The Talleyrand Maxim - J. S. Fletcher (best ebook reader ubuntu txt) š
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a Sunday. And it were on a Sunday, too, āat I got to know this here
James Parrawhite as you want to know summat about. He began coming to my
place of a Sunday eveninā, dāye see, gentlemen?āheād walk across tā
valley up there to Whitcliffe and stop an hour or two, enjoyinā hisself.
Well, now, as youāre no doubt well aweer, Mr. Eldrick, he were a reight
hand at talkinā, were yon Parrawhiteāheād tā gift oā tā gab reight
enough, and talked well anā all. And of course him anā me, we hed bits
oā conversation at times, ācause he come to tā house regālar and
sometimes oā week-nights anā all. Anā he tellād me āat heād had a deal
oā experience iā racinā mattersāwhether it were true or not, I couldnāt
say, butā-ā
āTrue enough!ā said Eldrick. āHe had.ā
āWell, so he said,ā continued Pickard, āand he was allus tellinā me āat
he could make a pile oā brass on tā turf if he only had capital. Anā iā
tā end, he persuaded me to start what he called investinā money with him
iā that wayāiā plain language, it meant givinā him brass to put on
horses āat he said was goinā to win, dāye understand?ā
āPerfectly,ā replied Eldrick. āYou gave him various amounts which he was
to stake for you.ā
āJust so, sir! And at first,ā said Pickard, with a shake of the head,
āat first Iād no great reason to grumble. He certāny wor a good hand at
spottinā a winner. But as time went on, Iā tā greatest difficulty in
gettinā a settlement wiā him, dāye see? He wor just as good a hand at
makinā excuses as he wor at pickinā out winnersābetter, I think! I
nivver knew wheer I was wiā himāheād pay up, and then heād persuade me
to go in for another do wiā tā brass Iād won, and happen we should lose
that time, and then of course we had to hev another investment to get
back what weād dropped, and so it went on. But tā end wor this
hereālast November theer wor about fifty to sixty pound oā mine iā his
hands, and I wanted it. Iād a spirit merchantās bill to settle, and I
wanted tā brass badly for that. I knew Parrawhite had been paid, dāye
see, by tā turf agent, āat he betted wiā, and I plagued him to hand tā
brass over to me. He made one excuse and then anotherāhowsumivver, it
come to that very day youāre talkinā about iā your advertisement, Mr.
Eldrickāthe twenty-third oā Novemberā-ā
āStop a minute, Mr. Pickard,ā interrupted Eldrick. āNow, how do you
knowāfor a certaintyāthat this day youāre going to talk about was the
twenty-third of November?ā
The landlord, who had removed his hands from his pockets, and was now
twiddling a pair of fat thumbs as he talked, chuckled slyly.
āFor a very good reason,ā he answered. āI had to pay that spirit bill I
tellād about just now on tā twenty-fourth, and that Iām going to tell
you happened tā night afore tā twenty-fourth, so of course it were tā
twenty-third. Dāye see?ā
āI see,ā asserted Eldrick. āThatāll do! And nowāwhat did happen?ā
āThis here,ā replied Pickard. āOn that nightātā twenty-third
NovemberāParrawhite came into tā Green Man at about, happen,
half-past eight. He come into tā little private parlour to me, bold as
brassāas indeed, he allers wor. āYeāre a nice un!ā I says. āIāve
written yer three letters durinā tā last week, and yeāve nivver answered
one oā āem!ā āIāve come to answer iā person,ā he says. āThereās nobbut
one answer I want,ā says I. āWheerās my money?ā āNow then, be quiet a
bit,ā he says. āYou shall have your money before the eveningās over,ā he
says. āOr, if not, as soon as tā banks is open tomorrow morninā,ā he
says. āWheerās it coominā from?ā says I. āNow, never you mind,ā he says.
āItās safe!ā āI donāt believe a word youāre sayinā,ā says I. āYeāre
havinā me for tā mug!āthatās about it.ā Anā I went on so at him, āat iā
tā end he tellād me āat he wor presently goinā to meet Pratt, and āat he
could get tā brass out oā Pratt anā as much more as iwer he liked to ax
for. Well, I donāt believe that theer, and I said so. āWhat brass has
Pratt?ā says I. āPrattās nowt but a clerk, wiā happen three or four
pound a week!ā āThatās all you know,ā he says. āPrattās become a gold
mine, and Iām going to dig in it a bit. Whatās it matter to you,ā he
says, āso long as you get your brass?ā Well, of course, that wor true
enoughāall āat I wanted just then were to handle my brass. And I tellād
him so. āIāll brek thy neck, Parrawhite,ā I says, āif thou doesnāt bring
me that theer money eyther tonight or tā first thing tomorrowāso now!ā
āDonāt talk rot!ā he says. āIāve told you!ā And he had money wiā him
thenāānough to pay for drinks and cigars, any road, and we had a drink
or two, and a smoke or two, and then he went out, sayinā he wor goinā to
meet Pratt, and heād be back at my place before closinā time wiā either
tā cash or what āud be as good. Anā I waitedāand waited after closinā
time, anā all. But Iāve nivver seen Parrawhite from that day to
thisānor heerd tell on him neither!ā
Eldrick and Byner looked at each other for a moment. Then the solicitor
spokeāquietly and with a significance which the agent understood.
āDo you want to ask Mr. Pickard any questions?ā he said.
Byner nodded and turned to the landlord.
āDid Parrawhite tell you where he was going to meet Pratt?ā he asked.
āHe did,ā replied Pickard. āNear Prattās lodginā place.ā
āDidāor doesāPratt live near you, then?ā
āClosish byāhappen ten minutesā walk. Thereās few oā housesāa sort oā
terrace, like, on tā edge oā what they call Whitcliffe Moor. Pratt
lodgedālodges now for all I know to tā contraryāiā one oā them.ā
āDid Parrawhite give you any idea that he was going to the house in
which Pratt lodged?ā
āNo! He were not goinā to tā house. I know he wornāt. He tellād me āat
heād a good idea what time Pratt āud be home, ācause he knew where he
was that evening and he were goinā to meet him just afore Pratt got to
his place. I know where heād meet him.ā
āWhere?ā asked Byner. āTell me exactly. Itās important.ā
āPratt āud come up froā tā town iā tā tram,ā answered Pickard. āHeād
approach this here terrace I tellād you about by a narrow lane that runs
off tā high road. Heād meet him there, would Parrawhite.ā
āDid you ever ask any question of Pratt about Parrawhite?ā
āNoānever! Iād no wish that Pratt should know owt about my dealinās
with Parrawhite. When Parrawhite never come backāwhy, I kepā it all to
myself, till now.ā
āWhat do you think happened to Parrawhite, Mr. Pickard?ā asked Byner.
āGow, I know what I think!ā replied Pickard disgustedly. āI think āat if
he did get any brass out oā Prattāwhich is what I know nowt about, and
hewnāt much belief ināhe went straight away froā tā townāvanished! I
do know thisāhe nivver went back to his lodginās that neet, ācause I
went theer mysen next day to inquire.ā
Eldrick pricked up his ears at that. He remembered that he had sent
Pratt to make inquiry at Parrawhiteās lodgings on the morning whereon
the money was missing.
āWhat time of the dayāon the twenty-fourthāwas that, Mr. Pickard?ā he
asked.
āEveninā, sir,ā replied the landlord. āTheyād nivver seen naught of him
since he went out the day before. Oh, he did me, did Parrawhite! Of
course, I lost mi brassāfifty odd pounds!ā
Byner gave Eldrick a glance.
āI think Mr. Pickard has earned the ten pounds you offered,ā he said.
Eldrick took the hint and pulled out his chequebook.
āOf course, youāre to keep all this privateāstrictly private, Mr.
Pickard,ā he said as he wrote. āNot a word to a soul!ā
āJust as you order, sir,ā agreed Pickard. āIāll say nowtāto nobody.ā
āAndāperhaps tomorrowāperhaps this afternoonāyouāll see me at the
Green Man,ā remarked Byner. āI shall just drop in, you know. You
neednāt know meāif thereās anybody about.ā
āAll right, sirāI understand,ā said Pickard.
āQuietās the wordāwhat? Very goodāmuch obliged to you, gentlemen.ā
When the landlord had gone Eldrick motioned Byner to pick up his hat.
āCome across the street with me,ā he said. āI want us to have a
consultation with a friend of mine, a barrister, Mr. Collingwood. For
this matter is assuming a very queer aspect, and we canāt move too
warily, nor consider all the features too thoroughly.ā
Collingwood listened with deep interest to Eldrickās account of the
morningās events. And once again he was struck by the fact that all
these various happenings in connection with Pratt, and now with
Parrawhite, took place at the time of Antony Bartleās death, and he said
so.
āTrue enough!ā agreed Eldrick.
āAnd once more,ā pointed out Collingwood. āWeāre hearing of a hold!
Pratt claims to have a hold on Mrs. Mallathorpeānow it turns out that
Parrawhite boasted of a hold on Pratt. Suppose all these things have a
common origin? Suppose the hold which Parrawhite hadāor hasāon Pratt
is part and parcel of the hold which Pratt has on Mrs. Mallathorpe? In
that caseāor casesāwhat is the best thing to do?ā
āWill you gentlemen allow me to suggest something?ā said Byner. āVery
wellāfind Parrawhite! Of all the people concerned in this, Parrawhite,
from your account of him, anyway, Mr. Eldrick, is the likeliest person
to extract the truth from.ā
āThereās a great deal in that suggestion,ā said Eldrick. āDo you know
what I think?ā he went on, turning to Collingwood, āMr. Byner tells me
he means to stay here until he has come across some satisfactory news of
Parrawhite or solved the mystery of his disappearance. Well, now that
weāve found that there is some ground for believing that Parrawhite was
in some fashion mixed up with Pratt about that time, why not place the
whole thing in Mr. Bynerās handsālet him in any case see what he can do
about the Parrawhite-Pratt business of November twenty-third, eh?ā
āI take it,ā answered Collingwood, looking at the inquiry agent, āthat
Mr. Byner having heard what he has, would do that quite apart from us?ā
āYes,ā said Byner. āNow that Iāve heard what Pickard had to say, I
certainly shall follow that up.ā
āI am following out something of my own,ā said Collingwood, turning to
Eldrick. āI shall know more by this time tomorrow. Let us have a
conference hereāat noon.ā
They separated on that understanding, and Byner went his own ways. His
first proceeding was to visit, one after another, the Barford newspaper
offices, and to order the insertion in large type, and immediately, of
the Halstead-Byner advertisement for news of Parrawhite. His second was
to seek the General Post Office, where he wrote out and dispatched a
message to his partner in London. That message was in cypherātranslated
into English, it read as follows:ā
āIf person named Pratt sends any communication to us re
Parrawhite, on no account let him know I am in Barford, but
forward whatever he sends to me at once, addressed to H.D.
Black, Central Station Hotel.ā
THE EYE-WITNESS
When Collingwood said that he was following out something of his own, he
was
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