'You've left few enough tatters of the supernatural, Masters. Once the police come trampling in, poor old Louis....' I remembered Lady Benning twisting round to glare at me, and the words she had said. 'Never mind. Anything in the nature of a definite clue?'
'Fingerprint men working now. I've got a cursory report from the doctor, but we can't get the full P-M until tomorrow. The van's here, and they'll move him as soon as Bailey gets finished with the interior photographs. Aaa- h!' he snapped, and clenched his hands. 'I wish it 'ud get daylight. Between ourselves, I never wanted daylight so much. There's an indication somewhere - somewhere - if I could see it. And I've bungled this, too. The assistant commissioner'll say I shouldn't have let any footprints get out there; that we should have put down boards, or some like foolishness. As though you could! I begin to see, ah, ah! I begin to see how hard it is to be methodical, and think of everything, when you're mixed up in a case yourself. Clues? No. We didn't find anything more than you saw - except a handkerchief. It's Darworth's; had his initials on it, and it was lying under him.'
'There were some sheets of paper and a fountain pen on the floor,' I suggested. 'Anything written?'
'No such luck. Blank. Empty. Swept clean. And that's all.'
'So - now what?'
'Now,' said Masters vigorously, 'we interview our little tea-party. Bert's taking charge outside, and we shan't be interrupted.... Now, let's get this straight, from my notebook. It was, h'm, I judge it was roughly half-past twelve when Bert and Mr. Halliday and I left you here reading this - this bosh, and went out front there. Miss Latimer thought something had happened to Halliday, and grabbed him when we got to the front hall. Then we went into the room where the rest of 'em were, Bert stopping outside, and I had a talk which was-' he scowled.
'Abortive?'
'Ah! I suppose so. Yes, I daresay. Anyhow, the old. lady (as cool as you please) ordered me to hunt over the house for some chairs so's they could all sit down. And I did. Blast her.... Besides, it was a good chance for a look round. The place is full of broken furniture. Then they slammed the door in my face; but we'd got young Joseph. Bert and I took him to a room across the hall from theirs, which is full of old junk, and we lit a candle and had a talk with Joseph. . . .'
'Was he full of morphine then?'
'No. But he needed it. He would sit quiet for a while, and then he'd jerk. He wouldn't admit anything. But then, I can remember now, was when he got the morphine. He kept complaining about it being too warm, and rushed over to where it was dark and pretended to be trying to push the boards off a window. He wasn't doing that, because when I went over after him I caught him' putting something back in his inside pocket.... Oh, there was no, rough stuff!' Masters added suspiciously. 'Just a little, um, polite firmness. Ha. Well, I thought if it was dope, I'd give it a chance to work before I tackled him again. So I left him with Bert who,' snapped Masters, 'who's too bloody polite to be in the Force anyway, and I went out to have a thorough look round the house. That would have been about ten minutes to one, maybe more; but we hadn't been much time.
'I went out in the hall. The other room, where the five of 'em were, was quiet, and I thought it was dark.... But the front door was partly open. The big door, you know. The one we came in by.'
His face was so portentous as he looked at me that I said:
'Masters, this is nonsense! Surely nobody would dare, when there was a police officer just across the hall.... Besides, that big door was open when we arrived. Maybe the wind.. . . “
'Ah!' growled the inspector. He tapped his chest.
'That's what I thought, too. I wasn't paying any attention to these people inside; I had my eye on Darworth, you see. I wanted to queer a game of his, and so.... Well! I shut the door: firmly. Then I went upstairs to prowl. We'd thought, before, that you might get a better view of the house from a back upstairs window, but you couldn't. And when I came downstairs, the front door was partly open again. I'd only a flashlight, but it was the first thing I spotted.'
He knocked his fist on the work-bench. 'I tell you, sir, alone in that place ... I damned well got the wind up myself. If I'd only thought that somebody had designs on Darworth ... I went out the front door. . . .'
'The place is muddy all around,' I suggested. 'Footprints?'
'There were no footprints whatever,' Masters returned quietly.
We looked at each other. Even with the police in possession, with flash-powders exploding and reporters fighting for news, this house had become full of more monstrous and terrible things than existed in the letters I had read.
'I went round the side of the house,' the inspector continued, 'and I've told you what I saw and heard. Shadows inside. Darworth moaning or imploring. Then the bell.'
He paused, and let out a sound resembling, 'Haa-ah!' as of a man finishing off a deep drink that has almost choked him. 'Now, Sir! Now! And here's what I wanted to ask you. You tell me you heard somebody walking past your door, when you were sitting in this room reading? Yes. Well, then: which direction was it going? Was it going out towards the back yard, or returning from there?'
The only answer was, or could be, 'I don't know.'
He wheezed. 'Because, if it was coming back to the house - I mean this house; the big one here - after, say, `visiting' Darworth.... You see, I came round the side of the house into the back yard. I could see the back door, with the candlelight shining from here, I could even see the part of the yard towards me... Then what kind of hell- bound thing is it that can walk out a front door, round through a muddy yard without leaving footprints; can kill Darworth in a stone jug of a house, and return here by the back door, and pass through candlelight without being seen?'
During the ensuing silence he nodded curtly and went to the door. I could hear him addressing the constable he had sent up to the front room as a guard against the five suspects comparing notes. Vaguely I heard him giving instructions that Lady Benning was to be sent back here to our 'council-room'; vaguely I wondered what my old Chief at the M.I.D., that rather great figure whom Featherton's remark had put into my mind, would have thought of this muddle. 'What kind of hell-bound thing is it that can… .?' I looked up, to see Masters striding back.
'If,' he said uncertainly, 'the old lady goes to pieces again, the way you say she did before-'
He hesitated. His hand went slowly to his hip-pocket, and he took out that gunmetal flask, which in his own placid thoroughness he kept for the convenience of nervous believers at spiritist seances. He juggled it in his hand. His eyes wore a curiously blank look. Along the passage we could hear someone limping towards the council-room, and the booming tones of a constable urging caution.
'You drink it, Masters,' I said.
X THE TESTIMONY IN THE CASE
IT IS to Masters' thoroughness that I am indebted for the actual word-for-word record of the testimony we received. Masters does not trust to brief notes. Into his fat notebooks you will find entered in shorthand every word spoken by the person he has questioned: except, of course, things obviously irrelevant. This is later deciphered, rearranged, and typed into a statement which he submits for the witness to initial. With his permission, I have got copies f these notes, filled in also with the questions he asked but did not write down at the time.
These, then, constitute mere extracts from that vast jumble of talk: they are designedly incomplete, but they are submitted because they may be of interest to the puzzle-analyst, and for the significance of certain statements among them.
The first is headed 'Lady Anne Benning, widow; wife of the late Sir Alexander Benning, O.B.E.' It does not convey the atmosphere of that bleak room, where the spurious Watteau marquise faced Masters across the candles; with the clock-hands crawling towards four, and the stolid constable looming in the shadows behind, and outside the noise of Darworth's body being dumped into a black van.
She was even more hostile than before. They had given her a chair; the red cloak-lining gleamed again, and she sat upright with her jeweled hands clenched tightly in her lap. About her there was a sort of evil jauntiness. She moved her head as though she were looking for a place to touch Masters on the raw; the pouched eyes were half shut, and you could see wrinkles along the lids; and she still smiled. They went through the formalities without clashing, though Major Featherton - who insisted on accompanying her-had to be rather forcibly urged from the room. I can see her yet, lifting an eyebrow or hand slightly, and hear the thin chill metal of her voice.
Q. Lady Benning, how long have you known Mr. Darworth?
A. I really can't say. Does it matter? Eight months, possibly a year.
Q. How did you come to make his acquaintance?
A. Through Mr. Theodore Latimer, if it matters. He told me of Mr. Darworth's interest in the occult, and