The Red House Mystery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about The Red House Mystery.

The Red House Mystery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about The Red House Mystery.

“Leave it to me,” broke in Bill.  “I know just what you want.”

“Don’t assume that it was Robert—­or anybody else.  Let them describe the man to you.  Don’t influence them unconsciously by suggesting that he was short or tall, or anything of that sort.  Just get them talking.  If it’s the landlord, you’d better stand him a drink or two.”

“Right you are,” said Bill confidently.  “Where do I meet you again?”

“Probably at ‘the George.’  If you get there before me, you can order dinner for eight o’clock.  Anyhow we’ll meet at eight, if not before.”

“Good.”  He nodded to Antony and strode off back to Stanton again.

Antony stood watching him with a little smile at his enthusiasm.  Then he looked round slowly, as if in search of something.  Suddenly he saw what he wanted.  Twenty yards farther on a lane wandered off to the left, and there was a gate a little way up on the right-hand side of it.  Antony walked to the gate, filling his pipe as he went.  Then he lit his pipe, sat on the gate, and took his head in his hands.

“Now then,” he said to himself, “let’s begin at the beginning.”

It was nearly eight o’clock when William Beverley, the famous sleuth-hound, arrived, tired and dusty, at ‘the George,’ to find Antony, cool and clean, standing bare-headed at the door, waiting for him.

“Is dinner ready?” were Bill’s first words.

“Yes.”

“Then I’ll just have a wash.  Lord, I’m tired.”

“I never ought to have asked you,” said Antony penitently.

“That’s all right.  I shan’t be a moment.”  Half-way up the stairs he turned round and asked, “Am I in your room?”

“Yes.  Do you know the way?”

“Yes.  Start carving, will you?  And order lots of beer.”  He disappeared round the top of the staircase.  Antony went slowly in.

When the first edge of his appetite had worn off, and he was able to spare a little time between the mouthfuls, Bill gave an account of his adventures.  The landlord of the “Plough and Horses” had been sticky, decidedly sticky—­Bill had been unable at first to get anything out of him.  But Bill had been tactful; lorblessyou, how tactful he had been.

“He kept on about the inquest, and what a queer affair it had been, and so on, and how there’d been an inquest in his wife’s family once, which he seemed rather proud about, and I kept saying, ‘Pretty busy, I suppose, just now, what?’ and then he’d say, ‘Middlin’,’ and go on again about Susan—­that was the one that had the inquest—­he talked about it as if it were a disease —­and then I’d try again, and say, ’Slack times, I expect, just now, eh?’ and he’d say ‘Middlin’ again, and then it was time to offer him another drink, and I didn’t seem to be getting much nearer.  But I got him at last.  I asked him if he knew John Borden—­he was the man who said he’d seen Mark at the station.  Well, he knew all about Borden, and after he’d told me all about Borden’s wife’s family, and how one of them had been burnt to death—­after you with the beer; thanks—­well, then I said carelessly that it must be very hard to remember anybody whom you had just seen once, so as to identify him afterwards, and he agreed that it would be ‘middlin’ hard,’ and then—­”

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Project Gutenberg
The Red House Mystery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.