the morning, fronts the market square, and from it you can see about all there is to see of the town. He was standing at the door, under the porch, looking all round him, and I overheard him talking to himself as I went up behind him.

“ ‘Aye!’ he was saying, as he looked this way and that, ‘there’s the old church, and the old moot-hall, and the old marketplace, and the old gabled and thatched houses, and even the old town pump⁠—they haven’t changed a bit, I reckon, in all these years!’ Then he caught sight of me, and he smiled. ‘Not many changes in this old place, landlady, in your time?’ he said pleasantly. ‘No, sir,’ I answered. ‘We don’t change much in even a hundred years in Marketstoke.’ ‘No!’ he said, and shook his head. ‘No⁠—the change is in men, in men!’ And then he suddenly set straight off across the square to the churchyard. ‘You’ve known Marketstoke before,’ I said to myself.”

“You didn’t ask him that?” inquired Mr. Pawle, eagerly.

“I didn’t, sir,” replied Mrs. Summers. “I never asked him a question all the time he was here. I thought that if I was correct in what I fancied, I should hear him say something. But he never did say anything of that sort⁠—all the same, I felt more and more certain that he did know the place. And during the time he was here, he went about in it in a fashion that convinced me that my ideas were right. He was in and around the church a great deal⁠—the vicar and the parish clerk can tell you more about his visits there than I can⁠—and he was at the old moot-hall several times, looking over certain old things they keep there, and he visited Ellingham Park twice, and was shown over the house. And before he’d been here two days I came to a certain conclusion about him, and I’ve had it ever since, though he never said one word, or did one thing that could positively confirm me in it.”

“Yes!” exclaimed Mr. Pawle. “And that, ma’am, was⁠—”

“That he was somebody who disappeared from Marketstoke thirty-five years ago,” answered the landlady, “disappeared completely, and has never been heard of from that day to this!”

Mr. Pawle turned slowly and looked at Viner. He nodded his head several times, then turned to Mrs. Summers and regarded her fixedly.

“And that somebody?” he asked in hushed accents. “Who was he?”

The landlady smoothed her silk apron and shook her head.

“It’s a long story, sir,” she answered. “I think you must have heard something of it⁠—though to be sure, it was not talked of much at the time, and didn’t become public until legal proceedings became necessary, some years ago. You’re aware, of course, that just outside the town here is Ellingham Park, the seat of the Earl of Ellingham. Well, what I have to tell you has to do with them, and I shall have to go back a good way. Thirty-five years ago the head of the family was the seventh Earl, who was then getting on in life. He was a very overbearing, harsh old gentleman, not at all liked⁠—the people here in Marketstoke, nearly all of them his tenants, used to be perpetually at variance with him about something or other; he was the sort of man who wanted to have his own way about everything. And he had trouble at home, at any rate with his elder son⁠—he only had two sons and no daughter⁠—and about the time I’m talking of it came to a head. Nobody ever knew exactly what it was all about, but it was well known that Lord Marketstoke⁠—that was the elder son’s name⁠—and his father, the Earl, were at cross purposes, if not actually at daggers drawn, about something or other. And when Lord Marketstoke was about twenty five or twenty-six there was a great quarrel between them; it broke out one night, after dinner; the servants heard angry words between them. That night, gentlemen, Lord Marketstoke left the house and set off to London, and from that day to this he has never been heard of or seen again⁠—hereabouts, at any rate.”

Mr. Pawle, who was listening with the deepest interest and attention, glanced at Viner as if to entreat the same care on his part.

“I do remember something of this, now I come to think of it,” he said. “There were some legal proceedings in connection with this disappearance, I believe, some years ago.”

“Yes, sir⁠—they were in the newspapers,” asserted the old landlady. “But of course, those of us about here knew of how things stood long before that. Lord Marketstoke went away, as I have said. It was known that he had money of his own, that had come to him from his mother, who had died years before all this. But it wasn’t known where he went. Some said he’d gone to the Colonies; some said to America. And at one time there was a rumour that he’d taken another name and joined some foreign army, and been killed in its service. Anyway, nobody ever heard a word of him⁠—Mr. Marcherson, who was steward at Ellingham Park for over forty years (he died last year, a very old man) assured me that from the day on which Lord Marketstoke left his father’s house not one word of him, not a breath, ever reached any of those he’d left behind him. There was absolute silence⁠—he couldn’t have disappeared more completely if they’d laid him in the family vault in Marketstoke church.”

“And evident intention to disappear!” observed Mr. Pawle. “You’ll mark that, Viner⁠—it’s important. Well, ma’am,” he added, turning again to Mrs. Summers. “And⁠—what happened next?”

“Well sir, there was nothing much happened,” continued the landlady. “Matters went on in pretty much the usual way. The old Earl got older, of course, and his temper got worse. Mr. Marcherson assured me that he was never known to mention his missing son⁠—to anybody.

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