The Strange Case of Mortimer Fenley
Side
than otherwise, did not blanc
d up a few tricks of speech from Transatlantic breth
tly," was
a cook in this village that shall comp
I ate with a butler, but I drank wine with a con
ith a scowl why I shot Mr. Fenley you might tell me why th
at one time, built in a spirit of mistaken hospitality for the reception of prominent Scots visiting L
eive, in a bottle of Cha
ow, sir, if you have finished luncheon, kindly take me to
ised an inqui
ssion in the abstract, but it is new to fi
n the neighborhood of The Towers before half past nine o'clock
gave the requisite sting to the concluding words. Trenholme, at any other
k," he said. "It will not be a
ght to the easel, took off the drawing of Sylvia Manning and the Aphrodite, placed it on the floor face to the wall, and staged the sketch of the
y as adjectives to explain one's meaning. You are a true impressionist. You paint Nature as you see her, not as she is, yet your technique is superb and your observation just. For instance, ev
olor note for future guidance
able portrait of Miss Sylvia Mann
se I r
by other methods th
shall have to
present stubbornness on your part. I know you were hidden among those cedars between, say, eight o'clock and half past nine. I know that Miss Manning bathed in a lake well within your view. I know, too, that you sketched her, because I saw the can
ccurately. Without another word of protest Tre
inquired the det
ce has my smoking
of life when in the presence of the supreme in art. I find that a really fine picture induces a feeling of reverence, an emotion
e Grand Boulevard. Almost unconsciously he yielded to the spell of a familiar jargon, well knowing he had been inspired in every touch wh
zed long an
compare the cold sunlight on the statue with the same light falling on wet skin. Of course, Mr. Trenho
olme. "What a cursed spite tha
Furneaux, unfei
nd you wouldn't have me blazon that girl'
ve snapped
ture is hung. London provides one front-rank tragedy a week, but not another suc
ptly it would have been in ashes an hour ago,"
manner the detective promptly a
our picture is your excuse, Mr. Trenholme. What plea could you have urged
rather carelessly. Just now you described me as 'hidden' behind that clump of trees, and again you accuse me of
to his French vein. His sh
e could palliate his conduct by that picture. But, given no picture, what is the answer? Reflect calmly, Mr. Trenholme, and you'll see that mine are words of wisdom. Burn tha
ity, I shall nev
nly, for goodness' sake, keep this one covered with a water-proof wrap if the weather breaks, which it doesn't look like doing at this moment. Now, Mr. Trenholme, take the advice of a
me from, but so far as I could ascertain, the only creat
id the pheas
se to the spot where
w m
many
asan
th front of the house to a covert on the
nd it so," commented Furneaux. "Why do
n can recognize the difference in sound. The explosive for
oo, an expe
haven't used a gun during the past five years. If you know Fr
t a cock robin or a jenny wren left in the country....
ied away, halting for an instant in t
tree. You were either painting a pretty girl or gloating over her. Prove the one and people won't
e new and entrancing upland in the domain of art, he had bought or borrowed a volume of light fiction in order to read himself to sleep, and a detective figured occasionally in such pages. Us
ock if practiced in real life. Furneaux came as a positive revelation. A small, wiry individual who looked like a comedian and spouted the truisms of the studio, a wizened little whippersnapper who put hardly one direct question to a prospective witness, but whose caustic comments had
that seemed to forbid their meeting. Now he was to be brought to her, though somewhat after the fashion of a felon with gyves on
ified. He had hit on the one certain means of restraint on an act of vandalism. The picture now stood between Trenholme and the scoffing multitude. It was his buckler agai
nd attributes in one lightning-swift glance of intuition. Before ever Trenholme was aware o
me Secretary regards the militant suffragists. Knows as much about the murder as I do about the rings of Saturn. But he ought to provide a touch of humor in an affair that p
niffing in the back passage. Eliza red-eyed now from distres
but quailed under a sudden and pen
is it?" inqu
m curl papers stirr
" she stammered. "Mr. Trenholme wouldn't hurt a fuf-fuf-fly. I sus-sus-sa
your head by declaring that you are the
nic in itself. Eliza dropped th
," she cried, "but I can hold me own no matter wher
blue eyes-a man who looks as though he can use a carving-knife with discretion-you prepare a dinner worthy
a recovered her breath. Then
your peepin' an' pryin' I'd never ha' set eyes on that blessed picter. You go an' put on a black dress, an' d
Eliza bustled i
n with eyes like a ferret, either? If he does, he's very much mistaken. I don't believe he's a real 'tec. I wouldn't be a bit surprised if he wasn't a repor
halting outside Brondesbury police station. An Inspector assured the Superintendent that a constable was on the track of Robert
y but well, on bread and cheese and beer
y Avenue. A lady, name unknown, but the youth in charge knows her well by sight, and thinks she lives in a set of
to fib about such a trivial matter. His brother, too, is behaving in a way that invites criticism. I don't imagine that either o
lips that mild exclamation betokened the maximum of surprise. "Is there any r
he local police would be seriously considering the arrest of Robe
t Commission
. Winter," he said. "I've just lunched in the St.
window, and seemed to seek inspiration from busy Westminster Bridge and a river dancing in suns
rnfully, "but I make it a rule not to smoke while passing
door had closed on his
aid he was puzzled, or bothered, or have given me some silly advice such as that I must be discreet, look into affairs closely, and no
et him in a Yorkshire town during a protracted and difficult inquiry into the death of a wealthy recluse; although the man was merely an ordinary constable he had shown such resourc
carried himself easily; a peculiarity of his thoughtful, somewhat lawyer-like face was that the left eye was noticeably smaller than the right
t once into the
ssage comes through from Mr. Furneaux tell him I have located the doubtful call made to Th
. Is it a
se could
ordinary
nt, which had not occu
t few years. That is my present opinion, at any rate. Now, a man from the Brondesbury police station is following one of t
re rather small. He talks aggressively, and looks what he is, a pampered youth, very much spoiled by his parents. His clothes-all that I have seen-are a motorist's overalls. If the Brondesbury man reports here
sir?" was the l
hone go. Should Fenley seem to leave London by the Edgware Road, which leads to Roxton, have him checked
aux if I am called ou
message to
taxi, walked up Whitehall and crossed Trafalgar Square en route to t
one, which was lodged in an estate agent's office. The
nce of the born Cockney, "but we aren't al
," said Winter. "You answered a similar inqu
d I thought there was something funny go
card, and the boy
ats where I thought the lady lived, and had the luck to see her getting out of a cab at the door. I followed her upstairs, pretending I had busine
our eyes open. Now, to encourage you, I'll tell you the second. Keep your mouth shut. If this lady is Miss Garth she is not the p
lse for you, sir?" c
but you have saved me from wasting time. Th
good-looking, bu
er s
d. "I'm looking for a Polish Jewess, whose chief fe
d slim-a regular dasher, big black hat, swell togs, black and white, and smart b
sighe
lost," he murmur
ere he smoked a thin, raffish Italian cigar with an Anarchist of his acquaintance who kept a restaurant famous for its r
o an elderly, hatchet-face
reply, given in the tone of one who meant the strang
villy. "Kindly tell her that Superintendent Winter, of the Crim
unless he was addressing some desperate criminal, he did not expect to be assaulted. For once, therefore, he was thoroughly surprised when a bony hand shot out an
al to the task of disturbing his burly frame, and a foot thrust between door and jamb would have done the rest. As ma
eanor of people in whom he was interested, and of whom circumstances permitted only the merest glimpse. This woman's face had revealed annoyance rather than fear. "Scotland Yard" was not an ogre but
oice, heard under admittedly adverse conditions, was correct in accent and fairly cultured. Before the world had hardened it its tones might have been soft and dulc
" thought Winter, smiling as he turned to descend the stairs. F
on the same landing, opened, and a man appea
re you Signor Maselli? Well met, any
emed to have received the shock of his life. His sallow-complexioned face assumed a
ok over his shoulder to ascertain whether any one in
nni Maselli, since that was the name modestly displayed on No. Twelve's card in the hall beneath, closed the
ive minutes-at the Regency Café
ve followed slowly. Crossing the street at an angle, he loo
uned, "and a nice lot of priz
passing sentence of five years' penal servitude and three years' police supervision on a felon;