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"The unset diamonds were bought by Mr. Dunbar?"
"Yes, to an enormous amount, I believe. While I was in Paris, my father wrote to tell me that he meant to delay the making of the necklace until he was well enough to go on the Continent. He could see no design in England that at all satisfied him."
"No, I dare say not," answered the detective, "I dare say he'd find it rather difficult to please himself in that matter."
Laura looked inquiringly at Mr. Carter. There was something disrespectful, not to say ironical, in his tone.
"I thank you heartily for having been so candid with me, Lady Jocelyn,"
he said; "and believe me I shall have your interests at heart throughout this matter. I shall go to work immediately; and you may rely upon it, I shall succeed in finding the missing man."
"You do not think that--that under some terrible hallucination, the result of his long illness--you don't think that he has committed suicide?"
"No," Lady Jocelyn, answered the detective, decisively, "there is nothing further from my thoughts now."
"Thank Heaven for that!"
"And now, my lady, may I ask if you'll be kind enough to let me see Mr.
Dunbar's valet, and to leave me alone with him in these rooms? I may pick up something that will help me to find your father. By the bye, you haven't a picture of him--a miniature, a photograph, or anything of that sort, eh?"
"No, unhappily I have no portrait whatever of my father."
"Ah, that is unlucky; but never mind, we must contrive to get on without it."
Laura rang the bell. One of the superb footmen, the birds of paradise who consented to glorify the halls and pa.s.sages of Maudesley Abbey, appeared in answer to the summons, and went in search of Mr. Dunbar's own man--the man who had waited on the invalid ever since the accident.
Having sent for this person, Laura bade the detective good morning, and went away through the vista of rooms to the other side of the hall, to that bright modernized wing of the house which Percival Dunbar had improved and beautified for the granddaughter he idolized.
Mr. Dunbar's own man was only too glad to be questioned, and to have a good opportunity of discoursing upon the event which had caused such excitement and consternation. But the detective was not a pleasant person to talk to, as he had a knack of cutting people short with a fresh question at the first symptom of rambling; and, indeed, so closely did he keep his companion to the point, that a conversation with him was a kind of intellectual hornpipe between a set of fire-irons.
Under this pressure the valet told all he knew about his master's departure, with very little loss of time by reason of discursiveness.
"Humph!--ha!--ah, yes!" muttered the detective between his teeth; "only one friend that was at all intimate with your master, and that was a gentleman called Vernon, lately come to live at Woodbine Cottage, Lisford Road; used to come at all hours to see your master; was odd in his ways, and dressed queer; first came on Miss Laura's wedding-day; was awful shabby then; came out quite a swell afterwards, and was very free with his money at Lisford. Ah!--humph! You've heard your master and this gentleman at high words--at least you've fancied so; but, the doors being very thick, you ain't certain. It might have been only telling anecdotes. Some gentlemen do swear and row like in telling anecdotes.
Yes, to be sure! You've felt a belt round your master's waist when you've been lifting him in and out of bed. He wore it under his s.h.i.+rt, and was always fidgety in changing his s.h.i.+rt, and didn't seem to want you to see the belt. You thought it was a galvanic belt, or something of that sort. You felt it once, when you were changing your master's s.h.i.+rt, and it was all over little k.n.o.bs as hard as iron, but very small. That's all you've got to say, except that you've always fancied your master wasn't quite easy in his mind, and you thought that was because of his having been suspected in the first place about the Winchester murder."
Mr. Carter jotted down some pencil-notes in his pocket-book while making this little summary of his conversation with the valet.
Having done this and shut his book, he prowled slowly through the sitting-room, bed-room, and dressing-room, looking about him, with the servant close at his heels.
"What clothes did Mr. Dunbar wear when he went away?"
"Grey trousers and waistcoat, small shepherd's plaid, and he must have taken a greatcoat lined with Russian sable."
"A black coat?"
"No; the coat was dark blue cloth outside."
Mr. Carter opened his pocket-book in order to add another memorandum--
Trousers and waistcoat, shepherd's plaid; coat, dark blue cloth lined with sable. "How about Mr. Dunbar's personal appearance, eh?"
The valet gave an elaborate description of his master's looks.
"Ha!--humph!" muttered Mr. Carter; "tall, broad-shouldered, hook-nose, brown eyes, brown hair mixed with grey."
The detective put on his hat after making this last memorandum: but he paused before the table, on which the lamp was still standing.
"Was this lamp filled last night?" he asked.
"Yes, sir; it was always fresh filled every day."
"How long does it burn?"
"Ten hours."
"When was it lighted?"
"A little before seven o'clock."
Mr. Carter removed the gla.s.s shade, and carried the lamp to the fireplace. He held it up over the grate, and drained the oil.
"It must have been burning till past four this morning," he said.
The valet stared at Mr. Carter with something of that reverential horror with which he might have regarded a wizard of the middle ages. But Mr.
Carter was in too much haste to be aware of the man's admiration. He had found out all he wanted to know, and now there was no time to be lost.
He left the Abbey, ran back to the lodge, found his a.s.sistant, Mr.
Tibbles, and despatched that gentleman to the Shorncliffe railway station, where he was to keep a sharp look out for a lame traveller in a blue cloth coat lined with brown fur. If such a traveller appeared, Sawney Tom was to stick to him wherever he went; but was to leave a note with the station-master for his chief's guidance, containing information as to what he had done.
CHAPTER XLII.
THE HOUSEMAID AT WOODBINE COTTAGE.
In less than a quarter of an hour after leaving the gate of Maudesley Park, the fly came to a stand-still before Woodbine Cottage. Mr. Carter paid the man and dismissed the vehicle, and went alone into the little garden.
He rang a bell on one side of the half-gla.s.s door, and had ample leisure to contemplate the stuffed birds and marine curiosities that adorned the little hall of the cottage before any one came to answer his summons. He rang a second time before anyone came, but after a delay of about five minutes a young woman appeared, with her face tied up in a coloured handkerchief. The detective asked to see Major Vernon, and the young woman ushered him into a little parlour at the back of the cottage, without either delay or hesitation.
The occupant of the cottage was sitting in an arm-chair by the fire.
There was very little light in the room, for the only window looked into a miniature conservatory, where there were all manner of p.r.i.c.kly and spiky plants of the cactus kind, which had been the delight of the late owner of Woodbine Cottage.
Mr. Carter looked very sharply at the gentleman sitting in the easy-chair; but the closest inspection showed him nothing but a good-looking man, between fifty and sixty years of age, with a determined-looking mouth, half shaded by a grey moustache.
"I've come to make a few inquiries about a friend of yours, Major Vernon," the detective said; "Mr. Dunbar, of Maudesley Abbey, who has been missing since four o'clock this morning."
The gentleman in the easy-chair was smoking a meerschaum. As Mr. Carter said those two words, "four o'clock," his teeth made a little clicking noise upon the amber mouthpiece of the pipe.