Part 15 (2/2)

Mr. Cazalette was sitting between Miss Raven and myself; I leaned close to him and whispered, feeling that now was the time to bring every known fact to light.

”Tell all--all--you told me just before dinner!” I urged upon him.

”Table the whole pack of cards: let us get at something--now!”

He hesitated, looking half-suspiciously from one to the other of those opposite.

”D'ye think I'd be well advised, Middlebrook?” he whispered. ”Is it wise policy to show all the cards you're holding?”

”In this case, yes!” I said. ”Tell everything!”

”Well,” he said. ”Maybe. But--it's on your advice, you'll remember, and I'm not sure this is the time, nor just the company. However--”

So, for the second time that day, Mr. Cazalette told the story of the tobacco-box and of his pocket-book, and produced his photograph. It came as a surprise to all there but myself, and I saw that Mr. Raven in particular was much perturbed by the story of the theft that morning. I knew what he was thinking--the criminal or criminals were much too close at hand. He cut in now and then with a question--but the detective listened in grim, absorbed silence.

”Now, you know, this is really about the most serious and important thing I've heard, so far,” he said, when Mr. Cazalette had finished.

”Just let's sum it up. Salter Quick is murdered in a strange and lonely place. Not for his goods, for all his money and his valuables--not inconsiderable--are found on him. But the murderer was in search of something that he believed to be on Salter Quick, for he thoroughly searched his clothing, slashed its linings, turned his pockets out--and probably, no, we may safely say certainly, failed in his search. He did not get what he was after--any more than his fellow-murderer who slew Noah Quick, some hundreds of miles away from here, about the very same time, got what he was after. But now comes in Mr. Cazalette. Mr. Cazalette, inadvertently, never thinking what he was doing, draws public attention to certain marks and scratches, evidently made on purpose, in Salter Quick's tobacco-box. Do you see my point, gentlemen? The murderer hears of this and says to himself, 'That box is the thing I want!' So--he appropriates it, at the inquest! But even then, so faint and almost illegible are the marks within the lid, he doesn't find exactly what he wants. But he knows that Mr. Cazalette was going to submit his photograph to an enlarging process, which would make the marks clearer; he also knows Mr.

Cazalette's habits (a highly significant fact!) so he sets himself to steal Mr. Cazalette's pocket-book, theorizing that Mr. Cazalette probably has a copy of the enlarged photograph within it. And, this morning, while Mr. Cazalette is bathing, he gets it! Gentlemen!--what does this show? One thing as a certainty--the murderer is close at hand!”

There was a dead silence--broken at last by a querulous murmur from Mr. Cazalette himself.

”Ye may be as sure o' that, my man, as that Arthur's Seat o'erlooks Edinbro'!” he said. ”I wish I was as sure o' his ident.i.ty!”

”Well, we know something that's gradually bringing us toward establis.h.i.+ng that,” remarked Scarterfield. ”Let me see that photograph again, if you please.”

The rest of us watched Scarterfield as he studied the thing over which Mr. Cazalette and I had exercised our brains in the half-hour before dinner. He seemed to get no more information from a long perusal of it than we had got, and he finally threw it away from him across the table, with a muttered exclamation which confessed discomfiture. Miss Raven picked up the photograph.

”Aye!” mumbled Mr. Cazalette. ”Let the la.s.sie look at it! Maybe a woman's brains is more use than a man's whiles.”

”Often!” said the detective. ”And if Miss Raven can make anything of that----”

I saw that Miss Raven was already wishful to speak, and I hastened to encourage her by throwing a word to Scarterfield.

”You'd be infinitely obliged to her, I'm sure,” I put in. ”It would be a help?”

”No slight one!” said he. ”There's something in that diagram.

But--what?”

Miss Raven, timid, and a little shy of concentrated attention, laid the photograph again on the table.

”Don't--don't you think there may be some explanation of this in what Salter Quick said to Mr. Middlebrook when they met on the cliffs?” she asked. ”He told Mr. Middlebrook that he wanted to find a churchyard where there were graves of people named Netherfield, but he didn't know exactly where it was, though it was somewhere in this locality.

Now supposing this is a rough outline of that churchyard? These outer lines may be the wall--then these little marks may show the situation of the Netherfield graves. And that cross in the corner--perhaps there is something buried, hidden, there, which Salter Quick wanted to find?”

The detective uttered a sharp exclamation and s.n.a.t.c.hed up the photograph again.

”Good! Good!” he said. ”Upon my word, I shouldn't wonder! To be sure, that may be it. What's against it?”

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