登陆注册
26288300000009

第9章 III(3)

As I entered the great room and closed the door behind me, I was again impressed by the beauty and luxury of the appointments.

Surely Joseph Crawford must have been a man of fine calibre and refined tastes to enjoy working in such an atmosphere. But I had only two short hours before the inquest, and I had many things to do, so for the moment I set myself assiduously to work examining the room again. As in my first examination, I did no microscopic scrutinizing; but I looked over the papers on and in the desk, I noted conditions in the desk of Mr. Hall, the secretary, and I paid special attention to the position of the furniture and windows, my thoughts all directed to an intruder from outside on Mr. Crawford's midnight solitude.

I stepped through the long French window on to the veranda, and after a thorough examination of the veranda, I went on down the steps to the gravel walk. Against a small rosebush, just off the walk, I saw a small slip of pink paper:. I picked it up, hardly daring to hope it might be a clue, and I saw it was a trolley transfer, whose punched holes indicated that it had been issued the evening before. It might or might not be important as evidence, but I put it carefully away in my note-book for later consideration.

Returning to the library I took the newspaper which I had earlier discovered from the drawer where I had hidden it, and after one more swift but careful glance round the room, I went away, confident that I had not done my work carelessly.

I left the Crawford house and walked along the beautiful avenue to the somewhat pretentious inn bearing the name of Sedgwick Arms.

Here, as I had been led to believe, I found pleasant, even luxurious accommodations. The landlord of the inn was smiling and pleasant, although landlord seems an old-fashioned term to apply to the very modern and up-to-date man who received me.

His name was Carstairs, and he had the genial, perceptive manner of a man about town.

"Dastardly shame!" he exclaimed, after he had assured himself of my identity. " Joseph Crawford was one of our best citizens, one of our finest men. He hadn't an enemy in the world, my dear Mr.

Burroughs - not an enemy! generous, kindly nature, affable and friendly with all."

"But I understand he frowned on his ward's love affair, Mr.

Carstairs."

"Yes; yes, indeed. And who wouldn't? Young Hall is no fit mate for Florence Lloyd. He's a fortune-hunter. I know the man, and his only ambition is the aggrandizement of his own precious self."

"Then you don't consider Miss Lloyd concerned in this crime?"

"Concerned in crime? Florence Lloyd! why, man, you must be crazy! The idea is unthinkable!"

I was sorry I had spoken, but I remembered too late that the suspicions which pointed toward Miss Lloyd were probably known only to those who had been in the Crawford house that morning.

As for the townspeople in general, though they knew of the tragedy, they knew very little of its details.

I hastened to assure Mr. Carstairs that I had never seen Miss Lloyd, that I had formed no opinions whatever, and that I was merely repeating what were probably vague and erroneous suspicions of mistakenly-minded people.

At last, behind my locked door, I took from my pocket the newspaper I had brought from Mr. Crawford's office.

It seemed to me important, from the fact that it was an extra, published late the night before.

An Atlantic liner had met with a serious accident, and an extra had been hastily put forth by one of the most enterprising of our evening papers. I, myself, had bought one of these extras, about midnight; and the finding of a copy in the office of the murdered man might prove a clue to the criminal.

I then examined carefully the transfer slip I had picked up on the Crawford lawn. It had been issued after nine o'clock the evening before. This. seemed to me to prove that the holder of that transfer must have been on the Crawford property and near the library veranda late last night, and it seemed to me that this was plain common-sense reasoning, and not mere intuition or divination. The transfer might have a ****** and innocent explanation, but until I could learn of that, I should hold it carefully as a possible clue.

同类推荐
  • 太上灵宝净明洞神上品经

    太上灵宝净明洞神上品经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 清暑笔谈

    清暑笔谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 三十国春秋辑本

    三十国春秋辑本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 注肇论疏

    注肇论疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 国朝诗话

    国朝诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 事隔经年

    事隔经年

    IfIshouldmeetthee,afterlongyears.HowshouldIgreetthee,withsilenceandtears.
  • 当代英美组织领导力发展:理论与实践

    当代英美组织领导力发展:理论与实践

    与引进的关于“领导力发展”的西方学术著作和教科书不同,本书是中国学者立足本土文化情境、采用跨文化视野系统研究西方组织领导力发展的第一部专著。本书“如其所是”回答英美语境下“组织领导力发展是什么”和“怎样发展组织领导力”两个关键问题,同时提出汉语世界第一个组织领导力发展理论框架——它为宝钢集团、中兴通讯等跨国企业所认同,具有十分显著的实践价值。
  • 粗暴派与细腻派

    粗暴派与细腻派

    两枚一见面不吵就浑身难受的孩纸,会有什么火花呢?一枚霸情侧漏的孩纸,在面对某个人时却像只汪,一枚温柔淑女的孩纸,在面对某个人时却像只虎。
  • 最弱贴身保镖

    最弱贴身保镖

    一次偶然的机会得到一颗子弹,一次偶然的机会拥有了真兄弟,他靠自己的实力改变了全球人的命运。
  • 萌萌巧巧甜心爱

    萌萌巧巧甜心爱

    巧巧一家搬了两次家,第二次搬到了乐忧小区,在那里认识了邻居林墨一家,从那之后,巧巧天天黏着林墨,而巧巧父母和林墨父母也不阻止。直到某天,巧巧父母察觉到,但时间已晚,自家女儿已被拐走。呵呵呵→_→
  • 现实过后

    现实过后

    曾近的真爱至上难道真的要跪拜在现实面前吗
  • 超品神医

    超品神医

    异世大陆顶尖强者楚飞,因为意外重伤导致元魂重生到了一个现代初中生的身上,面对自己此时所面临的险境,这一世,苏醒的楚飞决定用其医术扬名立万,建立医馆,守护校花级姐妹,追求修炼巅峰,勇闯异空间……
  • 都市守陵人

    都市守陵人

    你有没有遇到某件事情十分眼熟,觉得曾经在梦中见过的情况?有没有经历过在某件事情还没有发生时已经猜到了结果,却无法改变事情的走向?有谁跟我一样,在看到某明星去世的新闻时,十分清楚的记得他已经死过?这一切都是记忆的错觉吗?为什么有人在网络上用帖子记录了下来?如果有一天,你发现自己的整个人生是一场阴谋,连你的生命和身体都不属于你自己,你该如何做?你到底该相信人,还是相信见到的鬼?
  • 唯愿时光不负你

    唯愿时光不负你

    一段暖心治愈的爱情,女主呆萌,男主腹黑。落棃说:“我很好,真的”顾月安说:“你还有我”落棃只是一个沉迷于自己世界的女孩,她以为她会一直这样下去,可是却在某一天,有个人强制进入了她的世界,并扬言要在这里待一辈子。而她终于接受他,却在某一天,回忆里血淋淋的事实再次被撕开来。她将如何面对?是继续逃避,抑或是勇敢的接受?女主有轻微自闭症,感情慢热。男主身心干净,独宠一人。
  • 待到荼蘼花开时

    待到荼蘼花开时

    一片又一片的落叶代表我对你一份,又一份的思念,又是一年夏暮初秋,我等你,等你等到秋彼岸,我要从荼蘼花一直等到彼岸花,你呢?