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Not a soul was in the place, not even a policeman. Presently a poor woman with a shawl over her head hurried past in the falling rain, and afterwards came the postman, who, very fortunately, had no letters for the door where I stood concealed in the shadow. The place seemed dark, mysterious, almost ghostly, in the dead silence of the night.
The quarter chimed, but no person lingered at the gateway. Perhaps the advertis.e.m.e.nt had not been seen; or, more likely, "White Feather" was absent from London.
At last, however, I heard the rattle of a four-wheeled cab outside the gateway. I saw it stop, and a man alighted. Then the vehicle moved on slowly, and again stopped, as though awaiting him. A dark figure in black overcoat and low felt hat loomed up in the darkness of the gateway, and entering the Yard glanced eagerly around.
Next moment another person, a rather taller man, entered and pa.s.sed him by, but without speaking. Indeed, they pa.s.sed as strangers, the second man strolling slowly along the pavement in the direction of where I was in hiding. He pa.s.sed by me, and as the street lamp shone upon his face I saw that he was young and his features were aquiline, dark and evil-looking. I had never to my knowledge seen him before. He seemed well-dressed, for his overcoat did not conceal the fact that he was wearing evening clothes. His collar was turned up, but he went on heedless of the rain, his sharp eyes searching everywhere. My hiding-place was a most excellent one, however, and he failed to detect my presence.
A few minutes later a third man entered the Yard, a youngish man with the air of the c.o.c.kney from the East End. He wore a hard hat of the usual costermonger type, a red woollen comforter about his neck, and his trousers were bell-bottomed and adorned with pearl b.u.t.tons. He, however, gave no sign to either of the other two, although it was apparent that they were acquainted, for sorely three men could not be keeping appointments at that unfrequented spot at the same moment.
The first comer still stood in the gateway, but too far away to allow me to clearly distinguish his features. He stood back in the shadow, his face turned expectantly out to the open roadway, where ever and anon I saw the lights of cabs pa.s.sing and re-pa.s.sing. Meanwhile, the two men in the quiet little square had walked to the opposite gateway, and there halted, though at a respectable distance from each other.
The man who had arrived in a cab stood for a long time in patience, the other two giving no sign whatever of their presence. At first I was half inclined to think that the trio were strangers to each other, but on watching their movements I saw that something was premeditated--but what it was I could not gather.
While the man dressed as a costermonger--or perhaps he was a real costermonger--remained near the exit to the Yard ready to give warning of anyone approaching, the man in evening clothes slowly re-pa.s.sed me, while at the same time the watcher at the gate came forward in his direction.
When not far from me he halted and struck a vesta in order to light a cigarette. The fickle flame betrayed his countenance.
It was the man John Parham, the person believed by his wife to be in India.
What was contemplated? The four-wheeled cab was still in waiting in the little open s.p.a.ce which divides Dean's Yard from Victoria Street, while the exit to Great College Street was being watched, and the thin-faced man lurked there ready for Sybil's arrival.
Within myself I smiled to think that all their elaborate arrangements were futile, and wondered if Parham was the man who signed himself "White Feather?" In that fellow's house were the fatal stairs, therefore if I followed him I should now be enabled to fix the actual place to which I had, on that never-to-be-forgotten night, been enticed.
While the costermonger remained on vigil, Parham and his companion pa.s.sed and re-pa.s.sed, but still without acknowledging each other.
Once the costermonger suddenly began to whistle a popular music-hall air, and turning I saw that it was a preconcerted signal. A man had entered the Yard from Great College Street and was crossing to where Parham was standing.
For fully three-quarters of an hour they waited patiently until ten o'clock struck. Then Parham approached his companion, and they stood in earnest conversation.
Almost at the same moment a female figure in deep black came swiftly through the gateway into the Yard, causing both to start quickly and draw back. Next instant, however, Parham started off briskly, walking past me to where the costermonger was standing, while his thin-faced accomplice slipped past the newcomer and disappeared into Victoria Street.
It was evident that the woman's appearance had instantly upset all their calculations.
The newcomer stopped, glanced around and strained her eyes into the darkness. She wore a close black hat, a long mackintosh, and carried an umbrella, yet so swiftly had Parham disappeared that she had not noticed his presence in the Yard, while the other man had so cleverly slipped past her and out through the gateway that she had not seen his face.
For a few moments she stood expectant. I could see that she had hurried, in fear of being too late.
Then, as she approached me, I discerned that she was the girl O'Hara.
And of her, Parham and his lurking accomplices were evidently in fear, as they separated and disappeared.
I watched her standing there and wondered why she had come. Was it in order to save Sybil from some plot that had been prepared for her?
Was it their intention to take her to that dark, mysterious house with the fatal stairs?
I felt convinced that it was. The truth was plain. There was a plot against Sybil. The cab had been in waiting there to convey the victim to her grave!
CHAPTER TWENTY TWO.
IS AN ECHO FROM CHARLTON WOOD.
My bitterest regret was that I had not been able to follow Parham and trace him to the house of doom, but at the moment of his disappearance I had been unable to emerge from my hiding-place, otherwise the girl O'Hara would have seen me. Perhaps, indeed, she might have recognised me. So, by sheer force of adverse circ.u.mstances, I was compelled to remain there and see the trio escape under my very nose.
I had learnt one important fact, however, namely, that a deep conspiracy was afoot against Sybil.
It was beyond comprehension how Tibbie, daughter of the n.o.ble and patrician house of Scarcliff, could be so intimately a.s.sociated with what appealed to me to be a daring gang of malefactors. The treatment I had received at their hands showed me their utter unscrupulousness. I wondered whether what the police suspected was really true, that others had lost their lives in that house wherein I had so nearly lost mine.
What was the story of Tibbie's a.s.sociation with them--a romance no doubt, that had had its tragic ending in the death of the unknown in Charlton Wood.
To me, it seemed plain that he was a member of the gang, for had he not their secret cipher upon him, and did not both Winsloe and Parham possess his photograph?
I recollected the receipt for a registered letter which I had found among the letters in the dead man's pocket, and next morning told Budd to go and unlock the drawer in my writing-table and bring it to me. He did so, and I saw that the receipt was for a letter handed in at the post-office at Blandford in Dorset, addressed to: "Charles Denton, 16b Bolton Road, Pendleton, Manchester."
I turned over the receipt in my hand, wondering whether the slip of paper would reveal anything to me. Then, after some reflection, I resolved to break my journey in Manchester on my return to Tibbie in Carlisle, and ascertain who was this man to whom the dead unknown had sent a letter registered.
Next afternoon I pa.s.sed through Salford in a tram-car, along by Peel Park, and up the Broad Street to Pendleton, alighting at the junction of those two thoroughfares, the one leading to aristocratic Eccles and Patricroft, and the other out to bustling Bolton.
The Bolton road is one over which much heavy traffic pa.s.ses, and is lined with small houses, a working-cla.s.s district, for there are many mills and factories in the vicinity. I found the house of which I was in search, a small, rather clean-looking place, and as I pa.s.sed a homely-looking woman was taking in the milk from the milkman.
Without hesitation I stopped, and addressing her, exclaimed,--
"Excuse me, mum, but do you happen to know a Mr Charles Denton?"
The woman scanned me quickly with some suspicion, I thought, but noticing, I supposed, that although a working-man I seemed highly respectable, replied bluntly, in a p.r.o.nounced Lancas.h.i.+re dialect,--
"Yes, I do. What may you want with him?"
"I want to see him on some important business," was my vague reply. "Is he at home?"
"No, he ain't," was the woman's response. "Mr Denton lodges with me, but 'e's up in London just now, and 'e's been there this four months."
"In London!" I exclaimed.
"Yes, but I don't know his address. When he goes away 'e never leaves it. He's lodged with me this two years, but I don't think 'e's been here more than six months altogether the whole time."
"Then you have a lot of letters for him, I suppose?"
"Yes, quite a lot," answered the good woman. The letter sent by the dead man might be among them!
"It was about a letter that I wanted to see Mr Denton--about a registered letter. I've come from London on purpose."
"From London!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the woman, a stout, good-humoured person.
"Yes. I wonder whether you'd mind me looking at the letters, if it is among them I'd know he had not received it. The fact is," I added in confidence, "there's a big lawsuit pending, and if he hasn't got the letter then the other side can't take any action against him."
"Then you're on his side?" she asked shrewdly.
"Of course I am. I came down to explain matters to him. If I can ascertain that he didn't get the letter then that's all I want. I'm a stranger, I know," I added, "but as it is in Mr Denton's interest I don't think you'll refuse."
She hesitated, saying she thought she ought to ask her husband when he returned from the mill. But by a.s.suring her of her lodger's peril, and that I had to catch the six-thirty train back to London, I at last induced her to admit me to the house, and there in the small, clean, front parlour which was given over to her lodger when he was there, she took a quant.i.ty of letters from a cupboard and placed them before me.