<h2 id="id00607" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER X</h2>
<h5 id="id00608">THE PARISH REGISTER</h5>
<p id="id00609" style="margin-top: 2em">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.</p>
<p id="id00610">"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 any one in the town?"</p>
<p id="id00611">"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."</p>
<p id="id00612">"Wise woman!" said Mr. Pawle. "But now let me ask you a few questions.<br/>
Did you know this Lord Marketstoke before he disappeared?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00613">"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."</p>
<p id="id00614">"But you remember him?" suggested Mr. Pawle.</p>
<p id="id00615">"Oh, very well indeed!" said Mrs. Summers. "I saw him last a day or two
before he went away for good."</p>
<p id="id00616">"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!"</p>
<p id="id00617">"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."</p>
<p id="id00618">"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.</p>
<p id="id00619">"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."</p>
<p id="id00620">"What sort of questions?" inquired Mr. Pawle.</p>
<p id="id00621">"Oh—as to what sort of young man he was, and if he was a good landlord
and so on," replied Mrs. Summers. "And I purposely told him about the
disappearance of thirty-five years ago, just to see what he would say
about it."</p>
<p id="id00622">"Ah! And what did he say?" asked Mr. Pawle.</p>
<p id="id00623">"Nothing—except that it was extraordinary how people could disappear in
this world," said Mrs. Summers. "Whether he was interested or not, he
didn't show it."</p>
<p id="id00624">"Probably felt that he knew more about it than you did," chuckled the old
solicitor. "Well, ma'am, we're much obliged to you. Now take my advice
and keep to your very excellent plan of saying nothing. Tomorrow morning
we will just have a look into certain things, and see if we can discover
anything really pertinent, and you shall know what conclusion we come to.
Viner!" Pawle went on, when the old landlady had left them alone, "what
do you think of this extraordinary story? Upon my word, I think it quite
possible that the old lady's theory might be right, and that Ashton may
really have been the missing Lord Marketstoke!"</p>
<p id="id00625">"You think it probable that a man who was heir to an English earldom and
to considerable estates could disappear like that, for so many years, and
then reappear?" asked Viner.</p>
<p id="id00626">"I won't discuss the probability," answered Mr. Pawle, "but that it's
possible I should steadily affirm. I've known several very extraordinary
cases of disappearance. In this particular instance—granting things to
be as Mrs. Summers suggests—see how easy the whole thing is. This young
man disappears. He goes to a far-off colony under an assumed name.
Nobody knows him. It is ten thousand to one against his being recognized
by visitors from home. All the advertising in the world will fail to
reveal his identity. The only person who knows who he is is himself. And
if he refuses to speak—there you are!"</p>
<p id="id00627">"What surprises me," remarked Viner, "is that a man who evidently lived a
new life for thirty-five years and prospered most successfully in it,
should want to return to the old one."</p>
<p id="id00628">"Ah, but you never know!" said the old lawyer. "Family feeling, old
associations, loss of the old place—eh? As men get older, their thoughts
turn fondly to the scenes and memories of their youth, Viner. If Ashton
was really the Lord Marketstoke who disappeared, he may have come down
here with no other thought than that of just revisiting his old home for
sentimental reasons. He may not have had the slightest intention, for
instance, of setting up a claim to the title and estates."</p>
<p id="id00629">"I don't understand much about the legal aspect of this," said Viner,
"but I've been wondering about it while you and the landlady talked.
Supposing Ashton to be the long-lost Lord Marketstoke—could he have
established a claim such as you speak of?"</p>
<p id="id00630">"To be sure!" answered Mr. Pawle. "Had he been able to prove that he was
the real Simon pure, he would have stepped into title and estates at
once. Didn't the old lady say that the seventh Earl died intestate? Very
well—the holders since his time, that is to say, Charles, who, his
brother's death being presumed, became eighth Earl, and his son, the
present holder, would have had to account for everything since the day
of the seventh Earl's death. When the seventh Earl died, his elder son,
Lord Marketstoke, <i>ipso facto</i>, stepped into his shoes, and if he were,
or is, still alive, he's in them still. All he had to do, at any moment,
after his father's death, no matter who had come into title and estates,
was to step forward and say: 'Here I am!—now I want my rights!'"</p>
<p id="id00631">"A queer business altogether!" commented Viner. "But whoever Ashton
was, he's dead. And the thing that concerns me is this: if he really
was Earl of Ellingham, do you think that fact's got anything to do with
his murder?"</p>
<p id="id00632">"That's just what we want to find out," answered Mr. Pawle eagerly. "It's
quite conceivable that he may have been murdered by somebody who had a
particular interest in keeping him out of his rights. Such things have
been known. I want to go into all that. But now here's another matter. If
Ashton really was the missing Lord Marketstoke, who is this girl whom he
put forward as his ward, to whom he's left his considerable fortune, and
about whom nobody knows anything? I've already told you there isn't a
single paper or document about her that I can discover. Was he really her
guardian?"</p>
<p id="id00633">"Has this anything to do with it?" asked Viner. "Does it come into
things?"</p>
<p id="id00634">Mr. Pawle did not answer for a moment; he appeared to have struck a new
vein of thought and to be exploring it deeply.</p>
<p id="id00635">"In certain events, it would come into it pretty strongly!" he muttered
at last. "I'll tell you why, later on. Now I'm for bed—and first thing
after breakfast, in the morning, Viner, we'll go to work."</p>
<p id="id00636">Viner had little idea of what the old solicitor meant as regards going to
work; it seemed to him that for all practical purposes they were already
in a maze out of which there seemed no easy way. And he was not at all
sure of what they were doing when, breakfast being over next morning, Mr.
Pawle conducted him across the square to the old four-square churchyard,
and for half an hour walked him up one path and down another and in and
around the ancient yew-trees and gravestones.</p>
<p id="id00637">"Do you know what I've been looking for, Viner?" asked Mr. Pawle at
last as he turned towards the church porch. "I was looking for
something, you know."</p>
<p id="id00638">"Not the faintest notion!" answered Viner dismally. "I wondered!"</p>
<p id="id00639">"I was looking," replied Mr. Pawle with a faint chuckle, "to see if I
could find any tombstones or monuments in this churchyard bearing the
name Ashton. There isn't one! I take it from that significant fact that
Ashton didn't come down here to visit the graves of his kindred. But now
come into the church—Mrs. Summers told me this morning that there's a
chapel here in which the Cave-Gray family have been interred for two or
three centuries. Let's have a look at it."</p>
<p id="id00640">Viner, who had a dilettante love of ancient architecture, was immediately
lost in admiration of the fine old structure into which he and his
companion presently stepped. He stood staring at the high rood, the fine
old rood screen, the beauty of the clustered columns—had he been alone,
and on any other occasion, he would have spent the morning in wandering
around nave and aisles and transepts. But Mr. Pawle, severely practical,
at once made for the northeast chapel; and Viner, after another glance
round, was forced to follow him.</p>
<p id="id00641">"The Ellingham Chapel!" whispered the old solicitor as they passed a fine
old stone screen which Viner mentally registered as fifteenth-century.
"No end of Cave-Grays laid here. What a profusion of monuments!"</p>
<p id="id00642">Viner began to examine those monuments as well as the gloom of the
November morning and the dark-painted glass of the windows would permit.
And before very long he turned to his companion, who was laboriously
reading the inscription on a great box-tomb which stood against the
north wall.</p>
<p id="id00643">"I say!" he whispered. "Here's a curious fact which, in view of what we
heard last night, may be of use to us."</p>
<p id="id00644">"What's that?" demanded Mr. Pawle.</p>
<p id="id00645">Viner took him by the elbow and led him over to the south wall, on which
was arranged a number of ancient tablets, grouped around a great
altar-tomb whereon were set up the painted effigies of a gentleman, his
wife, and several sons and daughters, all in ruffs, kneeling one after
the other, each growing less in size and stature, in the attitude of
prayer. He pointed to the inscription on this, and from it to several of
the smaller monuments.</p>
<p id="id00646">"Look here!" he said. "There are Cave-Grays commemorated here from 1570
until 1820. No end of 'em—men and women. And now, see—there's a
certain Christian name—a woman's name—which occurs over and over
again. There it is—and there—and here—and here—and here again; it's
evidently been a favourite family name among the Cave-Gray women for
three hundred years at least. You see what it is? Avice!"</p>
<p id="id00647">Mr. Pawle peered at the various places to which his companion's
finger pointed.</p>
<p id="id00648">"Yes," he answered, "I see it—several times, as you say. Avice! Yes?"</p>
<p id="id00649">"Miss Wickham's Christian name is Avice," said Viner.</p>
<p id="id00650">Mr. Pawle started.</p>
<p id="id00651">"God bless me!" he exclaimed. "So it is! I'd forgotten that. Dear me!
Now, that's very odd—too odd, perhaps, to be a coincidence. Very
interesting, indeed! Favourite family name without a doubt."</p>
<p id="id00652">Viner silently went round the chapel, inspecting every monument its four
walls sheltered.</p>
<p id="id00653">"It occurs just nineteen times," he announced at last. "Now, is it a
coincidence that Miss Wickham's name should be Avice? Or is it that
there's some connection between her and all these dead and gone Avices?"</p>
<p id="id00654">"Very strange!" admitted Mr. Pawle. "Viner—we'll go next and have a look
at the parish registers. But look here! Not a word to parson or clerk
about our business! We merely wish to make search for a certain legal
purpose, eh?"</p>
<p id="id00655">Three hours later Viner, heartily weary of turning over old registers
full of crabbed writing, was glad when Mr. Pawle closed the one on
which he was engaged, intimated that he had seen all he wanted, paid
the fees for his search, and whispered to his companion that they would
go to lunch.</p>
<p id="id00656">"Well?" asked Viner as they walked across the square to the Ellington<br/>
Arms. "Have we done anything?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00657">"Probably!" answered Mr. Pawle. "For you never know how these little
matters might help. We've established two facts, anyway. One—that there
have never been any folk of the name of Ashton in this town since the
registers came into being in 1567; the other, that the name Avice was a
very favourite one indeed amongst the women of the Cave-Gray family. And
there's just another little fact which I discovered, and said nothing
about while the vicar and clerk were about—it may be nothing, and it may
be something."</p>
<p id="id00658">"What is it?" asked Viner.</p>
<p id="id00659">"Well," answered Mr. Pawle pausing a few yards away from the porch of the
hotel, and speaking in a confidential voice, "it's this: In turning up
the records of the Cave-Gray family, as far as they are shown in their
parish registers, I found that Stephen John Cave-Gray, sixth Earl of
Ellingham, married one Georgina Wickham. Now, is that another
coincidence? There you get the two names in combination—Avice Wickham.
That particular Countess of Ellingham would, of course, be the
grandmother of the Lord Marketstoke who disappeared. Did he think of her
maiden name, Wickham, when he wanted a new one for himself? Possibly! And
when he married, and had a daughter, did he think of the Christian name
so popular with his own womenfolk of previous generations, and call his
daughter Avice? And are Marketstoke and Wickham and Ashton all one and
the same man?"</p>
<p id="id00660">"Upon my word, it's a strange muddle!" exclaimed Viner.</p>
<p id="id00661">"Nothing as yet to what it will be," remarked Mr. Pawle sententiously.<br/>
"Come on—I'm famishing. Let's lunch—and then we'll go back to town."<br/></p>
<p id="id00662">Another surprise awaited them when they walked into Mr. Pawle's office in
Bedford Row at four o'clock that afternoon. A card lay on the old
lawyer's blotting-pad, and after glancing at it, he passed it to Viner.</p>
<p id="id00663">"See that?" he said. "Now, who on earth is Mr. Armitstead Ashton
Armitstead, of Rouendale House, Rawtenstall? Who left this?" he went on,
as a clerk entered the room with some letters.</p>
<p id="id00664">"A gentleman who called at three o'clock, sir," replied the clerk. "He
said he's travelled specially from Lancashire to see you about the Ashton
affair. He's going to call again, sir. In fact," concluded the clerk,
glancing into the anteroom, "I think he's here now."</p>
<p id="id00665">"Bring him in," commanded Mr. Pawle. He made a grimace at Viner as the
clerk disappeared. "You see how things develop," he murmured. "What are
we going to hear next?"</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />