Mrs. Jeffries Appeals the Verdict by Emily Brightwell (lightest ebook reader txt) 📕
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- Author: Emily Brightwell
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“She kept saying that it was all Mrs. Muran’s fault, that
she’d stolen too much, that she’d taken it all away from
them. She said it over and over and over. Mr. Muran kept
watching the drawing room door while he tried to quiet her
down. Finally, he grabbed her and gave her a quick shake.”
“Tell them the rest,” Mrs. Briggs ordered. “Tell them
everything so you can get a decent night’s sleep.”
“Mrs. Turner’s eyes rolled up in her head and I was sure
she was going to collapse. But then all of a sudden she was
right as rain and asking Mr. Muran what they were doing
standing out in the hallway.”
“What did he say?” Witherspoon asked. “Please try to
remember his exact words.”
“He said, ‘Get a hold of yourself, Edwina. You’re talking
rubbish. What in the name of God has gotten into you?’ ”
The inspector leaned forward. “What did she say?”
“She said, ‘What on earth are you talking about? I just
came out to get my shawl.’ Then he asked her what was the
last thing she remembered, and she said it was getting out
of her chair and walking toward the drawing room door.”
Witherspoon said nothing for a moment. “Are you saying she’d no idea what she’d just done?”
“That’s right, Inspector, she’d no idea at all.” Helen
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dabbed at her eyes again. “So you can understand why I
don’t want to go back to work for Mr. Muran. I feel sorry
for him, I really do, but I refuse to be in a house with a madwoman, and as sure as I’m sitting here, she’ll be living in that house.”
“Why do you think Mrs. Turner is going to be living in
Mr. Muran’s home?” Witherspoon asked.
“I don’t think it, sir, I know it. Mr. Muran isn’t the sort
of man that can live on his own, and both those Turner
women will take advantage of his loneliness. Take my
word for it, sir, Lucy Turner has already determined that
she’ll be the next Mrs. Muran, and I’ve no doubt whatsoever that Mrs. Turner will do everything she can to make sure that happens.” She shook her head. “God forgive me, I
know it’s not the poor woman’s fault that she’s losing her
mind. It happens to lots of old people, but I can’t stand it.”
“Our gran went that way,” Mrs. Briggs interjected. “It
was heartbreaking to watch, and it almost killed our poor
father.”
Helen turned her tear-stained face to the inspector. “I
know I should have told the police all this before, and I kept
waiting for someone to come. But no one did so I decided it
wasn’t important. Then I heard about that man being arrested and it should have made me feel better, but it didn’t.”
“Do you know if Mr. Muran told Mrs. Muran about the
incident?” Barnes asked.
Helen shook her head. “I don’t think so. After the Turners left, Mr. Muran went into his study and spent most of the afternoon there, and Mrs. Muran went upstairs to her
room. Mr. Muran didn’t even come out when the Turners
came back for tea that afternoon.”
“They came twice that day?” Barnes asked.
“Yes, for luncheon and for tea,” Helen said. “They’d been
shopping in the neighborhood, you see, so Mrs. Muran had
invited them back that afternoon.”
“What time did you leave that day?” Witherspoon leaned
back in his chair.
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Emily Brightwell
“At my usual time: six o’clock,” she replied. “Mr. Muran
had come out of his study and gone upstairs to get dressed.”
“So they might have spoken about the matter after you
left?”
“It’s possible.” Helen shrugged. “I don’t know. I was
just glad to be gone.”
Witherspoon frowned. “Do you have any idea what
Mrs. Turner meant when she was . . . uh . . .”
“Out of her mind,” Helen finished the sentence for him.
“I’ve no idea, Inspector, and neither does anyone else in
the household. But I think it’s something you’d do well to
ask her. Even if she’s out of her head, she had some reason
for what she was saying, and I find it very peculiar that
within a few hours of her ranting and raving, poor Mrs.
Muran was murdered.”
Smythe spotted Fletcher coming out of the cabshack. He
hurried toward him. “Come ’ave a pint with me.” he held
up a coin. “I’ll make it worth yer while.”
Fletcher looked about, his expression uncertain. “I don’t
know. I ought to get back out.”
“There’s a pub just around the corner,” Smythe coaxed.
“I know the place,” Fletcher replied. “I suppose a few
more minutes won’t hurt.”
Smythe chatted easily as they walked the short distance to
the pub. He pulled the door open and they stepped inside.
The place was clearing out and he spotted an empty table.
“Go grab us a seat,” he told Fletcher. “I’ll get the pints.”
A few moments later, he slipped into the chair opposite
Fletcher and put their glasses on the small table. “Here’s
yer beer.”
“Ta. I don’t usually drink much.” Fletcher picked up the
beer and took a long, slow drink.
“Tell me more about what happened that night,” Smythe
said softly.
Fletcher slowly lowered his drink. “I’ve already told ya
everything I can remember.”
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“Are you sure there’s nothin’ you’ve forgotten?” he
pressed. He wanted the man to voluntarily tell him the truth.
Fletcher looked down at the table. “I don’t know what
ya mean.”
“I’m just wonderin’ if there was some little detail you
might ’ave forgotten to mention, that’s all.” Smythe noticed that the man’s cheeks, what you could see of them over his beard, were turning red. “It’s important we know
everything that ’appened that night. A man’s life is at stake
’ere, and what with you bein’ a decent man, a Presbyterian
at that, I know you’d not want someone to hang for a crime
they didn’t do. That’s why all these little details are important. They add up, you see.”
“There is one thing I might have gotten wrong,” Fletcher
replied. His voice was so low that Smythe could barely
hear him.
“We all forget things every now and again,” Smythe said.
“It’s human nature. Why don’t you tell me what it is you
might ’ave gotten wrong when we ’ad our last little chat.”
Fletcher looked up at him, his expression troubled. “He
asked me to wait. The husband, he asked me to wait, but I
didn’t, and it’s preyed
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