And in the end, perhaps about fifteen years after Lord Marketstoke had gone away, he died. And then there was no end of trouble and bother. The Earl had left no will; at any rate, no will could be found, and no lawyer could be heard of who had ever made one. And of course, nobody knew where the new Earl was, nor even if he was alive or dead. There were advertisements sent out all over the world⁠—Mr. Marcherson told me that they were translated into I don’t know how many foreign languages and published in every quarter of the globe⁠—asking for news of him and stating that his father was dead. That was done for some time.”

“With no result?” asked Mr. Pawle.

“No result whatever, sir⁠—I understand that the family solicitors never had one single reply,” answered Mrs. Summers. “I understand, too, that for some time before the old Earl’s death they’d been trying to trace Lord Marketstoke from his last known movements. But that had failed too. He had chambers in London, and he kept a manservant there; the manservant could only say that on the night on which his young master left Ellingham Park he returned to his chambers, went to bed⁠—and had gone when he, the manservant, rose in the morning. No, sir; all the efforts and advertisements were no good whatever, and after some time⁠—some considerable time⁠—the younger brother, the Honourable Charles Cave-Gray⁠—”

“Cave-Gray? Is that the family name?” interrupted Mr. Pawle.

“That’s the family name, sir⁠—Cave-Gray,” replied Mrs. Summers. “One of the oldest families in these parts, sir⁠—the earldom dates from Queen Anne. Well, the Honourable Charles Cave-Gray, and his solicitors, of course, came to the conclusion that Lord Marketstoke was dead, and so⁠—I don’t understand the legal niceties, gentlemen, but they went to the courts to get something done which presumed his death and let Mr. Charles come into the title and estates. And in the end that had been done, and Mr. Charles became the eighth Earl of Ellingham.”

“I remember it now,” muttered Mr. Pawle. “Yes⁠—curious case. But it was proved to the court, I recollect, that everything possible had been done to find the missing heir⁠—and without result.”

“Just so, sir, and so Mr. Charles succeeded,” asserted Mrs. Summers. “He was a very nice, pleasant man, not a bit like his father⁠—a very good and considerate landlord, and much respected. But he’s gone now⁠—died three years ago; and his son, a young man of twenty-two or three, succeeded him⁠—that’s the present Earl, gentlemen. And of him we see very little; he scarcely ever stayed at Ellingham Park, except for a bit of shooting, since he came to the title. And now,” she concluded, with a shrewd glance at the old lawyer, “I wonder if you see, sir, what it was that came into my mind when this Mr. John Ashton came here a few weeks ago, especially after I heard him say what he did, and after I saw how he was spending his time here?”

“I’ve no inkling, ma’am; I’ve no inkling!” said Mr. Pawle. “You wondered⁠—”

“I wondered,” murmured Mrs. Summers, bending closer to her listeners, “if the man who called himself John Ashton wasn’t in reality the long-lost Lord Marketstoke.”

X

The Parish Register

Mr. Pawle, after a glance at Viner which seemed to be full of many meanings, bent forward in his chair and laid a hand on the old landlady’s arm.

“Now, have you said as much as that to anybody before?” he asked, eking her significantly. “Have you mentioned it to your neighbours, for instance, or to anyone in the town?”

“No, sir!” declared Mrs. Summers promptly. “Not to a soul! I’m given to keeping my ideas to myself, especially on matters of importance. There is no one here in Marketstoke that I would have mentioned such a thing to, now that the late steward, Mr. Marcherson, is dead. I shouldn’t have mentioned it to you two gentlemen if it hadn’t been for this dreadful news in the papers. No, I’ve kept my thoughts at home.”

“Wise woman!” said Mr. Pawle. “But now let me ask you a few questions. Did you know this Lord Marketstoke before he disappeared?”

“I only saw him two or three times,” replied the landlady. “It was seldom that he came to Ellingham Park, after his majority. Of course, I saw him a good deal when he was a mere boy. But after he was grown up, only, as I say, a very few times.”

“But you remember him?” suggested Mr. Pawle.

“Oh, very well indeed!” said Mrs. Summers. “I saw him last a day or two before he went away for good.”

“Well, now, did you think you recognized anything of him⁠—making allowance for the difference in age⁠—in this man who called himself John Ashton?” asked Mr. Pawle. “For that, of course, is important!”

Mr. Ashton,” answered Mrs. Summers, “was just such a man as Lord Marketstoke might have been expected to become. Height, build⁠—all the Cave-Grays that I’ve known were big men⁠—colour, were alike. Of course, Mr. Ashton had a beard, slightly grey, but he was a grey-haired man. All the family had crown hair; the present Lord Ellingham is crown-haired. And Mr. Ashton had grey eyes⁠—every Cave-Gray that I remember was grey-eyed. I should say that Mr. Ashton was just what I should have expected Lord Marketstoke to be at sixty.”

“I suppose Ashton never said or did anything here to reveal his secret, if he had one?” asked Mr. Pawle, after a moment’s thoughtful pause.

“Oh, nothing!” replied Mrs. Summers. “He occupied himself, as I tell you, while he was here, and finally he went away in the car in which he had come, saying that he had greatly enjoyed his stay, and that we should see him again sometime. No⁠—he never said anything about himself, that is. But he asked me several questions; I used to talk to him sometimes, of an evening, about the present Lord Ellingham.”

“What sort of questions?” inquired Mr. Pawle.

“Oh⁠—as to what

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