Part 16 (2/2)
It was about young Rogers when he came here that evening. Swearing about you something dreadful, Sergeant.
About me?
Yes. It appeared he hadn't got a rear-light on his motor-bike. That was why he took it down the alley instead of leaving it out the front. Only I wasn't going to tell that other fellow that. And he was saying that he wasn't going to give you a chance of. making him pay a fine. Said you'd got a down on him. But he'd like to get his own back.
Is that all?
Yes. That's all. Only I thought you ought to know.
Mr. Sawyer was called away to serve, but when he returned he asked how the case was going.
If you don't mind, said Beef, with that absurd pomposity of his, we won't discuss nothink about it. I 'ave enough of these things in the day-time without being 'ara.s.sed with them at night. A man must have some life of his own.
But when a few minutes later the obese Mr. Sawyer-said he'd just thought of something else, the Sergeant showed interest again.
It was when he was going off, said Mr. Sawyer. He was all dressed up in his motor-biking things and they were wet. He looked up at the clock and said he'd have to hurry. He was meeting his girl at seven o'clock he said.
He did, did he? said Beef.
Yes. It must have been about half an hour after he had come in, I should think.
Thank you, Mr. Sawyer, said Beef.
An hour or two later, when I was in bed at the Mitre, I thought of the grotesque Sawyer wheezing out his trivial secret. That, I thought, was one reason why I liked following an investigation. It lifted the lid from a little town like Braxham, as nothing else could. With licence to ask the most personal and pertinent questions, the investigator could peep into a number of very divergent lives.
There was that fat publican for instance, waddling through day after day, rotting his in'ards with alcohol taken without fresh air or exercise to balance its effect, rising daily to open his dirty premises, sleeping stertorously, moving as little as possible, his brain stupefied by fumes, his eyes glazed. Lord knows what sort of a young man he had beenhe was unimaginable in a form other than his present. And so he would stump on, until they had to carry his huge bloated carca.s.s to burial.
How many other characters and stories had already been revealed by our two days' questioning! The old Rogers couple, who had adopted a ne'er-do-well tramp, because in their own words they had taken to him” when he had come to their shop to beg. They were, the postman had said, crazy about the young man, and I could well believe it when I remembered Mrs. Rogers's tear-stained face, and the little bootmaker's worried look. Up to a point the fellow seemed to have respondedfor at least he had preferred work to imposing on the kindness they would have been only too ready to show him.
One could see so wellnowwhat life had been like to the old couple in their neat home behind the shop. It was dominated by the calendar, and the date on which Alan was due for his few days' leave. I was almost inclined to agree with Molly Cutler when she said that young Rogers must have killed in self-defence. How else could he have faced the old people?
And the Cutlers, mother and daughter. What a curious conflict had been there. The older woman studying appearances, respectable, uncharitablethe girl lovely and free. One could see how she treated her mothernot with argument or aggression, but with a kind of secret indifference. She had never troubled to answer any of Mrs. Cutler's ill-natured references, yet she had her own point of view. One felt that up to a point the two had agreed to differ, and, when possible, had met on what common ground they had. It wasn't so much that Molly had concealed her love-affair from her mother. She had not discussed it, any more than she had discussed other intimate aspects of her life.
Yet she had been in love with young Rogers. There was no doubt about that. A deep and steadfast love, I thought, which had forgiven him much, and would have done much for him. What a fool the fellow had been not to have married her long ago. Unless there was some barrier of which we knew nothing.
I thought of Mrs. Murdoch, too, with her grim pretentiousness, her insistence on the use of words like client,
lunch,
waiter, in speaking of her business, and yet the rather cheerless look of her hotel. She was the sort of woman who, if she knew more than she had already admitted, would cheerfully have lied rather than involve her hotel's name in unwelcome publicity.
Then Mrs. Walker. I thought with a smile how much of her tawdry self she had revealed. How she had been so ready to give young Rogers's address to the enquiring Miss Smythe, and how she had gloated over the situation when the girl had come down to get her due. From all her garrulity nothing had emerged so clearly as the gusto with which she had watched the affair, and the chagrin she had felt at not being instantly made the chief witness. I could see her now, with her untidy red hair and not over-clean face as she poured out her precious information.
There were others who had shewn unexpected side to their natures. Mrs. Simmons, of this hotel, with her tip-toe respect for the presence of a dead body, even if it was a murderer's body; Mr. Simmons with his instantly selfish concern for its effect on his house; Charlie Meadows, delighted to have his little part in the investigation, and the waiter at Riverside yielding to Beef's come off of it.
None of these people would ever have been more to me than pa.s.sers-by, but the sudden earthquake in their town which a murder had caused had scattered their conventional covering wide.
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