hings into a bag--and
he was rather puzzled to account for Cleek's desire to say anything to
him which the Captain was not to hear. However, he kept his curiosity in
check and his tongue behind his teeth until they were on the other side
of the lich-gate and in the road leading to the Three Desires.
"There's something you want to say to me, isn't there?" he inquired.
"Something you want attended to on the quiet?"
"Yes," admitted Cleek, tersely. "There's a public telephone station a
mile or two on the other side of this place--I saw it this morning when
I was out tramping. Slip off down there, ring up the head of the
Dalehampton Constabulary, and tell him to have a man at the house ready
to pop up when wanted. I'll be long enough over my supposed 'packing' to
cover the time of your going and returning without the Captain's
knowledge."
"Without--Good Heaven! My dear Cleek, you were serious, then? You meant
it? You--you really believe that suspicion points to Sir Gilbert
Morford?"
"Not any more than it points to Sir Gilbert Morford's grandson, Mr.
Narkom."
"Good Lord! To him? To that boy? Why, man alive, what possible motive
could he have for bringing grief and anguish to Miss Comstock when he's
willing to give up a fortune to marry her?"
"Ah, but don't forget that another fortune descends to all the heirs,
male and female alike, of the late Mrs. Comstock, Mr. Narkom, and that
if the Captain's fiancee becomes, in course of time, the only surviving
child of that unfortunate lady, the Captain's sacrifice will not be such
an overpowering hardship for him, after all."
"Great Scott! I never thought of that before, Cleek--never."
"Didn't you? Well, don't think too much of it now that you have. For
circumstantial evidence is tricky and treacherous, and he mayn't be the
man, after all!"
"Mayn't be? What a beggar you are for damping a man's ardour after
you've fanned it up to the blazing point. Any light in the darkness, old
chap? Any idea of what--and how?"
"Yes," said Cleek, quietly. "If there's a mark on that poor little
shaver's neck, Mr. Narkom, I shall know the means. And if there's soap
on the window sill I shall know the man!" And then, having reached the
doorway of the inn, he dived into it and went up the staircase two steps
at a time.
CHAPTER XXXIV
The little house of Dalehampton was something more than a mere house of
grief, they found, when the long drive came to an end and Cleek and
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