"I don"t say that. When I first stood there I strolled about a little, talking with one person and another. _But I did not stir from the door after I saw Sam Dene leave the parlour._ And I do not think five minutes elapsed before I went in. Not more than five, I am quite certain. What are you thinking about, Dutton?--you don"t seem to take me."
"I take you well enough, sir, and all you say. But what is puzzling me in the matter is this; strikes me as strange, in fact: that Mr. Dene should do the thing (allowing that he has done it) in so open and barefaced a manner, laying himself open to immediate suspicion. Left alone in the room with the box by Miss Betty, he must know that if, when he left it, the box vanished with him, only one inference would be drawn. Most thieves exercise some caution."
"Not when they are as hard up as Dene is. Impudence with them is the order of the day, and often carries luck with it. Nothing risk, nothing win, they cry, and they _do_ risk--and win. Dene has got my box, sergeant."
"Well, sir, it looks dark against him; almost _too_ dark; and if you decide to give him into custody, of course we have only to---- Good-evening, Badger!"
They had strolled as far as the Cross, and were standing on the wide pavement in front of St. Nicholas" Church, about to part, when that respectable gentleman, Jonas Badger, pa.s.sed by. A thought struck the captain. He knew the man was a money-lender in a private way.
"Here, Badger, stop a minute," he hastily cried. "I want to ask you a question about young Dene--my brother"s clerk, you know. Does he owe you money?--Much?"
Mr. Badger, wary by nature and by habit, glanced first at the questioner and then at the police-sergeant, and did not answer. Whereupon Captain c.o.c.kermuth, as an excuse for his curiosity, plunged into the history of what had occurred: the finding of the box of guineas yesterday and the losing it again to-day, and the doubt of Sam.
Mr. Badger listened with interest; for the news of that marvellous find had not yet reached his ears. He had been shut up in his office all the morning, very busy over his account-books; and in the afternoon had walked over to Kempsey, where he had a client or two, getting back only in time for tea.
"That long-lost box of guineas come to light at last!" he exclaimed.
"What an extraordinary thing! And Mr. Dene is suspected of---- Why, good gracious!" he broke off in fresh astonishment, "I have just seen him with a guinea in his pocket!"
"Seen a guinea in Sam Dene"s pocket!" cried Captain c.o.c.kermuth, turning yellow as the gas-flame under which they were standing.
"Why yes, I have. It was----"
But there Mr. Badger came to a full stop. It had suddenly struck him that he might be doing harm to Sam Dene; and the rule of his life was not to harm any one, or to make an enemy, if his own interest allowed him to avoid it.
"I won"t say any more, Captain c.o.c.kermuth. It is no business of mine."
But here Mr. Sergeant Dutton came to the fore. "You must, Badger. You must say all you know that bears upon the affair; the law demands it of you. What about the guinea?"
"Well, if you force me to do so--putting it in that way," returned the man, driven into a corner.
Mr. Badger had just been down to Edgar Street to pay another visit to Sam. Not to torment him; he did not do that more than he could help; but simply to say he would accept smaller instalments for the liquidation of his debt--which of course meant giving to Sam a longer time to pay the whole in. This evening he was admitted to Sam"s sitting-room. During their short conversation, Sam, searching impatiently for a pencil in his waistcoat-pocket, drew out with it a few coins in silver money, and one coin in gold. Mr. Badger"s hungry eyes saw that it was an old guinea.
These particulars he now imparted.
"What did he _say_ about the guinea?" cried Captain c.o.c.kermuth, his own eyes glaring.
"Not a word," said Badger; "neither did I. He slipped it back into his pocket."
"I hope you think there"s some proof to go upon _now_," were Charles c.o.c.kermuth"s last words to the police-officer as he wished him good-night.
On the following morning, Sam Dene was apprehended, and taken before the magistrates. Beyond being formally charged, very little was done; Miss Betty was in bed with a sick headache, brought on by the worry, and could not appear to give evidence; so he was remanded on bail until Sat.u.r.day.
III.
I"m sure you might have thought all his rick-yards were on fire by the way old Jacobson came bursting in. It was Sat.u.r.day morning, and we were at breakfast at d.y.k.e Manor. He had run every step of the way from Elm Farm, two miles nearly, not having patience to wait for his gig, and came in all excitement, the _Worcester Herald_ in his hand. The Squire started from his chair; Mrs. Todhetley, then in the act of pouring out a cup of coffee, let it flow over on to the tablecloth.
"What on earth"s amiss, Jacobson?" cried the Squire.
"Ay, what"s amiss," stuttered Jacobson in answer; "_this_ is amiss,"
holding out the newspaper. "I"ll prosecute the editor as sure as I"m a living man. It is a conspiracy got up to sell it; a concocted lie. It can"t be anything else, you know, Todhetley. And I want you to go off with me to Worcester. The gig"s following me."
When we had somewhat collected our senses, and could look at the newspaper, there was the account as large as life. Samson Reginald Dene had been had up before the magistrates on Thursday morning on a charge of stealing a small box of carved ebony, containing sixty guineas in gold, from the dwelling house of Lawyer c.o.c.kermuth; and he was to be brought up again that day, Sat.u.r.day, for examination.
"A pretty thing this is to see, when a man opens his weekly newspaper at his breakfast-table!" gasped Jacobson, flicking the report with his angry finger. "I"ll have the law of them--accusing _my_ nephew of such a thing as that! You"ll go with me, Squire!"
"Go! of course I"ll go!" returned the Squire, in his hot partisanship.
"We were going to Worcester, any way; I"ve things to do there. Poor Sam!
Hanging would be too good for the printers of that newspaper, Jacobson."
Mr. Jacobson"s gig was heard driving up to the gate at railroad speed; and soon our own carriage was ready. Old Jacobson sat with the Squire, I behind with Giles; the other groom, Blossom, drove Tod in the gig; and away we went in the bl.u.s.tering March wind. Many people, farmers and others, were on the road, riding or driving to Worcester market.
Well, we found it was true. And not the mistake of the newspapers: they had but reported what pa.s.sed before the magistrates at the town hall.
The first person we saw was Miss c.o.c.kermuth. She was in a fine way, not knowing what to think or believe, and sat in the parlour in that soft green gown of twilled silk (that might have been a relic of the silk made in the time of the Queen of Sheba), her cap and front all awry.
Rumour said old Jacobson had been a sweetheart of hers in their young days; but I"m sure I don"t know. Any way they were very friendly with one another, and she sometimes called him "Frederick." He sat down by her on the horse-hair sofa, and we took chairs.
She recounted the circ.u.mstances (ramblingly) from beginning to end. Not that the end had come yet by a long way. And--there it was, she wound up, when the narrative was over: the box had disappeared, just for all the world as mysteriously as it disappeared in the days gone by.
Mr. Jacobson had listened patiently. He was a fine, upright man, with a healthy colour and bright dark eyes. He wore a blue frock-coat to-day with metal b.u.t.tons, and top-boots. As yet he did not see how they had got up grounds for accusing Sam, and he said so.
"To be sure," cried the Squire. "How"s that, Miss Betty?"
"Why, it"s this way," said Miss Betty--"that n.o.body was here in the parlour but Sam when the box vanished. It is my brother Charles who has done it all; he is so pa.s.sionate, you know. John has properly quarrelled with him for it."
"It is not possible, you know, Miss Betty, that Sam Dene could have done it," struck in Tod, who was boiling over with rage at the whole thing.
"Some thief must have stolen in at the street-door when Sam had left the room."
"Well, no, that could hardly have been, seeing that Charles never left the street-door after that," returned Miss Betty, mildly. "It appears to be a certain fact that not a soul entered the room after the young man left it. And there lies the puzzle of it."
Putting it to be as Miss Betty put it--and I may as well say here that nothing turned up, then or later, to change the opinion--it looked rather suspicious for Sam Dene. I think the Squire saw it.
"I suppose you are sure the box was on the table when you left the room, Miss Betty?" said he.
"Why, of course I am sure, Squire," she answered. "It was the last thing my eyes fell on; for, as I went through the door, I glanced back to see that I had left the table tidy. Susan can bear witness to that. Dutton, the police-sergeant, thinks some demon of mischief must be in that box--meaning the deuce, you know. Upon my word it looks like it."
Susan came in with some gla.s.ses and ale as Miss Betty spoke, and confirmed the testimony--which did not need confirmation. As she closed the parlour-door, she said, after her mistress had pa.s.sed out, she noticed the box standing on the table.
"Is Sam here to-day--in the office?" asked Mr. Jacobson.
"Oh, my goodness, no," cried Miss Betty in a fl.u.s.ter. "Why, Frederick, he has not been here since Thursday, when they had him up at the Guildhall. He couldn"t well come while the charge is hanging over him."
"Then I think we had better go out to find Sam, and hear what he has to say," observed Mr. Jacobson, drinking up his gla.s.s of ale.
"Yes, do," said Miss Betty. "Tell poor Sam I"m as sorry as I can be--pestered almost out of my mind over it. And as to their having found one of the guineas in his pocket, please just mention to him that I say it might have slipped in accidentally."
"One of the guineas found in Sam"s pocket!" exclaimed Mr. Jacobson, taken aback.
"Well, I hear so," responded Miss Betty. "The police searched him, you see."