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The butler smoothed his hands down his trousers in embarra.s.sment.
"I thought he ... Mr. Greve ... would be sure to be going to fetch Mr.
Parrish in to tea, Miss ..." he replied, eyeing the girl anxiously.
Mary Trevert continued gazing into the fire.
"You know it is a rule in this house, Bude," she said, "that Mr. Parrish is never disturbed in the library ..."
The butler changed his position uneasily.
"Yes, Miss, but I thought ..."
Slowly Mary Trevert turned and looked at the man.
"Bude,"--her voice was very calm,--"I want you to tell me the truth. You know that Mr. Greve went in to Mr. Parrish ..."
Bude looked uneasily about him.
"Oh, Miss," he answered, almost in a whisper, "whatever are you saying?"
"I want your answer, Bude," the girl said coldly.
Bude did not speak. He rubbed his hands up and down his trousers in desperation.
"I wish to know why Mr. Parrish did this thing, Bude. I mean to know.
And I think you are keeping something back!"
The challenge resounded clearly, firmly.
"Miss Trevert, ma'am," the butler said in a low voice, "I wouldn't take it upon me to say anything as would get anybody in this house into trouble...."
"You saw Mr. Greve go into Mr. Parrish?"
The butler raised his hands in a quick gesture of denial.
"G.o.d forbid, Miss!" he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed in horror.
"What, then, do you know that is likely to get anybody here into trouble?"
The butler hesitated an instant. Then he spoke.
"That Inspector Humphries has been asking me questions, Miss, in a nasty, suspicious sort o' way. I told him, what I told him already, that just after I'd done serving the tea Mr. Greve crossed the hall and went down the library corridor...."
"You didn't tell him everything, Bude?"
The butler took a step nearer.
"Oh, Miss," he said, lowering his voice, "if you'll pardon my frankness, but I know as how you and Mr. Greve are old friends, and I wouldn't take it upon me to tell the police anything as might ..."
Mary Trevert stood up and faced the man.
"Bude," said she, "Mr. Parrish was your master, a kind and generous master as he was kind and generous to every one in this house. We must clear up the mystery of his ... of his death. Neither you nor I nor Mr.
Greve nor anybody must stand in the way. Now, tell me the truth!"
She dropped back into her chair. She gave the order imperiously like the mistress of the house. The butler, trained through life to receive orders, surrendered.
"There's nothing much to tell, Miss. When Mr. Humphries asked me if I were the last person to see Mr. Parrish alive, I made sure that Mr.
Greve would say he had been in to tell him tea was ready. But Mr. Greve, who heard the Inspector's question and my answer, said nothing. So I thought, maybe, he had his reasons and I did not feel exactly as how it was my place ..."
Mary Trevert tapped with her foot impatiently.
"But what grounds have you for saying that Mr. Greve went in to Mr.
Parrish? Mr. Greve declared quite positively that he went out by the side door and did not go into the library at all."
"But, Miss, I heard him speaking to Mr. Parrish ..."
The girl turned round and the man saw fear in her wide-open eyes.
The butler put his hand on the back of her chair and leaned forward.
"Better leave things where they are, Miss," he said in a low voice. "Mr.
Parrish, I dare say, had his reasons. He's gone to his last account now.
What does it matter why he done it ..."
The man was agitated, and in his emotion his carefully studied English was forsaking him.
But the girl broke in incisively.
"Please explain what you mean!" she commanded.
"Why, Miss," replied the butler, "we know that Mr. Greve had no call to like Mr. Parrish seeing how things were between you and the master ..."
"You mean the servants know that Mr. Parrish and I were engaged ..."
Bude made a deprecatory gesture.
"Know, Miss? I wouldn't go so far as to say 'know.' But there has been some talk in the servants' 'all, Miss. You know what young female servants are, Miss ..."
"And you think that Mr. Greve went to Mr. Parrish to talk about ... me?"
Mary Trevert's voice faltered a little. She looked eagerly at the other's fat, smooth face.
"I presoomed as much, Miss, I must confess!"
"But what did you hear Mr. Greve say?"
"I heard nothing, Miss, except just only the sound of voices. After Mr.
Greve had crossed me in the hall, I took the salver I was carrying into the butler's pantry. I stayed there a minute or two, and then I remembered I had not collected the letters from the box in the hall for the chauffeur to take to the post, the same as he does every evening. I went back to the hall, and just as I opened the green baize door I heard voices from the library ..."