The Middle Temple Murder by J. S. Fletcher (feel good books txt) đ
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- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âIt is one of the original fifty burgess tickets of Market Milcaster, young sir, which gave its holder special and greatly valued privileges in respect to attendance at our once famous race-meeting, now unfortunately a thing of the past,â he added. âFiftyâaye, forty!âyears ago, to be in possession of one of those tickets wasâwasââ
âA grand thing!â said one of the old gentlemen.
âMr. Lummis is right,â said Mr. Quarterpage. âIt was a grand thingâa very grand thing. Those tickets, sir, were treasuredâare treasured. And yet you, a stranger, show us one! You got it, sirââ
Spargo saw that it was now necessary to cut matters short.
âI found this ticketâunder mysterious circumstancesâin London,â he answered. âI want to trace it. I want to know who its original owner was. That is why I have come to Market Milcaster.â
Mr. Quarterpage slowly looked round the circle of faces.
âWonderful!â he said. âWonderful! He found this ticketâone of our famous fiftyâin London, and under mysterious circumstances. He wants to trace itâhe wants to know to whom it belonged! That is why he has come to Market Milcaster. Most extraordinary! Gentlemen, I appeal to you if this is not the most extraordinary event that has happened in Market Milcaster forâI donât know how many years?â
There was a general murmur of assent, and Spargo found everybody looking at him as if he had just announced that he had come to buy the whole town.
âButâwhy?â he asked, showing great surprise. âWhy?â
âWhy?â exclaimed Mr. Quarterpage. âWhy? He asksâwhy? Because, young gentleman, it is the greatest surprise to me, and to these friends of mine, too, every man jack of âem, to hear that any one of our fifty tickets ever passed out of the possession of any of the fifty families to whom they belonged! And unless I am vastly, greatly, most unexplainably mistaken, young sir, you are not a member of any Market Milcaster family.â
âNo, Iâm not,â admitted Spargo. And he was going to add that until the previous evening he had never even heard of Market Milcaster, but he wisely refrained. âNo, Iâm certainly not,â he added.
Mr. Quarterpage waved his long pipe.
âI believe,â he said, âI believe that if the evening were not drawing to a closeâit is already within a few minutes of our departure, young gentlemanâI believe, I say, that if I had time, I could, from memory, give the names of the fifty families who held those tickets when the race-meeting came to an end. I believe I could!â
âIâm sure you could!â asserted the little man in the loud suit. âNever was such a memory as yours, never!â
âEspecially for anything relating to the old racing matters,â said the fat man. âMr. Quarterpage is a walking encyclopaedia.â
âMy memory is good,â said Mr. Quarterpage. âItâs the greatest blessing I have in my declining years. Yes, I am sure I could do that, with a little thought. And whatâs more, nearly every one of those fifty families is still in the town, or if not in the town, close by it, or if not close by it, I know where they are. Therefore, I cannot make out how this young gentlemanâfrom London, did you say, sir?â
âFrom London,â answered Spargo.
âThis young gentleman from London comes to be in possession of one of our tickets,â continued Mr. Quarterpage. âIt isâwonderful! But I tell you what, young gentleman from London, if you will do me the honour to breakfast with me in the morning, sir, I will show you my racing books and papers and we will speedily discover who the original holder of that ticket was. My name, sir, is QuarterpageâBenjamin Quarterpageâand I reside at the ivy-covered house exactly opposite this inn, and my breakfast hour is nine oâclock sharp, and I shall bid you heartily welcome!â
Spargo made his best bow.
âSir,â he said, âI am greatly obliged by your kind invitation, and I shall consider it an honour to wait upon you to the moment.â
Accordingly, at five minutes to nine next morning, Spargo found himself in an old-fashioned parlour, looking out upon a delightful garden, gay with summer flowers, and being introduced by Mr. Quarterpage, Senior, to Mr. Quarterpage, Juniorâa pleasant gentleman of sixty, always referred to by his father as something quite juvenileâand to Miss Quarterpage, a young-old lady of something a little less elderly than her brother, and to a breakfast table bounteously spread with all the choice fare of the season. Mr. Quarterpage, Senior, was as fresh and rosy as a cherub; it was a revelation to Spargo to encounter so old a man who was still in possession of such life and spirits, and of such a vigorous and healthy appetite.
Naturally, the talk over the breakfast table ran on Spargoâs possession of the old silver ticket, upon which subject it was evident Mr. Quarterpage was still exercising his intellect. And Spargo, who had judged it well to enlighten his host as to who he was, and had exhibited a letter with which the editor of the Watchman had furnished him, told how in the exercise of his journalistic duties he had discovered the ticket in the lining of an old box. But he made no mention of the Marbury matter, being anxious to see first whither Mr. Quarterpageâs revelations would lead him.
âYou have no idea, Mr. Spargo,â said the old gentleman, when, breakfast over, he and Spargo were closeted together in a little library in which were abundant evidences of the hostâs taste in sporting matters; âyou have no idea of the value which was attached to the possession of one of those silver tickets. There is mine, as you see, securely framed and just as securely fastened to the wall. Those fifty silver tickets, my dear sir, were made when our old race-meeting was initiated, in the year 1781. They were made in the town by a local silversmith, whose great-great-grandson still carries on the business. The fifty were distributed amongst the fifty leading burgesses of the town to be kept in their families for everânobody ever anticipated in those days that our race-meeting would ever be discontinued. The ticket carried great privileges. It made its holder, and all members of his family, male and female, free of the stands, rings, and paddocks. It gave the holder himself and his eldest son, if of age, the right to a seat at our grand race banquetâat which, I may tell you, Mr. Spargo, Royalty itself has been present in the good old days. Consequently, as you see, to be the holder of a silver ticket was to be somebody.â
âAnd when the race-meeting fell through?â asked Spargo. âWhat then?â
âThen, of course, the families who held the tickets looked upon them as heirlooms, to be taken great care of,â replied Mr. Quarterpage. âThey were dealt with as I dealt with mineâframed on velvet, and hung upâor locked away: I am sure that anybody who had one took the greatest care of it. Now, I said last night, over there at the âDragon,â that I could repeat the names of all the families who held these tickets. So I can. But hereââthe old gentleman drew out a drawer and produced from it a parchment-bound book which he handled with great reverenceââhere is a little volume of my own handwritingâmemoranda relating to Market Milcaster Racesâin which is a list of the original holders, together with another list showing who held the tickets when the races were given up. I make bold to say, Mr. Spargo, that by going through the second list, I could trace every ticketâexcept the one you have in your purse.â
âEvery one?â said Spargo, in some surprise.
âEvery one! For as I told you,â continued Mr. Quarterpage, âthe families are either in the town (weâre a conservative people here in Market Milcaster and we donât move far afield) or theyâre just outside the town, or theyâre not far away. I canât conceive how the ticket you haveâand itâs genuine enoughâcould ever get out of possession of one of these families, andââ
âPerhaps,â suggested Spargo, âit never has been out of possession. I told you it was found in the lining of a boxâthat box belonged to a dead man.â
âA dead man!â exclaimed Mr. Quarterpage. âA dead man! Who couldâah! Perhapsâperhaps I have an idea. Yes!âan idea. I remember something now that I had never thought of.â
The old gentleman unfastened the clasp of his parchment-bound book, and turned over its pages until he came to one whereon was a list of names. He pointed this out to Spargo.
âThere is the list of holders of the silver tickets at the time the race-meetings came to an end,â he said. âIf you were acquainted with this town you would know that those are the names of our best-known inhabitantsâall, of course, burgesses. Thereâs mine, you seeâQuarterpage. Thereâs Lummis, thereâs Kaye, thereâs Skene, thereâs Templebyâthe gentlemen you saw last night. All good old town names. They all areâon this list. I know every family mentioned. The holders of that time are many of them dead; but their successors have the tickets. Yesâand now that I think of it, thereâs only one man who held a ticket when this list was made about whom I donât know anythingâat least, anything recent. The ticket, Mr. Spargo, which youâve found must have been his. But I thoughtâI thought somebody else had it!â
âAnd this man, sir? Who was he?â asked Spargo, intuitively conscious that he was coming to news. âIs his name there?â
The old man ran the tip of his finger down the list of names.
âThere it is!â he said. âJohn Maitland.â
Spargo bent over the fine writing.
âYes, John Maitland,â he observed. âAnd who was John Maitland?â
Mr. Quarterpage shook his head. He turned to another of the many drawers in an ancient bureau, and began to search amongst a mass of old newspapers, carefully sorted into small bundles and tied up.
âIf you had lived in Market Milcaster one-and-twenty years ago, Mr. Spargo,â he said, âyou would have known who John Maitland was. For some time, sir, he was the best-known man in the placeâaye, and in this corner of the world. Butâaye, here it isâthe newspaper of October 5th, 1891. Now, Mr. Spargo, youâll find in this old newspaper who John Maitland was, and all about him. Now, Iâll tell you what to do. Iâve just got to go into my office for an hour to talk the dayâs business over with my sonâyou take this newspaper out into the garden there with one of these cigars, and read whatâll you find in it, and when youâve read that weâll have some more talk.â
Spargo carried the old newspaper into the sunlit garden.
AN OLD NEWSPAPER
As soon as Spargo unfolded the paper he saw what he wanted on the middle page, headed in two lines of big capitals. He lighted a cigar and settled down to read.
âMARKET MILCASTER QUARTER SESSIONS
âTRIAL OF JOHN MAITLAND
âThe Quarter Sessions for the Borough of Market Milcaster were held on Wednesday last, October 3rd, 1891, in the Town Hall, before the Recorder, Henry John Campernowne, Esq., K.C., who was accompanied on the bench by the Worshipful the Mayor of Market Milcaster (Alderman Pettiford), the Vicar of Market Milcaster (the Rev. P.B. Clabberton, M.A., R.D.), Alderman Banks, J.P., Alderman Peters, J.P., Sir Gervais Racton, J.P., Colonel Fludgate, J.P., Captain Murrill, J.P., and other magistrates and gentlemen. There was a crowded attendance of the public in anticipation of the trial of John Maitland, ex-manager of the Market Milcaster Bank, and the reserved portions of the Court were filled with the Ă©lite of the town and neighbourhood, including a considerable number of ladies who manifested the greatest interest in the proceedings.
âThe Recorder, in charging the Grand Jury, said he regretted that the very pleasant and gratifying experience which had been his upon the occasion of his last two official visits to Market Milcasterâhe referred to the fact that on both those occasions his friend the Worshipful Mayor had been able to present him with a pair of white glovesâwas not to be repeated on the present occasion. It would be their sad and regrettable lot to have before them a fellow-townsman whose family had for generations occupied a foremost position in the life of the borough. That fellow-townsman was charged with one of the most serious offences known to a commercial nation like ours: the offence of embezzling the moneys of the bank of which he had for many years been the trusted manager, and with which he had been connected all his life since his school days. He understood that the prisoner who would shortly be put before the court on his trial was about to plead guilty, and there would accordingly be no need for him to direct the gentlemen of the Grand Jury on this matterâwhat he had to say respecting the gravity and even enormity of the offence he would reserve. The Recorder
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