登陆注册
37905300000009

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
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 我来地球修仙啦

    我来地球修仙啦

    “叮!恭喜宿主突破无上境界”“叮!正在传送下一个位面”“叮!欢迎来到美丽的地球村,也是本系统的家乡”“由于地球是本系统家乡,预防宿主的修为导致破坏当地生态,小叮将收回您所有修为”“???”“???”“贼系统,你可知道我达到帝仙花了老子几万年?现在说拿就拿?”笛梵大声喊到......
  • 周易述

    周易述

    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。
  • 末日掌舵者

    末日掌舵者

    获得一部手机,可以预测未来,不平凡的人生自此展开!
  • 重开地狱

    重开地狱

    这是一个荒诞的世界,为善者因善而下地狱,为恶者因恶而得权柄,正所谓“守法良民冤屈多,强盗地痞夜欢歌,损人利己金腰带,正直公平却挨饿,修桥补路无尸骸,杀人放火儿孙多”。当我们只是个普通人时,只能改变自己顺应这个社会,甚至为了生存而忍辱负重,可是当某一天,普通人之一的李道忽然成为地狱之主,可以惩治世上的所有恶行时,他将为这个世界带来什么样的改变?
  • 天仙飞升录

    天仙飞升录

    在慢慢的历史长河里,留传着许多多关于神仙的传说,但是凡人真正见到的,不能说没有,但也决对凤毛麟角,而有机会踏上修仙一途的,更是万里无一,现在和主人公一起,和众道友一起,向长生之门,向天道仙境,向着永恒,向着梦的世界,去休验吧。
  • TFBOYS之爱你珊玲之欣

    TFBOYS之爱你珊玲之欣

    因为我是四叶草,所以男主就是三小只啦,我比较喜欢悲惨一点的和复仇和关于青春的,所以写了这本小说,喜欢你们多多关注这本书,希望你们喜欢。
  • 百年归源

    百年归源

    一个沉睡百年的失忆人,一个战火纷飞的新世界,一群尔虞我诈的当权者,书写出多少不为人知的秘密。游历四方,只为揭开世界的真相,还我一个回去的方向。
  • 仙门遍地是奇葩

    仙门遍地是奇葩

    原来仙门竟是这般不以为耻,当真是脸皮厚到极致。师傅喜欢徒弟,徒弟却为魔界鬼祭哭得死去活来。好一个郎艳独绝,遗世独立的灵澈仙人。又好一个不知羞耻,仙门之辱的徒弟。不愧是仙门之境,遍地奇葩,魔为仙成仙,仙为魔堕魔;不疯不魔,不魔不仙(ps:纯属瞎七八扯,毫无逻辑。)
  • 做人要小心(人一生必须避免的99个失误)

    做人要小心(人一生必须避免的99个失误)

    在本书中,我们尽全力为你提供那些应该加倍小心,而又常被忽略的“小心”故事,在细致的评析和点拨中,深入浅出地为你展示一个新的世界。当然,因为每个人所处的工作环境、所受的教育不尽相同,对同一件事情也会有自己的看法,做出自己的判断。但我们相信,我们所做的工作一定能或多或少对你的工作和生活有所帮助,助你在为人处世、职场应酬方面高人一筹。