<h2><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>CHAPTER NINETEEN<br/> THE CHAMBERLAYNE STORY</h2>
<p>“I perceive, sir,” said Mr. Quarterpage, as Spargo entered the
library, “that you have read the account of the Maitland trial.”</p>
<p>“Twice,” replied Spargo.</p>
<p>“And you have come to the conclusion that—but what conclusion have
you come to?” asked Mr. Quarterpage.</p>
<p>“That the silver ticket in my purse was Maitland’s property,”
said Spargo, who was not going to give all his conclusions at once.</p>
<p>“Just so,” agreed the old gentleman. “I think so—I
can’t think anything else. But I was under the impression that I could
have accounted for that ticket, just as I am sure I can account for the other
forty-nine.”</p>
<p>“Yes—and how?” asked Spargo.</p>
<p>Mr. Quarterpage turned to a corner cupboard and in silence produced a decanter
and two curiously-shaped old wine-glasses. He carefully polished the glasses
with a cloth which he took from a drawer, and set glasses and decanter on a
table in the window, motioning Spargo to take a chair in proximity thereto. He
himself pulled up his own elbow-chair.</p>
<p>“We’ll take a glass of my old brown sherry,” he said.
“Though I say it as shouldn’t, as the saying goes, I don’t
think you could find better brown sherry than that from Land’s End to
Berwick-upon-Tweed, Mr. Spargo—no, nor further north either, where they
used to have good taste in liquor in my young days! Well, here’s your
good health, sir, and I’ll tell you about Maitland.”</p>
<p>“I’m curious,” said Spargo. “And about more than
Maitland. I want to know about a lot of things arising out of that newspaper
report. I want to know something about the man referred to so much—the
stockbroker, Chamberlayne.”</p>
<p>“Just so,” observed Mr. Quarterpage, smiling. “I thought that
would touch your sense of the inquisitive. But Maitland first. Now, when
Maitland went to prison, he left behind him a child, a boy, just then about two
years old. The child’s mother was dead. Her sister, a Miss Baylis,
appeared on the scene—Maitland had married his wife from a
distance—and took possession of the child and of Maitland’s
personal effects. He had been made bankrupt while he was awaiting his trial,
and all his household goods were sold. But this Miss Baylis took some small
personal things, and I always believed that she took the silver ticket. And she
may have done, for anything I know to the contrary. Anyway, she took the child
away, and there was an end of the Maitland family in Market Milcaster.
Maitland, of course, was in due procedure of things removed to Dartmoor, and
there he served his term. There were people who were very anxious to get hold
of him when he came out—the bank people, for they believed that he knew
more about the disposition of that money than he’d ever told, and they
wanted to induce him to tell what they hoped he knew—between ourselves,
Mr. Spargo, they were going to make it worth his while to tell.”</p>
<p>Spargo tapped the newspaper, which he had retained while the old gentleman
talked.</p>
<p>“Then they didn’t believe what his counsel said—that
Chamberlayne got all the money?” he asked.</p>
<p>Mr. Quarterpage laughed.</p>
<p>“No—nor anybody else!” he answered. “There was a strong
idea in the town—you’ll see why afterwards—that it was all a
put-up job, and that Maitland cheerfully underwent his punishment knowing that
there was a nice fortune waiting for him when he came out. And as I say, the
bank people meant to get hold of him. But though they sent a special agent to
meet him on his release, they never did get hold of him. Some mistake
arose—when Maitland was released, he got clear away. Nobody’s ever
heard a word of him from that day to this. Unless Miss Baylis has.”</p>
<p>“Where does this Miss Baylis live?” asked Spargo.</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t know,” replied Mr. Quarterpage. “She did
live in Brighton when she took the child away, and her address was known, and I
have it somewhere. But when the bank people sought her out after
Maitland’s release, she, too, had clean disappeared, and all efforts to
trace her failed. In fact, according to the folks who lived near her in
Brighton, she’d completely disappeared, with the child, five years
before. So there wasn’t a clue to Maitland. He served his time—made
a model prisoner—they did find that much out!—earned the maximum
remission, was released, and vanished. And for that very reason there’s a
theory about him in this very town to this very day!”</p>
<p>“What?” asked Spargo.</p>
<p>“This. That he’s now living comfortably, luxuriously abroad on what
he got from the bank,” replied Mr. Quarterpage. “They say that the
sister-in-law was in at the game; that when she disappeared with the child, she
went abroad somewhere and made a home ready for Maitland, and that he went off
to them as soon as he came out. Do you see?”</p>
<p>“I suppose that was possible,” said Spargo.</p>
<p>“Quite possible, sir. But now,” continued the old gentleman,
replenishing the glasses, “now we come on to the Chamberlayne story.
It’s a good deal more to do with the Maitland story than appears at first
sight, I’ll tell it to you and you can form your own conclusions.
Chamberlayne was a man who came to Market Milcaster—I don’t know
from where—in 1886—five years before the Maitland smash-up. He was
then about Maitland’s age—a man of thirty-seven or eight. He came
as clerk to old Mr. Vallas, the rope and twine manufacturer: Vallas’s
place is still there, at the bottom of the High Street, near the river, though
old Vallas is dead. He was a smart, cute, pushing chap, this Chamberlayne; he
made himself indispensable to old Vallas, and old Vallas paid him a rare good
salary. He settled down in the town, and he married a town girl, one of the
Corkindales, the saddlers, when he’d been here three years. Unfortunately
she died in childbirth within a year of their marriage. It was very soon after
that that Chamberlayne threw up his post at Vallas’s, and started
business as a stock-and-share broker. He’d been a saving man; he’d
got a nice bit of money with his wife; he always let it be known that he had
money of his own, and he started in a good way. He was a man of the most
plausible manners: he’d have coaxed butter out of a dog’s throat if
he’d wanted to. The moneyed men of the town believed in him—I
believed in him myself, Mr. Spargo—I’d many a transaction with him,
and I never lost aught by him—on the contrary, he did very well for me.
He did well for most of his clients—there were, of course, ups and downs,
but on the whole he satisfied his clients uncommonly well. But, naturally,
nobody ever knew what was going on between him and Maitland.”</p>
<p>“I gather from this report,” said Spargo, “that everything
came out suddenly—unexpectedly?”</p>
<p>“That was so, sir,” replied Mr. Quarterpage. “Sudden?
Unexpected? Aye, as a crack of thunder on a fine winter’s day. Nobody had
the ghost of a notion that anything was wrong. John Maitland was much respected
in the town; much thought of by everybody; well known to everybody. I can
assure you, Mr. Spargo, that it was no pleasant thing to have to sit on that
grand jury as I did—I was its foreman, sir,—and hear a man
sentenced that you’d regarded as a bosom friend. But there it was!”</p>
<p>“How was the thing discovered?” asked Spargo, anxious to get at
facts.</p>
<p>“In this way,” replied Mr. Quarterpage. “The Market Milcaster
Bank is in reality almost entirely the property of two old families in the
town, the Gutchbys and the Hostables. Owing to the death of his father, a young
Hostable, fresh from college, came into the business. He was a shrewd, keen
young fellow; he got some suspicion, somehow, about Maitland, and he insisted
on the other partners consenting to a special investigation, and on their
making it suddenly. And Maitland was caught before he had a chance. But
we’re talking about Chamberlayne.”</p>
<p>“Yes, about Chamberlayne,” agreed Spargo.</p>
<p>“Well, now, Maitland was arrested one evening,” continued Mr.
Quarterpage. “Of course, the news of his arrest ran through the town like
wild-fire. Everybody was astonished; he was at that time—aye, and had
been for years—a churchwarden at the Parish Church, and I don’t
think there could have been more surprise if we’d heard that the Vicar
had been arrested for bigamy. In a little town like this, news is all over the
place in a few minutes. Of course, Chamberlayne would hear that news like
everybody else. But it was remembered, and often remarked upon afterwards, that
from the moment of Maitland’s arrest nobody in Market Milcaster ever had
speech with Chamberlayne again. After his wife’s death he’d taken
to spending an hour or so of an evening across there at the
‘Dragon,’ where you saw me and my friends last night, but on that
night he didn’t go to the ‘Dragon.’ And next morning he
caught the eight o’clock train to London. He happened to remark to the
stationmaster as he got into the train that he expected to be back late that
night, and that he should have a tiring day of it. But Chamberlayne
didn’t come back that night, Mr. Spargo. He didn’t come back to
Market Milcaster for four days, and when he did come back it was in a
coffin!”</p>
<p>“Dead?” exclaimed Spargo. “That was sudden!”</p>
<p>“Very sudden,” agreed Mr. Quarterpage. “Yes, sir, he came
back in his coffin, did Chamberlayne. On the very evening on which he’d
spoken of being back, there came a telegram here to say that he’d died
very suddenly at the Cosmopolitan Hotel. That telegram came to his
brother-in-law, Corkindale, the saddler—you’ll find him down the
street, opposite the Town Hall. It was sent to Corkindale by a nephew of
Chamberlayne’s, another Chamberlayne, Stephen, who lived in London, and
was understood to be on the Stock Exchange there. I saw that telegram, Mr.
Spargo, and it was a long one. It said that Chamberlayne had had a sudden
seizure, and though a doctor had been got to him he’d died shortly
afterwards. Now, as Chamberlayne had his nephew and friends in London, his
brother-in-law, Tom Corkindale, didn’t feel that there was any necessity
for him to go up to town, so he just sent off a wire to Stephen Chamberlayne
asking if there was aught he could do. And next morning came another wire from
Stephen saying that no inquest would be necessary, as the doctor had been
present and able to certify the cause of death, and would Corkindale make all
arrangements for the funeral two days later. You see, Chamberlayne had bought a
vault in our cemetery when he buried his wife, so naturally they wished to bury
him in it, with her.”</p>
<p>Spargo nodded. He was beginning to imagine all sorts of things and theories; he
was taking everything in.</p>
<p>“Well,” continued Mr. Quarterpage, “on the second day after
that, they brought Chamberlayne’s body down. Three of ’em came with
it—Stephen Chamberlayne, the doctor who’d been called in, and a
solicitor. Everything was done according to proper form and usage. As
Chamberlayne had been well known in the town, a good number of townsfolk met
the body at the station and followed it to the cemetery. Of course, many of us
who had been clients of Chamberlayne’s were anxious to know how he had
come to such a sudden end. According to Stephen Chamberlayne’s account,
our Chamberlayne had wired to him and to his solicitor to meet him at the
Cosmopolitan to do some business. They were awaiting him there when he arrived,
and they had lunch together. After that, they got to their business in a
private room. Towards the end of the afternoon, Chamberlayne was taken suddenly
ill, and though they got a doctor to him at once, he died before evening. The
doctor said he’d a diseased heart. Anyhow, he was able to certify the
cause of his death, so there was no inquest and they buried him, as I have told
you.”</p>
<p>The old gentleman paused and, taking a sip at his sherry, smiled at some
reminiscence which occurred to him.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, presently going on, “of course, on that came
all the Maitland revelations, and Maitland vowed and declared that Chamberlayne
had not only had nearly all the money, but that he was absolutely certain that
most of it was in his hands in hard cash. But Chamberlayne, Mr. Spargo, had
left practically nothing. All that could be traced was about three or four
thousand pounds. He’d left everything to his nephew, Stephen. There
wasn’t a trace, a clue to the vast sums with which Maitland had entrusted
him. And then people began to talk, and they said what some of them say to this
very day!”</p>
<p>“What’s that?” asked Spargo.</p>
<p>Mr. Quarterpage leaned forward and tapped his guest on the arm.</p>
<p>“That Chamberlayne never did die, and that that coffin was weighted with
lead!” he answered.</p>
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