wore a large, broad-brimmed black hat. From her thin shoulders, entirely concealing her gawky legs, hung a voluminous black cloak.
Ten minutes later her father was plodding up the street in search of the Steyning constable. He had noticed rust-coloured stains on the dark material, stains which, as an ex-serviceman, he recognized as dried blood. This fact, combined with the police notice which he had read only the previous day in the local paper, had aroused his suspicions.
When Meredith reached Findon after his visit to Mrs. Abingworth, Rodd, whom he had âphoned early that morning, had already collected this new evidence and handed it to his superior in a brown-paper parcel. He explained where and how it had been discovered.
âWhich,â he added with a pleased smirk of self-congratulation, âcorroborates old Mike Riddleâs story.â
Meredith agreed. He was in an optimistic frame of mind because in his interview with Kate Abingworth, the housekeeper had stoutly upheld that Mrs. Will had come into the farmhouse ânot later than the strike of half past nineâ. Did it mean now that William Rother was out of the running and that Janet Rother plus the Cloaked Man were the perpetrators of the crime?
âStrange,â he thought, âhow suspicion in a case of this sort swings about from one direction to another. Iâll end by suspecting myself soon, or the Chief Constable! After all, in these detective yarns itâs always the most unlikely person who has committed the murder!â
âBy the way,â he added aloud to Rodd, âhave you found anybody who saw William Rother round about Findon on the evening of the twentieth?â
Rodd shook his head.
âOnly Clark up at the Filling Stationâbut you knew about that already.â
âWell Iâve got a new slant now,â explained Meredith. âI want you to nose around and find out if anybody saw John Rotherâs Hillman pass through the village at any time between 7 and, say, 9.30. Probably driven by the same chap that Riddle saw up near Houndâs Oak.â
âWearing his hat and cloak?â asked Rodd with a meaning grin.
Meredith laughed.
âA bit too conspicuous, eh, Sergeant? Just as I thought. NoâI reckon that hat and cloak act was performed solely for our benefit. He used that disguise simply to take himself from Bindings Lane over the downs to Steyning. By the way, did Steyning say anything about having seen a stranger on the roads late that nightâI mean when you collected the cloak this morning?â
âNothing. I made a point of asking that question myself.â
âDamn!â said Meredith. âLoose ends everywhere, Rodd, and the murder nearly three weeks old already!â
Chapter Seven
Dead End
On his return to Lewes, Meredith found a note on his desk to say that the Chief would like to see him at the earliest possible moment. The Superintendent smothered an oath of irritation, suppressed all thought of an early retirement to his inevitable high-tea, and knocked on Major Forestâs door.
âWell,â barked the Chief without preliminary, âany further?â
Meredith slowly shook his head.
âMore evidence and less daylight, sir. Thatâs the present situation in a nutshell.â
âSit down. Take a fill of this. Light your pipe, and post me up to date,â ordered the Major.
With an inward sigh Meredith plunged into a detailed recital of his latest investigations, whilst his superior, every now and then, furiously scribbled a note on his desk-pad. At the conclusion of Meredithâs story the Chief studied these notes for about five minutes in a dead silence, rose, snorted, lit a cigar and dumped himself down again with an even louder snort.
âHopeless, eh? A damned muddle, eh? Complex, what?â Meredith dolefully agreed. âYet interesting, Meredith. What about the stains on the cloak? Had them
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