Miss Arnott's Marriage - BestLightNovel.com
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"Well, he's been making a confession."
At this point Mrs Granger--who was lingering with the tea-tray--interposed.
"A confession, Mr Nunn! You don't mean for to tell that after all he owns up 'twas he who killed he man?"
"No, I can't say exactly that I do. It's not that sort of confession he's been making. What he's been confessing is that he knows who did kill him."
"Who was it, Mr Nunn?"
"Supposing, Mrs Granger, you were to get me that sup of tea. If you were to know what my throat felt like you wouldn't expect to get much through it till it had had a good rinsing."
The constable issued his marital orders.
"Now then, Susan, hurry up with that tea for Mr Nunn. What are you standing there gaping for? If you were to know what the dust is like you'd move a little quicker."
Mrs Granger proceeded to hurry. Mr Nunn seated himself comfortably at the table and waited, showing no sign of a desire to continue the conversation till the tea appeared. His host dropped a hint or two, pointing out that to him, in his official capacity, the matter was of capital importance. But Mr Nunn declined to take them. When the tea did appear he showed more reticence than seemed altogether necessary. He was certainly slower in coming to the point than his hearers relished.
Mr Granger did his best to prompt him.
"Well, Mr Nunn, now that you've had three cups of tea perhaps you wouldn't mind mentioning what Jim Baker's been saying that's brought you here."
Mr Nunn helped himself to a fourth.
"I'm in rather a difficult position."
"I daresay. It might make it easier perhaps if you were to tell me just what it is."
"I'm not so sure, Granger, I'm not so sure. That relative of yours is a queer fish."
"Maybe I know what sort of a fish he is better than you do, seeing I've known him all my life."
"What I've got to ask myself is--What reliance is to be placed on what he says?"
"Perhaps I might be able to tell you if you were to let me know what he does say."
"Oh, that's the point." Mr Nunn stirred what remained of his fourth cup of tea with a meditative air. "Mr Granger, I don't want to say anything that sounds unfriendly or that's calculated to hurt your feelings, but I'm beginning to be afraid that you've muddled this case."
"Me muddled it! Seeing that you've had the handling of it from the first, if anyone's muddled it, it's you."
"I don't see how you make that out, Mr Granger, seeing that you're on the spot and I'm not."
"What's the good of being on the spot if I'm not allowed to move a finger except by your instructions?"
"Have there been rumours, Mr Granger? and by that I mean rumours which a man who had his professional advancement at heart might have laid his hand on."
"Of course there have been rumours! there's been nothing else but rumours! But every time I mentioned one of them to you all I got was a wigging for my pains."
"That's because the ones you mentioned to me were only will-o'-the-wisps. According to the information I've received the real clues you've let slip through your fingers."
Mr Granger stood up. He was again uncomfortably hot. His manner was hardly deferential.
"Excuse me, Mr Nunn, but if you've come here to lecture me while drinking of my wife's tea, since I've had a long and a hard day's work, perhaps you'll let me go and clean myself and have a bit of rest."
"If there's anything in what Jim Baker says there's plenty for you to do, Mr Granger, before you think of resting."
"What the devil does he say?"
"You needn't swear at me, Mr Granger, thank you all the same. I've come here for the express purpose of telling you what he says."
"Then you're a long time doing it."
"Don't you speak to me like that, Granger, because I won't have it. I conduct the cases which are placed in my hands in my own way, and I don't want no teaching from you. Jim Baker says that although he didn't kill the chap himself he saw him being killed, and who it was that killed him."
"Who does he say it was?"
"Why, the young woman up at Exham Park--Miss Arnott."
CHAPTER x.x.xII
THE HOUSEMAID'S TALE
Mr And Mrs Granger looked at each other. Then the husband dropped down into the chair which he had just vacated with a sound which might be described as a snort; it was perhaps because he was a man of such plethoric habit that the slightest occasion for surprise caused him to emit strange noises. His wife caught at the edge of the table with both her hands.
"Lawk-a-mussy!" she exclaimed. "To think of Jim Baker saying that!"
"It seems to me," observed Mr Nunn, with an air of what he perhaps meant to be rhadamanthine severity, "that if there's anything in what that chap says somebody ought to have had their suspicions before now.
I don't say who."
This with a very meaning glance at Mr Granger.
"Suspicions!" cried the lady. "Why, Mr Nunn, there ain't been nothing but suspicions! I shouldn't think there was a soul for ten miles round that hasn't been suspected by someone else of having done it. You wouldn't have had my husband lock 'em all up! Do you believe Jim Baker?"
"That's not the question. It's evidence I want, and it's for evidence, Mr Granger, I've come to you."
"Evidence of what?" gasped the policeman. "I don't know if you think I keep evidence on tap as if it was beer. All the evidence I have you've got--and more."
His wife persisted in her inquiry.
"What I ask you, Mr Nunn, is--Are you going to lock up that young lady because of what Jim Baker says?"
"And I repeat, Mrs Granger, that that's not the question, though you must allow me to remark, ma'am, that I don't see what is your _locus standi_ in the matter."
"Aren't you drinking my tea?"
"I don't see what my drinking your tea has got to do with it anyhow. At the same time, since it'll all soon enough be public property, I don't know that it's of much consequence. Of course a man hasn't been at the game all the years I have without becoming aware that nothing's more common than for A, when he's accused of a crime, to try to lay the blame of it on B; and that, therefore, if for that reason only, what that chap in Winchester Gaol says smells fishy. But at the same time the statement he has made is of such a specific nature, and should be so open to corroboration, or the reverse, that I'm bound to admit that if anything did turn up to give it colour I should feel it my duty to act on it at once."