“I’ll come with you,” said Pen mutinously.
“You will—for once in your life—do as you are told,” said Sir Richard, and, lowering the unknown on to the bank, strode on down the track towards the clearing in the wood.
Here the moonlight bathed the ground in its cold silver light. Sir Richard had no doubt that he would find Beverley Brandon, either stunned, or recovering from the effects of the blow which had felled him, but as he stepped into the clearing he saw not only one man lying still on the ground, but a second on his knees beside him.
Sir Richard trod softly, and it was not until he had approached to within a few feet of the little group that the kneeling man heard his footsteps, and looked quickly over his shoulder. The moonlight drained the world of colour, but even allowing for this the face turned towards Sir Richard was unnaturally pallid. It was the face of a very young man, and perfectly strange to Sir Richard.
“Who are you?” The question was shot out in a hushed, rather scared voice. The young man started to his feet, and took up an instinctively defensive pose.
“I doubt whether my name will convey very much to you, but, for what it is worth, it is Wyndham. What has happened here?”
The boy seemed quite distracted, and replied in a shaken tone: “I don’t know. I found him here—like this. I—I think he’s dead!”
“Nonsense!” said Sir Richard, putting him out of his way, and in his turn kneeling beside Beverley’s inanimate body. There was a bruise on the livid brow, and when Sir Richard raised Beverley his head fell back in a way that told its own tale rather horribly. Sir Richard saw the tree-stump, and realized that Beverley’s head must have struck it. He laid his body down again, and said without the least vestige of emotion: “You are perfectly right. His neck is broken.”
The boy dragged a handkerchief out of his pocket, and wiped his brow with it. “My God, who did it?—I—I didn’t, you know!”
“I don’t suppose you did,” Sir Richard replied, rising to his feet, and dusting the knees of his breeches.
“But it’s the most shocking thing! He was staying with me, sir!”
“Oh!” said Sir Richard, favouring him with a long, penetrating look.
“He’s Beverley Brandon—Lord Saar’s younger son!”
“I know very well who he is. You, I apprehend, are Mr Piers Luttrell
“Yes. Yes, I am. I knew him up at Oxford. Not very well, because I—well, to tell you the truth, I never liked him much. But a week ago he arrived at my home. He had been visiting friends, I think. I don’t know. But of course I—that is, my mother and I—asked him to stay, and he did. He has not been quite well—seemed to be in need of rest, and—and country air. Indeed, I can’t conceive how he comes to be here now, for he retired to his room with one of his sick headaches. At least, that was what he told my mother.”
“Then you did not come here in search of him?”
“No, no! I came—The fact is, I just came out to enjoy a stroll in the moonlight,” replied Piers, in a hurry.
“I see.” There was a dry note in Sir Richard’s voice.
“Why are you here?” demanded Piers.
“For the same reason,” Sir Richard answered.
“But you know Brandon!”
“That circumstance does not, however, make me his murderer.”
“Oh no! I did not mean—but it seems so strange that you should both be in Queen Charlton!”
“I thought it tiresome, myself. My errand to Queen Charlton did not in any way concern Beverley Brandon.”
“Of course not! I didn’t suppose—Sir, since you didn’t kill him, and I didn’t, who—who did, do you suppose? For he did not merely trip and fall, did he? There is that bruise on his forehead, and he was lying face upwards, just as you saw him. Someone struck him down!”
“Yes, I think someone struck him down,” agreed Sir Richard.
“I suppose you do not know who it might have been, sir?”
“I wonder?” Sir Richard said thoughtfully.
Piers waited, but as Sir Richard said no more, but stood looking frowningly down at Beverley’s body, he blurted out: “What ought I to do? Really, I do not know! I have no experience in such matters. Perhaps you could advise me?”
“I do not pretend to any very vast experience myself, but I suggest that you should go home.”
“But we can’t leave him here—can we?”
“No, we can’t do that. I will inform the magistrate that there is—er—a corpse in the wood. No doubt he will attend to it.”
“Yes, but I don’t wish to run away, you know,” Piers objected. “It is the most devilish, awkward situation, but of course I don’t dream of leaving you to—to explain it all to the magistrate. I shall have to say that it was I who found the body.”
Sir Richard, who knew that the affair was one of extreme delicacy, and who had been wondering for several minutes in what way it could be handled so as to spare the Brandons as much humiliation as possible, did not feel that the entry of Piers Luttrell into the proceedings would facilitate his task. He cast another of his searching looks over the young man, and said: “Your doing so would serve no useful purpose, I believe. You had better leave it to me.”
“You know something about it!”
“Yes, I do. I am on terms of—er—considerable intimacy with the Brandons, and I know a good deal about Beverley’s activities. There is likely to be a peculiarly distasteful scandal arising out of this murder.”
Piers nodded. “I was afraid of that. You know, sir, he was not at all the thing, and he knew some devilish odd people. A man came up to the house, enquiring for him only yesterday—a seedy sort of bully: I dare say you may be familiar with the type. Beverley did not like it above half, I could see.”
“Were you privileged to meet this man?”
“Well, I saw him: I didn’t exchange two words with him. The servant came to tell Beverley that a Captain Trimble had called to see him, and Beverley was so much put out that I—well, I fear I did rather wonder what was in the wind.”
“Ah!” said Sir Richard. “The fact that you have met Trimble may—or may not—prove useful. Yes, I think you had better go home, and say nothing about this. No doubt the news of Beverley’s death will be conveyed to you tomorrow morning.”
“But what shall I tell the constable, sir?”
“Whatever he asks you,” replied Sir Richard.
“Shall I say that I found Beverley here, with you?” asked Piers doubtfully.
“I hardly think that he will ask you that question.”
’But will he not wonder how it came about that I did not miss Beverley?”
“Did you not say that Beverley gave it out that he was retiring to bed? Why should you miss him?”
“To-morrow morning?”
“Yes, I think you might miss him at the breakfast-table,” conceded Sir Richard.
“I see. Well, if you feel it to be right, sir, I—I own I would rather not divulge that I was in the wood to-night. But what must I say if I am asked if I know you?”
“You don’t know me.”
“N-no. No, I don’t, of course,” said Piers, apparently cheered by this reflection.
“That is a pleasure in store for you. I came into this neighbourhood for the purpose of—er—making your acquaintance, but this seems hardly the moment to enter upon a matter which I have reason to suspect may prove extremely complicated.”
“You came to see me?” said Piers, astonished. “How can this be?”
“If,” said Sir Richard, “you will come to see me at the “George” to-morrow—a very natural action on your part, in view of my discovery of your guest’s corpse—I will tell you just why I came to Queen Charlton in search of you.”
“I am sure I am honoured—but I cannot conceive what your business with me may be, sir!”
“That,” said Sir Richard, “does not surprise me nearly as much as my business is likely to surprise you, Mr Luttrell!”