Read Death Comes to Cambers Online
Authors: E.R. Punshon
âWell, sir, there have been some very remarkable developments,' Bobby answered, âand at present I am trying to clear away the accessories, so to say. If we can only get to the bare facts, we shall know where we are.' He paused for a moment, wondering to himself what the other would say if he knew that these developments included a statement of an eyewitness who claimed to have seen Sir Albert himself commit the murder. âThere are one or two points I should like to put to you,' he went on.
âWish I had been able to get about,' Sir Albert remarked. âRotten luck being tied up like this.'
âIf I may say so,' Bobby observed, âit was only to be expected after spending a few hours in wet clothes in the midst of dripping rhododendrons.'
Sir Albert jerked to a sitting position as if under the impulse of sudden physical pressure. His eyes had fear in them, and he moistened with his tongue his lips that had become suddenly very dry. Bobby made no comment, but watched him steadily. After a time, Sir Albert muttered: âI was going to tell you... of course... I was a fool not to at first... how did you find out?'
âIt would have been better to be open about it,' Bobby said, ignoring this last question. âWhy weren't you?'
Sir Albert lay back in the bed and stared at the ceiling. âMakes it worse I didn't, I suppose,' he said. âThere was a kind of choking feeling round the throat I had that stopped me when I thought of telling you. Besides, why should I? And then my head was going like a traffic roundabout, and I could hardly think. If you ask them, they'll tell you I was a bit delirious that Monday evening. But I was going to explain the whole thing as soon as I felt up to it.'
It was a statement concerning whose accuracy Bobby felt some doubt. Still, he supposed the sharp attack of influenza Sir Albert had suffered did to some extent excuse his silence. He had certainly been in no condition to consider calmly his course of action.
âIf you care to tell me all you can now, it may be useful,' Bobby said slowly. âBut I must warn you first that you will most likely be asked soon to make a formal statement. Certain of the developments I spoke of just now are very grave, and, I think you ought to know, seem to point to your own guilt.'
Sir Albert nodded gloomily.
âJust my luck,' he said. âThings always happen like that for me. The only time I've ever tried to catch anyone out in my life, and of course I get caught out myself. I know I was a fool to try to keep things quiet. I've been thinking that all the time I've been lying here. God knows, poor Lotty was enough to drive anyone mad with her, “Just think it over and you'll see I'm right,” and her, “Of course, that's what you must do, so you had better start at once,” but I would never have thought of hurting a hair of her head. Then there's the jewellery that's been stolen. I am not likely to have stolen my own property, am I? Of course, you'll say I was trying to make it look like a burglary. And then, what the blazes was Lotty doing out at that time of night, unless it was to meet young Dene? And I'm told now, there's proof he was in his room at home when it happened.'
âYou suspected there was something between Lady Cambers and Eddy Dene?' Bobby asked. âI haven't come across anything to make me think that was so. Had you any reason?'
âIt was Oscar Bowman put me up, first, to what was going on,' Sir Albert replied. âWhen Lotty took Dene up, I thought it was just one of her fads â just someone else to boss; someone else's life to manage and arrange.' He said this with a certain bitterness, and then, after a short pause, went on: âShe spent money on him like water. If I wanted a pound or two it was: “Why? What for? What have you done with what you had?” â as if I were at school still, and had spent too much at the tuck-shop. But when Dene wanted anything, she drew whacking big cheques without a murmur. Oscar Bowman told me right out there was more to it than I thought. Then one day...' Again Sir Albert hesitated, looked embarrassed, finally made up his mind, and continued with a rush: âI dare say you've heard about Miss Bowman. She always understood me much better than Lotty did. When she wanted help and advice, she got into the way of turning to me quite naturally â Lotty never did that. Oscar felt he ought to tell me certain things he had heard, and then there was an open breach â a scene, in fact â when Lotty had the bad taste to walk right into the Bowmans' drawing-room without a by-your-leave, or with-your-leave, or anything â just walked straight in. That made me feel things had become intolerable, and I decided to take a flat in London, and then I got more information backing up what Oscar said that Lotty and this grocer's assistant she was infatuated with were being seen together in West-End restaurants. I felt that had to be looked into â after all, Lotty bore my name still â and I made up my mind if I got the evidence I would go into the divorce-court with it. Oscar said it was my duty, and I felt he was right. I sent an agent down here, and he told me there was no doubt about it, and he had reliable information that they would be meeting late on Sunday night in the sort of hut she put up for him on the pretence it was needed for what he called his pot-holes. It was settled I was to see for myself. I was to wait outside the house, and, when she came out to keep the appointment, I was to follow her. I felt I had a right to know the truth, and I wrote to Miss Bowman to tell her I hoped we should be free to marry soon, and I borrowed her car â one I had given her myself only just before. I had the key to the garage where she kept it. On the way I took a wrong turning in the dark, and that delayed me, and then there was the rain. It came down in sheets. I drew in to the side of the road to wait till it was over. You could hardly see a yard before you, it was so thick â like a curtain. Where I had drawn up there was a dip in the road â at the West Leigh cross-roads. It was flooded in no time, and a big Rolls-Royce went by, making such a wave, the water came right over the footboard. I moved on and sheltered again, and it must have been close on midnight before I got here.'
âWhen you arrived, you hid in the rhododendrons near the front-door of the house?' Bobby asked.
âI took shelter there,' Sir Albert answered coldly, evidently not approving of the word âhid'. âIt was extremely wet, but there was nowhere else where I could be sure of not being seen and yet be positive of seeing myself if Lotty went out to keep her appointment â or came back from it, for that matter. I waited till nearly three, and then I gave it up and drove back home, and I had hardly got to bed when I heard what had happened. I saw at once it was a very awkward position for me. But I had had nothing to do with it. I had seen and heard nothing all night, so what was the good of drawing attention to myself by saying anything?'
It was in character, Bobby thought, for Sir Albert Cambers to adopt always what seemed at the moment the line of least resistance.
âHave you any suspicion yourself who is guilty?' he asked presently.
âI made sure at first it was young Dene,' Sir Albert answered, âbut I couldn't think why. Besides, it seems he was in his room at home at the time. Rather looks as if there hadn't been any appointment, after all. Only, my agent said he was sure of his facts â reliable information, he said. In the village, Farman tells me they think it was very likely young Ray Hardy. Apparently he had used threats about Lotty. That wasn't through her doing good to him; it was her doing good to the rabbits â always doing good, Lotty. Then, I know it sounds fantastic, but when you're lying in bed with nothing to do but think, you think a lot, and I've been wondering if it could be Andrews â the vicar, you know. He told me himself Lotty was helping Dene to destroy men's faith, and couldn't I stop it, and I told him to stop it himself, only to try stopping the earth going round the sun first, by way of practice. And he said any means would be justified in the sight of Heaven, for men's souls were in danger. The fellow's a fanatic, and a fanatic can work himself up to any pitch.'
âI suppose,' asked Bobby, âwhile you were â er â waiting in the rhododendrons, you didn't see or hear anything or anyone, did you?'
âFarman, smoking my Cabanas,' said Sir Albert, looking very black indeed. âCigars that work out at three and nine each, buying them by the hundred. I keep them for a special treat, and there was Farman, if you please, leaning out of his window where he sleeps in the little room next the pantry and enjoying them as calm as you please â seven-and-six gone up.'
âTo make a butler's holiday,' sympathized Bobby. âToo bad; though I wouldn't grudge him them this time. It may be useful. I take it, you are sure they were your Cabanas?'
âI could tell one whiff a mile away,' declared Sir Albert, with emphasis, âand then, besides, I got Emmers to bring me the box. I happen to know there were fourteen left. I make it a rule to order a fresh box when they get down to a dozen, and the day before I went away from here to London I counted them to see, and there were fourteen. Now there are ten left. That means four gone â two that evening while I was watching with nothing better to smoke myself than some Bulgarian Tempo cigarettes, and two some other time when Mr. Farman wanted to enjoy himself. I'll have a word or two with him when I feel a bit stronger.'
âIf you don't mind,' Bobby said seriously and gravely, âI will ask you very specially to say nothing to him at present.'
Sir Albert, who was really still a little weak, had been lying down in his bed during almost all this conversation, but now, again, he jerked himself abruptly to a sitting position, exactly as if someone had suddenly pulled the string that actuated him: âDo you mean you think Farman did it?' he asked eagerly.
On leaving Sir Albert, Bobby asked if he might use the library for a few minutes, and there he made notes of their talk, and put his mind to the problem of how far the fresh facts he had learned confirmed, contradicted, or illumined those he had so laboriously collected.
To him his case seemed now fairly complete, and yet he could not feel certain how others would regard it, or whether the logical structure he had built up in his mind might not seem to them to have but shaky foundations. And no erection, mental or physical, is stronger than that whereon it stands. Then, too, he had to admit that in his theory there were two weak points that might be considered fatal to it â one of them being that he had as yet no explanation to offer of the missing jewellery.
He put his note-book away, and, turning to examine the book-lined shelves, soon found a complete set of Walter Scott's novels. There was no copy of the poems, however, though a gap at the end of the long line of novels suggested one volume might be missing. Bobby went into the hall, and, finding Farman there, said to him: âDidn't Mr. Sterling bring back that copy of Walter Scott's poems he borrowed?'
âNot that I know of. He didn't tell me if he did,' Farman answered, and then began to think, marking the operation by slowly opening eyes and mouth to their widest. âHow did you know he had it?' he asked.
âIn the same way,' Bobby answered severely, âthat I know you were not telling the whole and exact truth when you said you were smoking your pipe at your bedroom window on Sunday night.'
âBut I was. I don't know what you mean. Who says I wasn't?' demanded Farman, but with a certain uneasiness.
âI do,' Bobby retorted. He went on with authority: âNow you just listen to me. There are small breaches of duty and discipline that don't matter very much. Murder is different. You get that?'
âI don't know what you mean,' Farman muttered. âI don't know what you're after. Anyhow, I've my work to see to,' and he made as if to walk away.
âJust as you like,' said Bobby grimly. âOnly I warn you if you don't talk to me now, you'll probably have to talk to someone else later on.'Â
Farman was beginning to perspire gently. He hesitated. He made a fresh movement to go. Bobby took no notice. Farman came back.
âI suppose it's about those damn cigars,' he burst out.
âWhat cigars were those?' Bobby asked, looking full at him. âOh, you know,' Farman answered sulkily. âTwo of Sir Albert's own I pinched from his box.'
âYes, I know,' Bobby said slowly. âBut I'm not worrying about them. Pinching your employer's cigars is one thing. Murder is another. What I'm trying to do is to find out who murdered Lady Cambers, and for that every little detail is important. One item that doesn't, or does, correspond with another may make all the difference to the theories we are working on.'
âI don't see what my wanting to try those cigars has to do with it,' Farman muttered sulkily. âGet me the sack if it was known. I never done such a thing before. It just came to me Sir Albert was away and not likely to come back, and it seemed a shame them lying there wasting, as you might say. Her ladyship told me to offer them to Mr. Tyler when he was here, only he wouldn't have one, preferring his own, so I thought it would be easy to tell Sir Albert, if asked, Mr. Tyler had had them by her ladyship's orders.'
âThat's all right,' Bobby said. âI don't care anything about that. What I want to establish is that you were at your window that night for some considerable time after the rain stopped, long enough to smoke two cigars.'
âThat's right,' admitted Farman sulkily.
âDid you see or hear anything?'
âNo, no-o, nothing, only that I thought I heard a sound of something moving coming from the rhododendrons â I just thought it was a cat or something. I didn't bother.'
âWhen you saw the cigarette-ends in the rhododendrons next morning, you knew quite well it must have been Sir Albert who had been there?'Â
âI didn't know... I just thought... I wondered... it wasn't my business to say anything.'
âIt's always wisest to tell the truth,' Bobby said dryly. âIt generally comes out in the end.'