<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<h3><SPAN name="div1_05" href="#div1Ref_05">A REPRESENTATIVE OF LAW AND ORDER</SPAN></h3>
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<p class="normal">The next morning, information was given to a passing policeman of the
events of the night, and in the course of the day an officer came
round from the local station to learn particulars. Madge received him
in solitary state; she had refused Ella's offer to stop away from
business to keep her company, declaring that for that day, at any
rate, she would be safe from undesirable intruders.</p>
<p class="normal">The officer was a plain-clothes man, middle-aged, imperfectly
educated, with the stolid, matter-of-fact, rather stupid-looking
countenance which one is apt to find an attribute of the detective of
fact, rather than fiction.</p>
<p class="normal">"You say you didn't see him?"</p>
<p class="normal">"I saw the back of him."</p>
<p class="normal">"Hum!" This stands for a sort of a kind of a sniff.</p>
<p class="normal">"Would you know him if you saw him again?"</p>
<p class="normal">"From the glimpse which I caught of him last night I certainly
shouldn't. It was pretty dark, and he was twenty or thirty yards down
the road when I first caught sight of his back."</p>
<p class="normal">"You didn't follow him?"</p>
<p class="normal">"We did not."</p>
<p class="normal">Madge smiled as she thought of how such a suggestion would have been
received had it been made at the time.</p>
<p class="normal">"He came in through the back window and left through the front?"</p>
<p class="normal">"That's it."</p>
<p class="normal">"And he took nothing?"</p>
<p class="normal">"No--but he left something behind him--he left this."</p>
<p class="normal">Madge produced the half-sheet of paper which Ella had picked up from
the floor.</p>
<p class="normal">"You're sure this was his property?"</p>
<p class="normal">"I'm sure it isn't ours, and I'm sure we found it in this room just
after he left it."</p>
<p class="normal">The officer took the paper; read it, turned it over and over; looked
it up and down; read it again. Then he gave his mouth a rather comical
twist; then he looked at Madge with eyes which he probably intended to
be pregnant with meaning.</p>
<p class="normal">"Hum!" He paused to cogitate. "I suppose you know there's been a
burglary here before?"</p>
<p class="normal">"I know nothing of the kind. We have only been here six weeks, and are
quite strangers to the place."</p>
<p class="normal">"There was. Something more than a year ago. The house was empty at the
time. The man who did it was caught at the job--and our chap got
pretty well knocked about for his pains. But that wasn't the only time
we've had business at this house; our fellows have been here a good
many times."</p>
<p class="normal">"Neither my friend or I had the slightest notion that the house had
such a reputation."</p>
<p class="normal">"I daresay not. It's been empty a good long time. I expect the stories
which were told about it were against its letting."</p>
<p class="normal">"What sort of stories?"</p>
<p class="normal">"All sorts--nonsense, most of them."</p>
<p class="normal">"Were the people who lived here named Ossington?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Ossington?" The officer screwed his mouth up into the comical twist
which it seemed he had a trick of giving it. "I believe it was, or, at
any rate, something like it. A queer lot they were--very."</p>
<p class="normal">"Do you see what's written as a heading on that piece of paper?"</p>
<p class="normal">The officer's glance returned to the writing.</p>
<p class="normal">"'Tom Ossington's Ghost!'--yes, I noticed it, but I don't know what it
means--do you?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Except that if the name of the people who lived here last was
Ossington, it would seem as if last night's affair had some reference
to the house's former occupants."</p>
<p class="normal">"Yes--it would look as if it had--when you come to look at it in that
way." He was studying it as if now he had made up his mind to
understand it clearly. "It looks as if it was some sort of cryptogram,
and yet it mightn't be--it's hard to tell." He wagged his head. "I'll
take it to our chaps, and see what they can make of it. Some men are
better at this sort of thing than others." Folding up the paper he
placed it in his pocket-book. "Am I to understand that you can give no
description of the burglar--that there's no one you suspect?"</p>
<p class="normal">"I don't know that it amounts to suspicion--but there was a man
hanging about here in rather a singular fashion whom I can't help
thinking might have had a finger in the pie."</p>
<p class="normal">"Can you describe him?"</p>
<p class="normal">"He was about my height--I'm five feet six and a half--thick set, and
I noticed he walked in a sort of rolling way; I thought he was drunk
at first, but I don't believe he was. He kept his hands in his
trousers pockets, and he was very shabbily dressed, in an old black
coat--I believe you call them Chesterfields--which was buttoned down
the front right up to the chin--I doubt if he had a waistcoat; a pair
of old patched trousers--and I'm under the impression that his boots
were odd ones. He had an old black billycock hat, with no band on,
crammed over his eyes, iron-grey hair, and a fortnight's growth of
whiskers on his cheeks and chin. He had a half impudent, half hang-dog
air--altogether just the sort of person to try his hand at this sort
of thing."</p>
<p class="normal">"I'll take down that description, if you'll repeat it."</p>
<p class="normal">She did repeat it--and he did take it down, with irritating slowness.
When she had finished he read what he had written, tapping his teeth
with the end of his pencil and looking most important.</p>
<p class="normal">"I shouldn't be surprised if you've laid your finger on the very
man--and if we lay our fingers on him before the day is over.
You will excuse my saying, miss, that you've got the faculty of
observation--marked. I couldn't have given a better description of a
chap myself--and I've been a bit longer at the game than you have. Now
I'll just go through the place once more, and then I'll go; and then
in due course you'll hear from us again."</p>
<p class="normal">He did go through the place once more--and he did go.</p>
<p class="normal">"Now," observed Madge to herself, as she watched him going down the
road, "all that remains, is for us in due course to hear from you
again--to some effect--and that, if you're the sort of blunderbuss I
take you to be, will be never."</p>
<p class="normal">Turning from the window, she looked about the room, speaking half in
jest and half in earnest.</p>
<p class="normal">"This is a delightful state of things--truly! It seems as if we
couldn't have found a more undesirable habitation, if we had tried
Petticoat Lane. Not the first burglar that's been in the place! And
the house well known to the police--not to speak of a sinister
reputation in all the country side! Charming! Clover Cottage seems to
be an ideal place of residence for two lone, lorn young women. The
abode of mystery, and, so far as I can make out, a sink of crime, one
wonders if it still waits to become the scene of some ghastly murder
to give to the situation its crowning touches. I shiver--or, at any
rate, I ought to shiver--when I reflect on the horrors with which I
may be, and probably am, surrounded!"</p>
<p class="normal">Ella returned earlier than the day before, and, this time, she came
alone. The question burst from her lips the instant she was in the
house.</p>
<p class="normal">"Well, has anything happened?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Nothing--of importance. It's true the police have been, but as it
appears that they've been here over and over again before, that's a
trifle. There's been at least one previous burglar upon the premises,
and it seems that the house has been known to the police--and to the
whole neighbourhood--for years, in the most disreputable possible
sense."</p>
<p class="normal">Ella could but gasp.</p>
<p class="normal">"Madge!"</p>
<p class="normal">The statements which the officer had made were retailed, with comments
and additions--and, it may be added, interpolations. Ella was more
impressed even than Madge had been--being divided between concern and
indignation.</p>
<p class="normal">"To think that we should have been inveigled into taking such a place!
We ought to claim damages from those scamps of agents who let it us
without a word of warning. You can't think how I have been worrying
about you the whole day long; the idea of our being together in the
place is bad enough, but the idea of your being alone in it is worse.
What that policeman has said, settles it. Jack may laugh if he likes,
but my mind is made up that I won't stop a moment longer in the house
than I can help; the notion of your being all those hours alone here
would worry me into the grave if nothing else did--and so I shall tell
him when he comes."</p>
<p class="normal">Madge's manner was more equable.</p>
<p class="normal">"He will laugh at you, you'll find; and, unless I'm in error, here he
is to do it."</p>
<p class="normal">As she spoke there was a vigorous knock at the front door.</p>
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