Part 10 (1/2)

”Never saw t' fellow again, nor had a word with him,” replied Beeman.

”He had his gla.s.s or two o' rum, and went away. But I reckon he was t'

man who was murdered.”

”And where have you been, yourself, since the time you tell us about?”

asked the inspector.

”Right away across country,” answered Beeman readily. ”I went across to Chillingham and Wooler, then forrard to some farms i' t' Cheviots, and back by Alnham and Whittingham to Alnwick. And then I heard all about this affair, and so I thought good to come and tell you what bit I knew.”

”I'm much obliged to you, Mr. Beeman,” said the inspector. ”You've cleared up something, at any rate. Are you going to stay longer in the neighbourhood?”

”I shall be here--leastways, at Alnwick yonder, at t' Temp'rance--for two or three days yet, while I've collected some sheep together 'at I've bowt for our maister, on one farm and another,” replied Beeman.

”Then I shall be away. But if you ever want me, at t' 'Sizes, or wot o' that sort, my directions is James Beeman, foreman to Mr. Thomas Dimbleby, Cross-houses Manor, York.”

When this candid and direct person had gone, the inspector looked at Miss Raven and me with glances that indicated a good deal.

”That settles one point and seems to establish another,” he remarked significantly. ”Salter Quick was not murdered by somebody who had come into these parts on the same errand as himself. He was murdered by somebody who was--here already!”

”And who met him?” I suggested.

”And who met him,” a.s.sented the inspector. ”And now I'm more anxious than ever to know if there is anything in that tobacco-box theory of Mr. Cazalette's. Couldn't you young people cajole Mr. Cazalette into telling you a little? Surely he would oblige you, Miss Raven?”

”There are moments when Mr. Cazalette is approachable,” replied Miss Raven. ”There are others at which I should as soon think of asking a question of the Sphinx.”

”Wait!” said I. ”Mr. Cazalette, I firmly believe, knows something. And now--you know more than you did. One mystery has gone by the board.”

”It leaves the main one all the blacker,” answered the inspector.

”Who, of all the folk in these parts, is one to suspect? Yet--it would seem that Salter Quick found somebody here to whom his presence was so decidedly unwelcome that there was nothing for it but--swift and certain death! Why? Well--death ensures silence.”

Miss Raven and I took our leave for the second time. We walked some distance from the police-station before exchanging a word: I do not know what she was thinking of; as for myself, I was speculating on the change in my opinion brought about by the rough-and-ready statement of the brusque Yorks.h.i.+reman. For until then I had firmly believed that the man who had accosted our friend of the Mariner's Joy, Jim Gelthwaite, the drover, was the man who had murdered Salter Quick. My notion was that this man, whoever he was, had foregathered somewhere with Quick, that they were known to each other, and had a common object, and that he had knifed Quick for purposes of his own. And now that idea was exploded, and so far as I could see, the search for the real a.s.sa.s.sin was yet to begin.

Suddenly Miss Raven spoke.

”I suppose it's scarcely possible that the murderer was present at that inquest?” she asked, half-timidly, as if afraid of my ridiculing her suggestion.

”Quite possible,” said I. ”The place was packed to the doors with all sorts of people. But why?”

”I thought perhaps that he might have contrived to abstract that tobacco-box, knowing that as long as it was in the hands of the police there might be some clue to his ident.i.ty,” she suggested.

”Good notion!” I replied. ”But there's just one thing against it. If the murderer had known that, if he felt that, he'd have secured the box when he searched Quick's clothing, as he undoubtedly did.”

”Of course!” she admitted. ”I ought to have thought of that. But there are such a lot of things to think of in connection with this case--threads interwoven with each other.”

”You've been thinking much about it?” I asked.

She made no reply for a moment, and I waited, wondering.

”I don't think it's a very comfortable thing to know that one's had a particularly brutal murder at one's very door and that, for all one knows, the murderer may still be close at hand,” she said at last.