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Church Restoration Fundā€”the Vicarā€”oh, dear, here are these people coming back again; well, Iā€™ll tell you afterwardsā€”do look at that woman looking shocked, and the girl in tweeds trying to look as if she sat on undraped gentlemen every day of her lifeā€”I donā€™t mean thatā€”corpses of courseā€”but one finds oneself being so Elizabethan nowadaysā€”what an awful little man the coroner is, isnā€™t he? Heā€™s looking daggers at meā€”do you think heā€™ll dare to clear me out of the court or commit me for what-you-may-call-it?ā€

The first part of the evidence was not of great interest to Mr. Parker. The wretched Mr. Thipps, who had caught cold in gaol, deposed in an unhappy croak to having discovered the body when he went in to take his bath at eight oā€™clock. He had had such a shock, he had to sit down and send the girl for brandy. He had never seen the deceased before. He had no idea how he came there.

Yes, he had been in Manchester the day before. He had arrived at St. Pancras at ten oā€™clock. He had cloak-roomed his bag. At this point Mr. Thipps became very red, unhappy and confused, and glanced nervously about the court.

ā€œNow, Mr. Thipps,ā€ said the Coroner, briskly, ā€œwe must have your movements quite clear. You must appreciate the importance of the matter. You have chosen to give evidence, which you need not have done, but having done so, you will find it best to be perfectly explicit.ā€

ā€œYes,ā€ said Mr. Thipps faintly.

ā€œHave you cautioned this witness, officer?ā€ inquired the Coroner, turning sharply to Inspector Sugg.

The Inspector replied that he had told Mr. Thipps that anything he said might be used aginā€™ him at his trial. Mr. Thipps became ashy, and said in a bleating voice that he ā€™adnā€™tā€”hadnā€™t meant to do anything that wasnā€™t right.

This remark produced a mild sensation, and the Coroner became even more acidulated in manner than before.

ā€œIs anybody representing Mr. Thipps?ā€ he asked, irritably. ā€œNo? Did you not explain to him that he couldā€”that he ought to be represented? You did not? Really, Inspector! Did you not know, Mr. Thipps, that you had a right to be legally represented?ā€

Mr. Thipps clung to a chair-back for support, and said, ā€œNo,ā€ in a voice barely audible.

ā€œIt is incredible,ā€ said the Coroner, ā€œthat so-called educated people should be so ignorant of the legal procedure of their own country. This places us in a very awkward position. I doubt, Inspector, whether I should permit the prisonerā€”Mr. Thippsā€”to give evidence at all. It is a delicate position.ā€

The perspiration stood on Mrs. Thippsā€™s forehead.

ā€œSave us from our friends,ā€ whispered the Duchess to Parker. ā€œIf that cough-drop-devouring creature had openly instructed those fourteen peopleā€”and what unfinished-looking faces they haveā€”so characteristic, I always think, of the lower middle-class, rather like sheep, or calvesā€™ head (boiled, I mean), to bring in wilful murder against the poor little man, he couldnā€™t have made himself plainer.ā€

ā€œHe canā€™t let him incriminate himself, you know,ā€ said Parker.

ā€œStuff!ā€ said the Duchess. ā€œHow could the man incriminate himself when he never did anything in his life? You men never think of anything but your red tape.ā€

Meanwhile Mr. Thipps, wiping his brow with a handkerchief, had summoned up courage. He stood up with a kind of weak dignity, like a small white rabbit brought to bay.

ā€œI would rather tell you,ā€ he said, ā€œthough itā€™s reelly very unpleasant for a man in my position. But I reelly couldnā€™t have it thought for a moment that Iā€™d committed this dreadful crime. I assure you, gentlemen, I couldnā€™t bear that. No. Iā€™d rather tell you the truth, though Iā€™m afraid it places me in rather aā€”well, Iā€™ll tell you.ā€

ā€œYou fully understand the gravity of making such a statement, Mr. Thipps,ā€ said the Coroner.

ā€œQuite,ā€ said Mr. Thipps. ā€œItā€™s all rightā€”Iā€”might I have a drink of water?ā€

ā€œTake your time,ā€ said the Coroner, at the same time robbing his remark of all conviction by an impatient glance at his watch.

ā€œThank you, sir,ā€ said Mr. Thipps. ā€œWell, then, itā€™s true I got to St. Pancras at ten. But there was a man in the carriage with me. Heā€™d got in at Leicester. I didnā€™t recognise him at first, but he turned out to be an old school-fellow of mine.ā€

ā€œWhat was this gentlemanā€™s name?ā€ inquired the Coroner, his pencil poised.

Mr. Thipps shrank together visibly.

ā€œIā€™m afraid I canā€™t tell you that,ā€ he said. ā€œYou seeā€”that is, you will seeā€”it would get him into trouble, and I couldnā€™t do thatā€”no, I reelly couldnā€™t do that, not if my life depended on it. No!ā€ he added, as the ominous pertinence of the last phrase smote upon him, ā€œIā€™m sure I couldnā€™t do that.ā€

ā€œWell, well,ā€ said the Coroner.

The Duchess leaned over to Parker again. ā€œIā€™m beginning quite to admire the little man,ā€ she said.

Mr. Thipps resumed.

ā€œWhen we got to St. Pancras I was going home, but my friend said no. We hadnā€™t met for a long time and we ought toā€”to make a night of it, was his expression. I fear I was weak, and let him overpersuade me to accompany him to one of his haunts. I use the word advisedly,ā€ said Mr. Thipps, ā€œand I assure you, sir, that if I had known beforehand where we were going I never would have set foot in the place.

ā€œI cloak-roomed my bag, for he did not like the notion of our being encumbered with it, and we got into a taxicab and drove to the corner of Tottenham Court Road and Oxford Street. We then walked a little way, and turned into a side street (I do not recollect which) where there was an open door, with the light shining out. There was a man at a counter, and my friend bought some tickets, and I heard the man at the counter say something to him about ā€˜Your friend,ā€™ meaning me, and my friend said, ā€˜Oh, yes, heā€™s been here before, havenā€™t you, Alf?ā€™ (which was what they called me at school), though I assure you, sirā€ā€”here Mr. Thipps grew very earnestā€”ā€œI never had, and nothing in the world should induce me to go to such a place again.

ā€œWell, we went down into a room underneath, where there were drinks, and my friend had several, and made me take one or twoā€”though I am an abstemious man as a ruleā€”and he talked to some other men and girls who were thereā€”a very vulgar set of people, I thought them, though I wouldnā€™t say but what some of the young ladies were nice-looking enough. One of them sat on my friendā€™s knee and called him a slow old thing, and told him to come onā€”so we went into another room, where there were a lot of people dancing all these up-to-date dances. My friend went and danced, and I sat on a sofa. One of the young ladies came up to me and said, didnā€™t I dance, and I said ā€˜No,ā€™ so she said wouldnā€™t I stand her a drink then. ā€˜Youā€™ll stand us a drink then, darling,ā€™ that was what she said, and I said, ā€˜Wasnā€™t it after hours?ā€™ and she said that didnā€™t matter. So I ordered the drinkā€”a gin and bitters it wasā€”for I didnā€™t like not to, the young lady seemed to expect it of me and I felt it wouldnā€™t be gentlemanly to refuse when she asked. But it went against my conscienceā€”such a young girl as she wasā€”and she put her arm round my neck afterwards and kissed me just like as if she was paying for the drinkā€”and it reelly went to my ā€™eart,ā€ said Mr. Thipps, a little ambiguously, but with uncommon emphasis.

Here somebody at the back said, ā€œCheer-oh!ā€ and a sound was heard as of the noisy smacking of lips.

ā€œRemove the person who made that improper noise,ā€ said the Coroner, with great indignation. ā€œGo on, please, Mr. Thipps.ā€

ā€œWell,ā€ said Mr. Thipps, ā€œabout half-past twelve, as I should reckon, things began to get a bit lively, and I was looking for my friend to say good-night, not wishing to stay longer, as you will understand, when I saw him with one of the young ladies, and they seemed to be getting on altogether too well, if you follow me, my friend pulling the ribbons off her shoulder and the young lady laughingā€”and so on,ā€ said Mr. Thipps, hurriedly, ā€œso I thought Iā€™d just slip quietly out, when I heard a scuffle and a shoutā€”and before I knew what was happening there were half-a-dozen policemen in, and the lights went out, and everybody stampeding and shoutingā€”quite horrid, it was. I was knocked down in the rush, and hit my head a nasty knock on a chairā€”that was where I got that bruise they asked me aboutā€”and I was dreadfully afraid Iā€™d never get away and it would all come out, and perhaps my photograph in the papers, when someone caught hold of meā€”I think it was the young lady Iā€™d given the gin and bitters toā€”and she said, ā€˜This way,ā€™ and pushed me along a passage and out at the back somewhere. So I ran through some streets, and found myself in Goodge Street, and there I got a taxi and came home. I saw the account of the raid afterwards in the papers, and saw my friend had escaped, and so, as it wasnā€™t the sort of thing I wanted made public, and I didnā€™t want to get him into difficulties, I just said nothing. But thatā€™s the truth.ā€

ā€œWell, Mr. Thipps,ā€ said the Coroner, ā€œwe shall be able to substantiate a certain amount of this story. Your friendā€™s nameā€”ā€

ā€œNo,ā€ said Mr. Thipps, stoutly, ā€œnot on any account.ā€

ā€œVery good,ā€ said the Coroner. ā€œNow, can you tell us what time you did get in?ā€

ā€œAbout half-past one, I should think. Though reelly, I was so upsetā€”ā€

ā€œQuite so. Did you go straight to bed?ā€

ā€œYes, I took my sandwich and glass of milk first. I thought it might settle my inside, so to speak,ā€ added the witness, apologetically, ā€œnot being accustomed to alcohol so late at night and on an empty stomach, as you may say.ā€

ā€œQuite so. Nobody sat up for you?ā€

ā€œNobody.ā€

ā€œHow long did you take getting to bed first and last?ā€

Mr. Thipps thought it might have been half-an-hour.

ā€œDid you visit the bathroom before turning in?ā€

ā€œNo.ā€

ā€œAnd you heard nothing in the night?ā€

ā€œNo. I fell fast asleep. I was rather agitated, so I took a little dose to make me sleep, and what with being so tired and the milk and the dose, I just tumbled right off and didnā€™t wake till Gladys called me.ā€

Further questioning elicited little from Mr. Thipps. Yes, the bathroom window had been open when he went in in the morning, he was sure of that, and he had spoken very sharply to the girl about it. He was ready to answer any questions; he would be only too ā€™appyā€”happy to have this dreadful affair sifted to the bottom.

Gladys Horrocks stated that she had been in Mr. Thippsā€™s employment about three months. Her previous employers would speak to her character. It was her duty to make the round of the flat at night, when she had seen Mrs. Thipps to bed at ten. Yes, she remembered doing so on Monday evening. She had looked into all the rooms. Did she recollect shutting the bathroom window that night? Well, no, she couldnā€™t swear to it, not in particular, but when Mr. Thipps called her into the bathroom in the morning it certainly was open. She had not been into the bathroom before Mr. Thipps went in. Well, yes, it had happened that she had left that window open before, when anyone had been ā€™aving a bath in the evening and ā€™ad left the blind down. Mrs. Thipps ā€™ad ā€™ad a bath on Monday evening, Mondays was one of her regular

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