Scarhaven Keep by J. S. Fletcher (best value ebook reader TXT) đ
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In Scarhaven Keep, the playwright Richard Copplestone is pulled into a search for a missing actor which leads him to the town of Scarhaven on the northern English sea coast. As he slowly uncovers the secrets of the residents of Scarhaven, the mystery deepens and reveals much more than a simple missing person.
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- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âPooh!â âheâd slipped outâ âwalked outâ âwhen you werenât looking!â said Gilling. âWhy didnât you keep your eye on the ball, man?â âyou!â
âYou be hanged!â retorted Swallow. âNever had an eyelash off that shop door from the time he entered until I, too, entered.â
âThen thereâs a side door to that shopâ âinto some alley or passage,â said Gilling.
âNot that I could find,â answered Swallow. âMight be at the rear of the premises perhaps, but I couldnât ascertain, of course. Remember!â âthereâs another thing. He may have stopped on the premises. Thereâs that in it. However, I know the shop and the name.â
âWhy didnât you bring somebody else with you, to follow the man and the luggage?â demanded Gilling, half-petulantly.
Swallow shook his head.
âThere I made a mess of it, I confess,â he admitted. âBut it never struck me theyâd separate. I thought, of course, theyâd drive straight to some hotel, andâ ââ
âAnd the long and the short of it is, Greyleâs slipped you,â said Gilling. âWellâ âthereâs no more to be done tonight. The only thing of value is that Greyle called at the Fragonard. Whatâs a country squireâ âonly recently come to England, too!â âto do with the Fragonard? That is worth something. Wellâ âCopplestone, weâd better meet in the morning at Pethertonâs. You be there at ten oâclock, and Iâll get Sir Cresswell Oliver to be there, too.â
Copplestone betook himself to his rooms in Jermyn Street; it seemed an ageâ âseveral agesâ âsince he had last seen the familiar things in them. During the few days which had elapsed since his hurried setting off to meet Bassett Oliver so many things had happened that he felt as if he had lived a week in a totally different world. He had met death, and mystery, and what appeared to be sure evidence of deceit and cunning and perhaps worseâ âfraud and crime blacker than fraud. But he had also met Audrey Greyle. And it was only natural that he thought more about her than of the strange atmosphere of mystery which wrapped itself around Scarhaven. She, at any rate, was good to think upon, and he thought much as he looked over the letters that had accumulated, changed his clothes, and made ready to go and dine at his club. Already he was counting the hours which must elapse before he would go back to her.
Nevertheless, Copplestoneâs mind was not entirely absorbed by this pleasant subject; the events of the day and of the arrival in London kept presenting themselves. And coming across a fellow club member whom he knew for a thorough man about town, he suddenly plumped him with a question.
âI say!â he said. âDo you know the Fragonard Club?â
âOf course!â replied the other man. âDonât you?â
âNever even heard of it till this evening,â said Copplestone. âWhat is it?â
âMixed lot!â answered his companion. âTheatrical and music hall folkâ âmen and womenâ âboth. Lively spotâ âsometimes. Like to have a look in when they have one of their nights?â
âVery much,â assented Copplestone. âAre you a member?â
âNo, but I know several men who are members,â said the other. âIâll fix it all right. Worth going to when theyâve what they call a house dinnerâ âSunday night, of course.â
âThanks,â said Copplestone. âI suppose membership of thatâs confined to the profession, eh?â
âStrictly,â replied his friend. âBut they ainât at all particular about their guestsâ âyouâll meet all sorts of people there, from judges to jockeys, and millionairesses to milliners.â
Copplestone was still wondering what the Squire of Scarhaven could have to do with the Fragonard Club when he went to Mr. Pethertonâs office the next morning. He was late for the appointment which Gilling had made, and when he arrived Gilling had already reported all that had taken place the day before to the solicitor and to Sir Cresswell Oliver. And on that Copplestone produced the papers entrusted to him by Mr. Dennie and they all compared the handwritings afresh.
âThere is certainly something wrong, somewhere,â remarked Petherton, after a time. âHowever, we are in a position to begin a systematic inquiry. Here,â he went on, drawing a paper from his desk, âis a cablegram which arrived first thing this morning from New Yorkâ âfrom an agent who has been making a search for me in the shipping lists. This is what he says: âMarston Greyle, St. Louis, Missouri, booked first-class passenger from New York to Falmouth, England, by S.S. Araconda, September 28th, 1912.â Thereâ âthatâs something definite. And the next thing,â concluded the old lawyer, with a shrewd glance at Sir Cresswell, âis to find out if the Marston Greyle who landed at Falmouth is the same man whom we have recently seen!â
XVI In Touch with the MissingSir Cresswell Oliver took the cablegram from Petherton and read it over slowly, muttering the precise and plain wording to himself.
âDonât you think, Petherton, that we had better get a clear notion of our exact bearings?â he said as he laid it back on the solicitorâs desk. âSeems to me that the timeâs come when we ought to know exactly where we are. As I understand it, the case is thisâ ârightly or wrongly we suspect the present holder of the Scarhaven estates. We suspect that he is not the rightful ownerâ âthat, in short, he is no more the real Marston Greyle than you are. We think that heâs an impostorâ âposing as Marston Greyle. Other peopleâ âMrs. Valentine Greyle, for exampleâ âevidently think so, too. Am I right?â
âQuite!â responded Petherton. âThatâs our positionâ âexactly.â
âThenâ âin that case, what I want to get at is this,â continued Sir Cresswell. âHow does this relate to my brotherâs death? Whatâs the connection? Thatâ âto me at any rateâ âis the first thing of importance. Of course I have a theory. This, that the impostor did see my brother last Sunday afternoon. That
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