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from The old man in the corner
Popular edition with frontispiece by H.M. Brock
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1910
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THE man in the corner pushed aside his glass, and leant across the table.
"Mysteries!" he commented. "There is no such thing as a mystery in connection with any crime, provided intelligence is brought to bear upon its investigation."
Very much astonished Polly Burton looked over the top of her newspaper, and fixed a pair of very severe, coldly inquiring brown eyes upon him.
She had disapproved of the man from the instant when he shuffled across the shop and sat down opposite to her, at the same marble-topped table which already held her large coffee (3d.), her roll and butter (2d.), and plate of tongue (6d.).
Now this particular corner, this very same table, that special view of the magnificent marble hall--known as the Norfolk Street branch of the Aërated Bread Company's depôts--were Polly's own corner, table, and view. Here she had partaken of eleven pennyworth of luncheon and one pennyworth of daily information ever since that glorious never-to-be-forgotten day when she was enrolled on the staff of the Evening Observer (we'll call it that, if you please), and became a member of that illustrious and world-famed organization known as the British Press.
She was a personality, was Miss Burton of the Evening Observer. Her cards were printed thus:
MISS MARY J. BURTON.
Evening Observer |
She had interviewed Miss Ellen Terry and the Bishop of Madagascar, Mr. Seymour Hicks and the Chief Commissioner of Police. She had been present at the last Marlborough House garden party--in the cloak-room, that is to say, where she caught sight of Lady Thingummy's hat, Miss What-you-may-call's sunshade, and of various other things modistical or fashionable, all of which were duly described under the heading "Royalty and Dress" in the early afternoon edition of the Evening Observer.
(The article itself is signed M. J. B., and is to be found in the files of that leading halfpenny-worth.)
For these reasons--and for various others, too--Polly felt irate with the man in the corner, and told him so with her eyes, as plainly as any pair of brown eyes can speak.
She had been reading an article in the Daily Telegraph. The article was palpitatingly interesting. Had Polly been commenting audibly upon it? Certain it is that the man over there had spoken in direct answer to her thoughts.
She looked at him and frowned; the next moment she smiled. Miss Burton (of the Evening Observer) had a keen sense of humour, which two years' association with the British Press had not succeeded in destroying, and the appearance of the man was sufficient to tickle the most ultra-morose fancy. Polly thought to herself that she had never seen any one so pale, so thin, with such funny light-coloured hair, brushed very smoothly across the top of a very obviously bald crown. He looked so timid and nervous as he fidgeted incessantly with a piece of string; his long, lean, and trembling fingers tying and untying it into knots of wonderful and complicated proportions.
Having carefully studied every detail of the quaint personality Polly felt more amiable.
"And yet," she remarked kindly but authoritatively, "this article, in an otherwise well-informed journal, will tell you that, even within the last year, no fewer than six crimes have completely baffled the police, and the perpetrators of them are still at large."
"Pardon me," he said gently, "I never for a moment ventured to suggest that there were no mysteries to the police; I merely remarked that there were none where intelligence was brought to bear upon the investigation of crime."
"Not even in the Fenchurch Street mystery, I suppose," she asked sarcastically.
"Least of all in the so-called Fenchurch Street mystery," he replied quietly.
Now the Fenchurch Street mystery, as that extraordinary crime
had popularly been called, had puzzled--as Polly well knew--the brains of every
thinking man and woman for the last twelve months. It had puzzled her not
inconsiderably; she had been interested, fascinated; she had studied the case, formed
her own theories, thought about it all often and often, had even written one or two
letters to the Press on the subject-- "What a pity it is, in that case, that you do not offer your
priceless services to our misguided though well-meaning police."
"Isn't it?" he replied with perfect good-humour.
"Well, you know, for one thing I doubt if they would accept them; and in the
second place my inclinations and my duty would--were I to become an active member
of the detective force--nearly always be in direct conflict. As often as not my
sympathies go to the criminal who is clever and astute enough to lead our entire police
force by the nose.
"I don't know how much of the case you remember,"
he went on quietly. "It certainly, at first, began even to puzzle me. On the 12th
of last December a woman, poorly dressed, but with an unmistakable air of having
seen better days, gave information at Scotland Yard of the disappearance of her
husband, William Kershaw, of no occupation, and apparently of no fixed abode. She
was accompanied by a friend--a fat, oily-looking German--and between them they
told a tale which set the police immediately on the move.
"It appears that on the 10th of December, at about three
o'clock in the afternoon, Karl Müller, the German, called on his friend,
William Kershaw, for the purpose of collecting a small debt--some ten pounds or
so--which the latter owed him. On arriving at the squalid lodging in Charlotte Street,
Fitzroy Square, he found William Kershaw in a wild state of excitement, and his wife
in tears. Müller attempted to state the object of his visit, but Kershaw, with
wild gestures, waved him aside, and--in his own words-- "After a quarter of an hour spent in obscure hints,
Kershaw, finding the cautious German obdurate, decided to let him into the secret
plan, which, he averred, would place thousands into their hands."
Instinctively Polly had put down her paper; the mild stranger,
with his nervous air and timid, watery eyes, had a peculiar way of telling his tale,
which somehow fascinated her.
"I don't know," he resumed, "if you remember
the story which the German told to the police, and which was corroborated in every
detail by the wife or widow. Briefly it was this: Some thirty years previously,
Kershaw, then twenty years of age, and a medical student at one of the London
hospitals, had a chum named Barker, with whom he roomed, together with another.
"The latter, so it appears, brought home one evening a very
considerable sum of money, which he had won on the turf, and the following morning
he was found murdered in his bed. Kershaw, fortunately for himself, was able to
prove a conclusive alibi; he had spent the night on duty at the hospital; as for Barker,
he had disappeared, that is to say, as far as the police were concerned, but not as far
as the watchful eyes of his friend Kershaw were able to spy--at least, so the latter
said. Barker very cleverly contrived to get away out of the country, and, after sundry
vicissitudes, finally settled down at Vladivostok, in Eastern Siberia, where, under the
assumed name of Smethurst, he built up an enormous fortune by trading in furs.
"Now, mind you, every one knows Smethurst, the Siberian
millionaire. Kershaw's story that he had once been called Barker, and had committed
a murder thirty years ago, was never proved, was it? I am merely telling you what
Kershaw said to his friend the German and to his wife on that memorable afternoon of
December the 10th.
"According to him Smethurst had made one gigantic
mistake in his clever career--he had on four occasions written to his late friend,
William Kershaw. Two of these letters had no bearing on the case, since they were
written more than twenty-five years ago, and Kershaw, moreover, had lost them--so
he said--long ago. According to him, however, the first of these letters was written
when Smethurst, alias Barker, had spent all the money he had obtained from the
crime, and found himself destitute in New York.
"Kershaw, then in fairly prosperous circumstances, sent him
a £10 note for the sake of old times. The second, when the tables had turned,
and Kershaw had begun to go downhill, Smethurst, as he then already called himself,
sent his whilom friend £50. After that, as Müller gathered, Kershaw had
made sundry demands on Smethurst's ever-increasing purse, and had accompanied
these demands by various threats, which, considering the distant country in which the
millionaire lived, were worse than futile.
"But now the climax had come, and Kershaw, after a final
moment of hesitation, handed over to his German friend the two last letters purporting
to have been written by Smethurst, and which, if you remember, played such an
important part in the mysterious story of this extraordinary crime. I have a copy of
both these letters here," added the man in the corner, as he took out a piece of
paper from a very worn-out pocket-book, and, unfolding it very deliberately, he began
to read:--
"'SIR,--Your preposterous
demands for money are wholly unwarrantable. I have already helped you quite as
much as you deserve. However, for the sake of old times, and because you once
helped me when I was in a terrible difficulty, I am willing to once more let you
impose upon my good nature. A friend of mine here, a Russian merchant, to whom I
have sold my business, starts in a few days for an extended tour to many European
and Asiatic ports in his yacht, and has invited me to accompany him as far as
England. Being tired of foreign parts, and desirous of seeing the old country once
again after thirty years absence, I have decided to accept his invitation I don t know
when we may actually be in Europe, but I promise you that as soon as we touch a
suitable port I will write to you again, making an appointment for you to see me in
London. But remember that if your demands are too preposterous I will not for a
moment listen to them, and that I am the last man in the world to submit to persistent
and unwarrantable blackmail. "'FRANCIS SMETHURST.
"The second letter was dated from Southampton,"
continued the old man in the corner calmly, "and, curiously enough, was the
only letter which Kershaw professed to have received from Smethurst of which he had
kept the envelope, and which was dated. It was quite brief," he added, referring
once more to his piece of paper.
"'DEAR SIR,--Referring to my letter of a few weeks ago, I wish to inform you
that the Tsarskoe Selo will touch at Tilbury on Tuesday next, the 10th. I
shall land there, and immediately go up to London by the first train I can get. If you
like, you may meet me at Fenchurch Street Station, in the first-class waiting-room in
the late afternoon. Since I surmise that after thirty years' absence my face may not be
familiar to you, I may as well tell you that you will recognize me by a heavy
Astrakhan fur coat, which I shall wear, together with a cap of the same. You may
then introduce yourself to me and I will personally listen to what you may have to
say.
"'Yours faithfully,
" FRANCIS SMETHURST.
"It was this last letter which had caused William Kershaw's
excitement and his wife's tears In the German's own words, he was walking up and
down the room like a wild beast, gesticulating wildly, and muttering sundry
exclamations. Mrs. Kershaw, however, was full of apprehension. She mistrusted the
man from foreign parts--who, according to her husband's story, had already one crime
upon his conscience--who might, she feared, risk another, in order to be rid of a
dangerous enemy. Woman-like, she thought the scheme a dishonourable one, for the
law, she knew, is severe on the blackmailer.
"The assignation might be a cunning trap, in any case it
wag a curious one; why, she argued, did not Smethurst elect to see Kershaw at his
hotel the following day? A thousand whys and wherefores made her anxious, but the
fat German had been won over by Kershaw's visions of untold gold, held tantalizingly
before his eyes. He had lent the necessary £2, with which his friend intended to
tidy himself up a bit before he went to meet his friend the millionaire. Half an hour
afterwards Kershaw had left his lodgings, and that was the last the unfortunate woman
saw of her husband, or Müller, the German, of his friend.
"Anxiously his wife waited that night, but he did not
return; the next day she seems to have spent in making purposeless and futile inquiries
about the neighbourhood of Fenchurch Street; and on the 12th she went to Scotland
Yard, gave what particulars she knew, and placed in the hands of the police the two
letters written by Smethurst."
THE man in the corner had finished his glass
of milk. His watery blue eyes looked across at Miss Polly Burton's eager little face,
from which all traces of severity had now been chased away by an obvious and
intense excitement.
"It was only on the 31st," he resumed after a while,
"that a body, decomposed past all recognition, was found by two lightermen in
the bottom of a disused barge. She had been moored at one time at the foot of one of
those dark flights of steps which lead down between tall warehouses to the river in the
East End of London. I have a photograph of the place here," he added, selecting
one out of his pocket, and placing it before Polly.
"The actual barge, you see, had already been removed
when I took this snapshot, but you will realize what a perfect place this alley is for the
purpose of one man cutting another's throat in comfort, and without fear of detection.
The body, as I said, was decomposed beyond all recognition; it had probably been
there eleven days, but sundry articles, such as a silver ring and a tie pin, were
recognizable, and were identified by Mrs. Kershaw as belonging to her husband.
"She, of course, was loud in denouncing Smethurst, and the
police had no doubt a very strong case against him, for two days after the discovery
of the body in the barge, the Siberian millionaire, as he was already popularly called
by enterprising interviewers, was arrested in his luxurious suite of rooms at the Hotel
Cecil.
"To confess the truth, at this point I was not a little
puzzled. Mrs. Kershaw's story and Smethurst's letters had both found their way into
the papers, and following my usual method--mind you, I am only an amateur, I try to
reason out a case for the love of the thing--I sought about for a motive for the crime,
which the police declared Smethurst had committed. To effectually get rid of a
dangerous blackmailer was the generally accepted theory. Well! did it ever strike you
how paltry that motive really was?"
Miss Polly had to confess, however, that it had never struck her
in that light.
"Surely a man who had succeeded in building up an
immense fortune by his own individual efforts, was not the sort of fool to believe that
he had anything to fear from a man like Kershaw. He must have
known that Kershaw held no damning proof~ against him--not enough
to hang him, anyway. Have you ever s~en Smethurst?" he added, as he once
more fumbled in his pocket-book.
Polly replied that she had seen Smethurst's picture in the
illustrated papers at the time. Then he added, placing a small photograph before her:
"What strikes you most about the face?"
"Well, I think its strange, astonished expression, due to the
total absence of eyebrows, and the funny foreign cut of the hair."
"So close that it almost looks as if it had been shaved.
Exactly. That is what struck me most when I elbowed my way into the court that
morning and first caught sight of the millionaire in the dock. He was a tall,
soldierly-looking man, upright in stature, his face very bronzed and tanned. He wore
neither moustache nor beard, his hair was cropped quite close to his head, like a
Frenchman's; but, of course, what was so very remarkable about him was that total
absence of eyebrows and even eyelashes, which gave the face such a peculiar
appearance--as you say, a perpetually astonished look.
"He seemed, however, wonderfully calm; he had been
accommodated with a chair in the dock--being a millionaire--and chatted pleasantly
with his lawyer, Sir Arthur Inglewood, in the intervals between the calling of the
several witnesses for the prosecution; whilst during the examination of these witnesses
he sat quite placidly, with his head shaded by his hand.
"Müller and Mrs. Kershaw repeated the story which
they had already told to the police. I think you said that you were not able, owing to
pressure of work, to go to the court that day, and hear the case, so perhaps you have
no recollection of Mrs. Kershaw. No? Ah, well! Here is a snapshot I managed to get
of her once. That is her. Exactly as she stood in the box-- "She would not look at the prisoner, and turned her head
resolutely towards the magistrate. I fancy she had been fond of that vagabond husband
of hers: an enormous wedding-ring encircled her finger, and that, too, was swathed in
black. She firmly believed that Kershaw's murderer sat there in the dock, and she
literally flaunted her grief before him.
"I was indescribably sorry for her. As for Müller, he
was just fat, oily, pompous, conscious of his own importance as a witness; big fat
fingers, covered with brass rings, gripped the two incriminating letters, which he had
identified. They were his passports, as it were, to a delightful land of importance and
notoriety. Sir Arthur Inglewood, I think, disappointed him by stating that he had no
questions to ask of him. Müller had been brimful of answers, ready with the
most perfect indictment, the most elaborate accusations against the bloated millionaire
who had decoyed his dear friend Kershaw, and murdered him in Heaven knows what
an out-of-the-way corner of the East End.
"After this, however, the excitement grew apace.
Müller had been dismissed, and had retired from the court altogether, leading
away Mrs. Kershaw, who had completely broken down.
"Constable D 21 was giving evidence as to the arrest in the
meanwhile. The prisoner, he said, had seemed completely taken by surprise, not
understanding the cause or history of the accusation against him; however, when put
in full possession of the facts, and realizing, no doubt, the absolute futility of any
resistance, he had quietly enough followed the constable into the cab. No one at the
fashionable and crowded Hotel Cecil had even suspected that anything unusual had
occurred.
"Then a gigantic sigh of expectancy came from every one
of the spectators. The ' fun ' was about to begin. James Buckland, a porter at
Fenchurch Street railway station, had just sworn to tell all the truth, etc. After all, it
did not amount to much. He said that at six o'clock in the afternoon of December the
10th, in the midst of one of the densest fogs he ever remembers, the 6.5 from Tilbury
steamed into the station, being just about an hour late. He was on the arrival platform,
and was hailed by a passenger in a first-class carriage. He could see very little of him
beyond an enormous black fur coat and a travelling cap of fur also.
"The passenger had a quantity of luggage, all marked F.
S., and he directed James Buckland to place it all upon a four-wheel cab, with the
exception of a small hand-bag, which he carried himself. Having seen that all his
luggage was safely bestowed, the stranger in the fur coat paid the porter, and, telling
the cabman to wait until he returned, he walked away in the direction of the
waiting-rooms, still carrying his small hand-bag.
"'I stayed for a bit,' added James Buckland, ' talking to the
driver about the fog and that; then I went about my business, seein' that the local
from Southend 'ad been signalled.'
"The prosecution insisted most strongly upon the hour when
the stranger in the fur coat, having seen to his luggage, walked away towards the
waiting-rooms. The porter was emphatic. 'It was not a minute later than 6.15,' he
averred.
"Sir Arthur Inglewood still had no questions to ask, and the
driver of the cab was called.
"He corroborated the evidence of James Buckland as to the
hour when the gentleman in the fur coat had engaged him, and having filled his cab in
and out with luggage, had told him to wait. And cabby did wait. He waited in the
dense fog--until he was tired, until he seriously thought of depositing all the luggage
in the lost property office, and of looking out for another fare--waited until at last, at
a quarter before nine, whom should he see walking hurriedly towards his cab but the
gentleman in the fur coat and cap, who got in quickly and told the driver to take him
at once to the Hotel Cecil. This, cabby declared, had occurred at a quarter before
nine. Still Sir Arthur Inglewood made no comment, and Mr. Francis Smethurst, in the
crowded, stuffy court, had calmly dropped to sleep.
"The next witness, Constable Thomas Taylor, had noticed a
shabbily dressed individual, with shaggy hair and beard, loafing about the station and
waiting-rooms in the afternoon of December the 10th. He seemed to be watching the
arrival platform of the Tilbury and Southend trains.
"Two separate and independent witnesses, cleverly
unearthed by the police, had seen this same shabbily dressed individual stroll into the
first-class waiting-room at about 6.15 on Wednesday, December the 10th, and go
straight up to a gentleman in a heavy fur coat and cap, who had also just come into
the room. The two talked together for a while; no one heard what they said, but
presently they walked off together. No one seemed to know in which direction.
"Francis Smethurst was rousing himself from his apathy; he
whispered to his lawyer, who nodded with a bland smile of encouragement. The
employés the Hotel Cecil gave evidence as to the arrival of Mr. Smethurst at
about 9.30 p.m. on Wednesday, December the 10th, in a cab, with a quantity of
luggage; and this closed the case for the prosecution.
"Everybody in that court already saw
Smethurst mounting the gallows. It was uninterested curiosity which caused the
elegant audience to wait and hear what Sir Arthur Inglewood had to say. He, of
course, is the most fashionable man in the law at the present moment. His lolling
attitudes, his drawling speech, are quite the rage, and imitated by the gilded youth of
society.
" Even at this moment, when the Siberian millionaire s
neck literally and metaphorically hung in the balance, an expectant titter went round
the fair spectators as Sir Arthur stretched out his long loose limbs and lounged across
the table. He waited to make his effect--Sir Arthur is a born actor--and there is no
doubt that he made it, when in his slowest, most drawly tones he said quietly
"'With regard to this alleged murder of one William
Kershaw, on Wednesday, December the 10th, between 6.15 and 8.45 p.m., your
Honour, I now propose to call two witnesses, who saw this same William Kershaw
alive on Tuesday afternoon, December the 16th, that is to say, six days after the
supposed murder.'
"It was as if a bombshell had exploded in the court. Even
his Honour was aghast, and I am sure the lady next to me only recovered from the
shock of the surprise in order to wonder whether she need put off her dinner party
after all.
"As for me," added the man in the corner, with that
strange mixture of nervousness and self-complacency which had set Miss Polly Burton
wondering, "well, you see, I had made up my mind long ago where the hitch
lay in this particular case, and I was not so surprised as some of the others.
"Perhaps you remember the wonderful development of the
case, which so completely mystified the police--and in fact everybody except myself.
Torriani and a waiter at his hotel in the Commercial Road both deposed that at about
3.30 p.m. on December the 10th a shabbily dressed individual lolled into the
coffee-room and ordered some tea. He was pleasant enough and talkative, told the
waiter that his name was William Kershaw, that very soon all London would be
talking about him, as he was about, through an unexpected stroke of good fortune, to
become a very rich man, and so on, and so on, nonsense without end.
"When he had finished his tea he lolled out again, but no
sooner had he disappeared down a turning of the road than the waiter discovered an
old umbrella, left behind accidentally by the shabby, talkative individual. As is the
custom in his highly respectable restaurant, Signor Torriani put the umbrella carefully
away in his office, on the chance of his customer calling to claim it when he had
discovered his loss. And sure enough nearly a week later, on Tuesday, the 16th, at
about 1 p.m., the same shabbily dressed individual called and asked for his umbrella.
He had some lunch, and chatted once again to the waiter. Signor Torriani and the
waiter gave a description of William Kershaw, which coincided exactly with that
given by Mrs. Kershaw of her husband.
"Oddly enough he seemed to be a very absent-minded sort
of person, for on this second occasion, no sooner had he left than the waiter found a
pocket-book in the coffee-room, underneath the table. It contained sundry letters and
bills, all addressed to William Kershaw. This pocket-book was produced, and Karl
Müller, who had returned to the court, easily identified it as having belonged to
his dear and lamented friend 'Villiam.'
"This was the first blow to the case against the accused. It
was a pretty stiff one, you will admit. Already it had begun to collapse like a
house of cards. Still, there was the assignation, and the undisputed meeting between
Smethurst and Kershaw, and those two and a half hours of a foggy evening to
satisfactorily account for." The man in the corner made a long pause,
keeping the girl on tenterhooks. He had fidgeted with his bit of string till there W&S
not an inch of it free from the most complicated and elaborate knots.
"I assure you," he resumed at last, "that at that
very moment the whole mystery was, to me, as clear as daylight. I only marvelled
how his Honour could waste his time and mine by putting what he thought were
searching questions to the accused relating to his past. Francis Smethurst, who had
quite shaken off his somnolence, spoke with a curious nasal twang, and with an
almost imperceptible soupçn of foreign accent. He calmly denied Kershaw s
version of his past; declared that he had never been called Barker, and had certainly
never been mixed up in any murder case thirty years ago.
"'But you knew this man Kershaw,' persisted his Honour,
'since you wrote to him? '
"'Pardon me, your Honour,' said the accused quietly, 'I
have never, to my knowledge, seen this man Kershaw, and I can swear that I never
wrote to him.'
"'Never wrote to him?' retorted his Honour warningly.
'That is a strange assertion to make when I have two of your letters to him in my
hands at the present moment.
"'I never wrote those letters, your Honour,' persisted the
accused quietly, 'they are not in my handwriting.'
"'Which we can easily prove,' came in Sir Arthur
Inglewood's drawly tones, as he handed up a packet to his Honour; 'here are a
number of letters written by my client since he has landed in this country, and some
of which were written under my very eyes.'
"As Sir Arthur Inglewood had said, this could be easily
proved, and the prisoner, at his Honour's request, scribbled a few lines, together with
his signature, several times upon a sheet of note-paper. It was easy to read upon the
magistrate's astounded countenance, that there was not the slightest similarity in the
two handwritings.
"A fresh mystery had cropped up. Who, then, had made the
assignation with William Kershaw at Fenchurch Street railway station? The prisoner
gave a fairly satisfactory account of the employment of his time since his landing in
England.
"'I came over on the Tsarskoe Selo,' he said,
'a yacht belonging to a friend of mine. When we arrived at the mouth of the Thames
there was such a dense fog that it was twenty-four hours before it was thought safe for
me to land. My friend, who is a Russian, would not land at all; he was regularly
frightened at this land of fogs. He was going on to Madeira immediately.
"'I actually landed on Tuesday, the 10th, and took a train at
once for town. I did see to my luggage and a cab, as the porter and driver told your
Honour; then I tried to find my way to a refreshment-room, where I could get a glass
of wine. I drifted into the waiting-room, and there I was accosted by a shabbily
dressed individual, who began telling me a piteous tale. Who he was I do not know.
He said he was an old soldier who had served his country faithfully, and then been
left to starve. He, begged of me to accompany him to his lodgings, where I could see
his wife and starving children, and verify the truth and piteousness of his tale.
"'Well, your Honour,' added the prisoner with noble
frankness, 'it was my first day in the old country. I had come back after thirty years
with my pockets full of gold, and this was the first sad tale I had heard; but I am a
business man, and did not want to be exactly "done" in the eye. I
followed my man through the fog, out into the streets. He walked silently by my side
for a time. I had not a notion where I was.
"'Suddenly I turned to him with some question, and
realized in a moment that my gentleman had given me the slip. Finding, probably,
that I would not part with my money till I had seen the starving wife and children, he
left me to my fate, and went in search of more willing bait.
"'The place where I found myself was dismal and deserted.
I could see no trace of cab or omnibus. I retraced my steps and tried to find my way
back to the station, only to find myself in worse and more deserted neighbourhoods. I
became hopelessly lost and fogged. I don't wonder that two and a half hours elapsed
while I thus wandered on in the dark and deserted streets; my sole astonishment is that
I ever found the station at all that night, or rather close to it a policeman, who showed
me the way.'
"'But how do you account for Kershaw knowing all your
movements?' still persisted his Honour, 'and his knowing the exact date of your
arrival in England? How do you account for these two letters, in fact? '
"'I cannot account for it or them, your Honour,' replied the
prisoner quietly. 'I have proved to you, have I not, that I never wrote those letters,
and that the man--er--Karshaw is his name?--was not murdered by me?'
"'Can you tell me of anyone here or abroad who might
have heard of your movements, and of the date of your arrival?'
"'My late employés at Vladivostok, of course, knew
of my departure, but none of them could have written these letters, since none of them
know a word of English.'
"'Then you can throw no light upon these mysterious
letters? You cannot help the police in any way towards the clearing up of this strange
affair?'
"'The affair is as mysterious to me as to your Honour, and
to the police of this country.'
"Francis Smethurst was discharged, of course; there was no
semblance of evidence against him sufficient to commit him for trial. The two
overwhelming points of his defence which had completely routed the prosecution
were, firstly, the proof that he had never written the letters making the assignation,
and secondly, the fact that the man supposed to have been murdered on the 10th was
seen to be alive and well on the 16th. But then, who in the world was the mysterious
individual who had apprised Kershaw of the movements of Smethurst, the
millionaire?"
THE man in the corner cocked his funny thin
head on one side and looked at Polly; then he took up his beloved bit of string and
deliberately untied every knot he had made in it. When it was quite smooth he laid it
out upon the table.
"I will take you, if you like, point by point along the line
of reasoning which I followed myself, and which will inevitably lead you, as it led
me, to the only possible solution of the mystery.
"First take this point," he said with nervous
restlessness, once more taking up his bit of string, and forming with each point raised
a series of knots which would have shamed a navigating instructor, "obviously it
was impossible for Kershaw not to have been acquainted with
Smethurst, since he was fully apprised of the latter's arrival in England by two letters.
Now it was clear to me from the first that no one could have written
those two letters except Smethurst. You will argue that those letters were proved not
to have been written by the man in the dock. Exactly. Remember, Kershaw was a
careless man--he had lost both envelopes. To him they were insignificant. Now it was
never disproved that those letters were written by Smethurst."
"But--" suggested Polly.
"Wait a minute," he interrupted, while knot number
two appeared upon the scene, "it was proved that six days after the murder,
William Kershaw was alive, and visited the Torriani Hotel, where already he was
known, and where he conveniently left a pocket-book behind, so that there should be
no mistake as to his identity; but it was never questioned where Mr. Francis
Smethurst, the millionaire, happened to spend that very same afternoon."
"Surely, you don't mean----?" gasped the girl.
"One moment, please," he added triumphantly.
"How did it come about that the landlord of the Torriani Hotel was brought into
court at all? How did Sir Arthur Inglewood, or rather his client, know that William
Kershaw had on those two memorable occasions visited the hotel, and that its landlord
could bring such convincing evidence forward that would for ever exonerate the
millionaire from the imputation of murder?"
"Surely," I argued, "the usual means, the
police----" "The police had kept the whole affair very dark until the arrest
at the Hotel Cecil. They did not put into the papers the usual: ' If anyone happens to
know of the whereabouts, etc. etc.' Had the landlord of that hotel heard of the
disappearance of Kershaw through the usual channels, he would have put himself in
communication with the police. Sir Arthur Inglewood produced him. How did Sir
Arthur Inglewood come on his track?"
"Surely, you don't mean----?"
"Point number four," he resumed imperturbably,
"Mrs. Kershaw was never requested to produce a specimen of her husband's
handwriting. Why? Because the police, clever as you say they are, never started on
the right tack. They believed William Kershaw to have been murdered; they looked
for William Kershaw.
"On December the 31st, what was presumed to be the body
of William Kershaw was found by two lightermen: I have shown you a photograph of
the place where it was found. Dark and deserted it is in all conscience, is it not? Just
the place where a bully and a coward would decoy an unsuspecting stranger, murder
him first, then rob him of his valuables, his papers, his very identity, and leave him
there to rot. The body was found in a disused barge which had been moored some
time against the wall, at the foot of these steps. It was in the last stages of
decomposition, and, of course, could not be identified; but the police would have it
that it was the body of William Kershaw.
"It never entered their heads that it was the body of
Francis Smethurst, and that William Kershaw was his murderer.
"Ah ! it was cleverly, artistically conceived! Kershaw is a
genius. Think of it all! His disguise! Kershaw had a shaggy beard, hair, and
moustache. He shaved up to his very eyebrows ! No wonder that even his wife did not
recognize him across the court; and remember she never saw much of his face while
he stood in the dock. Kershaw was shabby, slouchy, he stooped. Smethurst, the
millionaire, might have served in the Prussian army.
"Then that lovely trait about going to revisit the Torriani
Hotel. Just a few days' grace, in order to purchase moustache and beard and wig,
exactly similar to what he had himself shaved off. Making up to look like himself!
Splendid! Then leaving the pocket-book behind! He! he! he! Kershaw was not
murdered! Of course not. He called at the Torriani Hotel six days after the murder,
whilst Mr. Smethurst, the millionaire, hobnobbed in the park with duchesses! Hang
such a man! Fie!"
He fumbled for his hat. With nervous, trembling fingers he held
it deferentially in his hand whilst he rose from the table. Polly watched him as he
strode up to the desk, and paid twopence for his glass of milk and his bun. Soon he
disappeared through the shop, whilst she still found herself hopelessly bewildered,
with a number of snap-shot photographs before her, still staring at a long piece of
string, smothered from end to end in a series of knots, as bewildering, as irritating, as
puzzling as the man who had lately sat in the corner.
(End.)
Go to the next episode
"'I am, sir, "'Yours truly, CHAPTER II
A MILLIONAIRE IN THE DOCKCHAPTER III
HIS DEDUCTION
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