<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<p>"<span class="smcap">You</span> are on the wrong track, Mr. Crewe," said Gillett,
who was determined not to part with the theory
he had built up round the evidence he had collected.
"I was positive the murder took place in the house.
This man Jauncey, whom I mentioned, can swear
that he heard a shot fired. And more than that, he
can swear that he was hit by the bullet. This is the
bullet that was extracted from his wound in the left
arm. It fits this revolver."</p>
<p>"My dear Gillett, I don't dispute any of these
things," said Crewe. "They merely support my contention
that the murder was not committed at the farm,
but that the body was brought there, and that the
man who took the body there took certain steps with
the object of creating the impression that the tragedy
took place in the room in which the body was found."</p>
<p>"What evidence have you of that?" asked Sergeant
Westaway, coming to the aid of his official superior.</p>
<p>"The bullet that killed Lumsden went clear through
his body—so much was decided at the post-mortem
examination," Crewe said. "But that fact was also evident
from a cursory examination of the body, as we
saw it in the chair. You will remember that I drew
attention to the fact when we were looking at the body.
Your theory is that the shot was fired as Lumsden was
standing at the window, with his back towards his
murderer, that the bullet went through him, through<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
the window, and lodged in the arm of this man
Jauncey who stated he was outside in the garden.
But the course of the bullet through Lumsden's
body was slightly upward. How in that case could
it strike downward and wound a man on the ground
ten or twelve feet below the windows on the first
story?"</p>
<p>"The bullet might have been deflected by the glass
of the window," said Gillett.</p>
<p>"It might have been, but it is highly improbable
that ordinary window-glass would deflect a bullet—even
a spent one. In any case this bullet hit the
cherry-tree outside the window before hitting Jauncey.
You will find that it cut the bark of the cherry-tree—the
mark is 4 ft. 4½ inches from the ground."</p>
<p>"Then it was the cherry-tree that deflected it?" said
Sergeant Westaway.</p>
<p>"Yes and no," said Crewe. "Certainly its course
was deflected downwards after hitting the cherry-tree—I
assume that Jauncey was close to the tree. But
if it had not been travelling downwards, it would have
hit the tree much higher up—somewhere near the
level of the window. The bullet that hit Jauncey was
fired in the room in which we saw the body, but it
was fired by the man who took the body to the farm,
with the intention of giving the impression that the
crime took place there. Knowing that the bullet which
killed Lumsden had gone through his body, he placed
the body in a chair near the window and then fired a
shot through the window. He made the mistake of
going close up to the window to fire, and as a result
he fired downwards instead of on a level at the
height of the wound in Lumsden's body."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"If that is all you have to support your theory——"
began Detective Gillett.</p>
<p>"It isn't all," said Crewe, with a slight indication
of impatience. "It is only my first point. You will
recall that on the stairs there were indications that
a wet rag had been used for wiping away some traces
or stains. Inspector Payne suggested that the rag
had been used to wipe away muddy boot-marks on the
stairs—the traces of these boots. These boots were
not worn by the man as he went upstairs; he put them
on afterwards. Presently I will tell you why he
did. But the marks on the stairs were not the marks
of muddy boots. They were stains of blood which
dropped from the dead man's wound, as his body was
carried upstairs. These marks are in the hall leading
to the stairs and on the landing leading to the room
in which the body was placed. In the room itself no
attempt to remove the blood-stains was made, because
they were an indication that the shooting took
place there. If he had been aware that there was
a stain of blood on the latch-key which he took from
the dead man's pocket, he would have washed it
away."</p>
<p>"If he had possession of the key in order to get the
body into the house in the way you state, Mr. Crewe,
why did he break into the house? Remember one of
the downstairs windows was forced."</p>
<p>"It was forced by the man who took the body there.
But he forced it in breaking out of the house—not
in breaking into it. He wanted to give the impression
that some one had broken into the house, but
he was pressed for time—he was anxious to get away.
In searching for a rag in the kitchen with which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
to wipe out the blood-stains, he saw these boots. They
belonged to Lumsden, as you have said, but it was more
likely that Lumsden kept them in the kitchen than
in the barn or cowshed. This man—let us call him the
murderer—saw in the boots a means of averting suspicion
from himself. He decided to leave clues that
would suggest that the murderer broke into the house.
But, instead of going out of the front door and breaking
into the house, he forced the window from inside
the room. Then, with these boots on, he climbed out
of the window backwards, and when he reached the
ground he walked backwards across the garden bed
to the path in order to give the impression that some
one had walked forwards across the bed to the window.</p>
<p>"You saw from the sash of the window that the
catch had been forced back by a knife, but apparently
you overlooked the fact that the marks of the
knife are much broader at the top, where the catch
is, than at the bottom, where the knife would enter
if the catch had been forced by some one outside. It
was at the top, near the catch, and not at the bottom
below it, that the knife was inserted; that is to
say, the knife was used by some one inside the room.
The footprints outside the window showed that they
were made by a person walking backwards; the impression
from the toe to the ball of the foot being
very distinct and the rest of the foot indistinct. A
person in walking backwards puts down his toes first,
and gradually brings the rest of his foot down; a person
walking forwards puts his heel down first and
then puts down the rest of his foot as he brings his
weight forward. Our man, having made his way to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
the garden path from the window, walked along the
path to the motor-car at the gate, probably carrying his
own boots in his hand. As soon as he entered his
car he drove off along the road in the direction of
Staveley with the lights out. He took a risk in
travelling in the dark, and in spite of the fact that
he knew the road well he came to grief before he
reached Staveley."</p>
<p>"How do you know all this?" asked Gillett. "How
do you know he had a car?" He had not given up
his own theory in favour of Crewe's, but he realized
that Crewe's theory was the more striking one.</p>
<p>"In Marsland's statement he said that his horse
swerved from something in the dark as he was coming
down the Cliff road, and fell lame," said Crewe. "The
horse shied at the motor-car as it passed. Marsland
neither saw nor heard the car because of the darkness,
intensified by the storm, and because of the
roar of the wind and waves."</p>
<p>"You don't really expect us to regard the swerving
of the horse as proof there was a motor-car there?"
demanded Gillett, with a superior smile.</p>
<p>"Contributory proof," said Crewe. "If you went
along the cliff road, as I did on leaving the farm after
meeting you there, you would have noticed that the
danger post nearest the farm was out of the perpendicular.
That was not the case previous to the night
of the storm. This motor-car without lights bumped
into it. The mark of the wheels where the car had left
the road was quite plain when I looked—it had not
been obliterated by the rain. Four miles away the
car was run into the ditch and overturned. I saw
it as Sir George Granville and I drove along to Cliff<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
Farm on Saturday morning. If you want information
concerning it and the person who drove it you
can obtain it at Gosford's garage at Staveley. The
car was hired from Gosford."</p>
<p>"By whom?" asked Gillett.</p>
<p>"By a man named Arnold Brett, who was a very
close friend of the dead man."</p>
<p>"I know all about Brett from Inspector Murchison,"
said Gillett. "He rang me up about him and promised
to let me know when he came back to his lodgings
at Staveley. He said that Brett was a close friend of
Lumsden's, and would probably be able to give us
some useful information when he returns."</p>
<p>"When will he return?" asked Crewe.</p>
<p>"You think he has cleared out?" suggested Gillett.</p>
<p>"I'm sure of it," was the reply.</p>
<p>"Murchison gave the impression that he was sure
to come back—that he had left Staveley the day before
the murder. I understood from Murchison that
Brett is doing some secret service work for the Government,
and that it was quite a regular thing for him
to disappear suddenly."</p>
<p>"No doubt it was," said Crewe. "But this time he is
not coming back."</p>
<p>"I'll ring up Murchison," said Gillett.</p>
<p>"Don't waste your time," was Crewe's reply.
"Murchison is an excellent fellow—an ideal police
official for a quiet seaside place where nothing happens,
but too genial and unsuspecting for an emergency
of this kind. Go and see Brett's apartments at
Staveley—No. 41 Whitethorn Gardens—and the landlady,
Mrs. Penfield, will tell you as she told Murchison,
and as she told me also, that Brett left Staveley<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
on secret service work on Thursday morning, 15th October,
and that she expects him back at any moment.
But go to Gosford and he will show you the car that
Brett hired on Friday.</p>
<p>"He will tell you that on Saturday about midday
Brett rang him up—from Lewes, Gosford says, but
it was more probably from Marlingsea, on his way
to London—and told him that he had met with an
accident with the car, and that it was lying in the
ditch on the side of the road about six miles out from
Staveley on the road to this place. It was there that
Gosford's foreman found the car when he went for
it. If Brett hired a car at Staveley on Friday he
couldn't have left Staveley on Thursday, as his landlady
says. She doesn't know what to think in regard
to this murder, but she is ready to shield Brett all
she can because she is in love with him."</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />