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"Yes, quite alone."
"So you had abundant opportunity of observing him. Did he seem at all excited, flurried, did you notice anything unusual in his manner?"
"I didn't. He was just himself."
"Quite calm and normal?"
"Oh, quite!"
"Didn't give you the impression that he'd just been going through any particularly moving or trying episode--such as murdering a fellow-creature?"
"He didn't," replied Carstairs, without the ghost of a smile. "He was--just as usual."
"When did you see him next, after he went out to keep the appointment in Meadow Gate?"
"About half-past eight, or a little later."
"Where?"
"At the mortuary. He sent for me. I went to the mortuary, and found him there with Dr. Barber. They were making an examination of the dead man and wanted my help."
"Was Dr. Wellesley excited or upset then?"
"He was not. He seemed to me--I'm speaking professionally, mind you--remarkably cool."
Cotman suddenly sat down, and turned to his client with a smile on his lips. Evidently he made some cynical remark to Wellesley, for Wellesley smiled too.
"Smart chap, Cotman!" whispered Tansley to Brent. "That bit of cross-exam'll tell with the jury. And now, what next?"
Bunning, recalled from the previous sitting, came next--merely to repeat that the Mayor went up to his parlour at twenty-five minutes past seven, and that he and Mr. Brent found his Wors.h.i.+p dead just after eight o'clock. Following him came Dr. Barber, who testified that when he first saw Wallingford's dead body, just about a quarter-past eight, he came to the conclusion that death had taken place about forty-five minutes previously, perhaps a little less. And from him Cotman drew evidence that Wellesley, in the examination at the mortuary, was normal, calm, collected, and, added Dr. Barber, of his own will, greatly annoyed and horrified at the murder.
Brent was beginning to get sick of this new development: to him it seemed idle and purposeless. He whispered as much to Tansley. But Tansley shook his head.
"Can't say that," he replied. "Where was Wellesley during that nineteen minutes' absence from the surgery? He'll have to explain that anyway.
But they'll have more evidence than what we've heard. h.e.l.lo! here's Walkershaw, the Borough Surveyor! What are they going to get out of him, I wonder?"
Brent watched an official-looking person make his way to the witness-box. He was armed with a quant.i.ty of rolls of drawing-paper, and a clerk accompanied him whose duty, it presently appeared, was to act as a living easel and hold up these things, diagrams and outlines, while his princ.i.p.al explained them. Presently the eager audience found itself listening to what was neither more nor less than a lecture on the architecture of Hathelsborough Moot Hall and its immediately adjacent buildings--and then Brent began to see the drift of the Borough Surveyor's evidence.
The whole block of masonry between Copper Alley and Piper's Pa.s.sage, testified Walkershaw, ill.u.s.trating his observations by pointing to the large diagram held on high by his clerk, was extremely ancient. In it there were three separate buildings--separate, that was, in their use, but all joining on to each other. First, next to Copper Alley, which ran out of Meadow Gate, came the big house long used as a bank. Then came the Moot Hall itself. Next, between the Moot Hall and Piper's Pa.s.sage, which was a narrow entry between River Gate and St. Lawrence Lane, stood Dr. Wellesley's house. Until comparatively recent times Dr. Wellesley's house had been the official residence of the Mayor of Hathelsborough.
And between it and the Moot Hall there was a definite means of communication: in short, a private door.
There was a general p.r.i.c.king of ears upon this announcement, and Tansley indulged in a low whistle: he saw the significance of Walkershaw's statement.
"Another link in the chain, Brent!" he muttered. "'Pon my word, they're putting it together rather cleverly: nineteen minutes' absence? door between his house and the Moot Hall? Come!"
Brent made no comment. He was closely following the Borough Surveyor as that worthy pointed out on his plans and diagrams the means of communication between the Moot Hall and the old dwelling-place at its side. In former days, said Walkershaw, some Mayor of Hathelsborough had caused a door to be made in a certain small room in the house; that door opened on a pa.s.sage in the Moot Hall which led to the corridor wherein the Mayor's Parlour was situated. It had no doubt been used by many occupants of the Mayoral chair during their term of office. Of late, however, n.o.body seemed to have known of it; but he himself having examined it, for the purposes of this inquiry, during the last day or two, had found that it showed unmistakable signs of recent usage. In fact, the lock and bolts had quite recently been oiled.
The evidence of this witness came to a dramatic end in the shape of a question from the Coroner:
"How long would it take, then, for any person to pa.s.s from Dr.
Wellesley's house to the Mayor's Parlour in the Moot Hall?"
"One minute," replied Walkershaw promptly. "If anything--less."
Cotman, who had been whispering with his client during the Borough Surveyor's evidence, asked no questions, and presently the interest of the court s.h.i.+fted to a little shrewd-faced, self-possessed woman who tripped into the witness-box and admitted cheerfully that she was Mrs.
Marriner, proprietor of Marriner's Laundry, and that she washed for several of the best families in Hathelsborough. The fragment of handkerchief which had been found in the Mayor's Parlour was handed to her for inspection, and the Coroner asked her if she could say definitely if she knew whose it was. There was considerable doubt and scepticism in his voice as he put the question; but Mrs. Marriner showed herself the incarnation of sure and positive conviction.
"Yes, sir," she answered. "It's Dr. Wellesley's."
"You must wash a great many handkerchiefs at your laundry, Mrs.
Marriner," observed the Coroner. "How can you be sure about one--about that one?"
"I'm sure enough about that one, sir, because it's one of a dozen that's gone through my hands many a time!" a.s.serted Mrs. Marriner. "There's n.o.body in the town, sir, leastways not amongst my customers--and I wash for all the very best people, sir--that has any handkerchiefs like them, except Dr. Wellesley. They're the very finest French cambric. That there is a piece of one of the doctor's best handkerchiefs, sir, as sure as I'm in this here box--which I wish I wasn't!"
The Coroner asked nothing further; he was still plainly impatient about the handkerchief evidence, if not wholly sceptical, and he waved Mrs.
Marriner away. But Cotman stopped her.
"I suppose, Mrs. Marriner, that mistakes are sometimes made when you and your a.s.sistants send home the clean clothes?" he suggested. "Things get in the wrong baskets, eh?"
"Well, not often--at my place, sir," replied Mrs. Marriner. "We're very particular."
"Still--sometimes, you know?"
"Oh, I'll not say that they don't, sometimes, sir," admitted Mrs.
Marriner. "We're all of us human creatures, as you're very well aware, sir."
"This particular handkerchief may have got into a wrong basket?" urged Cotman. "It's--possible?"
"Oh, it's possible, sir," said Mrs. Marriner. "Mistakes will happen, sir."
Mrs. Marriner disappeared amongst the crowd, and a new witness took her place. She, too, was a woman, and a young and pretty one--and in a tearful and nervous condition. Tansley glanced at her and turned, with a significant glance, to Brent.
"Great Scott!" he whispered. "Wellesley's housemaid!"
CHAPTER XII
CIRc.u.mSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
Interest was beginning to thicken: the people in court, from Simon Crood, pompous and aloof in his new grandeur of chief magistrate, to Spizey the bellman, equally pompous in his ancient livery, were already open-mouthed with wonder at the new and startling development. But the sudden advent of the young and pretty domestic, whose tears betrayed her unwillingness to come forward, deepened the interest still further; everybody leaned forward towards the centre of the court, intent on hearing what the girl had to tell. She, however, paid no attention to these manifestations of inquisitiveness; standing in the witness-box, a tear-soaked handkerchief in her hands, half-sullen, half-resentful of mouth and eye, she looked at n.o.body but the Coroner; her whole expression was that of a defenceless animal, pinned in a corner and watchful of its captor.
But this time it was not the Coroner who put questions to the witness.
There had been some whispering between him, Hawthwaite and Meeking, the barrister who represented the police authorities, and it was Meeking who turned to the girl and began to get her information from her by means of bland, suavely-expressed, half-suggesting interrogatories. Winifred Wilson; twenty years of age; housemaid at Dr. Wellesley's--been in the doctor's employ about fourteen months.
"Did you give certain information to the police recently?" inquired Meeking, going straight to his point as soon as these preliminaries were over. "Information bearing on the matter now being inquired into?"