登陆注册
20059200000052

第52章 XVI(1)

THE OWNER OF THE GOLD BAG

The next day I received a letter addressed in modish, angular penmanship, which, before I opened it, I felt sure had come from Mrs. Cunningham. It ran as follows Mr. HERBERT Burroughs Dear Sir: Yes, I have lost a gold bag, and I have known all along that it is the one the newspapers are talking so much about in connection with the Crawford case. I know, too, that you are the detective on the case, and though I can't imagine how you did it, I think it was awfully clever of you to trace the bag to me, for I'm sure my name wasn't in it anywhere. As I say, the bag is mine, but I didn't kill Mr. Crawford, and I don't know who did.

I would go straight to you, and tell you all about it, but I am afraid of detectives and lawyers, and I don't want to be mixed up in the affair anyway. But I am going to see Miss Lloyd, and explain it all to her, and then she can tell you. Please don't let my name get in the papers, as I hate that sort of prominence.

Very truly yours, ELIZABETH CUNNINGHAM.

I smiled a little over the femininity of the letter, but as Parmalee had prophesied, Marathon Park was evidently no place to look for our criminal.

The foolish little woman who had written that letter, had no guilty secret on her conscience, of that I was sure.

I telephoned for Parmalee and showed him the letter.

"It doesn't help us in one way," he said, "for of course, Mrs.

Cunningham is not implicated. But the bag is still a clue, for how did it get into Mr. Crawford's office?"

"We must find out who Mr. Cunningham is," I suggested.

"He's not the criminal, either. If he had left his wife's bag there, he never would have let her send this letter."

"Perhaps he didn't know she wrote it."

"Oh, perhaps lots of things! But I am anxious to learn what Mrs.

Cunningham tells Miss Lloyd."

"Let us go over to the Crawford house, and tell Miss Lloyd about it."

"Not this morning; I've another engagement. And besides, the little lady won't get around so soon."

"Why a little lady?" I asked, smiling.

"Oh, the whole tone of the letter seems to imply a little yellow-haired butterfly of a woman."

"Just the reverse of Florence Lloyd," I said musingly.

"Yes; no one could imagine Miss Lloyd writing a letter like that.

There's lots of personality in a woman's letter. Much more than in a man's."

Parmalee went away, and prompted by his suggestions, I studied the letter I had just received. It was merely an idle fancy, for if Mrs. Cunningham was going to tell Miss Lloyd her story, it made little difference to me what might be her stature or the color of her hair. But, probably because of Parmalee's suggestion, I pictured her to myself as a pretty young woman with that air of half innocence and half ignorance which so well becomes the plump blonde type.

The broad veranda of the Sedgwick Arms was a pleasant place to sit, and I had mused there for some time, when Mr. Carstairs came out to tell me that I was asked for on the telephone. The call proved to be from Florence Lloyd asking me to come to her at once.

Only too glad to obey this summons, I went directly to the Crawford house, wondering if any new evidence had been brought to light.

Lambert opened the door for me, and ushered me into the library, where Florence was receiving a lady caller.

"Mrs. Cunningham," said Florence, as I entered, "may I present Mr. Burroughs - Mr. Herbert Burroughs. I sent for you," she added, turning to me, "because Mrs. Cunningham has an important story to tell, and I thought you ought to hear it at once."

I bowed politely to the stranger, and awaited her disclosures.

Mrs. Cunningham was a pretty, frivolous-looking woman, with appealing blue eyes, and a manner half-childish, half-apologetic.

I smiled involuntarily to see how nearly her appearance coincided with the picture in my mind, and I greeted her almost as if she were a previous acquaintance.

"I know I've done very wrong," she began, with a nervous little flutter of her pretty hands; "but I'm ready now to 'fess up, as the children say."

She looked at me, so sure of an answering smile, that I gave it, and said "Let us hear your confession, Mrs. Cunningham; I doubt if it's a very dreadful one."

"Well, you see," she went on, "that gold bag is mine."

"Yes," I said; "how did it get here?"

"I've no idea," she replied, and I could see that her shallow nature fairly exulted in the sensation she was creating. "I went to New York that night, to the theatre, and I carried my gold bag, and I left it in the train when I got out at the station."

"West Sedgwick?" I asked.

"No; I live at Marathon Park, the next station to this."

"Next on the way to New York?"

"Yes. And when I got out of the train - I was with my husband and some other people - we had been to a little theatre party - I missed the bag. But I didn't tell Jack, because I knew he'd scold me for being so careless. I thought I'd get it back from the Lost and Found Department, and then, the very next day, I read in the paper about the - the - awful accident, and it told about a gold bag being found here."

"You recognized it as yours?"

"Of course; for the paper described everything in it - even to the cleaner's advertisement that I'd just cut out that very day."

"Why didn't you come and claim it at once?"

"Oh, Mr. Burroughs, you must know why I didn't! Why, I was scared 'most to death to read the accounts of the terrible affair; and to mix in it, myself - ugh! I couldn't dream of anything so horrible."

It was absurd, but I had a desire to shake the silly little bundle of femininity who told this really important story, with the twitters and simpers of a silly school-girl.

"And you would not have come, if I had not written you?"

She hesitated. "I think I should have come soon, even without your letter."

"Why, Mrs. Cunningham?"

"Well, I kept it secret as long as I could, but yesterday Jack saw that I had something on my mind. I couldn't fool him any longer."

"As to your having a mind!" I said to myself, but I made no comment aloud.

"So I told him all about it, and he said I must come at once and tell Miss Lloyd, because, you see, they thought it was her bag all the time."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 诛神合约

    诛神合约

    2024年,全球出现空间裂痕,未知生物一拥而入,科学家称其为“空间兽“,身体强度远超人类,体型有大有小,各国凭借激光热武器以及微型核武,镇压住了空间兽、但是空间兽的进化周期非常快,能力与力量每天都在增长、全球安全令人堪忧由于印度军力不足,各国辅助镇压而各国也在相应空间裂痕地建立起军事防御圈军方将此事件冠以“野兽袭人事件”之名各国签订合约,同意暂时放下所有冲突,把更多的军事力量投放到对抗空间兽以及获取更多利益当中。
  • 奈何问道

    奈何问道

    一位少年,一把木剑,一段轮回,一场醒悟。年少的他,渴望有一日能够乘奔御风,踏上修道之路。可是当他终于得偿所愿的时候,却发现世间有太多的无奈是自己改变不了的,曾经拥有过的,也最终会失去。路一直都只有一条,当经历完了一切,他是否还能再找回自己的过往?·········
  • 等时间把我看透——惹火

    等时间把我看透——惹火

    我用文字记住了寂静流年…等时间将她看透…他经常对他说:“你脑子坏掉了!”她记住了他,记住他偶尔的温柔…某一时她会想,不如不见,她继续做她的春秋大梦,他继续当他的逍遥散仙…她和他的相遇,是否只是时间的一厢情愿…
  • 光与世纪

    光与世纪

    后来她抱着一袋面包慢慢走在街上,在玻璃橱窗前看见自己的样子,余光里是无尽的人来人往。
  • 天体密码破译

    天体密码破译

    宇宙的无限魅力就在于那许许多多的难解之谜,使我们不得不密切关注和发出疑问。本书包括太阳与人类的关系、日食形成的原因、恒星起源的假说、解释星系撞击、陨星坠落会伤人吗等内容,去伪存真地将未解之谜与科学研究结合起来,非常适合广大青少年读者阅读和收藏。
  • 左岸情深

    左岸情深

    一个国度的兴衰,一个君王的存亡
  • 银色血刃:放下呆萌少主

    银色血刃:放下呆萌少主

    从小受尽折磨,最后惨死在太阳风暴之下。羡慕哥哥,大神便赐予她男儿身;想要逆袭,大神允她复生于魔族;渴望有一个靠谱的伙伴,大神决定献身与她闯荡天下。就算最后只能分离’‘也不放弃彼此军临城下,她独自一人立于城墙之上,“门已启,我不得不走,但愿你忘”记与我一切,再寻与你有缘之人。”吾欠汝的,只得来世再还。
  • 绝品郎中

    绝品郎中

    开个小诊所,看看病,救救人,价格公道,为人低调,左邻右里都说杨凡是个好青年。杨凡也想如此平平淡淡,奈何现实总是逼良为娼,渐渐出现的人,出现的事让人发现,平素言语不多的小郎中还有鲜为人知的一面。杨凡说:穿上白大褂我可以是天使,脱了之后我也可以是恶魔!
  • 三界风云

    三界风云

    天地不仁,万物皆狗。报恩抱怨,孰是孰非。谁曾剑指苍天睥睨三界英雄?谁曾亦正亦邪斩破苍穹?欢迎加入三界风云书群,群号码:399582666
  • 雪球专刊第039期:我们的故事

    雪球专刊第039期:我们的故事

    从开始做雪球的第一天起,我就常常被问及一个问题:雪球的参照物是什么?每当被问到这个问题,我都有点为难。好像我们经常听到的创业故事里都有一个美国蓝本。创始人对这个蓝本进行“中国式加工”,成功做出一款属于自己的产品。但是雪球的确没有美国蓝本。我都有点不知道应该怎么讲我的创业故事了,所以我干脆讲讲我作为一个普通投资者的故事吧。