workable one.’

‘Redsey?’ The inspector drew out his note-book, licked a spatulate finger, and rapidly turned the pages. ‘Looks rather bad, if you’re going to take for granted that the body at Bossbury is Rupert Sethleigh. First of all, there’s the question of motive. Well, it seems as though Redsey had a motive all right. Two motives, in fact. He would have been cut out of Sethleigh’s will had Sethleigh lived, and, secondly, he hated his cousin pretty poisonously because Sethleigh wouldn’t unbelt sufficiently to allow Redsey to buy a share in a ranch, so Redsey goes out there soon as a hand instead of a boss. Galling, that.’

‘I see. He doesn’t seem to me a fellow who would kill out of revenge. But the will is a different matter. Who did you get the information from?’

‘The family solicitor. A chap named Grayling.’

‘Oh, that’s good enough. I know Grayling all right.’

‘Yes, sir. Well, next comes opportunity. So far as I can find out, Redsey was the last person to be in company with Sethleigh before the disappearance. Not only that, but he tried to establish an alibi, I should take it, by going into the “Queen’s Head” in Wandles Parva – landlord, William Albert Bondy – at about nine o’clock that night and getting dead drunk. Had to be took home by two labourers, Stanley Joseph Cummings and Henry Richards, both of Wandles Parva, who testify to the same, and were given sixpence apiece by Mrs Bryce Harringay for the job, which they thought could have been a shilling without exactly breaking the lady’s heart. Now I figure it out like this. The two chaps, Sethleigh and Redsey, went into the woods talking, arguing, and, in the end, quarrelling. Then Sethleigh gets annoyed and hands Redsey the information about the will. Redsey gets properly shirty at that and kills his cousin. Then he hides the body in the bushes, and all next day he spends his time playing policeman and stopping people from going into the woods.’

‘Is that a fact?’

‘I had it from Mrs Bryce Harringay first, and Mr Grayling confirmed it. Well, that’s the case against Redsey, sir. Motive, opportunity, alibi, suspicious behaviour afterwards – it looks pretty bad.’

‘Yes, I grant that. But there’s one thing – it puzzles me a good deal – how did he get the body from the woods into Bossbury market, and chop it up without somebody spotting him? I’ve had a lot of enquiries made in Bossbury while you’ve been working at the Wandles end of the affair, and I can’t find anybody who saw him arrive or leave.’

‘It must have been done on the Monday night after dark, sir. Redsey can give a good account of his movements all day Monday, and the account is substantiated by his aunt, the lawyer, young Harringay, and the servants. I’ve gone into all that.’

‘But after dark, Grindy my lad, the market is shut and they drop steel doors over the entrances. I’ve been looking round it, and there’s not a hole where a cat could squeeze in when that market is shut, let alone a chap carrying a dead body. No, that carving of the corpse was done in the daytime, and, if Redsey has got a complete alibi for Monday, you can give up your theories, because he couldn’t have done that nice little job in the butcher’s shop.’

‘Well, what about very early Tuesday morning, sir? The market opens at six, I suppose?’

‘No, not until eight. And Binks the butcher was in his shop at half-past nine.’

‘An hour and a half. H’m! I see your point. Too risky. Binks might have turned up earlier, and caught him at the job.’

‘Yes. As a matter of fact, I fancy I may have stumbled on the method used by the – well, let’s call him the murderer for a minute – to get into the shop without forcing the door. You remember we remarked it was curious that there were no signs of a forced entrance?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘Well, it seems that Binks usually reached the market shop at eight-thirty and opened it for business at nine. The odd half-hour was employed by him and his assistant in getting ready the stock for the day – bringing up carcasses from below, jointing up the stuff, sticking prices on it, and all that. Well, on that particular Tuesday morning the assistant, who had a key and generally turned up a bit earlier than Binks himself, came along and said he’d forgotten his key. It was the first time he had ever done such a thing, but Binks was rather annoyed, because, as it happened, he’d left his own key in his overall pocket, and his overall was locked up inside the shop. So he sent the lad home. Well, the chap was gone about twenty minutes, and then came back and said he couldn’t find the key anywhere, so Binks sent him to his other shop, over which he lives, for a third key, which the lad brought. They then opened the shop and found the bits of the body, as we know.’

‘So either the assistant lost the key and the murderer found it –’ began the inspector.

‘Unlikely,’ demurred the superintendent.

‘Or else the key was stolen from him –’

‘More likely.’

‘Or perhaps he was bribed by the murderer to hand it over.’

‘That’s quite possible, too. I’ve interviewed the fellow – as sawny a specimen as you’d wish to meet – and he swears he did lose it, but he can’t say when or how. He had it on the previous Saturday, because he unlocked the shop with it. He thinks he may have left it sticking in the door, which has a patent lock. He has done that once or twice, and remembered it or seen it there later in the day. Personally, I got the impression he knows all about that key. I reckon he was bribed for it. Now, assuming that is what happened, you see, it means that the crime was not committed in a moment of sudden anger, but was premeditated.’

‘Yes,’ said the inspector, ‘that’s a point, sir, in Redsey’s favour, judging from what I can gather of his character. He might easily fly into a rage and hit somebody over the head, but a premeditated crime, all worked out and arranged beforehand – no, I can’t see Redsey doing things that way. Hot-headed, sir, that’s my opinion; but real vicious, no.’

The superintendent nodded.

‘But what I do think ought to be undertaken next,’ he said, ‘is a thorough search of those woods. After all, we don’t know that the dismembered body is Sethleigh. He may still be lying hidden in some bushes, for all we can tell.’

‘An idea, sir,’ said the inspector. ‘I shall need some help to do a job like that thoroughly.’

‘You’d better take a couple of men and have a go at it this afternoon,’ remarked Bidwell.

‘Very good, sir. And then there’s the question of the Bossbury corpse’s clothing. I suppose nothing’s turned up?’

‘Not a sign nor a stitch of it. I’ve still got men on the job, of course. Something’s bound to turn up in connection with the clothes sooner or later. It is just a question of time.’

‘Then there are those fingerprints on the cleaver and knife at the butcher’s shop. Luckily, Binks the butcher hadn’t handled any of his tools that morning by the time we arrived on the scene.’

‘No. We took his prints, but of course they don’t correspond with any that are on the implements. Luckily again for us, there was no confusion about the prints, because he always washes up his things, including the top of the chopping-block, before he leaves the shop each night.’

‘Of course the prints don’t correspond with any that we know?’ enquired the inspector gloomily. ‘That’s the worst of murder. It isn’t a profession, like burglary, where you can dig out the prints of all the old lags and check them up against the new stuff.’

‘Never mind,’ said the superintendent, whose self-appointed mission seemed to be the soothing of restless subordinates, ‘we’ve got the prints, and I dare say we shall find a use for them in time. They may be those of that sawny lout of a lad that serves in Binks’s shop. I’ll have another go at him to-morrow.’

II

Jim Redsey sat moodily on the steps of the Club House at Culminster and chopped viciously at the turf with his putter. He was alone. Courteously, but quite definitely, three people he knew had cold-shouldered him. Even the pro. had looked at him with a kind of dubious curiosity and had kept out of his way.

A small shrivelled woman stood at the gate and watched him.

‘Surely I’ve seen that large young man before?’ she said.

Felicity Broome nodded.

‘That’s Jimsey,’ she said. ‘Rupert Sethleigh’s cousin, you know.’

‘Indeed?’ said Mrs Bradley. Then, after a pause, she added, ‘I am going over to speak to him, child. You stay

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