Part 30 (2/2)
”I was at that door,” said Sal, pointing to it, ”an' 'e couldn't 'ave got out unless I'd seen 'im.”
”Oh, it's all right,” said Calton, nodding to Kilsip, ”there won't be any difficulty in proving an ALIBI. But I say,” he added, turning to Sal, ”what were they talking about?”
”I dunno,” answered Sal. ”I was at the door, an' they talks that quiet I couldn't 'ear 'em. Then he sings out, 'My G--, it's too horrible!'
an' I 'ear 'er a larfin' like to bust, an' then 'e comes to me, and ses, quite wild like, 'Take me out of this 'ell!' an' I tooked 'im.”
”And when you came back?”
”She was dead.”
”Dead?”
”As a blessed door-nail,” said Sal, cheerfully.
”An' I never knowd I was in the room with a corpse,” wailed Mother Guttersnipe, waking up. ”Cuss 'er, she was allays a-doin' contrary things.”
”How do you know?” said Calton, sharply, as he rose to go.
”I knowd 'er longer nor you,” croaked the old woman, fixing one evil eye on the lawyer; ”an' I know what you'd like to know; but ye shan't, ye shan't.”
Calton turned from her with a shrug of his shoulders.
”You will come to the Court to-morrow with Mr. Kilsip,” he said to Sal, ”and tell what you have just now told me.”
”It's all true, s'elp me,” said Sal, eagerly; ”'e was 'ere all the time.”
Calton stepped towards the door, followed by the detective, when Mother Guttersnipe rose.
”Where's the money for finin' her?” she screeched, pointing one skinny finger at Sal.
”Well, considering the girl found herself,” said Calton, dryly, ”the money is in the bank, and will remain there.”
”An' I'm to be done out of my 'ard earned tin, s'elp me?” howled the old fury. ”Cuss ye, I'll 'ave the lawr of ye, and get ye put in quod.”
”You'll go there yourself if you don't take care,” said Kilsip, in his soft, purring tones.
”Yah!” shrieked Mother Guttersnipe, snapping her fingers at him. ”What do I care about yer quod? Ain't I bin in Pentrig', an' it ain't 'urt me, it ain't? I'm as lively as a gal, I am.”
And the old fury, to prove the truth of her words, danced a kind of war dance in front of Mr. Calton, snapping her fingers and yelling out curses, as an accompaniment to her ballet. Her luxurious white hair streamed out during her gyrations, and with her grotesque appearance and the faint light of the candle, she presented a gruesome spectacle.
Calton remembered the tales he had heard of the women of Paris, at the revolution, and the way they danced ”La Carmagnole.” Mother Guttersnipe would have been in her element in that sea of blood and turbulence he thought. But he merely shrugged his shoulders, and walked out of the room, as with a final curse, delivered in a hoa.r.s.e voice, Mother Guttersnipe sank exhausted on the floor, and yelled for gin.
CHAPTER XIX.
THE VERDICT OF THE JURY.
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