reminiscence. âIf Iâd seen him Iâd have told him off, I dare say, but I didnât.â
âNo, but you saw his car standing at the Duchy Hotel, so you thought of waiting for him down the road.â
Pengellyâs hands clenched; the hunted look returned to his eyes. âI wasnât going to waste my time waiting for a swine like that.â
âSo you just drove on and left him at the Duchy Hotel?â
âYes.â
âYou know that he had an accident on the way down Sandiland Hill and was picked up unconscious?â
âI heard something about it.â
âThank you, Pengelly. Thatâs all I want to ask you for the present.â
When they were alone Jago remarked, âThat man was lying.â
âUp to a point he was telling the truth, I think.â
âYes, because you dragged it out of him, but what puzzles me, Mr. Richardson, is how you knew that Dearborn had left his car standing outside the Duchy Hotel.â
âI didnât know it. It was just a lucky shot.â
âAnd that statement you got him to make? It struck me that you worded it in a funny way.â
âThat was because you didnât notice that it had one or two of the words used in those anonymous letters. I wanted to get a specimen of his handwriting; that was all. Now letâs have a look at his statement and compare it with the photographs of the letters.â Richardson laid the three documents on the table and pored over them. He shook his head. âNo. Pengelly never wrote those letters. He spells âbusinessâ right; not âbisnessâ as in both anonymous letters. Then look at the word âaccidentââitâs in much heavier writing than the same word in the letter to the Chief Constable.â
âI see that. But it never entered my head that he was the writer of the anonymous letters. I think weâve got him cold on the murder, though; he had a motiveâhe admits that he saw Dearbornâs car standing outside the Duchy Hotel. He went down the road to wait for him. Short of absolute proof what more can you want?â
âWe havenât done with our inquiries yet. Here comes the foreman. Pack up these papers quick. I donât want him to see them.â
âWell, gentlemen,â said the foreman, âhow did Pengelly shape when you put him through the hoop?â
âHe admitted driving a car without a licence, and I suppose that the county police will have something to say about that. Otherwise he came out all right. Iâm sorry to have taken up your time. We may have to see him again to clear up one or two minor points in his statement, but not for a few days. If heâs a competent workman, in your place I should keep him on. Good day.â
They entered the police car and Richardson gave the order to drive to the Duchy Hotel, Duketon. The driver went like the wind, covering the five miles in six minutes. The officers jumped down, entered the bar and asked to see the manager.
âPolice officers, are you?â questioned this functionary. âI donât remember seeing either of you before.â
âNo?â said Richardson. âWell, we wonât waste time over explanations. I have a simple question to ask you. Did Mr. Dearborn, who was injured in a motor accident last Saturday week and has since died, call in at this hotel late in the afternoon?â
âLord! I thought when I saw you that you were gentlemen of the Press. Is that the new wheezeâto call yourselves police officers? I suppose you represent the London newspapers. Youâll find a couple of your colleagues of the Plymouth Press in the bar parlour. I see the papers want to make a mystery out of that poor gentlemanâs death; theyâre not content with the verdict of the coronerâs jury.â
âWeâve nothing to do with the Press. As I told you weâre police officers; you might oblige me by
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