cheerfully:
âTerrible affair that at the Abbey?â
âTerrible!â the barmaid assented, with an uneasy glance at Stoddart.
The newcomer looked at him too. âYou have heard of it maybe, sir?â
âI have,â Stoddart told him in a noncommittal tone. At present he was uncertain whether the reason for his presence at Hepton was known or not.
Quite evidently this new-comer desired to be friendly. âCanât understand a woman being shot in her own bedroom, and the murderer getting away with it. Can you, sir?â turning suddenly on the detective.
Stoddard took a long pull at his drink before answering, then he said slowly:
âHas he got away with it? Has it been proved that the murderer was âheâ at all?â
The hand with which the barmaid was manipulating the big brass taps obviously trembled.
The rubicund stranger paused in the very act of raising his glass and stared at the detective.
âI say, sir, does that mean ââ
Stoddard smiled grimly. âIt does not mean anything but a plain statement of fact. Miss Karslake is quite as likely to have been shot by a woman as by a man. By the way, I hear she was a stranger hereabouts.â
âThat she was,â said the newcomer, who seemed to be constituting himself the spokesman of the assembly.
âWe are not much for going up to London, we Hepton folks, and this was the first time she ever come here.â
âWas it?â Stoddart questioned.
âWhy, of course it was,â the burly one said positively. âWho has been getting at you?â
âNobody.â Stoddart looked round. âBut I thought I had heard of people named Karslake living in Hepton and she might have been a connexion.â
âWhat be âe a saying Karslakes. Course there is Karslakes in Hepton. âTainât spelt like this womanâs though.â
The interruption came from an old man cowering down in the chimney-corner seat and holding out his trembling old hands to the heat.
Inspector Stoddart turned to him. Here was what he had been trying to find â one of the forefathers of the hamlet.
âYou have known Karslakes in Hepton, sir,â he said, with a deferential air to which the old man was quite unaccustomed.
ââEes, âees, sir,â he quavered. âSo do many of these âere folks too. Only our Karslake, âtaint spelt like this âere pore thingâs. Karslake, I understand hers was â spelt with a K like. While ours was Carslake, spelt with a C. Thatâs what made folks not recognize the name. But if it were spelt different folks wouldnât be unlike, would they?â
âI suppose notâ, the inspector said slowly. âBut now these Carslakes spelt with a C, are there any of them left in Hepton?â
âNow, no, sir.â The old man shook his head. âThe last of âem, Mrs. Lee Carslake, she lived at the Red House, a bit out oâ town that were. Everybody knowed her â a widow woman â her man had been a doctor over at Peysford Green, and when he died she come back to live at Hepton. Hepton born and bred she was. Father was Lawyer Herbert, buried at back oâ church he is. Ay, Hepton born and bred were Mrs. Lee Carslake.â
âHad she any children?â the inspector inquired in as conversational a tone as he could manage.
âAy! Chillen, yes. Of course she had.â The ancient scratched his head. âA matter of four or five boys and then the youngest, the purtiest little wench ever I see.â
A little girl! The inspector felt that he was striking oil at last.
âWhat was her name?â he asked abruptly.
âHer name?â the old man repeated. âWell, now, it was Missy Carslake I called her, when I spoke to her, which wasnât often. Her mother, I have heard her call her Angel or someut like that.â
But other memories were waking.
âMrs. Lee Carslake. The Red
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