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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have a consultation.â
He motioned Collingwood to remain where he was, and himself saw Nesta
down to the street. When he came back to his room he shook his head at
the young barrister.
âCollingwood!â he said. âThereâs some dreadful business afloat in all
this! And itâs all the worse because of the fashion in which Pratt
talked to that girl. Sheâs evidently a very good memoryâshe narrated
that conversation clearly and fully. Pratt must be very sure of his hand
if he showed her his cards in that wayâhis very confidence in himself
shows what a subtle network heâs either made or is making. I question if
heâd very much care if he knew that we know. But he mustnât know
thatâyet. We must reply to his mine with a counter-mine!â
âWhat do you think of Prattâs charge against Mrs. Mallathorpe?â asked
Collingwood.
Eldrick made a wry face.
âLooks bad!âvery, very bad, Collingwood!â he answered. âArt and scheme
of a desperate woman, of course. Butâwe mustnât let her daughter think
we believe it. Let her stick to the suggestion I madeâwhich, as you
remarked, would certainly make a very good line of defence, supposing
Pratt even did accuse her. But nowâwhat on earth is this document
thatâs been mentionedâthis paper of which Pratt has possession? Has
Mrs. Mallathorpe at some time committed forgeryâor bigamyâorâwhat is
it? One thingâs sure, howeverâweâve got to work quietly. We mustnât let
Pratt know that weâre working. I hope he doesnât know that Miss
Mallathorpe came here. Will you come back about four and hear what
message she sends me? After that, we could consult.â
Collingwood went away to his chambers. He was much occupied just then,
and had little time to think of anything but the work in hand. But as he
ate his lunch at the club which he had joined on settling in Barford, he
tried to get at some notion of the state of things, and once more his
mind reverted to the time of his grandfatherâs death, and his own
suspicions about Pratt at that period. Clearly that was a point to which
they must hark backâhe himself must make more inquiries about the
circumstances of Antony Bartleâs last hours. For this affair would not
have to rest where it wasâit was intolerable that Nesta Mallathorpe
should in any way be under Prattâs power. He went back to Eldrick at
four oâclock with a suggestion or two in his mind. And at the sight of
him Eldrick shook his head.
âIâve had that telephone message from Normandale,â he said, âfive
minutes ago. Pretty much what I expectedâat this juncture, anyway. Mrs.
Mallathorpe absolutely declines to talk business with even her daughter
at presentâand earnestly desires that Mr. Linford Pratt may be left
alone.â
âWell?â asked Collingwood after a pause. âWhat now?â
âWe must do what we canâsecretly, privately, for the daughterâs sake,â
said Eldrick. âI confess I donât quite see a beginning, butâ-â
Just then the private door opened, and Pascoe, a somewhat
lackadaisical-mannered man, who always looked half-asleep, and was in
reality remarkably wide-awake, lounged in, nodded to Collingwood, and
threw a newspaper in front of his partner.
âI say, Eldrick,â he drawled, as he removed a newly-lighted cigar from
his lips. âThereâs an advertisement here which seems to refer to that
precious protïżœgïżœ of yours, who left you with such scant ceremony. Same
name, anyhow!â
Eldrick snatched up the paper, glanced at it and read a few words aloud.
âINFORMATION WANTED about James Parrawhite, at one time in practice as a
solicitor.â
ADVERTISEMENT
Eldrick looked up at his partner with a sharp, confirmatory glance.
âThatâs our Parrawhite, of course!â he said. âWhoâs after him, now?â And
he went on to read the rest of the advertisement, murmuring its
phraseology half-aloud: ââin practice as a solicitor at Nottingham and
who left that town six years ago. If the said James Parrawhite will
communicate with the undersigned he will hear something greatly to his
advantage. Any person able to give information as to his whereabouts
will be suitably rewarded. Apply to Halstead & Byner, 56B, St. Martinâs
Chambers, London, W.C.â Um!âPascoe, hand over that Law List.â
Collingwood looked on in silence while Eldrick turned over the pages of
the big book which his partner took down from a shelf. He wondered at
Eldrickâs apparent and almost eager interest.
âHalstead & Byner are not solicitors,â announced Eldrick presently.
âThey must be inquiry agents or something of that sort. Anyway, Iâll
write to them, Pascoe, at once.â
âYou donât know where the fellow is,â said Pascoe. âWhatâs the good?â
âNoâbut we know where he last was,â retorted Eldrick. He turned to
Collingwood as the junior partner sauntered out of the room. âRather odd
that Pascoe should draw my attention to that just now,â he remarked.
âThis man Parrawhite was, in a certain sense, mixed up with Prattâat
least, Pratt and I are the only two people who know the secret of
Parrawhiteâs disappearance from these offices. That was just about the
time of your grandfatherâs death.â
Collingwood immediately became attentive. His first suspicions of Pratt
were formed at the time of which Eldrick spoke, and any reference to
events contemporary excited his interest.
âWho was or isâthis man youâre talking of?â he asked.
âBad lotâvery!â answered Eldrick, shaking his head. âHe and I were
articled together, at the same time, to the same people: we saw a lot of
each other as fellow articled clerks. He afterwards practised in
Nottingham, and he held some good appointments. But heâd a perfect mania
for gamblingâthe turfâand he went utterly wrong, and misappropriated
clientsâ money, and in the end he got into prison, and was, of course,
struck off the rolls. I never heard anything of him for years, and then
one day, some time ago, he turned up here and begged me to give him a
job. I didâand Iâll do him the credit to say that he earned his money.
Butâin the end, his natural badness broke out. One afternoonâIâm
careless about some thingsâI left some money lying in this
drawerâabout forty pounds in notes and goldâand next morning
Parrawhite never came to business. Weâve never seen or heard of him
since.â
âYou mentioned Pratt,â said Collingwood.
âOnly Pratt and I knowâabout the money,â replied Eldrick. âWe kept it
secretâI didnât want Pascoe to know Iâd been so careless. Pascoe didnât
like Parrawhiteâand he doesnât know his record. I only told him that
Parrawhite was a chap Iâd known in better circumstances and wanted to
give a hand to.â
âYou said it was about the time of my grandfatherâs death?â asked
Collingwood.
âIt was just about thenâbetween his death and his funeral I should
say,â answered Eldrick, âThe two events are associated in my mind.
Anyway, Iâd like to know what it is that these people want Parrawhite
for. If itâs money thatâs come to him, itâll be of no advantageâitâll
only go where all the restâs gone.â
Collingwood lost interest in Parrawhite. Parrawhite appeared to have
nothing to do with the affairs in which he was interested. He sat down
and began to tell Eldrick about his own suspicions of Pratt at the time
of Antony Bartleâs death; of what Jabey Naylor had told him about the
paper taken from the History of Barford; of the ladâs account of the
old manâs doings immediately afterwards; and of his own proceedings
which had led him to believe for the time being that his suspicions were
groundless.
âBut now,â he went on, âa new idea occurs to me. Suppose that that
paper, found by my grandfather in a book which had certainly belonged to
the late John Mallathorpe, was something important relating to Mrs.
Mallathorpe? Suppose that my grandfather brought it across here to you?
Suppose that finding you out, he showed it to Pratt? As my grandfather
died suddenly, with nobody but Pratt there, what was there to prevent
Pratt from appropriating that paper if he saw that it would give him a
hold over Mrs. Mallathorpe? We know now that he has some document in his
possession which does give him a holdâmay it not be that of which the
boy Naylor told me?â
âMight be,â agreed Eldrick. âButâmy opinion is, taking things all
together, that the paper which Antony Bartle found was the one you
yourself discovered laterâthe list of books. NoâIâll tell you what I
think. I believe that the document which Pratt told Miss Mallathorpe he
holds, and to which her mother referred in the letter asking Pratt to
meet her, is probablyâmost probably!âone which he discovered in
searching out his relationship to Mrs. Mallathorpe. Heâs a cute
chapâand he may have found some document whichâwell, Iâll tell you
what it might beâsomething which would upset the rights of Harper
Mallathorpe to his uncleâs estates. No other relatives came forward, or
were heard of, or were discoverable when John Mallathorpe was killed in
that chimney accident; but there may be someâthere may be one in
particular. Thatâs my notion!âand I intend, in the first place, to make
a personal search of the parish registers from which Pratt got his
information. He may have discovered something there which heâs keeping
to himself.â
âYou think that is the course to adopt?â asked Collingwood, after a
momentâs reflection.
âAt presentâyes,â replied Eldrick. âAnd while Iâm making itâIâll do it
myselfâweâll just go on outwardlyâas if nothing had happened. If I
meet Prattâas I shallâI shall not let him see that I know anything. Do
you go on in just the usual way. Go out to Normandale Grange now and
thenâand tell Miss Mallathorpe to think no more of her interview with
Pratt until weâve something to talk to her about. You talk to her
aboutâsomething else.â
When Collingwood had left him Eldrick laid a telegram form on his
plotting pad, and after a brief interval of thought wrote out a message
addressed to the people whose advertisement had attracted Pascoeâs
attention.
âHALSTEAD & BYNER, 56B, St. Martinâs Chambers, London, W.C.
âI can give you definite information concerning James Parrawhite
if you will send representative to see me personally.
âCHARLES ELDRICK, Eldrick & Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford.â
After Eldrick had sent off a clerk with this message to the nearest
telegraph office, he sat thinking for some time. And at the close of his
meditations, and after some turning over of a diary which lay on his
desk, he picked up pen and paper, and drafted an advertisement of his
own.
âTEN POUNDS REWARD will be paid to any person who can give
reliable and useful information as to James Parrawhite, who
until November last was a clerk in the employ of Messrs. Eldrick
& Pascoe, Solicitors, Barford, and who is believed to have left
the town on the evening of November 23.âApply to Mr. CHARLES
ELDRICK, of the above firm.â
âWorth risking ten pounds onâanyway,â muttered Eldrick. âWhether these
London people will cover it or not. Here!â he went on, turning to a
clerk who had just entered the room. âMake three copies of this
advertisement, and take one to each of the three newspaper offices, and
tell âem to put it in their personal column tonight.â
He sat musing for some time after he was left alone again, and when he
at last rose, it was with a shake of the head.
âI wonder if Pratt told me the truth that morning?â he said to himself.
âAnyway, heâs now being proved to be even deeper than Iâd ever
considered him. Wellâother folk than Pratt are possessed of pretty good
wits.â
Before he left the office that evening Eldrick was handed
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