Works of ellen wood, p.881

Works of Ellen Wood, page 881

 

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  The break in Mr. Butterby’s sentence this time was occasioned by his shooting into an entry. Approaching towards him came Mrs. Jones, attended by her servant with a huge market-basket: and as he had neither time nor wish for an encounter with that lady at the present moment, he let her go by.

  CHAPTER XXXIV.

  A Telegram to Helstonleigh.

  THAT same evening, just as suddenly as Detective Butterby had shot into the entry, did he seem to shoot into the private room of Mr. Bede Greatorex. The clerks had just left the office for the evening; Bede, putting things straight on his desk, was thinking of going up stairs to dinner. To be thus silently invaded was not pleasing: but Bede could only resign himself to his fate.

  In a spirit of reproach Mr. Butterby entered on the business of the interview, stating certain facts. Bede took alarm. Better, as he thought, that the earth should be arrested in its orbit, than that the part Godfrey Pitman played in connection with his cousin’s death at Helstonleigh should be brought to light.

  “It is the very charge, above all others, that I gave you, Mr. Butterby — the keeping secret what you had learnt about the identity of Godfrey Pitman,” broke forth Bede.

  “And it is because I obeyed you and did keep it, that head-quarters have it but into others’ hands and are hauling me over the coals,” spoke M. Butterby in an injured tone.

  “Have you told them that it was by my desire you remained passive?”

  “I’ve told them nothing,” was the answer. “I let ’em think that I was looking after Godfrey Pitman still myself, everywhere that I could look, high and low.”

  “Then they don’t know yet that he and my clerk Brown are the same?” said Bede, very eagerly.

  “Not a bit on’t. There’s not a living soul of the lot has been sharp enough to turn that page yet, Mr. Bede Greatorex.”

  “And it must be our business to keep it closed,” whispered Bede. “I will give you any reward if you can manage to do it.”

  “Look here, sir,” spoke Butterby. “I’m willing to oblige you as far as I can in reason; I’ve showed you that I am; but to fill you up with hopes that that secret will be a secret long, would be nothing but wilful deceit: and deceit’s a thing that don’t answer in the long run. When I want to throw people off a scent, or worm things out of ’em for the law’s purposes, I send their notions off on all sorts of air journeys, and think it no wrong: but to let you suppose I can keep from the world what I can’t keep, and take your thanks and rewards for doing it, is just the opposite case. As sure as us two be a talking here, this matter won’t stand at its present page; there’ll be more leafs turned in it afore many days is gone over.”

  Leaning forward, his face and eyes wearing their gravest look, his elbow on the table that was between them, his finger and thumb pointed to give force to his argument, there was that altogether in the speaker’s aspect, in his words, that carried a shiver of conviction to the mind of Bede Greatorex. His heart grew faint, his face was white with a sickly moisture.

  “You may think to stop it and I may think to stop it, Mr. Bede Greatorex: but, take my word, it won’t be stopped. There’s no longer a chance of it.”

  “If you — could get — Brown out of the way?” spoke Bede, scarcely knowing what it was he said, and speaking in a whisper. Mr. Butterby received the suggestion with severity.

  “It’s not to me, sir, that you should venture to say such a thing. I’ve been willing to help your views when it didn’t lie against my position and duty to do it; but I don’t think you’ve seen anything in me to suppose I would go beyond that. As good step into Scotland Yard and ask them to help a criminal to escape, as ask me. We’ll let that drop, sir; and I’ll go on to a question I should like to put. What do you want Godfrey Pitman out of the way for?”

  Bede did not answer. His hand was pressed upon his brow, his eyes wore their saddest and most dreamy look.

  “If Pitman had any share in the business at Helstonleigh, you ought to be the one to give him into custody, sir.”

  “For the love of Heaven, don’t pursue Pitman!” spoke Bede earnestly. “I have told you before, Mr. Butterby, that it was not he. So far as I believe, he never lifted his hand against John Ollivera; he did not hurt a hair of his head. Accuse any one in the world that you please, but don’t accuse him.”

  “What if I accuse a woman?” spoke Mr. Butterby, when he had gazed at Bede to his satisfaction.

  Their eyes met. Bede’s face, or the detective fancied it, was growing whiter.

  “Who? — What woman?” asked Bede, scarcely above his breath.

  “Alletha Rye.”

  With a sudden movement, looking like one of relief, Bede Greatorex dropped his hand and leaned back in his chair. It was as if some kind of rest had come to him.

  “Why should you bring in Alletha Rye’s name? Do you suspect her?”

  “I’m not clear that I do; I’m not clear that I don’t. Any how, I think she stands a chance of getting accused of it, Mr. Bede Greatorex.”

  “Better accuse her than Pitman,” said Bede, who seemed to be again speaking out of his uncomfortable dream.

  Mr. Butterby, inwardly wondering at various matters, and not just yet able to make them meet in his official mind, rose to conclude the interview. A loud bell was ringing up stairs; most probably the announcement of dinner.

  “Just a parting word, sir. What I chiefly stepped in to say, was this. So long as the case rested in my hands, and Mr. Godfrey Pitman was supposed to have finally disappeared from the world, I was willing to oblige you, and let it, and him, and the world be. But from the moment that the affair shall be stirred publicly, in short, that action is forced upon me by others, I shall take it up again. Counsellor Ollivera’s case belongs of right to me, and must be mine to the end.”

  With a civil good-night, Mr. Butterby departed, leaving Bede Greatorex to his thoughts and reveries. More unhappy ones have rarely been entertained in this world. Men cannot strive against fate for ever, and the battle had well nigh worn him out. It almost seemed that he could struggle no longer, that he had no power of resistance left within him. Mind and body were alike weary; the spirit fainted, the heart was sick. Life had long been a burden to Bede Greatorex, but never did its weight lie heavier than to-night, in its refined and exquisite pain.

  He had to bear it alone, you see. To lock the miserable secret, whatever might be its precise nature, and whoever might have been guilty, within his own bosom. Could he but have spoken of it to another, its anguish had been less keen; for, when once a great trouble can be imparted — be it of grief, or apprehension, or remorse; be it connected with ourselves, or (worse) one very near and dear to us — it is lightened of half its sting.

  But that relief was denied to Bede Greatorex.

  It had been the dinner-bell. Bede did not answer to it; but that was not altogether unusual.

  They sat around the brilliantly-lighted, well-appointed banquet. Where Mrs. Bede Greatorex procured her fresh hot-house flowers from daily, and at what cost, she alone knew. They were always beautiful, charming to the eye, odoriferously pleasant to the senses. At the head of the table to-night was she, wearing amber silk, her shoulders very bare, her back partially shaded by the horse’s tail that drooped from her remarkable chignon. It was not a dinner-party; but Mrs. Bede was going out later, and had dressed beforehand.

  The place at her left-hand was vacant — Bede’s — who never took the foot of the table when his father was present. Mr. Greatorex supposed his son was detained in the office, and sent a servant to see. Judge Kene sat on the right of Mrs. Bede; he had called in, and stayed to dinner without ceremony. Clare Joliffe and Miss Channing sat on either side Mr. Greatorex. Frank was dining out. Clare was returning to France for Christmas, after her many months’ stay in the country. Her chignon was more fashionable than a quartern loaf, and certainly larger, but lacking that great achievement, the tail. Annabel’s quiet head presented a contrast to those two of the mode.

  Bede came up. Shaking hands with Sir Thomas Kene, he passed round to his chair; his manner was restless, his thin cheeks were hectic. The judge had not seen him for some little time. Gazing at him across the table, he wondered what malady he could be suffering from, and how much more like a shadow he would be able to become — and live. Mr. Greatorex, anxiously awake to every minute glance or motion bearing on his son’s health, spoke.

  “Are you thinking Bede looks worse, Sir Thomas?”

  “He does not look better,” was the reply. “You should see a doctor and take some tonics, Bede.”

  “I am all right, Judge, thank you,” was Bede’s answer, as he turned a whole lot of croûtons into his purée de pois — and would afterwards send it away nearly untasted.

  Dinner was just over when a servant whispered to Mr. Greatorex that he was wanted. Going down at once to his room he found Henry William Ollivera.

  “Why did you not come up, William? Kene is there.”

  “I am in no fit mood for company, uncle,” was the clergyman’s reply. “The trouble has come at last.”

  In all the phases of agitation displayed by Henry Ollivera, and when speaking of the affair he generally displayed more or less, Mr. Greatorex never saw him so much moved as now. Leaning forward on his chair, his eyes bright, his cheeks burning as with the red of an autumn leaf, his hands feverish, his voice sunk to a whisper, he entered on the tale he had to tell.

  “Do you remember my saying to you one day in the dining-room above, that I thought it was a woman? Do you remember it, uncle?”

  “Quite well.”

  “In the weeks that have gone by since, the suspicion has only gained ground in my mind. Without cause: I am bound to say it, without further cause. Nay, almost in the teeth of what might have served to diminish suspicion. For, if Godfrey Pitman be really somewhere in existence, and hiding himself, the natural supposition would be, as Jelf thinks, that he was the one.”

  Mr. Greatorex nodded assent. “And yet you suspect the woman! Can you not say who she is, Henry?”

  “Yes, I can say now. I have come here to say it — Alletha Rye!”

  Mr. Greatorex evinced no surprise. He had fancied it might be upon her that his nephew’s doubts had been running. And he deemed it a crotchet indeed.

  “I think you must be entirely mistaken,” he said with emphasis. “What little I know of the young woman, tends to give me a very high opinion of her. She appears to be almost the last person in the world capable of such a crime as that, or of any crime.”

  “She might have done it in a moment’s passion; she might have been playing with the pistol and fired it accidentally, and then was afraid to avow it; but she did it, uncle.”

  “GO on.”

  “I have been distracted with doubt. Distracted,” emphatically repeated Mr. Ollivera. “For of course I knew that my suspicions of her, strong though they have been growing, did not prove her guilty. But tonight I have heard her avow it with her own lips.”

  “Avow what?”

  “That she murdered John!”

  “What! — has she confessed to you?” exclaimed Mr. Greatorex.

  “No. I heard it accidentally. Perhaps I ought to say surreptitiously. And, hearing it in that manner, the question arises in my mind whether or not I should make use of the knowledge so gained. I cannot bear anything like dishonourable or under-hand dealing; no, not even in this cause, uncle.”

  Mr. Greatorex made no reply. He was taken up with noting the strangely eager gaze fixed on him. Something in it, he knew not what, recalled to his memory a dead face, lying alone on the border of a distant church-yard.

  “It is some few weeks ago now that Mrs. Jones gave me a latch-key,” resumed Mr. Ollivera. “In fact, I asked her for it. Coming in so often, and sometimes detained out late at night with the sick, I felt that it would be a convenience to me, and save trouble to the maid. This evening, upon letting myself in with it about tea-time, I found the passage in darkness; the girl, I supposed, had delayed to light the lamp. My movements are not noisy at any time, as you know, and I went groping on in silence, feeling my way: not from any wish to be stealthy — such a thought never entered my head — but because Mr. Roland Yorke is given to leave all kinds of articles about and I was afraid of stumbling over something. I was making for the table at the end of the passage, on which matches are generally kept, sometimes a chamber-candle. Feeling for these, I heard a voice in Mrs. Jones’s parlour that I have not heard many times in my life, but nevertheless I knew it instantly — Butterby’s, the detective.”

  “Butterby’s!” exclaimed Mr. Greatorex. “I did not know he was in London.”

  “Uncle! It was Alletha Rye’s voice that answered him. Her voice, and no other’s, disguised with agitation though it was. I heard her say that it was herself who killed my brother; that Godfrey Pitman had never raised a hand against him.”

  “You — really heard her say this, William?” breathed Mr. Greatorex.

  “It is true as that I am a living man. It seemed to me that the officer must have been accusing Godfrey Pitman of the crime. I heard the man’s surprised answer ‘You, Miss Rye!’ I heard her again reiterate her self-accusing avowal. ‘Yes, I,’ she said, ‘I, Alletha Rye, not Godfrey Pitman.’ I heard her go on to tell Butterby that he might do his best and his worst.”

  Mr. Greatorex sat like one bereft of motion. “This confounds me, William,” he presently said.

  “It confounded me,” replied Mr. Ollivera. “Nearly took my senses from me, for I’m sure I had no rational reason left. She first thought that came to me was, that they had better not see me there, or discover they had been overheard, until I had decided what my course should be. So I stepped silently up to my room, and the detective went away; and, close upon that, Mrs. Jones and the maid came in together. Mrs. Jones called her sister to account for not having lighted the hall-lamp, little thinking how the darkness had served me.” —

  “But for your telling me this yourself, William, I had not believed it.”

  “It is true as Heaven’s gospel,” spoke the clergyman in his painful earnestness. “I sat a short while in my room, unable to decide what I ought to do, and then I came down here to tell you of it, uncle. It is very awful.”

  “Awful that it should have been Alletha Rye, you mean?”

  “Yes. I have been praying, seeking, working for this discovery ever since John died; and, now that it has come in this most sudden manner, it brings nothing but perplexity with it. Oh, poor helpless mortals that we are!” added the clergyman, clasping his hands. “We set our hearts upon some longed-for end, spend our days toiling for it, our nights supplicating for it; and when God answers us according to our short-sighted wish, the result is but as the apples of Sodom, filling our mouths with ashes. Anybody but Alletha Rye; almost anybody; and I had not hesitated a moment. But I have lived under the same roof with her, in pleasant, friendly intercourse; I have preached to her on Sundays; I have given her Christ’s Holy Sacrament with my own hands: in a serious illness that she had, I used to go and pray by her bedside. Oh, Uncle Greatorex, I cannot see where my duty lies; I am torn with conflicting doubt!”

  To the last words Mr. Ollivera had a listener that he had not bargained for — Judge Kene. About to take his departure, the Judge had come in without ceremony to say Good-night to Mr. Greatorex.

  “Why, what is amiss?” he cried, noting the signs of agitation as well as the words.

  And they told him; told him all; there was no reason why it should be kept from him; and Mr. Ollivera begged for his counsel and advice. The Judge gave it, and most emphatically; deciding as a judge more than as a humane man — and Thomas Kene was that.

  “You cannot hesitate, Ollivera. This poor unhappy woman, Alletha Rye, must be brought to answer for her crime. Think of him, your brother, and my once dear friend, lying unavenged in his shameful grave! Humanity is a great and a good virtue, but John’s memory must out-weigh it.”

  “Yes, yes; I am thinking of him always,” murmured the clergyman, his face lighting.

  “The initiative was taken by Mr. Greatorex. On the departure of the Judge and the clergyman, who went out together, Mr. Greatorex dropped a line to Scotland Yard. Butterby happened to be there, and answered it in person. Shortly and concisely Mr. Greatorex gave his orders.

  “And I have no resource but to act upon them,” coolly observed the imperturbable Butterby. “But I don’t think the party was Alletha Rye.”

  “You don’t!” exclaimed Mr. Greatorex.

  “No, sir, I don’t. Leastways, to my mind, there’s grave reasons against it. The whole affair, from beginning to end, seems encompassed with nothing but doubts; and that’s the blessed truth.”

  “I would like to ask you if Alletha Rye has or has not made a confession to you this evening, Mr. Butterby — to the effect that she was the one who killed Mr. Ollivera?” —

  “If nobody was in the house but her — as she said — she’s been talking,” thought the detective. “Confound these women for simpletons! They’d prate their necks away.”

  But Mr. Greatorex was looking at him, waiting for the answer.

  “I was with Alletha Rye this evening; I went there for my own purposes, to see what I could get out of her; little suspecting she’d say what she did. But I don’t believe her any the more for having said it. The fact is, Mr. Greatorex, that in this case there’s wheels within wheels, a’most more than in any I’ve ever had to do with. I can’t yet disclose what they are, even to you; but I’m trying to work them round and make one spoke fit into another.”

  “Do you know that Alletha Rye was not guilty of it?”

  “No, sir, I do not.”

  “Very good. Lose no time. Get a warrant to apprehend Alletha Rye, and execute it. If you telegraph to Helstonleigh at once, the warrant may be up, and she in custody before midday to-morrow.”

 

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