The Talleyrand Maxim by J. S. Fletcher (important of reading books TXT) đ
CHAPTER II
IN TRUST
As quietly and composedly as if he were discharging the most ordinary of his daily duties, Pratt unfolded the document, and went close to the solitary gas jet above Eldrick's desk. What he held in his hand was a half-sheet of ruled foolscap paper, closely covered with writing,
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the shrubberies near the house, so that if you are met people
would think you were taking a near cut to the village. I will
meet you in the shrubbery on the house side of the little
footbridge. The gatesâââ
Pratt suddenly paused, and before proceeding looked hard at his visitor.
âNow listen to what followsâand bear in mind what your mother knew, and
had done, at the time she wrote this letter. This is how the letter goes
onâlet every word fix itself in your mind, Miss Mallathorpe!â
ââThe gates of the footbridge are locked, but the enclosed keys
will open them. I will meet you amongst the trees on the further
side. Be sure to come and to bring that documentâI have
something to say about it on seeing it again.ââ
Pratt turned to the drawer from which he had taken the letter and took
out two small keys, evidently belonging to patent padlocks. He held them
up before Nesta.
âThere they are!â he said triumphantly. âBeen in my possession ever
sinceâand will remain there. Nowâdo you wish to read the letter? Iâve
read it to you word for word. You donât? Very goodâback it goes in
there, with these keys. And now then,â he continued, having replaced
letter and keys in his drawer, and turned to her again, ânow then, you
see what a diabolical scheme it was that was in your motherâs mind
against me. She meant me to meet with the fate which overtook her own
son! She meant me to fall through that bridge. Why? She hoped that I
should break my neckâas he did! She wanted to silence meâbut she also
wanted moreâshe wanted to take from my dead body, or my unconscious
body, the certain something which she was so anxious I should bring with
me, which she referred to as that document. She was willing to risk
anythingâeven to murder!âto get hold of that. And now you know why I
went to Normandale Grange that Saturdayâyou know, now, the real reason.
I told a deliberate lie at the inquest, for your motherâs sakeâfor your
sake, if you know it. I did not go there to hand in my application for
the stewardshipâI went in response to the letter Iâve just read. Is all
this clear to you?â
Nesta could only move her head in silent acquiescence. She was already
convinced, that whether all this was entirely true or not, there was
truth of some degree in what Pratt had told her. And she was thinking of
her motherâand of the trap which she certainly appeared to have
laidâand of her brotherâs fateâand for the moment she felt sick and
beaten. But Pratt went on in that cold, calculating voice, telling his
story point by point.
âNow I come to what happened that Saturday afternoon,â he said. âI may
as well tell you that in my own interest I have carefully collected
certain evidence which never came out at the inquestâwhich, indeed, has
nothing to do with the exact matter of the inquest. Now, that Saturday,
your mother and you had lunch togetherâyour brother, as we shall see in
a moment, being awayâat your lunch timeâa quarter to two. About twenty
minutes past two your mother left the house. She went out into the
gardens. She left the gardens for the shubberies. And at twenty-five
minutes to three, she was seen by one of your gardeners, Featherstone,
in what was, of course, hiding, amongst the trees at the end of the
north shrubbery. What was she doing there, Miss Mallathorpe? She was
waiting!âwaiting until a certain hoped-for accident happenedâto me.
Then she would come out of her hiding-place in the hope of getting that
document from my pocket! Do you see how cleverly sheâd laid her
plansâmurderous plans?â
Nesta was making a great effort to be calm. She knew now that she was
face to face with some awful mystery which could only be solved by
patience and strenuous endeavour. She knew, too, that she must show no
sign of fear before this man!
âWill you finish your story, if you please?â she asked.
âIn my own wayâin my own time,â answered Pratt. âI now come toâyour
mother. On the Friday noon, the late Mr. Harper Mallathorpe went to
Barford to visit a friendâyoung Stemthwaite, at the Hollies. He was to
stay the night there, and was not expected home until Saturday evening.
He did stay the night, and remained in Barford until noon on Saturday;
but heâunexpectedlyâreturned to the house at half past two. And almost
as soon as heâd got in, he picked up a gun and strolled outâinto the
gardens and the north shrubbery. And, as you know, he went to the
footbridge. You see, Miss Mallathorpe, your mother, clever as she was,
had forgotten one detailâthe gates of that footbridge were merely low,
four-barred things, and there was nothing to prevent an active young man
from climbing them. She forgot another thing, tooâthat warning had not
been given at the house that the bridge was dangerous. And, of course,
sheâd never, never calculated that your brother would return sooner than
he was expected, or that, on his return, heâd go where he did. And
soâbut Iâll spare you any reference to what happened. Onlyâyou know
now how it was that Mrs. Mallathorpe was found by her sonâs body. Sheâd
been waiting aboutâfor me! Butâthe fate sheâd meant for me was dealt
out toâhim!â
In spite of herself Nesta gave way to a slight cry.
âI canât bear any more of that!â she said. âHave you finished?â
âThereâs not much more to sayânow at any rate,â replied Pratt. âAnd
what I have to say shall be to the point. Iâm sorry enough to have been
obliged to say all that I have said. But, you know, you forced me to it!
You threatened me. The real truth, Miss Mallathorpe, is just thisâyou
donât understand me at all. You come hereâexcuse my plain
speechâhectoring and bullying me with talk about the police, and
blackmail, and I donât know what! Itâs I who ought to go to the police!
I could have your mother arrested, and put in the dock, on a charge of
attempted murder, this very day! Iâve got all the proofs.â
âI suppose you held that out as a threat to her when you forced her to
sign that power of attorney?â observed Nesta.
For the first time since her arrival Pratt looked at his visitor in an
unfriendly fashion. His expression changed and his face flushed a
little.
âYou think that, do you?â he said. âWell, youâre wrong. Iâm not a fool.
I held out no such threat. I didnât even tell your mother what Iâd found
out. I wasnât going to show her my hand all at onceâthough Iâve shown
you a good deal of it.â
âNot all?â she asked quickly.
âNot all,â answered Pratt with a meaning glance. âTo use more
metaphorsâIâve several cards up my sleeve, Miss Mallathorpe. But youâre
utterly wrong about the threats. Iâll tell youâI donât mind thatâhow I
got the authority youâre speaking about. Your mother had promised me
that stewardshipâfor life. Iâd have been a good steward. But we
recognized that your brotherâs death had altered thingsâthat you,
being, as she said, a self-willed young womanâyou see how plain I
amâwould insist on looking after your own affairs. So she gave
meâanother post. Iâll discharge its duties honestly.â
âYes,â said Nesta, âbut youâve already told me that youâd a hold on my
mother before any of these recent events happened, and that you possess
some document which she was anxious to get into her hands. So it comes
to thisâyouâve a double hold on her, according to your story.â
âJust so,â agreed Pratt. âYouâre right, I haveâa double hold.â
Nesta looked at him silently for a while: Pratt looked at her.
âVery well,â she said at last. âHow much do you wantâto be bought out?â
Pratt laughed.
âI thought that would be the end of it!â he remarked. âYesâI thought
so!â
âName your price!â said Nesta.
âMiss Mallathorpe!â answered Pratt, bending forward and speaking with a
new earnestness. âJust listen to me. Itâs no good. Iâm not to be bought
out. Your mother tried that game with me before. She offered me first
five, then ten thousand poundsâcash downâfor that document, when she
came to see me at my rooms. I dare say sheâd have gone to twenty
thousandâand found the money there and then. But I said no thenâand I
say no to you! Iâm not to be purchased in that way. Iâve my own ideas,
my own plans, my own ambitions, my ownâhopes. Itâs not any use at all
for you to dangle your money before me. ButâIâll suggest something
elseâthat you can do.â
Nesta made no answer. She continued to look steadily at the man who
evidently had her mother in his power, and Pratt, who was watching her
intently, went on speaking quietly but with some intensity of tone.
âYou can do this,â he said. âTo start withâand itâll go a long
wayâjust try and think better of me. I told you, you donât understand
me. Try to! Iâm not a bad lot. Iâve great abilities. Iâm a hard worker.
Eldrick & Pascoe could tell you that Iâm scrupulously honest in money
matters. Youâll see that Iâll look after your motherâs affairs in a
fashion thatâll commend itself to any firm of auditors and accountants
who may look into my accounts every year. Iâm only taking the salary
from her that I was to have had for the stewardship. Soâwhy not leave
it at that? Let things be! Perhapsâin time youâll come to see thatâIâm
to be trusted.â
âHow can I trust a man who deliberately tells me that he holds a secret
and a document over a womanâs head?â demanded Nesta. âYouâve admitted a
previous hold on my mother. You say youâre in possession of a secret
that would ruin herâquite apart from recent events. Is that honest?â
âIt was none of my seeking,â retorted Pratt. âI gained the knowledge by
accident.â
âYouâre giving yourself away,â said Nesta. âOr youâve some mental twist
or defect which prevents you from seeing things straight. Itâs not how
you got your knowledge, but the use youâre making of it thatâs the
important thing! Youâre using it to force my mother toâ-â
âExcuse me!â interrupted Pratt with a queer smile. âItâs you who donât
see things straight. Iâm using my knowledge to protectâall of you. Let
your mind go back to what was said at firstâto what I said at first. I
said that Iâd discovered a secret which, if revealed, would ruin your
mother and injureâyou! So it wouldâmore than ever, now. So, you see,
in keeping it, Iâm taking care, not only of her interests, but
ofâyours!â
Nesta rose. She realized that there was no more to be saidâor done. And
Pratt rose, too, and looked at her almost appealingly.
âI wish youâd try to see things as Iâve put them, Miss Mallathorpe,â he
said. âI donât bear malice against your mother for that scheme she
contrivedâIâm willing to put it clear out of my head. Why not accept
things as they are? Iâll keep that secret for everâno one shall ever
know about it. Why not be friends, nowâwhy not shake hands?â
He held out his hand as he spoke. But Nesta drew back.
âNo!â she said. âMy opinion is just what it was when I came here.â
Before Pratt could move she had turned swiftly to the door and let
herself out, and in another minute she was amongst the crowds in
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