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
I took the paper to the light and read as follows:
โHenry Ritchie Clavering, Gentleman, aged 43. Born in โโ, Hertfordshire, England. His father was Chas. Clavering, for short time in the army. Mother was Helen Ritchie, of Dumfriesshire, Scotland; she is still living. Home with H. R. C., in Portland Place, London. H. R. C. is a bachelor, 6 ft. high, squarely built, weight about 12 stone. Dark complexion, regular features. Eyes dark brown; nose straight. Called a handsome man; walks erect and rapidly. In society is considered a good fellow; rather a favorite, especially with ladies. Is liberal, not extravagant; reported to be worth about 5000 pounds per year, and appearances give color to this statement. Property consists of a small estate in Hertfordshire, and some funds, amount not known. Since writing this much, a correspondent sends the following in regard to his history. In โ46 went from uncleโs house to Eton. From Eton went to Oxford, graduating in โ56. Scholarship good. In 1855 his uncle died, and his father succeeded to the estates. Father died in โ57 by a fall from his horse or a similar accident. Within a very short time H. R. C. took his mother to London, to the residence named, where they have lived to the present time. โTravelled considerably in 1860; part of the time was with โโ, of Munich; also in party of Vandervorts from New York; went as far east as Cairo. Went to America in 1875 alone, but at end of three months returned on account of motherโs illness. Nothing is known of his movements while in America. โFrom servants learn that he was always a favorite from a boy. More recently has become somewhat taciturn. Toward last of his stay watched the post carefully, especially foreign ones. Posted scarcely anything but newspapers. Has written to Munich. Have seen, from waste-paper basket, torn envelope directed to Amy Belden, no address. American correspondents mostly in Boston; two in New York. Names not known, but supposed to be bankers. Brought home considerable luggage, and fitted up part of house, as for a lady. This was closed soon afterwards. Left for America two months since. Has been, I understand, travelling in the south. Has telegraphed twice to Portland Place. His friends hear from him but rarely. Letters recโd recently, posted in New York. One by last steamer posted in Fโโ, N. Y. โBusiness here conducted by โโ. In the country, โโ of โโ has charge of the property. โBROWN.โThe document fell from my hands.
Fโโ, N. Y., was a small town near Rโโ.
โYour friend is a trump,โ I declared. โHe tells me just what I wanted most to know.โ And, taking out my book, I made memoranda of the facts which had most forcibly struck me during my perusal of the communication before me. โWith the aid of what he tells me, I shall ferret out the mystery of Henry Clavering in a week; see if I do not.โ
โAnd how soon,โ inquired Mr. Gryce, โmay I expect to be allowed to take a hand in the game?โ
โAs soon as I am reasonably assured I am upon the right tack.โ
โAnd what will it take to assure you of that?โ
โNot much; a certain point settled, andโโโ
โHold on; who knows but what I can do that for you?โ And, looking towards the desk which stood in the corner, Mr. Gryce asked me if I would be kind enough to open the top drawer and bring him the bits of partly-burned paper I would find there.
Hastily complying, I brought three or four strips of ragged paper, and laid them on the table at his side.
โAnother result of Fobbsโ researches under the coal on the first day of the inquest,โ Mr. Gryce abruptly explained. โYou thought the key was all he found. Well, it wasnโt. A second turning over of the coal brought these to light, and very interesting they are, too.โ
I immediately bent over the torn and discolored scraps with great anxiety. They were four in number, and appeared at first glance to be the mere remnants of a sheet of common writing-paper, torn lengthwise into strips, and twisted up into lighters; but, upon closer inspection, they showed traces of writing upon one side, and, what was more important still, the presence of one or more drops of spattered blood. This latter discovery was horrible to me, and so overcame me for the moment that I put the scraps down, and, turning towards Mr. Gryce, inquired:
โWhat do you make of them?โ
โThat is just the question I was going to put to you.โ
Swallowing my disgust, I took them up again. โThey look like the remnants of some old letter,โ said I.
โThey have that appearance,โ Mr. Gryce grimly assented.
โA letter which, from the drop of blood observable on the written side, must have been lying face up on Mr. Leavenworthโs table at the time of the murderโโ
โJust so.โ
โAnd from the uniformity in width of each of these pieces, as well as their tendency to curl up when left alone, must first have been torn into even strips, and then severally rolled up, before being tossed into the grate where they were afterwards found.โ
โThat is all good,โ said Mr. Gryce; โgo on.โ
โThe writing, so far as discernible, is that of a cultivated gentleman. It is not that of Mr. Leavenworth; for I have studied his chirography too much lately not to know it at a glance; but it may beโHold!โ I suddenly exclaimed, โhave you any mucilage handy? I think, if I could paste these strips down upon a piece of paper, so that they would remain flat, I should be able to tell you what I think of them much more easily.โ
โThere is mucilage on the desk,โ signified Mr. Gryce.
Procuring it, I proceeded to consult the scraps once more for evidence to guide me in their arrangement. These were more marked than I expected; the longer and best preserved strip, with its โMr. Horโ at the top, showing itself at first blush to be the left-hand margin of the letter, while the machine-cut edge of the next in length presented tokens fully as conclusive of its being the right-hand margin of the same. Selecting these, then, I pasted them down on a piece of paper at just the distance they would occupy if the sheet from which they were torn was of the ordinary commercial note size. Immediately it became apparent: first, that it would take two other strips of the same width to fill up the space left between them; and secondly, that the writing did not terminate at the foot of the sheet, but was carried on to another page.
Taking up the third strip, I looked at its edge; it was machine-cut at the top, and showed by the arrangement of its words that it was the margin strip of a second leaf. Pasting that down by itself, I scrutinized the fourth, and finding it also machine-cut at the top but not on the side, endeavored to fit it to the piece already pasted down, but the words would not match. Moving it along to the position it would hold if it were the third strip, I fastened it down; the whole presenting, when completed, the appearance seen on the opposite page.
โWell!โ exclaimed Mr. Gryce, โthatโs business.โ Then, as I held it up before his eyes: โBut donโt show it to me. Study it yourself, and tell me what you think of it.โ
โWell,โ said I, โthis much is certain: that it is
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