembered
to have seen once or twice in London, at evening parties,
with Montague Nevitt. He turned pale at the sight—Gilbert
Gildersleeve turned pale, that great red man.
At first he didn’t even remember the young
fellow’s name; but it came back to him in time
that he was one Guy Waring. It was a hard ordeal
to meet him, but Gilbert Gildersleeve felt he must
brazen it out. To slink away from the young man
would be to rouse suspicion. So they sat and
talked for a minute or two together, on indifferent
subjects, neither, to say truth, being very well pleased
to see the other under such peculiar circumstances.
Then Guy, who had the least reason for concealment
of the two, sauntered out for a stroll, with his heart
still full of that villain Nevitt, whose name, of
course, he had never mentioned to Gilbert Gildersleeve.
And Gilbert Gildersleeve, for his part, had had equal
cause for a corresponding reticence as to their common
acquaintance.
Just as Guy left the room, the landlord
dropped in and began to talk with his guest about
the latest new sensation.
“Heard the news, sir, this morning?”
he asked, with an important air. “Inspector’s
just told me. A case very much in your line of
business. Dead body’s been discovered at
Mambury, choked, and then thrown among the brake by
the river. Name of McGregor—a visitor
from London. And they do say the police have a
clue to the murderer. Person who did it—”
Gilbert Gildersleeve’s heart
gave a great bound within him, and then stood stock-still;
but by an iron effort of will he suppressed all outer
sign of his profound emotion. He seemed to the
observant eye merely interested and curious, as the
landlord finished his sentence carelessly—“Person
who did it’s supposed to be a young man who
was at Mambury this week, of the name of Waring.”
Gilbert Gildersleeve’s heart
gave another bound, still more violent than before.
But again he repressed with difficulty all external
symptoms of his profound agitation. This was very
strange news. Then somebody else was suspected
instead of himself. In one way that was bad;
for Gilbert Gildersleeve had a conscience and a sense
of justice. But, in another way, why, it would
save time for the moment, and divert attention from
his own personality. Better anything now than
immediate suspicion. In a week or two more every
trace would be lost of his presence at Mambury.
“Waring,” he said thoughtfully,
turning over the name to himself, as if he attached
it to no particular individual. “Waring—Waring—Waring.”
He paused and looked hard. Ha!
so far good! It was clear the landlord didn’t
know Waring was the name of the young man who had
just left the billiard-room. This was lucky, indeed,
for if he had known it now, and had taxed Guy
then and there, before his own very face, with being
the murderer of this unknown person at Mambury, Gilbert
Gildersleeve felt no course would have been open for
him save to tell the whole truth on the spot unreservedly.
Try as he would, he couldn’t see another
man arrested before his very eyes for the crime he
himself had really, though almost unwittingly, committed.
“Waring,” he repeated
slowly, like one who endeavoured to collect his scattered
thoughts; “what sort of person was he, do you
know? And how did the police come to get a clue
to him?”
The landlord, nothing loth, went off
into a long and circumstantial story of the discovery
of the body, with minute details of how the innkeeper
at Mambury had traced the supposed murderer—who
gave no name—by an envelope which he’d
left in his bedroom that evening. The county
was up in arms about the affair to-day. All Dartmoor
was being searched, and it was supposed the fellow
was in hiding somewhere in the neighbourhood of Tavistock
or Oakhampton. They’d catch him by to-night.
The landlord wouldn’t be surprised, indeed,
now he came to think on it, if his truest himself—here
a very long pause—were retained by-and-by
for the prosecution.
Gilbert Gildersleeve drew a deep breath,
unperceived. That was all, was it? The
pause had unnerved him. He talked some minutes,
as unconcernedly as he could, though trembling inwardly
all the while, about the murder and the murderer.
The landlord listened with profound respect to the
words of legal wisdom as they dropped from his lips;
for he knew Mr. Gildersleeve by common repute as one
of the ablest and acutest of criminal lawyers in all
England. Then, after a short interval, the big
burly man, moving his guilty fingers nervously over
the seal on his watch-chain, and assuming as much
as possible his ordinary air of blustering self-assertion,
asked, in an off-hand fashion, “By the way, let
me see, I’ve, some business to arrange; what’s
the number of my friend Mr. Billington’s bedroom?”
The landlord looked up with a little
start of surprise. “Mr. Billington?”
he said, hesitating. “We’ve got no
Mr. Billington.”
Gilbert Gildersleeve smiled a sickly
smile. It was neck or nothing now. He must
go right through with it. “Oh yes,”
he answered, with prompt conviction, playing a dangerous
card well—for how could he know what name
this young man Waring might possibly be passing under?
“The gentleman who was talking to me when you
came in just now. His name’s Billington—though,
perhaps,” he added, after a pause, with a reflective
air, “he may have given you another one.
Young men will be young men. They’ve often
some reason, when travelling, for concealing their
names. Though Billington’s not the sort
of fellow, to be sure, who’s likely to be knocking
about anywhere incognito.”
The landlord laughed. “Oh,
we’ve plenty of that sort,” he replied
good-humouredly. “Both ladies and gentlemen.
It all makes trade. But your friend ain’t
one of ’em. To tell you the truth, he didn’t
give any name at all when he came to the hotel; and
we didn’t ask any. Billington, is it?
Ah, Billington, Billington. I knew a Billington
myself once, a trainer at Newmarket. Well, he’s
a very pleasant young man, nice-spoken, and that;
but I don’t fancy he’s quite right in
his head, somehow.”
With instinctive cleverness, Gilbert
Clildersleeve snatched at the opening at once.
“Ah no, poor fellow,” he said, shaking
his head sympathetically. “You’ve
found that out already, have you? Well, he’s
subject to delusions a bit; mere harmless delusions;
but he’s not at all dangerous. Excitable,
very, when anything odd turns up; he’ll be calling
himself Waring and giving himself in charge for this
murder, I dare say, when he comes to hear of it.
But as good-hearted a fellow as ever lived, though;
only, a trifle obstinate. If you’ve any
difficulty with him at any time, just send for me.
I’ve known him from a boy. He’ll
do anything I tell him.”
It was a critical game, but Gilbert
Gildersleeve saw something definite must be done,
and he trusted to bluster, and a well-known name,
to carry him through with it. And, indeed, he
had said enough. From that moment forth, the
landlord’s suspicions were never even so much
as aroused by the innocent young man with the preoccupied
manner, who knew Mr. Gildersleeve. The great
Q.C.’s word was guarantee enough—for
any one but himself. And the great Q.C. himself
knew it. Why, a chance word from his lips was
enough to protect Guy Waring from suspicion.
Who would ever believe, then, anything so preposterously
improbable as that the great Q.C. himself was the
murderer?
Not the police, you may be sure; nor
the Plymouth landlord.
He went out into the town, with his
mind now filled full of a curious scheme. A plan
of campaign loomed up visibly before him. Waring
was suspected. Therefore Waring must somehow have
given cause for suspicion. Well, Waring was
a friend of Montague Nevitt’s, and had evidently
been at Mambury, either with him or without him, immediately
before the—h’m—the unfortunate
accident. But as soon as Waring came to learn
of the discovery of the body, which he would be sure
to do from the paper that evening at latest, he would
see at once the full strength of whatever suspicions
might tell against him. Now, Gilbert Gildersleeve’s
experience of criminal cases had abundantly shown
him that a suspected person, even when innocent, always
has one fixed desire in his head—to gain
time, anyhow. So Waring would naturally wish
to gain time, at whatever cost. There were evidently
circumstances connecting Waring with the crime; there
were none at all, known to the outer world, connecting
the eminent lawyer. Therefore, the eminent lawyer
argued to himself, as coolly almost as if it had been
somebody else’s case, not his own, he was conducting—therefore,
if an immediate means of escape is provided for Waring,
Waring will almost undoubtedly fall blindfold into
it.
Not that he meant to let Guy pay the
penalty in the end for his own rash crime. He
was no hardened villain. He had still a conscience.
If the worst came to the worst, he said to himself,
he would tell all, openly, rather than let an innocent
man suffer. But, like every one else, in accordance
with his own inference from his observation of others,
he, too, wanted to gain time, anyhow; and if he could
but gain time by kindly helping Guy to escape for the
present, why, he would gladly do so. An innocent
man may be suspected for the moment, Gilbert Gildersleeve
thought to himself, with a lawyer’s blind confidence;
but under our English law he need never at least fear
that the suspicion will be permanent. For lawyers
repeat their own incredible commonplaces about the
absolute perfection of English law so often that at
last, by a sort of retributive nemesis, they really
almost come to believe them.
Filled with these ideas, then, which
rose naturally up in his mind without his taking the
trouble, as it were, definitely to prove them, Gilbert
Gildersleeve hurried on through the crowded streets
of Plymouth town, till he reached the office of the
London and South African Steamship Company. There
he entered with an air of decided business, and asked
to take a passage to Cape Town at once by the steamer
“Cetewayo”, due to call at Plymouth, outward
bound, that evening. He had looked up particulars
of sailing in the papers at the hotel, and asked now,
as if for himself, for a large and roomy berth, with
all his usual self-possession and boldness of manner.
The clerk gazed at him carelessly; that big and burly
man with the great awkward hands raised no picture
in his brain of the supposed murderer of McGregor
in the wood at Mambury as that murderer had been described
to him by the police that morning, from a verbal portrait
after the landlord of the Talbot Arms. This colossal,
red-faced, loud-spoken person, who required a large
and roomy berth, was certainly “not” the
rather slim young man, a little above the medium height,
with a dark moustache and a gentle musical voice,
whom the inn-keeper had seen in an excited mood on
the hunt for McGregor along the slopes of Dartmoor.
“What name?” the clerk
asked briskly, after Gilbert Gildersleeve had selected
his state-room from the plan, with some show of interest
as to its being well amidships and not too near the
noise of the engines.
“Billington,” the barrister
answered, without a glimmer of hesitation. “Arthur
Standish Billington, if you want the full name.
Thirty-two will suit me very well, I think, and I’ll
pay for it now. Go aboard when she’s sighted,
I suppose; nine o’clock or thereabouts.”
The clerk made out the ticket in the
name he was told. “Yes, nine o’clock,”
he said curtly. “All luggage to be on board
the tender by eight, sharp. You’ve left
taking your passage very late, Mr. Billington.
Lucky we’ve a room that’ll suit you, I’m
sure, It isn’t often we have berths left amidships
like this on the day of sailing.”
Gilbert Gildersleeve pretended to
look unconcerned once more. “No, I suppose
not,” he answered, in a careless voice.
“People generally know their own minds rather
longer beforehand. But I’d a telegram from
the Cape this morning that calls me over immediately.”
He folded up his ticket, and put it
in his pocket. Then he pulled out a roll of
notes and paid the amount in full. The clerk gave
him change promptly. Nobody could ever have suspected
so solid a man as the great Q.C. of any more serious
crime or misdemeanour than shirking the second service
on Sunday evening. There was a ponderous respectability
about his portly build that defied detection.
The agents of all the steamboat companies had been
warned that morning that the slim young man of the
name of Waring might try to escape at the last moment.
But who could ever suspect this colossal pile, in
the British churchwarden style of human architecture,
of aiding and abetting the escape of the young man
Waring from the pervasive myrmidons of English justice?
The very idea was absurd. Gilbert Gildersleeve’s
waistcoat was above suspicion.
And when Guy Waring returned to his
room at the Duke of Devonshire Hotel half an hour
later, in complete ignorance as yet of the bare fact
of the murder, he found on his table an envelope addressed,
in an unknown hand, “Guy Waring, Esq.,”
while below in the corner, twice underlined, were
the importunate words, “Immediate!
IMPORTANT!”
Guy tore it open in wonder. What
on earth could this mean? He trembled as he read.
Could Cyril have learnt all? Or had Nevitt, that
double-dyed traitor, now trebled his treachery by informing
against the man whom he had driven into a crime?
Guy couldn’t imagine what it all could be driving
at, for there, before his eyes, in a round schoolboy
hand, very carefully formed, without the faintest
trace of anything like character, were the words of
this strange and startling message, whose origin and
intent were alike a mystery to him.
“Guy Waring, a warrant is out
for your apprehension. Fly at once, or things
may be worse for you. It is something always to
gain time for the moment. You will avoid suspicion,
public scandal, trial. Enclosed find a ticket
for Cape Town by the Cetewayo to-night. She sails
at nine. Luggage to be on board the tender by
eight sharp. If you go, all can yet be satisfactorily
cleared up. If you stay, the danger is great,
and may be very serious. Ticket is taken (and
paid for) in the name of Arthur Standish Billington.
Settle your account at the hotel in that name and
go.
“Yours, in frantic haste,
“A sincere well-WISHER.”
Guy gazed at the strange missive long
and dubiously. “A warrant is out.”
He scarcely knew what to do. Oh, for time, time,
time! Had Cyril sent this? Or was it some
final device of that fiend, Nevitt?