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A Little World Part 58

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"'Do you mean to report me, sir?' I says. 'Don't be a fool, Purkis,'

he says. 'I want you to tell him with your own lips.'"

"Tell him what, sir?--tell him what?" said Tim, piteously.

"That I'd seen--"

"Stop--stop!" exclaimed Tim, imploringly, as if, now that it had come to the point, and he was about to have that which he already knew corroborated, he could not bear it. "I don't think I can quite take it yet; but there!--yes--please go on."

"That I'd seen her, sir, as I could swear to, go to the poor-boxes one after another, and take something out, just like Mrs Purkis emptying the till, and then steal off, sir, so still that you could hardly hear her, only for the clicking of the key in the lock, and then she was gone."

"_She_ was--_she_ was gone?" faltered Tim.

"Yes, sir; she was. Dark as it was, I could make out all I have said; and then it puzzled me that we should never have settled it upon her before, when we found the money missing. But, you see, she was always so prim, and clean, and neat, and respectable."

"Always, Mr Purkis, sir," said Tim; "always."

"And no one never would have thought it of her," said Purkis.

"No, sir; no one," responded Tim, and then, sinking his voice to a whisper, he looked anxiously round the shop, dropping his hat, and then starting as he caught Purkis by one of his b.u.t.tons--"Who was it, sir?-- who was it?" he said, in a voice hardly above his breath.

"Why, you don't want me to tell you, I'm sure, sir?" said Purkis, stoutly.

"Oh yes, I do!--oh yes, I do!" groaned Tim.

"Then," said the beadle, "I'll tell you!" When there came the words "O Joseph!" plainly heard from the inner room, pointing to the fact that Mrs Purkis had been listening the whole time. But her lord heeded not the soft appeal, but, leaning forward, he placed a hand upon Tim's shoulder, his lips close to his ear, and whispered the words.

With a cry, the little tailor caught up his hat and dashed out of the shop, then, after silencing the irritated bell, Mr Purkis gave one of his customer-seeking looks up and down the street, but it was only to see poor Tim Ruggles disappear round the corner.

"I knowed you'd commit yourself, Joseph," whimpered Mrs Purkis, standing at the inner door, and rolling her arms tightly in her ap.r.o.n.

"My dear," said Mr Purkis pompously, "it was only my dooty!"

Volume 3, Chapter XVII.

JOHN BROWN.

"It's all against rule and regulation, and that sort of thing," said the sergeant, as he and Harry Clayton were being jolted over the stones in a Hansom cab; "but ours is a particular case. The old gentleman's there long before this, sir. He seemed to revive like magic as soon as ever I told him the news. He just hid his face for a few moments, and then said quite sharp, 'Go and fetch Mr Clayton, and bring him after me,'

telling me, of course, where you were gone; and here I am, sir."

"But it seems so strange," said Clayton. "I can't understand it."

"Strange, sir! 'Pon my soul, sir, if you'll excuse me for saying so, I'm quite ashamed of myself. Thought I was up to more than that. And yet, here's all the wind taken out of my sails, and I'm nowhere."

Harry nodded, for he wanted to think, but the sergeant rattled on--

"It's always the way with your biggest puzzles, sir: the way to find them out is the simplest way--the way that's so easy that you never even give it a thought if it occurs to you. Perhaps you remember that chap in the story, sir, as wanted to keep a certain dockyment out of the way of the foreign detectives--French police--over the water--secret police, I think they call themselves; not that there's one of them who can hold a candle to our fellows. Spies, perhaps, would be the better name for them. Well, he knew that as soon as he was out, they'd search the place from top to bottom. Well, what does he do? Hide it in the most secret place he could think of? Not he; for places that he could think of as being the safest, perhaps they might think of too. He was too foxy, sir; and he just folds it up like a letter, sticks it in a dirty old envelope, and pops it into the card-rack over the chimney-piece,--plain, for all folk to see; and, as a matter of course, they never so much as look at it. That's just been the case with the young squire here; he's been stuck up in the card-rack over the chimney-piece, chock before my eyes, and I've been shutting 'em up close so as not to see him, when he's been as good as asking me to look. There, sir! I haven't patience with myself; and I'm going to ask to be put on the sooperannuation list, along with the pensioners as I call 'em. Mysterious disappearance! why, it wasn't anything of the sort, sir. But here we are!"

The cab was checked as he spoke, and alighting before a great gloomy looking building, the sergeant led the way up a flight of stone steps, and into a hall, where a liveried porter saluted him with a nod.

"Here, bring us the book again, Tomkins," said the sergeant; and the porter reached a large folio from a desk, and placed it before the sergeant upon a side-table.

"Here you are, sir," said the sergeant, eagerly, as he turned back some leaves, till he came to one which bore the date of Lionel's disappearance. "Now, look here!"

He pointed to an entry in the accident register; for they were in the entrance-hall of a large hospital.

"Look at that, sir," said the sergeant again; "and tell me what you think of it."

Harry Clayton bent over the book, and read--

"Brown, John, stableman, run over by a cab. Severe concussion of the brain."

"Now, sir, what do you make of that?"

"Nothing at all," said Clayton, blankly.

"No more did I, sir. I wasn't looking after John Brown, a stableman; but Lionel Redgrave, Esq. But that wasn't all. I've seen this case-- I've been to the bedside, and then I didn't think anything of it. I was so clever."

"But does that relate to him?"

"To be sure it does, sir. I tell you it's easy enough, now one can see through it; but I couldn't put that and that together before. Name never struck me a bit, when it ought to have been the very key to it all. He was knocked down, and run over by a cab, when out on his larks.

Got his hair cut short, and his mustacher shaved off. There's his clothes too, up-stairs--reg'lar stableman's suit--masquerading things-- such togs for a gent like him to wear! Poor chap, it was a bad case, though, for he was nearly killed. Well, of course, they brought him here, and asked him his name, when, just being able to speak, he says the very last thing that was in his poor head, before the sense was knocked out of it, and all its works were brought to a stand still.

'What's your name?' they says; and as I said before, he answers the very last thing as was in his head before he was stopped short, and that was the name of the place he had been to--Brownjohn Street; and, saying it, no doubt, very feebly, they didn't hear any more than the Brownjohn, so they put him down as Brown, and his Christian name after it, as is their custom, John--Brown, John; and here he's lain insensible to this day.

But come on up, sir."

Following an attendant, Harry and the sergeant were ushered into a long, whitewashed ward, where, on either side, in their iron bedsteads, lay sufferers from the many accidents constantly occurring in the London streets. Here was a man who had fallen from a scaffold; there one who had had his arm crushed by machinery, and, all around, suffering enough to affect the stoutest heart. The sergeant, though, had no eye for these, and swiftly leading the way down the centre, he conducted Harry to where, weak, pale, and helpless, on his bed of suffering, lay Lionel Redgrave,--his hair shaven from his temples, and the large surgical bandages about his head adding greatly to the cadaverous expression of his countenance.

There was not the slightest doubt of his having suffered severely--it was written too plainly on his face; but he seemed now to be perfectly sensible, and as Clayton approached, he tried feebly to hold out his hand, whispering as he did so, the one word--

"Harry!"

Sir Francis sat holding the other hand, anxiously watching his son's face, and hardly rea.s.sured by the house-surgeon's declaration that, with anything like care, the young man was now out of danger.

"Don't speak to him, Clayton," said Sir Francis. "Don't talk, my dear boy. Pray remember your condition."

"All right," was the reply, but in very feeble tones. "Seems as if I had been to sleep, and only just woke up. Confounded Hansom!--over me in a moment--Martin's Lane--remember no more."

"Yes, yes, we know all," said Sir Francis; "but for my sake now be silent."

"I must put in a word, too," said the house-surgeon, approaching. "I think he has borne as much as will be beneficial for one day. I must ask you to leave now. To-morrow he will be better able to bear a visit."

"Another ten minutes," pleaded Sir Francis. "Not one instant more. We will not talk."

The surgeon bowed his head, when Harry, after warmly pressing the young man's hand--for he somehow felt thoroughly at ease within his own breast--retired with the surgeon and the detective to another part of the ward.

"Curious case this, sir, eh?" said the sergeant.

"Well, yes," said the surgeon. "But what a strange whim! We had not the most remote idea but that he was some young groom out of place. I judged the latter from the whiteness of his hands, and I must really do our young friend the credit of saying that he thoroughly looked his part."

"I believe you, sir," said the sergeant, "for I was took in,--as reg'lar as I was ever took in before. But they will do this sort of thing, these young gents, with nothing else upon their hands. I don't wonder at it. Must be a miserable life!"

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