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"It was not long after the tea gong went," answered Robin, "about ten minutes past five, I should say ..."
"And you heard nothing?"
Robin shook his head.
"Absolutely nothing," he replied. "The corridor was perfectly quiet. I stepped out into the grounds, went for a turn round the house, but it was raining, so I came in almost at once."
"At what time was that?"
"When I came in ... oh, about two or three minutes later, say about a quarter past five."
Humphries turned to Horace Trevert.
"What time was it when Miss Trevert heard the shot?"
Horace puckered up his brow.
"Well," he said, "I don't quite know. We were having tea. It wasn't much after five--I should say about a quarter past."
"Then the shot that Miss Trevert heard would have been fired just about the time that you, sir," he turned to Robin, "were coming in from your stroll."
"Somewhere about that time, I should say!" Robin answered rather thoughtfully.
"Did you hear it?" queried the Inspector.
"No," said Robin.
"But surely you must have been at or near the side door at the time as you were coming in ..."
"I came in by the front door," said Robin, "on the other side of the house ..."
Very carefully the Inspector closed his notebook, thrust the pencil back in its place along the back, fastened the elastic about the book, and turned to Horace Trevert.
"And now, sir, if I might speak to Miss Trevert alone for a minute ..."
"I say, though," expostulated Horace, "my sister's awfully upset, you know. Is it absolutely necessary?"
"Aye, sir, it is!" said the Inspector. "But there's no need for me to see her in here. Perhaps in some other room ..."
"The drawing-room is next to this," the butler put in; "they'd be nice and quiet in there, Sir Horace."
The Inspector acquiesced. Dr. Redstone drew him aside for a whispered colloquy.
The Inspector came back to Robin and Horace.
"The doctor would like to have the body taken upstairs to Mr. Parrish's room," he said. "He wishes to make a more detailed examination if Dr.
Romain would help him. If one of you gentlemen could give orders about this ... I have two officers outside who would lend a hand. And this room must then be shut and locked. Sergeant Harris!" he called.
"Sir!"
A stout sergeant appeared at the library door.
"As soon as the body has been removed, you will lock the room and bring the key to me. And you will return here and see that no one attempts to get into the room. Understand?"
"Yessir!"
"Inspector!"
Robin Greve called Inspector Humphries as the latter was preparing to follow Bude to the drawing-room.
"Mr. Parrish seems to have written a note for Miss Trevert," he said, pointing at the desk. "And in that envelope you will find Mr. Parrish's will. I discovered it there on the desk just before you arrived!"
Again the Inspector shot one of his swift glances at the young man. He went over to the desk, shook the doc.u.ment and letter from their envelope, glanced at them, and replaced them.
"I don't rightly know that this concerns me, gentlemen," he said slowly.
"I think I'll just take charge of it. And I'll give Miss Trevert her letter."
Taking the two envelopes, he tramped heavily out of the room.
Then in a little while Bude and Jay and two bucolic-looking policemen came to the library to move the body of the master of Harkings. Robin stood by and watched the little procession pa.s.s slowly with silent feet across the soft pile carpet and out into the corridor. But his thoughts were not with Parrish. He was haunted by the look which Mary Trevert had given him as she had stood for an instant at the library door, a look of fear, of suspicion. And it made his heart ache.
CHAPTER VI
THE LETTER
The great drawing-room of Harkings was ablaze with light. The cl.u.s.ter of lights in the heavy crystal chandelier and the green-shaded electric lamps in their gilt sconces on the plain white-panelled walls coldly lit up the formal, little-used room with its gilt furniture, painted piano, and huge marble fireplace.
This glittering Louis Seize environment seemed altogether too much for the homely Inspector. Whilst waiting for Mary Trevert to come to him, he tried several att.i.tudes in turn. The empty hearth frightened him away from the mantelpiece, the fragile appearance of a gilt settee decided him against risking his sixteen stone weight on its silken cushions, and the vastness of the room overawed him when he took up his position in the centre of the Aubusson carpet. Finally he selected an ornate chair, rather more solid-looking than the rest, which he drew up to a small table on the far side of the room. There he sat down, his large red hands spread out upon his knees in an att.i.tude of singular embarra.s.sment.
But Mary Trevert set him quickly at his ease when presently she came to him. She was pale, but quite self-possessed. Indeed, the effort she had made to regain her self-control was so marked that it would have scarcely escaped the attention of the Inspector, even if he had not had a brief vision of her as she had stood for that instant at the library door, pale, distraught, and trembling. He was astonished to find her cool, collected, almost business-like in the way she sat down, motioned him to his seat, and expressed her readiness to tell him all she knew.
The phrases he had been laboriously preparing--"This has been a bad shock for you, ma'am"; "You will forgive me, I'm sure, ma'am, for calling upon you at a moment such as this"--died away on his lips as Mary Trevert said:
"Ask me any questions you wish, Inspector. I will tell you everything I can."
"That's very good of you, ma'am, I'm sure," answered the Inspector, unstrapping his notebook, "and I'll try and not detain you long. Now, then, tell me what you know of this sad affair ..."
Mary Trevert plucked an instant nervously at her little cambric handerchief in her lap. Then she said:
"I went to the library from the billiard-room ..."
"A moment," interposed the Inspector. "What time was that?"
"A little after five. The tea gong had gone some time. I was going to the library to tell Mr. Parrish that tea was ready ..."