^BIG BOW MYSTERY '.ui.iiLuuumu\r-iU ^\ <^e<^> ALPHA LIBRARY. The Big Bow Mystery I: Zangwill Chicago and New York : Rand, McNally & Company, Publishers. Copyright, 1895, by "ELaKd,' MclSTally & Cc. INTRODUCTION. OF MURDEES AND MYSTERIES. As this little book was written some four years ago, I feel able to review it without prejudice. A new book just hot from the brain is naturally apt to appear faulty to its begetter, but an old book has got into the proper perspective and may be jDraised by him without fear or favor. ' ' The Big Bow Mystery" seems to me an excellent murder story, as murder stories go, for, while as sen- sational as the most of them, it contains more humor and character creation than the best. Indeed, the humor is too abundant. Mysteries should be sedate and sober. There should be a pervasive atmosphere of horror and awe such as Poe manages to create. Humor is out of tone; it would be more artistic to preserve a somber note throughout. But I was a realist in those days, and in real life mysteries occur to real persons with their individual humors, and (iii) Mi?39404 iv INTRODUCTION. mysterious circumstances are apt to be com- plicated by comic. The indispensable con- dition of a good mystery is that it should be able and unable to be solved by the reader, and that the writer's solution should satisfy. Many a mystery runs on breathlessly enough till the denouement is reached, only to leave the reader with the sense of having been robbed of his breath under false pre- tenses. And not only must the solution be adequate, but all its data must be given in the body of the story. The author must not suddenly spring a new person or a new circumstance upon his reader at the end. Thus, if a friend were to ask me to guess who dined with him yesterday, it would be fatuous if he had in mind somebody of whom he knew I had never heard. The only person who has ever solved "The Big Bow Mystery" is myself. This is not paradox but plain fact. For long before the book was written, I said to myself one night that no mystery-monger had ever murdered a man in a room to which there was no X)ossible access. The puzzle was scarcely propounded ere the solution flew up and the idea lay stored in my mind till, years later, INTRODUCTION. V during the silly season, tlie editor of a popular London evening paper, anxious to let the sea-serpent have a year off, asked me to provide him with a more original piece of fiction. I might have refused, but there was murder in my soul, and here was the oppor- tunity. I went to work seriously, though the Morning Post subsequently said the skit was too labored, and I succeeded at least in exciting my readers, so many of whom sent in unsolicited testimonials in the shape of solutions during the run of the story that, when it ended, the editor asked me to say something by way of acknowledgement. Thereupon I wrote a letter to the paper, thanking the would-be solvers for their kindly attempts to help me out of the mess into which I had got the plot. I did not like to wound their feelings by saying straight out that they had failed, one and all, to hit on the real murderer, just like real police, so I tried to break the truth to them in a roundabout, mendacious fashion, as thus: To the Editor of '' The Star.'' Sir: Now that ^' The Big Bow Mystery "is solved to the satisfaction of at least one person, will you allow that person the use of your invalu- Vi INTEODUCTION. able columns to enable him to thank the hundreds of your readers who have favored him with their kind suggestions and solutions while his tale was running and they were reading ? I ask this more especially because great credit is due to them for enabling me to end the story in a manner so satisfactory to myself. When I started it, I had, of course, no idea who had done the murder, but I was determined no one should guess it. Accordingly, as each correspondent sent in the name of a suspect, I determined he or she should not be the guilty party. By degrees every one of the characters got ticked off as innocent — all except one, and I had no option but to make that character the murderer. I was very sorry to do this, as I rather liked that particular person, but when one has such ingenius readers, what can one do ? You can't let anybody boast that he guessed aright, and, in spite of the trouble of altering the plot five or six times, I feel that I have chosen the course most consistent with the dignity of my profession. Had I not been impelled by this consideration I should certainly have brought in a verdict against Mrs. Drabdump, as recommended by the reader who said that, judging by the illus- tration in the " Star,"' she must be at least seven feet high, and, therefore, could easily have got on the roof and put her (proportionately) long arm down the chimney to effect the cut. I am not INTKODUOTION. vii responsible for the artist's conception of the character. When I last saw the good lady she was under six feet^ but your artist may have had later information. The '' Star " is always so fright- fully up to date. I ought not to omit the humor- ous remark of a correspondent, who said: '*Mort- lake might have swung in some wild way from one window to another, at any rate in a story." I hope my fellow-writers thus satirically prodded will not demand his name, as I object to murders, ''at any rate in real life.'" Finally, a word with the legions who have taken me to task for allowing Mr. Gladstone to write over 170 words on a postcard. It is all owing to you, sir, who announced my story as containing humor- ous elements. I tried to put in some, and this gentle dig at the grand old correspond- ent's habits was intended to be one of them. However, if I am to be taken ''at the foot of the letter" (or rather of the postcard), I must say that only to-day I received a postcard containing about 250 words. But this was not from Mr. Gladstone. At any rate, till Mr. Glad- stone himself repudiates this postcard, I shall consider myself justified in allowing it to stand in the book. Again thanking your readers for their valuable assistance. Yours, etc. Viii INTEODUOTION. One would have imagined that nobody could take this seriously, for it is obvious that the mystery -story is just the one spe- cies of story that can not be told impromptu or altered at the last moment, seeing that it demands the most careful piecing together and the most elaborate dove-tailing. Never- theless, if you cast your joke upon the waters, you shall find it no joke after many days. This is what I read in the Lyttelton Times, New Zealand: ^'The chain of circumstan- tial evidence seems fairly irrefragable. From all accounts, Mr. Zangwill himself was puz- zled, after carefully forging every link, how to break it. The method ultimately adopted I consider more ingenious than convincing." After that I made up my mind never to joke again, but this good intention now helps to pave the beaten path. I. Zangwill. London, September, 1895. NOTE. The Mystery which the author will al- ways associate with this story is how he got through the task of writing it. It was writ- ten in a fortnight — day by day — to meet a sudden demand from the "Star," which made '^a new departure'^ with it. The said fortnight was further disturbed by an extraordinary combined attack of other troubles and tasks. This is no excuse for the shortcomings of the book, as it was always open to the writer to revise or sup- press it. The latter function may safely be left to the public, while if the work stands — almost to a letter — as it appeared in the "Star," it is because the author cannot tell a story more than once. The introduction of Mr. Gladstone into a fictitious scene is defended on the ground that he is largely mythical. I. Z. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. CHAPTER I. On a memorable morning of early Decem- ber London opened its eyes on a frigid gray mist. There are mornings when King Fog masses his molecules of carbon in serried squadrons in the city, while he scatters them tenuously in the suburbs ; so that your morning train may bear you from twilight to darkness. But to-day the enemy's ma- neuvering was more monotonous. From Bow even unto Hammersmith there drag- gled a dull, wretched vapor, like the wraith of an impecunious suicide come into a for- tune immediately after the fatal deed. The barometers and thermometers had sym- pathetically shared its depression, and their spirits (when they had any) were low. The cold cut like a many-bladed knife. 2 th£) big bow mystery. Mrs. Drabdump, of 11 Glover Street, Bow, was one of the few persons in London whom fog did not depress. She went about her work quite as cheerlessly as usual. She had been among the earliest to be aware of the enemy's advent, picking out the strands of fog from the coils of darkness the mo- ment she rolled up her bedroom blind and unveiled the somber picture of the winter morning. She knew that the fog had come to stay for the day at least, and that the gas bill for the quarter vf as going to beat the record in high-jumping. She also knew that this was because she had allowed her new gentleman lodger, Mr. Arthur Constant, to pay a fixed sum of a shilling a week for gas, instead of charging him a proportion of the actual account for the whole house. The meteorologists might have saved the credit of their science if they had reckoned witli Mrs. Drabdump's next gas bill when they predicted the weather and made "Snow" the favorite, and said that "Fog" would be no- where. Fog was everywhere, yet Mrs. Drab- dump took no credit to herself for her prescience. Mrs. Drabdump indeed took no THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 3 credit for anything, paying her way along doggedly, and struggling through life like a wearied swimmer trying to touch the ho- rizon. That things always went as badly as she had foreseen did not exhilarate her in the least. Mrs. Drabdump was a widow. Widows are not born, but made, else jou might have fancied Mrs. Drabdump had always been a widow. Nature had given her that tall, spare form, and that pale, thin-lipped, elon- gated, hard-eyed visage, and that painfully precise hair, which are always associated with widowhood in low life. It is only in higher circles that women can lose their husbands and yet remain bewitching. The late Mr. Drabdump had scratched the base of his thumb with a rusty nail, and Mrs. Drabdump's foreboding that he would die of lockjaw had not prevented her wrestling day and night with the shadow of Death, as she had wrestled with it vainly twice be- fore, when Katie died of diphtheria and lit- tle Johnny of scarlet fever. Perhaps it is from overwork among the poor that Death has been reduced to a shadow. 4 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. Mrs. Drabdump was lighting the kitchen fire. She did it very scientifically, as know- ing the contrariety of coal and the anxiety of flaming sticks to end in smoke unless rigidly kept up to the mark. Science was a success as usual; and Mrs. Drabdump rose from her knees content, like a Parsee priest- ess who had duly paid her morning devo- tions to her deity. Then she started violent- ly, and nearly lost her balance. Her eye had caught the hands of the clock on the mantel. They pointed to fifteen minutes to seven. Mrs. Drabdump's devotion to the kitchen fire invariably terminated at fifteen minutes past six. What was the matter with the clock? Mrs. Drabdump had an immediate vision of Snoppet, the neighboring horologist, keeping the clock in hand for weeks and then returning it only superficially repaired and secretly injured more vitally "for the good of the trade." The evil vision vanished as quickly as it came, exorcised by the deep boom of St. Dunstan's bells chiming the three-quarters. In its place a great horror surged. Instinct had failed; Mrs. Drab- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 5 dump had risen at half -past six instead of six. Now she understood why she had been feeling so dazed and strange and sleepy. She had overslept herself. Chagrined and puzzled, she hastily set the kettle over the crackling coal, discovering a second later that she had overslept herself because Mr. Constant wished to be woke three-quarters of an hour earlier than usual, and to have his breakfast at seven, having to speak at an early meeting of discontented tram-men. She ran at once, candle in hand, to his bedroom. It was upstairs. All "up- stairs" was Arthur Constant's domain, for it consisted of but two mutually independent rooms. Mrs. Drabdump knocked viciously at the door of the one he used for a bedroom, crying, "Seven o'clock, sir. You'll be late, sir. You must get up at once." The usual slumbrous "All right" was not forthcoming; but, as she herself had varied her morning salute, her ear was less expectant of the echo. She went downstairs, with no fore- boding save that the kettle would come off second best in the race between its boiling and her lodger's dressing. 6 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. For* she knew there was no fear of Arthur Constant's lying deaf to the call of dutv — temporarily represented by Mrs. D dump. He was a light sleeper, and the t tm conductors' bells were probably ringing in his ears, summoning him to the meeting. Why Arthur Constant, B. A. — white- handed and white-shirted, and gentleman to the very purse of him — should con- cern himself with tram-men, when for- tune had confined his necessary rela- tions with drivers to cabmen at the least, Mrs. Drabdump could not quite make out. He probably aspired to represent Bow in Parliament; but then it would surely have been wiser to lodge with a land- lady who possessed a vote by having a hus- band alive. Nor was there much practical wisdom in his wish to black his own boots (an occupation in which he shone but little), and to live in every way like a Bow working man. Bow working men were not so lavish in their patronage of water, whether exist- ing in drinking glasses, morning tubs, or laundress' establishments. Nor did they eat the delicacies with which Mrs. Drab- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 7 dump supplied him, with the assurance that they were the artisan^s appanage. She couUi ^-t bear to see him eat things unbefitting b (5 station. Arthur Constant opened his mouth and ate what his landlady gave him, not first deliberately shutting his eyes ac- cording to the formula, the rather pluming himself on keeping them very wide open. But it is difficult for saints to see through their own halos; and in practice an aureola about the head is often indistinguishable from a mist. The tea to be scalded in Mr. Constant's pot, when that cantankerous ket- tle should boil, was not the coarse mixture of black and green sacred to herself and Mr. Mortlake, of whom the thoughts of breakfast now reminded her. Poor Mr. Mortlake, gone off without any to Devon- port, somewhere about four in the fog-thick- ened darkness of a winter night! Well, she hoped his journey would be duly rewarded, that his perks would be heavy, and that he would make as good a thing out of the "traveling expenses" as rival labor leaders roundly accused him of to other people's faces. She did not grudge him his gains. 8 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. nor was it her business if, as they alleged, in introducing Mr. Constant to her vacant rooms, his idea was not merely to benefit his landlady. He had done her an uncommon good turn, queer as was the lodger thus in- troduced. His own apostleship to the sons of toil gave Mrs. Drabdump no twinges of perplexity. Tom Mortlake had been a com- positor; and apostleship was obviously a profession better paid and of a higher social status. Tom Mortlake — the hero of a hundred strikes — set up in print on a poster, was unmistakably superior to Tom Mortlake setting up other men's names at a case. Still, the work was not all beer and skittles, and Mrs. Drabdump felt that Tom's latest job was not enviable. She shook his door as she passed it on her way to the kitchen, but there was no response. The street door was only a few feet off down the passage, and a glance at it dispelled the last hope that Tom had abandoned the jour- ney. The door was unbolted and unchained, and the only security was the latch-key lock. Mrs. Drabdump felt a whit uneasy, though, to give her her due, she never suffered as THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 9 much as most housewives do from criminals who never come. Not quite opposite, but still only a few doors off, on the other side of the street, lived the celebrated ex-detective, Grodman, and, illogically enough, his pres- ence in the street gave Mrs. Drabdump a curious sense of security, as of a believer livina- under the shadow of the fane. That any human being of ill-odor should con- sciously come within a mile of the scent of so famous a sleuth-hound seemed to her highly improbable. Grodman had retired (with a competence) and was only a sleep- ing dog now; still, even criminals would have sense enough to let him lie. So Mrs. Drabdump did not really feel that there had been any danger, especially as a second glance at the street door showed that Mortlake had been thoughtful enough to slip the loop that held back the bolt of the big lock. She allowed herself another throb of sympathy for the labor leader whirling on his dreary way toward Devon- port Dockyard. Not that he had told her anything of his journey beyond the town; but she knew Devonport had a Dockyard 10 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. because Jessie Dymond — Tom's sweetheart ■ — once mentioned that her aunt lived near there, and it lay on the surface that Tom had gone to help the dockers, who were im- itating their London brethren. Mrs. Drab- dump did not need to be told things to be aware of them. She went back to prepare Mr. Constant's superfine tea, vaguely won- dering why people were so discontented nowadays. But when she brought up the tea and the toast and the eggs to Mr. Con- stant's sitting-room (which adjoined his bed- room, though without communicating with it), Mr. Constant was not sitting in it. She lit the gas, and laid the cloth ; then she re- turned to the landing and beat at the bed- room door with an imperative palm. Si- lence alone answered her. She called him by name and told him the hour, but hers was the only voice she heard, and it sounded strangely to her in the shadows of the stair- case. Then, muttering, "Poor gentleman, he had the toothache last night ; and p'r'aps he's only just got a wink o' sleep. Pity to disturb him for the sake of them grizzling conductors. I'll let him sleep his usual THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 11 time," she bore the tea-pot downstairs with a mournful, almost poetic, consciousness, that soft-boiled eggs (like love) must grow cold. Half-past seven came — and she knocked again. But Constant slept on. His letters, always a strange assortment, arrived at eight, and a telegram came soon after. Mrs. Drabdump rattled his door, shouted, and at last put the wire under it. Her heart was beating fast enough now, though there seemed to be a cold, clammy snake curling round it. She went down- stairs again and turned the handle of Mort- lake's room, and went in without knowing why. The coverlet of the bed showed that the occupant had only lain down in his clothes, as if fearing to miss the early train. She had not for a moment expected to find him in the room; yet somehow the con- sciousness that she was alone in the house with the sleeping Constant seemed to flash for the first time upon her, and the clammy snake tightened its folds round her heart. She opened the street door, and her eye wandered nervously up and down. It was 12 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. half -past eight The little street stretched cold and still in the gray mist, blinking bleary eyes at either end, where the street lamps smoldered on. No one was visible for the moment, though smoke was rising from many of the chimneys to greet its sis- ter mist. At the house of the detective across the way the blinds were still down and the shutters up. Yet the familiar, pro- saic aspect of the street calmed her. The bleak air set her coughing; she slammed the door to, and returned to the kitchen to make fresh tea for Constant, who could only be in a deep sleep. But the canister trem- bled in her grasp. She did not know wheth- er she dropped it or threw it down, but there was nothing in the hand that battered again a moment later at the bedroom door. No sound within answered the clamor with- out. She rained blow upon blow in a sort of spasm of frenzy, scarce remembering that her object w^as merely to wake her lodger, and almost staving in the lower panels with her kicks. Then she turned the handle and tried to open the door, but it was locked. The resistance recalled her to herself — she •THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 13 had a moment of shocked decency at the thought that she had been about to enter Constant'ls bedroom. Then the terror came over her afresh. She felt that she was alone in the house with a corpse. She sank to the floor, cowering; with difficulty stifling a desire to scream. Then she rose with a jerk and raced down the stairs without looking behind her, and threw open the door and ran out into the street, only pulling up with her hand violently agitating Grodman's door-knocker. In a moment the first floor window was raised — the little house was of the same pattern as her own — and Grod- man's full, fleshy face loomed through the fog in sleepy irritation from under a night- cap. Despite its scowl the ex-detective's face dawmed upon her like the sun upon an occupant of the haunted chamber. "What in the devil's the matter?" he growled. Grodman was not an early bird, now that he had no worms to catch. He could afford to despise proverbs now, for the house in which he lived was his, and he lived in it because several other houses in the street were also his, and it is well for 14 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. the landlord to be about his own estate in Bow, where poachers often shoot the moon. Perhaps the desire to enjoy his great- ness among his early cronies counted for something, too, for he had been born and bred at Bow, receiving when a youth his first engagement from the local police quar- ters, whence he drew a few shillings a week as an amateur detective in his leisure hours. Grodman was still a bachelor. In the celestial matrimonial bureau a partner might have been selected for him, but he had never been able to discover her. It was his one failure as a detective. He was a self-sufficing person, who preferred a gas stove to a domestic; but in deference to Glover Street opinion he admitted a female factotum between ten a. m. and ten p. m., and, equally in deference to Glover Street opinion, excluded her between ten p. m. and ten a. m. "I want you to come across at once," Mrs. Drabdump gasped. "Something has hap- pened to Mr. Constant." "What! Not bludgeoned by the police at the meeting this morning, I hope?" THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 15 "No, no! He didn't go. He is dead." "Dead?" Grodman's face grew very seri- ous now. "Yes. Murdered !" "What?" almost shouted the ex-detective. "How? When? Where? Who?" "I don't know. I can't get to him. I have beaten at his door. He does not answer." Grodman's face lit up with relief. "You silly woman! Is that all? I shall have a cold in my head. Bitter weather. He's dog-tired after yesterday — processions, three speeches, kindergarten, lecture on ^the moon,' article on co-operation. That's his style." It was also Grodman's style. He never wasted words. "No," Mrs. Drabdump breathed up at him solemnly, "he's dead." "All right; go back. Don't alarm the neighborhood unnecessarily. Wait for me. Down in five minutes." Grodman did not take this Cassandra of the kitchen too seri- ously. Probably he knew his woman. His small, bead-like eyes glittered with an al- most amused smile as he withdrew them from Mrs. Drabdump's ken, and shut down 16 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. the sash with a bang. The poor woman ran back across the road and through her door, which she would not close behind her. It seemed to shut her in with the dead. She waited in the passaga After an age — seven minutes by any honest clock — Grodman made his appearance, looking as dressed as usual, but with unkempt hair and with dis- consolate side-whisker. He was not quite used to that side-whisker yet, for it had only recently come within the margin of cul- tivation. In active service Grodman had been clean-shaven, like all members of the profession — for surely your detective is the most versatile of actors. Mrs. Drabdump closed the street door quietly, and pointed to the stairs, fear operating like a polite de- sire to give him precedence. Grodman ascended, amusement still glimmering in his eyes. Arrived on the landing he knocked peremptorily at the door, crying, "Mne o'clock, Mr. Constant; nine o'clock!" When he ceased there was no other sound or movement. His face grew more serious. He waited, then knocked, and cried louder. He turned the handle, but the door was fast. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 17 Jle tried to peer through the keyhole, but it was blocked. He shook the upper panels, but the door seemed bolted as well as locked. He stood still, his face set and rigid, for he liked and esteemed the man. ^'Ay, knock your loudest," whispered the pale-faced woman. "You'll not wake him now." The gray mist had follow^ed them through the street door, and hovered about the stair- case, charging the air with a moist, sepul- chral odor. "Locked and bolted," muttered Grodman, shaking the door afresh. "Burst it open," breathed the woman, trembling violently all over, and holding her hands before her as if to ward off the dreadful vision. Without another word, Grodman applied his shoulder to the door, and made a violent muscular effort. He had been an athlete in his time, and the sap was yet in him. The door creaked, little by little it began to give, the woodwork en- closing the bolt of the lock splintered, the panels bent upw^ard, the large upper bolt 18 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. tore off its iron staple; the door flew back with a crash. Grodman rushed in. ^^My God!" he cried. The woman shrieked. The sight was too terrible. Within a few hours the jubilant news- boys were shrieking "Horrible Suicide in Bow," and "The Star" poster added, for the satisfaction of those too poor to purchase: "A Philanthropist Cuts His Throat." THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 19 CHAPTER II. But the newspapers were premature. Scotland Yard refused to prejudge the case despite the pennj-a-liners. Several arrests were made, so that the later editions were compelled to soften "Suicide" into "Mys- tery." The people arrested were a nonde- script collection of tramps. Most of them had committed other offenses for which the police had not arrested them. One bewil- dered-looking gentleman gave himself up (as if he were a riddle), but the police would have none of him, and restored him forth- with to his friends and keepers. The num- ber of candidates for each new opening in Newgate is astonishing. The full significance of this tragedy of a noble young life cut short had hardly time to filter, into the public mind, when a fresh sensation absorbed it. Tom Mortlake had been arrested the same day at Liverpool on 20 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. suspicion of being concerned in the death of his fellow-lodger. The news fell like a bombshell upon a land in which Tom Mort- lake's name was a household word. That the gifted artisan orator, who had never shrunk upon occasion from launching red rhetoric at Society, should actually, have shed blood seemed too startling, especially as the blood shed was not blue, but the prop- erty of a lovable young middle-class ideal- ist, who had now literally given his life to the Cause. But this supplementary sensa- tion did not grow to a head, and everybody (save a few labor leaders) was relieved to hear that Tom had been released almost im- mediately, being merely subpoenaed to ap- pear at the inquest. In an interview which he accorded to the representative of a Liver- pool paper the same afternoon, he stated that he put his arrest down entirely to the enmity and rancor entertained toward him by the police throughout the country. He had come to Liverpool to trace the move- ments of a friend about whom he was very uneasy, and he was making anxious inquir- ies at the docks to discover at what times THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 21 steamers left for America, wheu the detec- tives stationed there in accordance with in- structions from headquarters had arrested him as a suspicious-looking character. "Though," said Tom, "they must very well have known my phiz, as I have been sketched and caricatured all over the shop. When I told them who I was they had the decency to let me go. They thought they'd scored off me enough, I reckon. Yes, it cer- tainly is a strange coincidence that I might actually have had something to do with the poor fellow's death, which has cut me up as much as anybody; though if they had known I had just come from the 'scene of the crime,' and actually lived in the house, they would probably have — let me alone." He laughed sarcastically. "They are a queer lot of muddle-heads are the police. Their motto is, Tirst catch your man, then cook the evidence.' If you're on the spot you're guilty because you're there, and if you're elsewhere you're guilty because you have gone away. Oh, I know them! If they could have seen their way to clap me in quod, they'd ha' done it. Lucky I know the 22 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. number of the cabman who took me to Eus- ton before five this morning." "If they clapped you in quod," the inter- viewer reported himself as facetiously ob- serving, "the prisoners would be on strike in a week." "Yes, but there would be so many black- legs ready to take their places," Mortlake flashed back, "that I^m afraid it 'ould be no go. But do excuse me. I am so upset about my friend. Pm afraid he has left England, and I have to make inquiries; and now there's poor Constant gone — horrible! hor- rible! and Pm due in London at the inquest. I must really run away. Good-by. Tell your readers it's all a police grudge." "One last word, Mr. Mortlake, if you please. Is it true that you were billed to preside at a great meeting of clerks at St. James' Hall between one and two to-day to protest against the German invasion?" "Whew! so I had. But the beggars ar- rested me just before one, when I was going to wire, and then the news of poor Con- stant's end drove it out of my head. What a nuisance! Lord, how troubles do come to- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 23 gether! Well, good-by, send me a copy of the paper." Tom Mortlake's evidence at the inquest added little beyond this to the public knowl- edge of his movements on the morning of the Mystery. The cabman who drove him to Euston had written indignantly to the papers to say that he had picked up his cele- brated fare at Bow Kailway Station at about half-past four a. m., and the arrest was a deliberate insult to democracy, and he offered to make an affidavit to that ef- fect, leaving it dubious to which effect. But Scotland Yard betrayed no itch for the affi- davit in question, and No. 2,138 subsided again into the obscurity of his rank. Mort- lake — whose face was very pale below the black mane brushed back from his fine fore- head — gave his evidence in low, sympa- thetic tones. He had known the de- ceased for over a year, coming constantly across him in their common political and social work, and had found the furnished rooms for him in Glover Street at his own request, they just being to let when Con- stant resolved to leave his rooms at Oxford 24 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. House in Bethnal Green and to share the actual life of the people. The locality suit- ed the deceased, as being near the People's Palace. He respected and admired the de- ceased, whose genuine goodness had won all hearts. The deceased was an untiring worker; never grumbled, was always in fair spirits, regarded his life and wealth as a sacred trust to be used for the benefit of humanity. He had last seen him at a quar- ter past nine p. m. on the day preceding his death. He (witness) had received a letter by the last post which made him uneasy about a friend. Deceased was evidently suffering from toothache, and was fixing a i)iece of cotton-wool in a hollow tooth, but he did not complain. Deceased seemed rather upset by the news he brought, and they both dis- cussed it rather excitedly. By a Juryman: Did the news concern him? Mortlake : Only impersonally. He knew my friend, and was keenly sympathetic when one was in trouble. Coroner: Could you show the jury the letter you received? THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 25 Mortlake: I have mislaid it, and cannot make out where it has got to. If you, sir, think it relevant or essential, I will state what the trouble was. Coroner: Was the toothache very vio- lent? Mortlake: I^ cannot tell. I think not, though he told me it had' disturbed his rest the night before. Coroner: What time did you leave him? Mortlake: About twenty to ten. Coroner: And what did you do then? Mortlake: I went out for an hour or so to make some inquiries. Then I returned, and told my landlady I should be leaving by an early train for — for the country. Coroner: And that was the last you saw of the deceased? Mortlake (with emotion) : The last. Coroner : How was he when you left him ? Mortlake: Mainly concerned about my trouble. Coroner : Otherwise you saw nothing un- usual about him? Mortlake: Nothing. 26 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. Coroner: What time did you leave the house on Tuesday morning? Mortlake: At about live and twenty min- utes past four. Coroner: Are you sure that you shut the street door? Mortlake: Quite sure. Knowing my landlady was rather a timid person, I even slipped the bolt of the big lock, which was usually tied back. It was impossible for any one to get in even with a latch-key. Mrs. Drabdump's evidence (which, of course, preceded his) was more important, and occupied a considerable time, unduly eked out by Drabdumpian padding. Thus she not only deposed that Mr. Constant had the toothache, but that it was going to last about a week; in tragic-comic indifference to the radical cure that had been effected. Her account of the last hours of the de- ceased tallied with Mortlake's, only that she feared Mortlake was quarreling with him over something in the letter that came by the nine o'clock post. Deceased had left the house a little after Mortlake, but had re- turned before him, and had gone straight THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 27 to his bedroom. She had not actually seen him come in, having been in the kitchen, but she heard his latch-key, followed by his light step up the stairs. A Juryman : How do you know it was not somebody else? (Sensation, of which the juryman tries to look unconscious.) Witness : He called down to me over the banisters, and says in his sweetish voice: "Be hextra sure to wake me at a quarter to seven, Mrs. Drabdump, or else I shan't get to my tram meeting." (Juryman collapses.) Coroner: And did you wake him? Mrs. Drabdump (breaking down): Oh, my lud, how can you ask? Coroner: There, there, compose yourself. I mean did you try to w^ake him? Mrs. Drabdump: I have taken in and done for lodgers this seventeen years, my lud, and have always gave satisfaction ; and Mr. Mortlake, he v/ouldn't ha' recommended me otherwise, though I wish to Heaven the poor gentleman had never Coroner: Yes, yes, of course. You tried to rouse him? 3 28 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. But it was some time before Mrs. Drab- dump was sufficiently calm to explain that though she had overslept herself, and though it would have been all the same anyhow, she had come up to time. Bit by bit the tragic story was forced from her lips — a tragedy that even her telling could not make tawdry. She told with superfluous de- tail hoAV — when Mr. Grodman broke in the door — she saw her unhappy gentleman lodger lying on his back in bed, stone dead, with a gaping red wound in his throat ; how her stronger-minded companion calmed her a little by spreading a handkerchief over the distorted face; how they then looked vainly about and under the bed for any instrument by which the deed could have been done, the veteran detective carefully making a rapid inventory of the contents of the room, and taking notes of the precise position and con- dition of the body before anything was dis- turbed by the arrival of gapers or bunglers; how she had pointed out to him that both the windows were firmly bolted to keep out the cold night air; how, having noted this down with a puzzled, pitying shake of the THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 29 head, he had opened the window to sum- mon the police, and espied in the fog one Denzil Cantercot, whom he called and told to run to the nearest police- station and ask them to send on an inspector and a surgeon. How they both remained in the room till the police ar- rived, Grodman pondering deeply the while and making notes every now and again, as fresh points occurred to him, and asking her questions about the poor, weak- headed young man. Pressed as to what she meant by calling the deceased "weak-head- ed,'' she replied that some of her neighbors wrote him begging letters, though. Heaven knew, they were better off than herself, who had to scrape her fingers to the bone for every penny she earned. Under further pressure from Mr. Talbot, who was watch- ing the inquiry on behalf of Arthur Con- stant's family, Mrs. Drabdump admitted that the deceased had behaved like a human being, nor was there anything externally eccentric or queer in his conduct. He was always cheerful and pleasant spoken, though certainly soft — God rest his soul. 30 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. No; he never shaved, but wore all the hair that Heaven had given him. By a Juryman: She thought deceased was in the habit of locking his door when he went to bed. Of course, she couldn't say for certain. (Laughter.) There was no need to bolt the door as well. The bolt slid up- ward, and was at the top of the door. When she first let lodgings, her reasons for which she seemed anxious to publish, there had only been a bolt, but a suspicious lodg- er, she would not call him a gentleman, had comx)lained that he could not fasten his door behind him, and so she had been put to the expense of having a lock made. The com- plaining lodger went off soon after with- out paying his rent. (Laughter.) She had always known he would. The Coroner: Was deceased at all nerv- ous? Witness: No, he was a very nice gentle- man. (A laugh.) Coroner: I mean did he seem afraid of being robbed? Witness: No, he was always goin' to demonstrations. (Laughter.) I told him to THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 31 be careful. I told him I lost a purse with 3s. 2d. myself on Jubilee Day. Mrs. Drabdump resumed her seat, weep- ing vaguely. The Coroner: Gentlemen, we shall have an opportunity of viewing the room shortly. The story of the discovery of the body was retold, though more scientifically, by Mr. George Grodman, whose unexpected re- surgence into the realm of his early exploits excited as keen a curiosity as the reappear- ance "for this occasion only" of a retired prima donna. His book, "Criminals I Have Caught," passed from the twenty-third to the twenty-fourth edition merely on the strength of it. Mr. Grodman stated that the body was still warm when he found it. He thought that death was quite recent. The door he had had to burst was bolted as well as locked. He confirmed Mrs. Drabdump's statement about the windows; the chim- ney was very narrow. The cut looked as if done by a razor. There was no instrument lying about the room. He had known the deceased about a month. He seemed a very earnest, simple-minded young fellow who 32 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. spoke a great deal about the brotherhood of man. ^The hardened old man-hunter's voice was not free from a tremor as he spoke jerkily of the dead man's enthusiasms.) He should have thought the deceased the last man in the world to commit suicide. Mr. Denzil Cantercot was next called. He was a poet. (Laughter.) He was on his way to Mr. Grodman's house to tell him he had been unable to do some writing for him be- cause he was suffering from writer's cramp, when Mr. Grodman called to him from the window of No. 11 and asked him to run for the police. No, he did not run; he was a philosopher. (Laughter.) He returned with them to the door, but did not go up. He had no stomach for crude sensations. (Laughter.) The gray fog was sufficiently unbeautiful for him for one morning. (Laughter.) Inspector Howlett said: About 9:45 on the morning of Tuesday, 4th December, from information received, he went with Sergeant Runnymede and Dr. Robinson to 11 Glover Street, Bow, and there found the dead body of a young man, lying on his back THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 33 with his throat cut. The door of the room had been smashed in, and the lock and the bolt evidently forced. The room wsl^ tidy. There were no marks of blood on the floor. A purse full of gold was on the dressing- table beside a big book. A hip-bath with cold water stood beside the bed, over which was a hanging bookcase. There was a large wardrobe against the wall next to the door. The chimney was very narrow. There were two windows, one bolted. It was about 18 feet to the pavement. There was no way of climbing up. No one could possibly have got out of the room, and then bolted the doors and windows behind him ; and he had searched all parts of the room in which any- one might have been concealed. He had been unable to find any instrument in the room, in spite of exhaustive search, there being not even a penknife in the pockets of the clothes of the deceased, which lay on a chair. The house and the back yard, and the adjacent pavement, had also been fruitless- ly searched. Sergeant Runnymede made an identical 34 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. statement, saving only that he had gone with Dr. Robinson and Inspector Howlett. Dr. Robinson, divisional surgeon, said: The deceased was lying on his back, with his throat cut. The body was not yet cold, the abdominal region being quite warm. Rigor mortis had set in in the lower jaw, neck and upper extremities. The muscles contracted when beaten. I inferred that life had been extinct some two or three hours, probably not longer, it might have been less. The bedclothes would keep the lower part warm for some time. The wound, which was a deep one, was 5^ inches from right to left across the throat to a point under the left ear. The upper portion of the windpipe was severed, and likewise the jugular vein. The muscular coating of the carotid artery was divided. There was a slight cut, as if in continuation of the wound, on the thumb of the left hand. The hands were clasped underneath the head. There was no blood on the right hand. The wound could not have been self-inflicted. A sharp instrument had been used, such as a razor. The cut might have been made by a THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 35 left-handed person. No doubt death was practically instantaneous. I saw no signs of a struggle about the body or the room. I noticed a purse on the dressing-table, ly- ing next to Madame Blavatsky's big book on Theosophy. Sergeant Runnymede drew my attention to the fact that the door had evidently been locked and bolted from within. By a Juryman: I do not say the cuts could not have been made by a right-handed person. I can offer no suggestion as to how the inflicter of the wound got in or out Ex- tremely improbable that the cut was self- inflicted. There was little trace of the out- side fog in the room. Police Constable Williams said he was on duty in the early hours of the morning of the 4th inst. Glover Street lay within his beat. He saw or heard nothing suspicious. The fog was never very dense, though nasty to the throat. He had passed through Glover Street about half -past four. He had not seen Mr. Mortlake or anybody else leave the house. The Court here adjourned, the Coroner 36 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. and the jury repairing in a body to 11 Glover Street to view the house and the bedroom of the deceased. And the evening posters announced, "The Bow Mystery Thickens." THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 37 CHAPTER III. Before the inquiry was resumed, all the poor wretches in custody had been released on suspicion that they were innocent; there was not a single case even for a magistrate. Clues, which at such seasons are gathered by the police like blackberries off the hedges, were scanty and unripe. Inferior specimens were offered them by bushels, but there was not a good one among the lot. The police could not even manufacture a clue. Arthur Constant's death was already the theme of every hearth, railway carriage and public house. The dead idealist had points of contact with so many spheres. The East End and West End alike w^ere moved and excited, the Democratic Leagues and the Churches, the Doss-houses and the Univer- sities. The pity of it! And then the im- penetrable mystery of it! The evidence given in the concluding por- 38 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. tion of the investigation was necessarily less sensational. There were no more wit- nesses to bring the scent of blood over the coroner's table; those who had yet to be beard were merely relatives and friends of the deceased, who spoke of him as he had been in life. His parents were dead, per- haps luckily for them; his relatives had seen little of him, and had scarce heard as much about him as the outside world. No man is a prophet in his own country, and, even if he migrates, it is advisable for him to leave his family at home. His friends were a motley crew; friends of the same friend are not necessarily friends of one an- other. But their diversity only made the congruity of the tale they had to tell more striking. It was the tale of a man who had never made an enemy even by benefiting him, nor lost a friend even by refusing his favors ; the tale of a man whose heart over- flowed with peace and good will to all men all the year round; of a man to whom Christmas came not once, but three hun- dred and sixty-five times a year; it was the tale of a brilliant intellect, who gave up to THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 39 mankind what was meant for himself, and worked as a laborer in the vineyard of hu- manity, never crying that the grapes were sour; of a man uniformly cheerful and of good courage, living in that forgetfulness of self which is the truest antidote to de- spair. And yet there was not quite want- ing the note of pain to jar the harmony and make it human. Richard Elton, his chum from boyhood, and vicar of Somerton, in Midlandshire, handed to the coroner a let- ter from the deceased about ten days before his death, containing some passages which the coroner read aloud: "Do you know anything of Schopenhauer? I mean any- thing beyond the current misconceptions? I have been making his acquaintance late- ly. He is an agreeable rattle of a pessimist; his essay on ^The Misery of Mankind' is quite lively reading. At first his assimilation of Christianity and Pessimism (it occurs in his essay on ^Suicide') dazzled me as an auda- cious paradox. But there is truth in it. Verily, the whole creation groaneth and travaileth, and man is a degraded monster, and sin is over all. Ah, my friend, I have 40 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. shed many of my illusions since I came to this seething hive of misery and wrong- doing. What shall one man's life — a mil- lion men's lives — avail against the corrup- tion, the vulgarity and the squalor of civili- zation? Sometimes I feel like a farthing rush-light in the Hall of Eblis. Selfishness is so long and life so short. And the worst of it is that everybody is so beastly content- ed. The poor no more desire comfort than the rich culture. The woman to whom a penny school fee for her child represents an appreciable slice of her income is satisfied that the rich we shall always have with us. "The real crusted old Tories are the paup- ers in the Workhouse. The Kadical work- ing men are jealous of their own leaders, and the leaders of one another. Schopen- hauer must have organized a labor party in his salad days. And yet one can't help feel- ing that he committed suicide as a philoso- pher by not committing it as a man. He claims kinship with Buddha, too; though Esoteric Buddhism at least seems spheres removed from the philosophy of ^The Will and the Idea.' What a wonderful woman THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 41 Madame Blavatsky must be. I can't say I follow her, for she is up in the clouds nearly all the time, and I haven't as yet developed an astral body. Shall I send you on her book? It is fascinating. ... I am be- coming quite a fluent orator. One soon gets into the way of it. The horrible thing is that you catch yourself saying things to lead up to ^Cheers' instead of sticking to the plain realities of the business, Lucy is still doing the galleries in Italy. It used to pain me sometimes to think of my darling's hap- piness when I came across a flat-chested factory girl. Now I feel her happiness is as important as a factory girl's." Lucy, the witness explained, was Lucy Brent, the betrothed of the deceased. The poor girl had been telegraphed for, and had started for England. The witness stated that the outburst of despondency in this let- ter was almost a solitary one, most of the letters in his possession being bright, buoy- ant and hopeful. Even this letter ended with a humorous statement of the writer's manifold' plans and projects for the new year. The deceased was a good Churchman. 42 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. Coroner: Was there any private trouble in his own life to account for the temporary despondency? Witness: Not so far as I am aware. His financial position was exceptionally favor- able. Coroner : There had been no quarrel with Miss Brent? Witness: I have the best authority for saying that no shadow of difference had ever come between them. Coroner: Was the deceased left-handed? Witness: Certainly not. He was not even ambidextrous. A Juryman: Isn't Shoppinhour one of the infidel writers, published by the Free- thought Publication Society? Witness: I do not know who publishes his books. The Juryman (a small grocer and big raw- boned Scotchman, rejoicing in the name of Sandy Sanderson and the dignities of dea- conry and membership of the committee of the Bow Conservative Association): No equeevocation, sir. Is he not a secularist, who has lectured at the Hall of Science? THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 43 Witness: No, he is a foreign writer — (Mr. Sanderson was heard to thank Heaven for this small mercy) — who believes that life is not worth living. The Juryman: Were you not shocked to find the friend of a meenister reading such impure leeterature? Witness: The deceased read everything. Schopenhauer is the author of a system of philosophy, and not what you seem to im- agine. Perhaps you would like to inspect the book? (Laughter.) The Juryman : I would na' touch it with a pitchfork. Such books should be burnt. And this Madame Blavatsky's book — what is that? Is that also pheelosophy? Witness: No. It is Theosophy. (Laugh- ter.) Mr. Allen Smith, secretary of the Tram- men^s Union, stated that he had had an in- terview with the deceased on the day before his death, when he (the deceased) spoke hopefully of the prospects of the movement, and wrote him out a check for 10 guineas for his union. Deceased promised to speak at a meeting called for a quarter past seven a. m. the next day. 4 44 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. Mr. Edward Wimp, of the Scotland Yard Detective Department, said that the letters and papers of the deceased threw no light upon the manner of his death, and they would be handed back to the famil}^ His Department had not formed smj theory on the subject. The Coroner proceeded to sum up the evi- dence. "We have to deal, gentlemen," he said, "with a most incomprehensible and mysterious case, the details of which are yet astonishingly simple. On the morning of Tuesda^^, the 4th inst., Mrs. Drabdump, a worthy, hard-working widow, who lets lodgings at 11 Grover Street, Bow, was un- able to arouse the deceased, who occupied the entire upper floor of the house. Be- coming alarmed, she went across to fetch Mr. George Grodman, a gentleman known to us all by reputation, and to whose clear and scientific evidence we are much indebt- ed, and got him to batter in the door. They found the deceased lying back in bed with a deep wound in his throat. Life had only recently become extinct. There was no trace of any instrument by which the cut THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 45 could have been effected ; there was no trace of any person who could have effected the cut. No person could apparently have got in or out. The medical evidence goes to show that the deceased could not have in- flicted the wound himself. And yet, gentle- men, there are, in the nature of things, two — and only two — alternative explanations of his death. Either the wound was inflict- ed by his own hand, or it was inflicted by another's. I shall take each of these pos- sibilities separatel}^ First, did the de- ceased commit suicide? The medical evi- dence says deceased was lying with his hands clasped behind his head. Now the wound was made from right to left, and terminated by a cut on the left thumb. If the deceased had made it he would have had to do it with his right hand, while his left hand remained under his head — a most pe- culiar and unnatural position to assume. Moreover, in making a cut with the right hand, one would naturally move the hand from left to right. It is unlikely that the deceased would move his right hand so awk- wardly and unnaturally, unless, of course, 46 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. his object was to baffle suspicion. Another point is that on this hypothesis, the de- ceased would have had to replace his right hand beneath his head. But Dr. Robinson believes that death was instantaneous. If so, deceased could have had no time to pose so neatly. It is just possible the cut was made with the left hand, but then the de- ceased was right-handed. The absence of any signs of a possible weapon undoubted- ly goes to corroborate the medical evidence. The police have made an exhaustive search in all places where the razor or other weapon or instrument might by any pos- sibility have been concealed, including the bedclothes, the mattress, the pillow, and the street into which it might have been dropped. But all theories involving the willful concealment of the fatal instrument have to reckon with the fact or probability that death was instantaneous, also with the fact that there was no blood about the floor. Finally, the instrument used was in all like- lihood a razor, and the deceased did not shave, and was never known to be in pos- session of any such instrument. If, then, THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 47 we were to confine ourselves to the medical and police evidence, there would, I think, be little hesitation in dismissing the idea of suicide. Nevertheless, it is well to forget the physical aspect of the case for a moment and to apply our minds to an unprejudiced inquiry into the mental aspect of it. Was there any reason why the deceased should wish to take his own life? He was young, wealthy and popular, loving and loved; life stretched fair before him. He had no vices. Plain living, high thinking, and noble doing were the three guiding stars of his life. If he had had ambition, an illustrious public career was within reach. He was an orator of no mean power, a brilliant and industri- ous man. His outlook was always on the future — he was always sketching out ways in which he could be useful to his fellov/- men. His purse and his time were ever at the command of whosoever could show fair claim upon them. If such a man were likely to end his own life, the science of human nature would be at an end. Still, some of the shadows of the picture have been pre- sented to us. The man had his moments of 48 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. despondency — as which of us has not? But they seem to have been few and passing. Anyhow, he was cheerful enough on the day before his death. He was suffering, too, from toothache. But it does not seem to have been violent, nor did he complain. Possibly, of course, the pain became very acute in the night. Nor must we forget that he may have overworked himself, and got his nerves into a morbid state. He worked very hard, never rising later than half-past seven, and doing far more than the profes- sional 'labor leader/ He taught and wrote as well as spoke and organized. But on the other hand all witnesses agree that he was looking forward eagerly to the meeting of tram-men on the morning of the 4th inst. His whole heart was in the movement. Is it likely that this was the night he would choose for quitting the scene of his useful- ness? Is it likely that if he had chosen it, he would not have left letters and a state- ment behind, or made a last will and testa- ment? Mr. Wimp has found no possible clue to such conduct in his papers. Or is it likely he would have concealed the instru- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 49 ment? The only positive sign of intention is the bolting of his door in addition to the nsual locking of it, but one cannot lay much stress on that. Kegarding the mental as- pects alone, the balance is largely against suicide; looking at the physical aspects, suicide is well nigh impossible. Putting the two together, the case against suicide is all but mathematically complete. The answer, then, to our first question, Did the deceased commit suicide? is, that he did not." The coroner paused, and everybody drew a long breath. The lucid exposition had been followed with admiration. If the cor- oner had stopped now, the jury would have unhesitatingly returned a verdict of "mur- der." But the coroner swallowed a mouth- ful of water and w^ent on. "We now come to the second alternative — was the deceased the victim of homicide? In order to answer that question in; the affirmative it is essential that we should be able to form some conception of the modus operandi. It is all very well for Dr. Eobinson to say the cut was made by nn- other hand; but in the absence of any 50 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. theory as to how the cut could possibly have been made by that other hand, we should be driven back to the theory of self-infliction, however improbable it may seem to medical gentlemen. Now, what are the facts? When Mrs. Drabdump and Mr. Grodman found the body it was yet warm, and Mr. Grodman, a witness fortunately qualified by special experience, states that death had been quite recent. This tallies closely enough with the view of Dr. Robinson, who, examining the body about an hour later, put the time of death at two or three hours before, say seven o'clock. Mrs. Drab- dump had attempted to wake the deceased at a quarter to seven, which would put back the act to a little earlier. As I understand from Dr. Robinson, that it is impossible to fix the time very precisely, death may have very well taken place several hours before Mrs. Drabdump's first attempt to wake de- ceased. Of course, it may have taken place between the first and second calls, as he may merely have been sound asleep at first; it may also not impossibly have taken place considerably earlier than the first call, THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 51 for all the physical data seem to prove. Nevertheless, on the whole, I think we shall be least likely to err if we assume the time of death to be half-past six. Gentlemen, let us picture to ourselves No. 11 Glover Street at half -past six. We have seen the house; we know exactly how it is constructed. On the ground floor a front room tenanted by Mr. Mortlake, with two windows giving on the street, both securely bolted; a back room occupied by the landlady; and a kitchen. Mrs. Drabdump did not leave her bedroom till half-past six, so that we may be sure all the various doors and windows have not yet been unfastened; while the season of the year is su guarantee that noth- ing had been left open. The front door through which Mr. Mortlake has gone out before half-past four, is guarded by the latchkey lock and the big lock. On the upper floor are two rooms — a front room used by deceased for a bedroom, and a back room which he used as a sitting-room. The back room has been left open, with the key inside, but the window is fastened. The door of the front room is not only locked, but 52 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. bolted. We have seen the splintered mor- tise and the staple of the upper bolt violent- ly forced from the woodwork and resting on the pin. The windows are bolted, the fasteners being firmly fixed in the catches. The chimney is too narrow to admit of the passage of even a cliild. This room, in fact, is as firmly barred in as if besieged. It has no communication with any other part of the house. It is as absolutely self-centered and isolated as if it were a fort in the sea or a log-hut in the forest. Even if any strange person is in the house, nay, in the very sitting-room of the deceased, he can- not get into the bedroom, for the house is one built for the poor, with no com- munication between the different rooms, so that separate families, if need be, may inhabit each. Now, however, let us grant that some person has achieved the miracle of getting into the front room, first floor, 18 feet from the ground. At half-past six, or thereabouts, he cuts the throat of the sleeping occupant. How is he then to get out without attract- ing the attention of the now roused land- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 53 lady? But let us concede him that miracle, too. How is he to go away and yet leave the doors and windows locked and bolted from within? This is a degree of miracle at which my credulity must draw the line. No, the room had been closed all night — ^there is scarce a trace of fog in it. No one could get in or out. Finally, murders do not take place without motive. Robbery and revenge are the only conceivable motives. The de- ceased had not an enemy in the world; his money and valuables were left untouched. Everything was in order. There were no signs of a struggle. The answer then to our second inquiry — was the deceased killed by another person? — is, that he was not. "Gentlemen, I am aware that this sounds impossible and contradictory. But it is the facts that contradict themselves. It seems clear that the deceased did not commit sui- cide. It seems equally clear that the de- ceased was not murdered. There is noth- ing for it, therefore, gentlemen, but to re- turn a verdict tantamount to an acknowl- edgment of our incompetence to come to any adequately grounded conviction what- 54 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. ever as to the means or the manner by which the deceased met his death. It is the most inexplicable mystery in all my experi- ence." (Sensation.) The Foreman (after a colloquy with Mr. Sandy Sanderson) : We are not agreed, sir. One of the jurors insists on a verdict of *'Death from visitation by the act of God.^^ THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 55 CHAPTER IV. But Sandy Sanderson's burning solici- tude to fix the crime flickered out in the face of opposition, and in the end he bowed his head to the inevitable "open verdict." Then the floodgates of inkland were opened, and the deluge pattered for nine days on the deaf coffin where the poor idealist mold- ered. The tongues of the Press were loos- ened, and the leader writers reveled in recapitulating the circumstances of "The Big Bow Mystery," though they could con- tribute nothing but adjectives to the solu- tion. The papers teemed with letters — it was a kind of Indian summer of the silly season. But the editors could not keep them out, nor cared to. The mystery was the one topic of conversation everywhere — it was on the carpet and the bare boards alike, in the kitchen and the drawing-room. It was discussed with science or stupidity. 56 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. with aspirates or without. It came up for breakfast with the rolls, and was swept off the supper table with the last crumbs. No. 11 Glover Street, Bow, remained for days a shrine of pilgrimage. The once sleepy little street buzzed from morning till night. From all parts of the town people came to stare up at the bedroom window and wonder with a foolish look of horror. The pavement was often blocked for hours together, and itinerant vendors of refresh- ment made it a new market center, while vocalists hastened thither to sing the de-^ lectable ditty of the deed without having any voice in the matter. It was a pity the Government did not erect a toll-gate at either end of the street. But Chancellors of the Exchequer rarely avail themselves of the more obvious expedients for paying off the National debt. Finally, familiarity bred contempt, and the wits grew facetious at the expense of the Mystery. Jokes on the subject appeared even in the comic papers. To the proverb, "You must not say Bo to a goose," one added, "or else she will ex- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 57 plain you the Mystery." The name of the gentleman who asked whether the Bow Mystery was not 'arrowing shall not be di- vulged. There was more point in "Dago- net's" remark that, if he had been one of the unhappy jurymen, he should have been driven to "suicide." A professional para- dox-monger pointed triumphantly to the somewhat similar situation in "the murder in the Rue Morgue," and said that Nature had been plagiarizing again — like the mon- key she was — and he recommended Poe's publishers to apply for an injunction. More seriously, Poe's solution was re-suggested by "Constant Reader" as an original idea. He thought that a small organ-grinder's monkey might have got down the chimney with its master's razor, and, after attempt- ing to shave the occiTpant of the bed, have returned the way it came. This idea creat- ed considerable sensation, but a corre- spondent with a long train of letters drag- gling after his name pointed out that a mon- key small enough to get down so narrow a flue would not be strong enough to inflict so deep a wound. This was disputed by a 58 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. third writer, and the contest raged so keen- ly about the power of monkeys' muscles that it was almost taken for granted that a monkey was the guilty party. The bubble was pricked by the pen of "Common Sense," who laconically remarked that no traces of soot or blood had been discovered on the floor, or on the nightshirt, or the counter- pane. The "Lancet's" leader on the Mys- tery was awaited with interest. It said: "We cannot join in the praises that have been showered upon the coroner's summing up. It shows again the evils resulting from having coroners who are not medical men. He seems to have appreciated but in- adequately the significance of the med- ical evidence. He should certainly have directed the jury to return a verdict of murder on that. What was it to do with him that he could see no way by which the wound could have been in- flicted by an outside agency? It was for the police to find how that was done. Enough that it was impossible for the un- happy young man to have inflicted such a wound and then have strength and will THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 59 power enough to hide the instrument and to remove perfectly every trace of his hav- ing left the bed for the purpose." It is im- possible to enumerate all the theories pro- pounded by the amateur detectives, while Scotland Yard religiously held its tongue. Ultimately the interest on the subject be- came confined to a few papers which had re- ceived the best letters. Those papers that couldn't get interesting letters stopped the correspondence and sneered at the "sensa- tionalism" of those that could. Among the mass of fantasy there were not a few not- able solutions, which failed brilliantly, like rockets posing as fixed stars. One was that in the obscurity of the fog the murderer had ascended to the window of the bedroom by means of a ladder from the pavement. He had then with a dia- mond cut one of the panes away, and effected an entry through the aperture. On leaving he fixed in the pane of glass again (or another which he had brought with him), and thus the room remained with its bolts and locks untouched. On its being pointed out that the panes were 60 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. too small, a third correspondent showed that that didn't matter, as it was only neces- sary to insert the hand and undo the fasten- ing, when the entire window could be opened, the process being reversed by the murderer on leaving. This pretty edifice of glass was smashed by a glazier, who wrote to say that a pane could hardly be fixed in from only one side of a window frame, that it would fall out when touched, and that in any case the wet putty could not have escaped detection. A door panel sliced out and replaced was also put for- ward, and as many trap-doors and secret passages were ascribed to No. 11 Glover Street as if it were a medieval castle. An- other of these clever theories was that the murderer was in the room the whole time the police were there — hidden in the ward- robe. Or he had got behind the door when Grodman broke it open, so that he was not noticed in the excitement of the discovery, and escaped with his weapon at the mo- ment when Grodman and Mrs. Drabdump were examining the window fastenings. Scientific explanations also were to hand THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 61 to explain how the assassin locked and bolt- ed the door behind him. Powerful magnets outside the door had been used to turn the key and push the bolt within. Murderers armed with magnets loomed on the popular imagination like a new microbe. There was only one defect in this ingenious theory — the thing could not be done. A physiolo- gist recalled the conjurers who swallowed swords — by an anatomical peculiarity of the throat — and said that the deceased might have swallowed the weapon after cutting his own throat. This was too much for the public to swallow. As for the idea that the suicide had been effected with a penknife or its blade, or a bit of steel, which had got buried in the w^ound, not even the quotation of Shelley's line : "Makes such a wound, the knife is lost in it," could secure it a moment's acceptance. The same reception was accorded to the idea that the cut had been made with a candle- stick (or other harmless article) constructed like a sword-stick. Theories of this sort caused a humorist to explain that the de- ceased had hidden the razor in his hollow 62 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. tooth! Some kind friend of Messrs. Mas- kelyne and Cook suggested that they were the only persons who could have done the deed, as no one else could get out of a locked cabinet. But perhaps the most brilliant of these flashes of false fire was the facetious, jet probably half-seriously meant, letter that appeared in the "Pell Mell Press" un- der the heading of THE BIG BOW MYSTERY SOLVED. "Sir — You will remember that when the Whitechapel murders were agitating the universe, I suggested that the district cor- oner was the assassin. My suggestion has been disregarded. The coroner is still at large. So is the Whitechapel murderer. Perhaps this suggestive coincidence will in- cline the authorities to pay more attention to me this time. The problem seems to be this. The deceased could not have cut his own throat. The deceased could not have had his throat cut for him. As one of the two must have happened, this is obvious nonsense. As this is obvious THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 63 nonsense I am justified in disbeliev- ing it. As this obvious nonsense was primarily put in circulation by Mrs. Drabdump and Mr. Grodman, I am justified in disbelieving them. In short, sir, what guarantee have we that the whole tale is not a cock-and-bull story, invented by the two persons who first found the body? What proof is there that the deed was not done by these persons themselves, who then went to work to smash the door and break the locks and the bolts, and fasten up all the windows before they called the police in? I enclose my card, and am, sir, yours truly, One Who Looks Through His Own Spec- tacles." ("Our correspondent's theory is not so au- daciously original as he seems to imagine. Has he not looked through the spectacles of the people who persistently suggested that the Whitechapel murderer was invariably the policeman who found the body? Some- body must find the body, if it is to be found at all.— Ed. P. M. P.") The editor had reason to be pleased that he inserted this letter, for it drew the follow- 64 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. ing interesting communication from the great detective himself: "THE BIG BOW MYSTERY SOLVED. "Sir — I do not agree with you that your correspondent's theory lacks originality. On the contrary, I think it is delight- fully original. In fact it has given me an idea. What that idea is I do not yet propose to say, but if ^One Who Looks Through His Own Spectacles' will favor me with his name and address I shall be happy to inform him a little before the rest of the world whether his germ has borne any fruit. I feel he is a kindred spirit, and take this opportunity of saying publicly that I was extremely dis- appointed at the unsatisfactory verdict. The thing was a palpable assassination ; an open verdict has a tendency to relax the ex- ertions of Scotland Yard. I hope I shall not be accused of immodesty, or of making per- sonal reflections, when I say that the De- partment has had several notorious failures of late. It is not what it used to be. Crime THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 65 is becoming impertinent. It no longer knows its place, so to speak. It throws down the gauntlet where once it used to cower in its fastnesses. I repeat, I make these remarks solely in the interest of law and order. I do not for one moment believe that Arthur Constant killed himself, and if Scotland Yard satisfies itself with that ex- planation, and turns on its other side and goes to sleep again, then, sir, one of the foul- est and most horrible crimes of the century will forever go unpunished. My acquaint- ance with the unhappy victim was but re- cent; still, I saw and knew enough of the man to be certain (and I hope I have seen and known enougJi of other men to judge) that he was a man constitutionally inca- pable of committing an act of violence, whether against himself or anybody else. He would not hurt a fly, as the saying goes. And a man of that gentle stamp always lacks the active energy to lay hands on him- self. He was a man to be esteemed in no common degree, and I feel proud to be able to say that he considered me a friend. I am hardlv at the time of life at which a man 66 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. cares to put on his harness again; but, sir, it is impossible that I should ever know a daj^s rest till the perpetrator of this foul deed is discovered. I have already put my- self in communication with the family of the victim, who, I am pleased to say, have every confidence in me, and look to me to clear the name of their unhappy relative from the semi-imi)utation of suicide. I shall be pleased if anyone who shares my distrust of the authorities, and who has any clue whatever to this terrible mystery, or any plausible suggestion to offer, if, in brief, any ^One who looks through his own spectacles' will communicate with me. If I were asked to indicate the direc- tion in which new clues might be most usefully sought, I should say, in the first instance, anything is valuable that helps us to piece together a com- plete picture of the manifold activities of the man in the East End. He entered one way or another into the lives of a good many people; is it true that he nowhere made enemies? With the best intentions a man may wound or offend ; his interference may THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 67 be resented; he may even excite jealousy. A young man like the late Mr. Constant could not have had as much practical saga- city as he had goodness. Whose corns did he tread on? The more we know of the last few months of his life the more we shall know of the manner of his death. Thank- ing you by anticipation for the insertion of this letter in your valuable columns, I am, sir, yours truly, "George Grodman. "46 Glover Street, Bow." "P. S. — Since writing the above lines I have, by the kindness of Miss Brent, been placed in possession of a most valuable let- ter, probably the last letter written by the unhappy gentleman. It is dated Monday, 3 December, the very eve of the murder, and was addressed to her at Florence, and has now, after some delay, followed her back to London where the sad news unex- pectedly brought her. It is a letter couched, on the whole, in the most hopeful spirit, and speaks in detail of his schemes. Of course, there are things in it not meant for the ears 68 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. of the public, but there can be no harm in transcribing an important passage: " 'You seem to have imbibed the idea that the East End is a kind of Golgotha, and this despite that the books out of which you probably got it are carefully labeled "Fic- tion." Lamb says somevf here that we think of the "Dark Ages" as literally without sun- light, and so I fancy people like you, dear, think of the "East End" as a mixture of mire, misery and murder. How's that for alliteration? Why, within five minutes' walk of me there are the loveliest houses, with gardens back and front, inhabited by very fine people and furniture. Many of my university friends' mouths would water if they knew the income of some of the shop- keepers in the High Road. a in^^Q Y^^i^ people about here may not be so fashionable as those in Kensington and Bayswater, but they are every bit as stupid and materialistic, I don't deny, Lucy, I do have my black moments, and I do sometimes pine to get away from all this to the lands of sun and lotus-eating. But, on the whole, I am too busy even to dream of dreaming. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 69 My real black moments are when I doubt if I am really doing any good. But yet on the whole my conscience or my self-conceit tells me that I am. If one cannot do much with the mass, there is at least the consola- tion of doing good to the individual. And, after all, is it not enough to have been an influence for good over one or tw^o human souls ? There are quite fine characters here- about — especially in the w^omen — natures capable not only of self-sacrifice, but of deli- cacy of sentiment. To have learnt to know of such, to have been of service to one or two of such — is not this ample return? I could not get to St. James' Hall to hear your friend's symphony at the Henschel concert. I have been reading Mme. Blavatsky's lat- est book, and getting quite interested in occult philosophy. Unfortunately I have to do all my reading in bed, and I don't find the book as soothing a soporific as most new books. For keeping one awake I find The- osophy as bad as toothache. . . . ' " 70 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. "THE BIG BOW MYSTERY SOLVED. "Sir — I wonder if anyone besides myself has been struck by the incredible bad taste of Mr. Grodman's letter in your last issue. That he, a former servant of the Depart- ment, should publicly insult and run it down can only be charitably explained by the supposition that his judgment is fail- ing him in his old age. In view of this let- ter, are the relatives of the deceased justi- fied in entrusting him with any private doc- uments? It is, no doubt, very good of him to undertake to avenge one whom he seems snobbishly anxious to claim as a friend; but, all things considered, should not his let- ter have been headed The Big Bow Mystery Shelved?' I enclose my card, and am, sir, "Your obedient servant, "Scotland Yard." George Grodman read this letter with annoyance, and, crumpling up the paper, murmured scornfully, "Edward Wimp." THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 71 CHAPTER V. "Yes, but what will become of the Beau- tiful?" said Denzil Cantercot. "Hang the Beautiful!" said Peter Crowl, as if he were on the committee of the Academy. "Give me the True." Denzil did nothing of the sort. He didn't happen to have it about him. Denzil Cantercot stood smoking a cigar- ette in his landlord's shop, and imparting an air of distinction and an agreeable aroma to the close leathery atmosphere. Crowl cobbled away, talking to his tenant without raising his eyes. He was a small, big-head- ed, sallow, sad-eyed man, with a greasy apron. Denzil was wearing a heavy over- coat with a fur collar. He was never seen without it in public during the winter. In private he removed it and sat in his shirt sleeves. Crowl was a thinker, or thought he was — which seems to involve original 72 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. thinking anyway. His hair was thinning rapidly at the top, as if his brain was strug- gling to get as near as possible to the reali- ties of things. He prided himself on hav- ing no fads. Few men are without some foi- ble or hobby; Crowl felt almost lonely at times in his superiority. He was a Vegeta- rian, a Secularist, a Blue Ribbonite, a Re- publican, and an Anti-Tobacconist. Meat was a fad. Drink was a fad. Religion was a fad. Monarchy was a fad. Tobacco was a fad. "A plain man like me," Crowl used to say, "can live without fads." "A plain man" was CrowPs catchword. When of a Sunday morning he stood on Mile-end Waste, which was opposite his shop — and held forth to the crowd on the evils of kings, priests and mutton chops, the "plain man" turned up at intervals like the "theme" of a symphonic movement. "I am only a plain man and I want to know." It was a phrase that sabered the spider-webs of logical re- finement, and held them up scornfully on the point. When Crowl went for a little recreation in Victoria Park on Sunday afternoons, it was with this phrase that he THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 73 invariably routed the supernaturalists. Crowl knew his Bible better than most min- isters, and always carried a minutely-print- ed copy in his pocket, dogs-eared to mark contradictions in the text. The second i chapter of Jeremiah says one tiling; the first chapter of Corinthians says another. Two contradictory statements may both be true, but ^^I am only a plain man, and I want to know." Crowl spent a large part of his time in setting "the word against the word." Cock-fighting affords its votaries no acuter pleasure than Growl derived from setting two texts by the ears. Crowl had a meta- physical genius which sent his Sunday morning disciples frantic with admiration, and struck the enemy dumb with dis- may. He had discovered, for instance, that the Deity could not move, ow- ing to already filling all space. He was also the first to invent, for the con- fusion of the clerical, the crucial case of a saint dying at the Antipodes con- temporaneously with another in London. Both went skyward to heaven, yet the two traveled in directly opposite directions. In 74 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. all eternity they would never meet. Which, then, got to heaven? Or was there no such place? "I am only a plain man, and I want to know." Preserve us our open spaces ; they exist to testify to the incurable interest of humanity in the Unknown and the Misun- derstood. Even ^Arry is capable of five min- utes' attention to speculative theology, if 'Arriet isn't in a 'urry. Peter Crowl was not sorry to have a lodger like Denzil Cantercot, who, though a man of parts and thus worth powder and shot, was so hopelessly wrong on all sub- jects under the sun. In only one point did Peter Crowl agree with Denzil Cantercot — he admired Denzil Cantercot secretly. When he asked him for the True — which was about twice a day on the average — he didn't really expect to get it from him. He knew that Denzil was a poet. "The Beautiful," he went on, "is a thing that only appeals to men like you. The True is for all men. The majority have the first claim. Till then you poets must stand aside. The True and the Useful — ^that's what we want. The Good of Society is the THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 75 only test of things. Everything stands or falls by the Good of Society. "The Good of Society!" echoed Denzil, scornfully. "What's the Good of Society? The Individual is before all. The mass must be sacrificed to the Great Man. Other- wise the Great Man will be sacrificed to the mass. Without great men there would be no art. Without art life would be a blank." "Ah, but we should fill it up with bread and butter," said Peter Crowl. "Yes, it is bread and butter that kills the Beautiful," said Denzil Cantercot bitterly. "Many of us start by following the butterfly through the verdant meadows, but we turn aside " "To get the grub," chuckled Peter, cob- bling away. "Peter, if you make a jest of everything, I'll not waste my time on you." DenziPs wild eyes flashed angrily. He shook his long hair. Life was very serious to him. He never wrote comic verse inten- tionally. There are three reasons why men of genins! have long hair. One is, that thej 76 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. forget it is growing. The second is, that they like it. The third is, that it comes cheaper; they wear it long for the same reason that they wear their hats long. Owing to this peculiarity of genius, you may get quite a reputation for lack of two- pence. The economic reason did not apply to Denzil, who could always get credit with the profession on the strength of his ap- pearance. Therefore, when street Arabs vocally commanded him to get his hair cut, they were doing no service to barbers. Why does all the world watch over barbers and conspire to promote their interests? Den- zil would have told you it was not to serve the barbers, but to gratify the crowd's in- stinctive resentment of originality^ In his palmy days Denzil had been an editor, but he no more thought of turning his scissors against himself than of swallowing his paste. The efficacy of hair has changed since the days of Samson, otherwise Denzil would have been a Hercules instead of a long, thin, nervous man, looking too brittle and delicate to be used even for a pipe-clean- er. The narrow oval of his face sloped to a THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 77 pointed, untrimmed beard. His linen was reproachable, his dingy boots were down at heel, and his cocked hat was drab with dust. Such are the effects of a love for the Beautiful. Peter Crowl was impressed with DenziPs condemnation of flippancy, and he hastened to turn off the joke. "Fm quite serious," he said. "Butterflies are no good to nothing or nobody; caterpil- lars at least save the birds from starving."' "Just like your view of things, Peter," said Denzil. "Good morning, madam." This to Mrs. Crowl, to whom he removed his hat with elaborate courtesy. Mrs. Crowl grunt- ed and looked at her husband with a note of interrogation in each eye. For some sec- onds Crowl stuck to his last, endeavoring not to see the question. He shifted uneasily on his stool. His wife coughed grimly. He looked up, saw her towering over him, and helplessly shook his head in a horizontal direction. It was wonderful how Mrs. Crowl towered over Mr. Crowl, even when he stood up in his shoes. She 78 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. measured half an inch less. It was quite an optical illusion. "Mr. Crowl," said Mrs. Crowl, "then 111 tell him." "No, no, my dear, not yet," faltered Peter helplessly; "leave it to me." "Fve left it to you long enough. Youll never do nothing. If it was a question of provin' to a lot o' chuckleheads that Jolly- gee and Genesis, or some other dead and gone Scripture folk that don't consaru no mortal soul, used to contradict each other, your tongue 'ud run thirteen to the dozen. But when it's a matter of takin' the bread out o' the mouths o' 3^our own children, you ain't got no more to say for yourself than a lamppost. Here's a man stayin' with you for weeks and weeks — eat in' and drinkin' the flesh off your bones — without payin' a far- '' "Hush, hush, mother; it's all right," said poor Crowl, red as fire. Denzil looked at her dreamily. "Is it pos- sible you are alluding to me, Mrs. Crowl?" he said. "Who then should I be alludin' to, Mr. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 79 Cantercot? Here's seven weeks come and gone, and not a blessed 'aypenny have I " "My dear Mrs. Crowl," said Denzil, re- moving his cigarette from his mouth with a pained air, "why reproach me for your neglect?" "My neglect! I like that!" "I don't," said Denzil, more sharply. "If you had sent me in the bill you would have had the money long ago. How do you ex- pect me to think of these details?" "We ain't so grand down here. People pays their way — they don't get no bills," said Mrs. Crowl, accentuating the word Avith infinite scorn. Peter hammered away at a nail, as though to drown his spouse's voice. "It's three pounds fourteen and eight- pence, if you're so anxious to know," Mrs. Crowl resumed. "And there ain't a woman in the Mile End Road as 'ud a-done it cheap- er, with bread at fourpence threefarden a quartern and landlords clamorin' for rent every Monday morning almost afore the sun's up and folks draggin' and slidderin' 80 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. on till their shoes is only fit to throw after brides, and Christmas comin^ and seven- pence a week for schoolin'!" Peter winced under the last item. He had felt it coming — like Christmas. His wife and he parted company on the ques- tion of Free Education. Peter felt that, having brought nine children into the world, it was only fair he should pay a penny a week for each of those old enough to bear educating. His better half argued that, having so many children, they ought in reason to be exempted. Only people who had few children could spare the penny. But the one point on which the cobbler- skeptic of the Mile End Road got his way was this of the fees. It was a question of conscience, and Mrs. Crowl had never made application for their remission, though she often slapped her children in vexation in- stead. They were used to slapping, and when nobody else slapped them they slapped one another. They were bright, ill- mannered brats, who pestered their parents and worried their teachers, and were happy as the Road was long. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 81 "Bother the school fees!" Peter retorted, vexed. "Mr. Cantercot's not responsible for jour children." "I should hope not, indeed, Mr. Crowl," Mrs. Crowl said sternly. "I'm ashamed of you." And with that she flounced out of the shop into the back parlor. "It's all right," I'eter called after her soothingly. "The money'll be all right, mother."^ In lower circles it is customary to call your wife your mother; in somewhat su- perior circles it is the fashion to speak of her as "the wife" as you speak of "the Stock Exchange," or "the Thames," without claim- ing any peculiar property. Instinctively men are ashamed of being moral and do- mesticated. Denzil puffed his cigarette, unembar- rassed. Peter bent attentively over his work, making nervous stabs with his awl. There was a long silence. An organ-grinder played a waltz outside, unregarded; and, failing to annoy anybody, moved on. Denzil lit another cigarette. The dirty-faced clock on the shop wall chimed twelve. 82 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. "What do you think," said Growl, "of Re- publics?" "They are low," Denzil replied. "With- out a Monarch there is no visible incarna- tion of Authority." "What! do you call Queen Victoria visi- ble?" "Peter, do you want to drive me from the house? Leave frivolousness to v/omen, whose minds are only large enough for do mestic difficulties. Republics are low. Plato mercifully kept the poets out of his. Republics are not congenial soil for poetry." "What nonsense! If England dropped its fad of Monarchy and became a Republic to-morrow, do you mean to say that ?" "I mean to say that there would be no Poet Laureate to begin with." "Who's fribbling now, you or me. Canter- cot? But I don't care a button-hook about poets, present company always excepted. Pm only a plain man, and I want to know Where's the sense of givin' any one person authority over everybody else?" "Ah, that's what Tom Mortlake used to say. Wait till you're in power, Peter, with THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 83 trade-union money to control, and working men bursting to give you flying angels and to carry you aloft, like a banner, huzzali- ing." "Ah, that's because he^s head and shoul- ders above 'em already," said Crowl, with a flash in his sad gray eyes. "Still, it don't prove that I'd talk any different. And I think you're quite wrong about his being spoiled. Tom's a fine fellow — a man every inch of him, and that's a good many. I don't deny he has his weaknesses, and there was a time when he stood in this very shop and denounced that poor dead Constant. *Crow],' said he, ^that man'll do mischief. I don't like these kid-glove philanthropists mixing themselves up in practical labor dis- putes they don't understand.' " Denzil whistled involuntarily. It was a piece of news. "I daresay,'^ continued Crowl, "he's a bit jealous of anybody's interference with his influence. But in this case the jealousy did wear off, you see, for the poor fallow and he got quite pals, as everybody knows. Tom's not the man to hug a prejudice. However, 84 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. all that don't prove nothing against Eepub- lics. Look at the Czar and the Jews. I'm only a plain man, but I wouldn't live in Russia not for — not for all the leather in it ! An Englishman, taxed as he is to keep up his Fad of Monarchy, is at least king in his own castle, whoever bosses it at Windsor. Excuse me a minute, the missus is callin'." "Excuse me a minute. I'm going, and I want to say before I go — I feel it is only right you should know at once — that after what has passed to-day I can never be on the same footing here as in the — shall I say pleasant? — days of yore." "Oh, no, Cantercot. Don't say that; don't say that !" pleaded the little cobbler. "Well, shall I say unpleasant, then?" "No, no, Cantercot. Don'^t misunderstand me. Mother has been very much put to it lately to rub along. You see she has such a growing family. It grows — daily. But never mind her. You pay whenever you've got the nione}^" Denzil shook his head. "It cannot be. You know when I came here first I rented your top room and boarded myself. Then THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 85 T learnt to know you. We talked together. Of the Beautiful. And the Useful. I found you had no soul. But you were honest, and I liked you. I went so far as to take my meals with your family. I made myself at home in your back parlor. But the vase has been shattered (I do not refer to that on the mantelpiece), and though the scent of the roses may cling to it still, it can be pieced together — nevermore." He shook his hair sadly and shambled out of the shop. Crowl would have gone after him, but Mrs. Crowl was still calling, and ladies must have the precedence in all polite societies. Cantercot went straight — or as straight as his loose gait permitted — to 46 Glover Street, and knocked at the door. Grodman's factotum opened it. She was a pock- marked person, with a brickdust complex- ion and a coquettish manner. "Oh, here we are again!" she said viva- ciously. "Don't talk like a clown," Cantercot snapped. "Is Mr. Grodman in?" "No, you've put him out," growled the gentleman himself, suddenly appearing in 86 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. his slippers. "Come in. Wliat the devil have you been doing with yourself since the inquest? Drinking again?" "I've sworn off. Haven't touched a drop since ^" "The murder?" "Eh?" said Denzil Cantercot, startled. "What do you mean?" "What I say. Since December 4, 1 reckon everything from that murder, now, as they reckon longitude from Greenwich." "Oh," said Denzil Cantercot. "Let me see. Nearly a fortnight. What a long time to keep away from Drink — and Me." "I don't know which is worse," said Den- zil, irritated. "You both steal away my brains." "Indeed?" said Grodman, with an amused smile. "Well, it's only petty pilfering, after all. What's put salt on your wounds?" "The twenty-fourth edition of my book." "Whose book?" "Well, your book. You must be making piles of money out of ^Criminals I Have Caught.' " THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 87 " 'Criminals / Have Caught/ '' corrected Grodman. "My dear Denzil, how often am I to point out that I went through the ex- periences that make the backbone of my book, not you? In each case I cooked the (•riminaPs goose. Any journalist could have supplied the dressing. '^ "The contrary. The journeymen of jour- nalism would have left the truth naked. You yourself could have done that — for there is no man to beat you at cold, lucid, scientific statement. But I idealized the bare facts and lifted them into the realm of poetry and literature. The twenty-fourth edition of the book attests my success." "Rot ! The twenty-fourth edition was all owing to the murder! Did you do that?" "You take one up so sharply, Mr. Grod- man," said Denzil, changing his tone. "No — Pve retired," laughed Grodman. Denzil did not reprove the ex-detective's flippancy. He even laughed a little. "Well, give me another fiver, and I'll cry ^quits.' Fm in debt." "Not a penny. Why haven't you been to see me since the murder? I had to write 7 88 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. that letter to the Tell Mell Press^ myself. You might have earned a crown." "IVe had writer's cramp, and couldn't do your last job. I was coming to tell you so on the morning of the " "Murder. So you said at the inquest." "It's true." "Of course. Weren't you on your oath? It was very zealous of you to get up so early to tell me. In which hand did you have this cramp?" "Why, in the right, of course." "And 3^ou couldn't write with your left?" "I don't think I could even hold a pen." "Or any other instrument, mayhap. What had you been doing to bring it on?" "Writing too much. That is the only pos- sible cause." "Oh, I don't know. Writing what?" Denzil hesitated. "An epic poem." "No wonder you're in debt. Will a sover- eign get you out of it?" "No ; it wouldn't be the least use to me." "Here it is, then." Denzil took the coin and his hat. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 89 "Aren't you going to earn it, you beggar? Sit down and write something for me." Denzil got pen and paper, and took his place. "What do you want me to' write?" "The Epic Poem." Denzil started and flushed. But he set to work. Grodman leaned back in his arm- chair and laughed, studying the poet's grave face. Denzil wrote three lines and paused, "Can't remember any more? Well, read me the start." Denzil read : "Of man's first disobedience and the fruit Of that forbidden tree whose mortal taste Brought death into the world—" "Hold on!" cried Grodman; "what morbid subjects you choose, to be sure." "Morbid! Why, Milton chose the same subject!" "Blow Milton. Take yourself off— you and your Epics." Denzil went. The pock-marked person opened the street door for him. 90 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. "When am I to have that new dress, dear?" she whispered coqiiettishly. "I have no money, Jane/' he said shortly. "You have a sovereign.'' Denzil gave her the sovereign, and slammed the door viciously. Grodman over- heard their whispers, and laughed silently. His hearing was acute. Jane had first in- troduced Denzil to his acquaintance about two years ago, w^hen he spoke of getting an amanuensis, and the poet had been doing odd jobs for him ever since. Grodman argued that Jane had her reasons. With- out knowing them he got a hold over both. There was no one, he felt, he could not get a hold over. All men — and women — have something to conceal, and you have only to pretend to know what it is. Thus Grodman, w^ho was nothing if not scientific. Denzil Cantercot shambled home thoughtfully, and abstractedly took his place at the Growl dinner-table. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 91 CHAPTER VI. Mrs. Crowl surveyed Denzil Cantercot so stouily and cut him his beef so savagely that he said grace when the dinner was over. Peter fed his metaphysical genius on tomatoes. He was tolerant enough to allow his family to follow their Fads; but no savory smells ever tempted him to be false to his vegetable loves. Besides, meat might have reminded him too much of his work. There is nothing like leather, but Bow beef- steaks occasionally come very near it. After dinner Denzil usually indulged in poetic reverie. But to-day he did not take his nap. He went out at once to "raise the wind." But there was a dead calm every- w^here. In vain he asked for an advance at the office of the "Mile End Mirror," to which he contributed scathing leaderettes about vestrymen. In vain he trudged to the city and offered to write the "Ham and 92 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. Eggs Gazette" an essay on the modern methods of bacon-curing. Denzil knew a great deal about the breeding and slaugh- tering of pigs, smoke-lofts and drying pro- cesses, having for years dictated the policy of the "New Pork Herald" in these momen- tous matters. Denzil also knew a great deal about many other esoteric matters, includ- ing weaving machines, the manufacture of cabbage leaves and snuff, and the inner economy of drain-pipes. He had written for the trade papers since boyhood. But there is great competition on these papers. So many men of literary gifts know all about the intricate technicalities of manu- factures and markets, and are eager to set the trade right. Grodman perhaps hardly allowed sufficiently for the step backward that Denzil made when he devoted his whole time for months to "Criminals I Have Caught." It was as damaging as a de- bauch. For when your rivals are pushing forward, to stand still is to go back. In despair Denzil shambled toilsomely to Bethnal Green. He paused before the win- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 93 dow of a little tobacconist's shop, wherein was displayed a placard announcing "PLOTS FOR SALE." The announcement went on to state that a large stock of plots was to be obtained on the premises — embracing sensational plots, humorous plots, love plots, religious plots, and poetic plots; also complete man- uscripts, original novels, poems and tales. Apply within. It was a very dirty-looking shop, with be- grimed bricks and blackened woodwork. The window contained some musty old books, an assortment of pipes and tobacco, and a large. number of the vilest daubs un- hung, painted in oil on Academy boards, and unframed. These were intended for landscapes, as you could tell from the titles. The most expensive was "Chingford Church," and it w^as marked Is. 9d. The others ran from Gd. to Is. 3d., and were most- ly representations of Scotch scenery — a loch with mountains in the background, with solid reflections in the water and a tree in 94 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. the foreground. Sometimes the tree would be in the background. Then the loch would be in the foreground. Sky and water were intensely blue in all. The name of the col- lection was '^Original oil paintings done by hand." Dust lay thick upon everything, as if carefully shoveled on; and the pro- prietor looked as if he slept in his shop win- dow at night without taking his clothes off. He was a gaunt man with a red nose, long but scanty black locks covered by a smok- ing cap, and a luxuriant black mustache. He smoked a long clay pipe, and had the air of a broken-down operatic villain. "Ah, good afternoon, Mr. Oantercot," he said, rubbing his hands, half from cold, half from usage; "what have you brought me?" "Nothing," said Denzil, "but if you will lend me a sovereign ITl do you a stunner." The operatic villain shook his locks, his eyes full of ]3awky cunning. "If you did it after that it would be a stunner." What the operatic villain did with these plots, and who bought them, Cantercot never knew nor cared to know. Brains are THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 95 cheap to-day, and Denzil was glad enough to find a customer. "Surely you've known me long enough to trust me," he cried. "Trust is dead," said the operatic villain, puffing away. "So is Queen Anne," cried the irritated poet. His eyes took a dangerous hunted look, ^oney he must have. But the oper- atic villain was inflexible. No plot, no sup- per. Poor Denzil went out flaming. He knew not where to turn. Temporarily he turned on his heel again and stared despairingly at the shop window. Again he read the legend: "PLOTS FOR SALE." He stared so long at this that it lost its meaning. When the sense of the words sud- denly flashed upon him again, they bore a new significance. He went in meekly, and borrowed fourpence of the operatic villain. Then he took the 'bus for Scotland Yard. There was a not ill-looking servant girl in the 'bus. The rhythm of the vehicle shaped 96 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. itself into rhymes in his brain. He forgot all about his situation and his object. He had never really written an epic — except "Paradise Lost" — but he composed lyrics about wine and women and often wept to think how miserable he was. But nobody ever bought anything of him, except articles on bacon-curing or attacks on vestrymen. He was a strange, wild creature, and the wench felt quite pretty under his ardent gaze. It almost hypnotized her, though, and she looked down at her new French kid boots to escape it. At Scotland Yard Denzil asked for Edward Wimp. Edward Wimp was not on; view. Like kings and editors. Detectives are difficult of approach — unless you are a criminal, when you cannot see anything of them at all. Denzil knew of Edward Wimp, principally because of Grodman's contempt for his successor. Wimp was a man of taste and culture. Grodman's in- terests were entirely concentrated on the problems of logic and evidence. Books about these formed his sole reading; for belles lettres he cared not a straw. Wimp, THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 97 with his flexible intellect, had a great contempt for Grodman and his slow, labori- ous, ponderous, almost Teutonic methods. Worse, he almost threatened to eclipse the radiant tradition of Grodman by some won- derfully ingenious bits of workmanship. Wimp was at his greatest in collecting cir- cumstantial evidence; in putting two and two together to make five. He would col- lect together a number of dark and discon- nected data and flash across them the elec- tric light of some unifying hypothesis in a way which would have done credit to a Dar- win or a Faraday. An intellect which might have served to unveil the secret work- ings of nature was subverted to the protec- tion of a capitalistic civilization. By the assistance of a friendly policeman, whom the poet magnetized into the belief that his business was a matter of life and death, Denzil obtained the great detective's private address. It was near King's Cross. By a miracle Wimp was at hom^ in the aft- ernoon. He was writing when Denzil was ushered up three pairs of stairs into his 98 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. presence, but he got up and flashed the bulPs-eje of his glance upon the visitor. "Mr. Denzil Cantercot, I believe!" said Wimp. Denzil started. He had not sent up his name, merely describing himself as a gen- tleman. "That is my name," he murmured. "You were one of the witnesses at the in- quest on the body of the late Arthur Con- stant. I have your evidence there." He pointed to a file. "Why have you come to give fresh evidence?" Again Denzil started, flushing in addi- tion this time. "I want money," he said, almost involuntarily. "Sit down." Denzil sat. Wimp stood. Wimp was young and fresh-colored. He had a Roman nose, and was smartly dressed. He had beaten Grodman by dis- covering the wife Heaven meant for him. He had a bouncing boy, who stole jam out of the pantry without anyone being the wiser. Wimp did what work he could do at home in a secluded study at the top of the house. Outside his chamber of horrors THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 99 he was the ordinary husband of com- merce. He adored his wife, who thought poorly of his intellect, but highly of his heart. In domestic difficulties Wimp was helpless. He could not even tell whether the servant's "character" was forged or genuine. Probably he could not level himself to such petty problems. He was like the senior wrangler who has for- gotten how to do quadratics, and has to solve equations of the second degree by the calculus. "How much money do you want?" he asked. "I do not make bargains," Denzil replied, his calm come back by this time. "I came to tender you a suggestion. It struck me that you might offer me a fiver for my trou- ble. Should you do so, I shall not refuse it." "You shall not refuse it — if you deserve it." "Good. I will come to the point at once. My suggestion concerns — Tom Mortlake." Denzil threw out the name as if it were a torpedo. Wimp did not move. 100 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. "Tom Mortlake," went on Denzil, looking disappointed^ "had a sweetheart." lie paused impressively. Wimp said "Yes?" "Where is that sweetheart now?" "Where, indeed?" "You know about her disappearance?" "You have just informed me of it." "Yes, she is gone — without a trace. She went about a fortnight before Mr. Con- stant's murder." "Murder? How do you know it was a murder?" "Mr. Grodman says so," said Denzil, startled again. "H'm! Isn't that rather a proof that it was suicide? Well, go on." "About a fortnight before the suicide, Jessie Dymond disappeared. So they tell me in Stepney Green, where she lodged and worked." "What was she?" "She was a dressmaker. She had a won- derful talent. Quite fashionable ladies got to know of it. One of her dresses was pre- THE BIG BOW MYSTETC ;' . \ ', , , J idl \. sen ted at Court. I think the lady forgot to pay for it; so Jessie's landlady said." "Did she live alone?" ^'^She had no parents, but the house was respectable." "Good-looking, I suppose?" "As a poet's dream." "As yours, for instance?" "I am a poet; I dream." "You dream you are a poet. Well, well! She was engaged to Mortlake?" "Oh, yes ! They made no secret of it. The engagement was an old one. When he was earning 36s. a week as a compositor they were saving up to buy a home. He worked at Eailton and Hockes', who print the ^I^ew Pork Herald.' I used to take my 'copy' into the comps' room, and one day the Father of the Chapel told me all about 'Mortlake and his young woman.' Ye gods ! How times are changed! Two years ago Mortlake had to struggle with my cali- graphy — now he is in with all the nobs, and goes to the 'at homes' of the aristocracy." "Radical M. P.'s," murmured Wimp, smil- ing. 101:: ,, T^HE BIG BOW MYSTERY. "While I am still barred from the claz» zling drawing-rooms, where beauty and in- tellect foregather. A mere artisan! A manual laborer!" DenziPs eyes flashed an- grily. He rose with excitement. "They say he always was a jabberer in the com- posing-room, and he has jabbered himself right out of it and into a pretty good thing. He didn't have much to say about the crimes of capital when he was set up to second the toast of ^Kailton and Hockes' at the beanfeast." "Toast and butter, toast and butter," said Wimp genially. "I shouldn't blame a man for serving the two together, Mr. Canter- cot." Denzil forced a laugh. "Yes; but consis- tency's my motto. I like to see the royal soul immaculate, unchanging, immovable by for- tune. Anyhow, when better times came for Mortlake the engagement still dragged on. He did not visit her so much. This last autumn he saw very little of her." "How do you know?" "I — I was often in Stepney Green. My business took me past the house of an even- THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 103 ing. Sometimes there was no light in her room. That meant she was downstairs gos- siping with the landhidy." "She might have been out with Tom?'^ "No, sir; I knew Tom was on the plat- form somewhere or other. He was work- ing up to all hours organizing the eight hours working movement." "A very good reason for relaxing his sweethearting." "It was. He never went to Stepney Green on a week night." "But you always did." ^^o — not every night." "You didn't go in?" "Never. She wouldn't permit my visits. She was a girl of strong character. She al- ways reminded me of Flora Macdonald." "Another lady of your acquaintance?" "A lady I know better than the shadows who surround me; who is more real to me than the women who pester me for the price for apartments. Jessie Dymond, too, was of the race of heroines. Her eyes were clear blue, two wells with Truth at the bottom of each When I looked into those eyes my 104 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. own were dazzled. They were the only eyes I coiikl never make dreamy.'' He waved his hand as if making a pass with it. ^It was she who had the influence over me." ^^You knew her then?" "Oh, yes. I knew Tom from the old ^IS'ew Pork Herald' days, and when I first met him with Jessie hanging on his arm he was quite proud to introduce her to a poet. When he got on he tried to shake me off." "You should have repaid him what you borrowed." "It— it— was only a trifle," stammered Denzil. "Yes, but the world turns on trifles," said the wise Wimp. "The world is itself a trifle," said the pen- sive poet. "The Beautiful alone is deserv- ing of our regard." "And when the Beautiful was not gossip- ing with her landlady, did she gossip with you as you passed the door?" "Alas, no! She sat in her room reading, and cast a shadow — ^" "On your life?" "No; on the blind." THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 105 "Always one shadow?" "No, sir. Once or twice, two." "Ah, you had been drinking." "On my life, not. I have sworn off the treacherous wine-cup." "That's right. Beer is bad for poets. It makes their feet shaky. Whose was the second shadow?" "A man's." "Naturally. Mortlake's, perhaps?" "Impossible. He was still striking eight hours." "You found out whose? You didn't leave it a shadow of doubt?" "No; I waited till the substance came out." "It was Arthur Constant." "You are a magician! You — you terrify me. Yes, it was he." "Only once or twice, you say?" "I didn't keep watch over them." "No, no, of course not. You only passed casually. I understand you thoroughly." Denzil did not feel comfortable at the as- sertion. "What did he go there for?" Wimp went on. 106 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. "I don't know. I'd stake my soui on Jes- sie's honor.'- "You might double your stake without risk." "Yes, I might! I would! You see her with my eyes." "For the moment they are the only ones available. When was the last time you saw the two together?" "About the middle of November." "Mortlake knew nothing of their meet- ings?" "I don't know. Perhaps he did. Mr. Con- stant had probably enlisted her in his social mission work. I knew she was one of the attendants at the big children's tea in the Great Assembly Hall early in November. He treated her quite like a lady. She was the only attendant who worked with her hands." "The others carried the cups on their feet, I suppose?" "No; how could that be? My meaning is that all the other attendants were real ladies, and Jessie was only an amateur, so to speak. There was no novelty for her in THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 107 handing kids cups of tea. I daresay she had helped her landlady often enough at that — there's quite a bushel of brats below stairs. It's almost as bad as at friend CrowFs. Jessie was a real brick. But per- haps Tom didn't know her value. Perhaps he didn't like Constant to call on her, and it led to a quarrel. Anyhow, she's disap- peared, like the snowfall on the river. There's not a trace. The landlady, who was such a friend of hers that Jessie used to make up her stuff into dresses for nothing, tells me that she's dreadfully annoyed at not having been left the slightest clue to her late tenant's whereabouts." "You have been making inquiries on your own account apparently." "Only of the landlady. Jessie never even gave her the week's notice, but paid her in lieu of it, and left immediately. The land- lady told me I could have knocked her down with a feather. Unfortunately, I wasn't there to do it, for I should certainly have knocked her down for not keeping her eyes open better. She says if she had only had the least suspicion beforehand that the 108 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. minx (she dared to call Jessie a minx) was going, she'd have known where, or her name would have been somebody else's. And yet she admits that Jessie was looking ill and worried. Stupid old hag!" ^*A woman of character," murmured the detective. "Didn't I tell you so?" cried Denzil eager- ly. "Another girl would have let out that she was going. But, no! not a word. She I)lumped down the money and walked out. The landlady ran upstairs. None of Jes- sie's things were there. She must have quietly sold them off, or transferred them to the new place. I never in my life met a girl who so thoroughly knew her own mind or had a mind so worth knowing. She al- ways reminded me of the Maid of Sara- gossa." "Indeed! And when did she leave?" ' "On the 19th of November." "Mortlake of course knows where she is?" "I can't say. Last time I was at the house to inquire — it was at the end of November — he hadn't been seen there for six weeks. THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. 109 He wrote to her, of course, sometimes — the landlady knew his writing." Wimp looked Denzil straight in the eye^, and said, "You mean, of course, to accuse Mortlake of the murder of Mr. Constant?" "N-n-no, not at all," stammered Denzil, "only you know what Mr. Grodman wrote to the Tell MelL' The more we know about Mr. Constant's life the more we shall know about the manner of his death. I thought my information would be valuable to you, and I brought it." "And why didn't you take it to Mr. Grod- man?" "Because I thought it wouldn't be valu- able to me." "You wrote ^Criminals I Have Caught.' " "How — how do you know that?" Wimp was startling him to-day with a vengeance. "Your style, my dear Mr. Cantercot. The unique noble style." "Yes, I was afraid it would betray me," said Denzil. "And since you know, I may tell you that Grodman's a mean curmudg- eon. What does he want with all that money and those houses — a man with no 110 THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. sense of the Beautifut? He'd have taken my information, and given me more kicks than ha^pence for it, so to speak." "Yes, he is a shrewd man after all. I don't see anything valuable in your evi- dence against Mortlake," "No !" said Denzil in a disappointed tone, and fearing he was going to be robbed. "Not when Mor-tlake was already jealous of Mr. Constant, who was a sort of rival organ- izer, unpaid! A kind of blackleg doing the work cheaper — nay, for nothing." "Did Mortlake tell you he was Jealous?" said Wimp, a shade of sarcastic contempt piercing through his tones. "Oh, yes! He said to me, ^That man will work mischief. I don't like your kid-glove philanthropists middling in matters they don't understand.' " "Those were his very words?" "His ipsissimxi verbal "Very well. I have your address in my files. Here is a sovereign for you." "Only one sovereign! It's not the least use to me." THE BIG BOW MYSTERY. Ill "Very well. It's of great use to me. I ha