The Leavenworth Case by Anna Katharine Green (best books to read all time TXT) ๐
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- Author: Anna Katharine Green
Read book online ยซThe Leavenworth Case by Anna Katharine Green (best books to read all time TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Anna Katharine Green
But the evening was destined to be full of disappointments. She had retired to her room while I was in the library, and I lost the interview from which I expected so much. โThe woman is slippery as an eel,โ I inwardly commented, pacing the hall in my chagrin. โWrapped in mystery, she expects me to feel for her the respect due to one of frank and open nature.โ
I was about to leave the house, when I saw Thomas descending the stairs with a letter in his hand.
โMiss Leavenworthโs compliments, sir, and she is too fatigued to remain below this evening.โ
I moved aside to read the note he handed me, feeling a little conscience-stricken as I traced the hurried, trembling handwriting through the following words:
โYou ask more than I can give. Matters must be received as they are without explanation from me. It is the grief of my life to deny you; but I have no choice. God forgive us all and keep us from despair. โM.โAnd below:
โAs we cannot meet now without embarrassment, it is better we should bear our burdens in silence and apart. Mr. Harwell will visit you. Farewell!โAs I was crossing Thirty-second Street, I heard a quick footstep behind me, and turning, saw Thomas at my side. โExcuse me, sir,โ said he, โbut I have something a little particular to say to you. When you asked me the other night what sort of a person the gentleman was who called on Miss Eleanore the evening of the murder, I didnโt answer you as I should. The fact is, the detectives had been talking to me about that very thing, and I felt shy; but, sir, I know you are a friend of the family, and I want to tell you now that that same gentleman, whoever he was,โMr. Robbins, he called himself then,โwas at the house again tonight, sir, and the name he gave me this time to carry to Miss Leavenworth was Clavering. Yes, sir,โ he went on, seeing me start; โand, as I told Molly, he acts queer for a stranger. When he came the other night, he hesitated a long time before asking for Miss Eleanore, and when I wanted his name, took out a card and wrote on it the one I told you of, sir, with a look on his face a little peculiar for a caller; besidesโโโ
โWell?โ
โMr. Raymond,โ the butler went on, in a low, excited voice, edging up very closely to me in the darkness. โThere is something I have never told any living being but Molly, sir, which may be of use to those as wishes to find out who committed this murder.โ
โA fact or a suspicion?โ I inquired.
โA fact, sir; which I beg your pardon for troubling you with at this time; but Molly will give me no rest unless I speak of it to you or Mr. Gryce; her feelings being so worked up on Hannahโs account, whom we all know is innocent, though folks do dare to say as how she must be guilty just because she is not to be found the minute they want her.โ
โBut this fact?โ I urged.
โWell, the fact is this. You seeโI would tell Mr. Gryce,โ he resumed, unconscious of my anxiety, โbut I have my fears of detectives, sir; they catch you up so quick at times, and seem to think you know so much more than you really do.โ
โBut this fact,โ I again broke in.
โO yes, sir; the fact is, that that night, the one of the murder you know, I saw Mr. Clavering, Robbins, or whatever his name is, enter the house, but neither I nor any one else saw him go out of it; nor do I know that he did.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
โWell, sir, what I mean is this. When I came down from Miss Eleanore and told Mr. Robbins, as he called himself at that time, that my mistress was ill and unable to see him (the word she gave me, sir, to deliver) Mr. Robbins, instead of bowing and leaving the house like a gentleman, stepped into the reception room and sat down. He may have felt sick, he looked pale enough; at any rate, he asked me for a glass of water. Not knowing any reason then for suspicionating any oneโs actions, I immediately went down to the kitchen for it, leaving him there in the reception room alone. But before I could get it, I heard the front door close. โWhatโs that?โ said Molly, who was helping me, sir. โI donโt know,โ said I, โunless itโs the gentleman has got tired of waiting and gone.โ โIf heโs gone, he wonโt want the water,โ she said. So down I set the pitcher, and up-stairs I come; and sure enough he was gone, or so I thought then. But who knows, sir, if he was not in that room or the drawing-room, which was dark that night, all the time I was a-shutting up of the house?โ
I made no reply to this; I was more startled than I cared to reveal.
โYou see, sir, I wouldnโt speak of such a thing about any person that comes to see the young ladies; but we all know some one who was in the house that night murdered my master, and as it was not Hannahโโโ
โYou say that Miss Eleanore refused to see him,โ I interrupted, in the hope that the simple suggestion would be enough to elicitate further details of his interview with Eleanore.
โYes, sir. When she first looked at the card, she showed a little hesitation; but in a moment she grew very flushed in the face, and bade me say what I told you. I should never have thought of it again if I had not seen him come blazoning and bold into the house this evening, with a new name on his tongue. Indeed, and I do not like to think any evil of him now; but Molly would have it I should speak to you, sir, and ease my mind,โand that is all, sir.โ
When I arrived home that night, I entered into my memorandum-book a new list of suspicious circumstances, but this time they were under the caption โCโ instead of โE.โ
XIX. IN MY OFFICE โSomething between an hindrance and a help.โ Wordsworth.
THE next day as, with nerves unstrung and an exhausted brain, I entered my office, I was greeted by the announcement:
โA gentleman, sir, in your private roomโbeen waiting some time, very impatient.โ
Weary, in no mood to hold consultation with clients new or old, I advanced with anything but an eager step towards my room, when, upon opening the door, I sawโMr. Clavering.
Too much astounded for the moment to speak, I bowed to him silently, whereupon he approached me with the air and dignity of a highly bred gentleman, and presented his card, on which I saw written, in free and handsome characters, his whole name, Henry Ritchie Clavering. After
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