sh me punctually with the
necessary documents."
"Had he, so far as you know, any reasons for wishing to disappear?"
"No."
"When and where did you last see him alive?"
"At six o'clock in the evening, on the fourteenth of October, nineteen
hundred and two, at 141, Queen Square, Bloomsbury."
"Kindly tell us what happened on that occasion."
"The testator had called for me at my office at a quarter past three,
and asked me to come with him to his house to meet Doctor Norbury. I
accompanied him to 141, Queen Square, and shortly after we arrived
Doctor Norbury came to look at some antiquities that the testator
proposed to give to the British Museum. The gift consisted of a mummy
with four Canopic jars and other tomb-furniture which the testator
stipulated should be exhibited together in a single case and in the
state in which they were then presented. Of these objects, the mummy
only was ready for inspection. The tomb-furniture had not yet arrived
in England, but was expected within a week. Doctor Norbury accepted
the gift on behalf of the Museum, but could not take possession of the
objects until he had communicated with the Director and obtained his
formal authority. The testator accordingly gave me certain
instructions concerning the delivery of the gift, as he was leaving
England that evening."
"Are those instructions relevant to the subject of this inquiry?"
"I think they are. The testator was going to Paris, and perhaps from
thence to Vienna. He instructed me to receive and unpack the
tomb-furniture on its arrival, and to store it, with the mummy, in a
particular room, where it was to remain for three weeks. If he
returned within that time he was to hand it over in person to the
Museum authorities; if he had not returned within that time, he desired
me to notify the Museum authorities that they were at liberty to take
possession of and remove the collection at their convenience. From
these instructions I gathered that the testator was uncertain as to the
length of his absence from England and the extent of his journey."
"Did he state precisely where he was going?"
"No. He said he was going to Paris and perhaps to Vienna, but he gave
no particulars and I asked for none."
"Do you, in fact, know where he went?"
"No. He left the house at six o'clock wearing a long, heavy overcoat
and carrying a suit-case and an umbrella. I wished him 'Good-by' at
the door and watched him walk away as i
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