The Moon Rock eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 404 pages of information about The Moon Rock.

The Moon Rock eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 404 pages of information about The Moon Rock.
the end.  He learnt that there had been what the writer called fresh developments in the case.  The police were now looking for another suspect—­himself.  The detective engaged upon the case had suspicions of the murdered man’s nephew for some time past, but had his reasons for reticence—­reasons which had now so completely disappeared that Scotland Yard had made public a full description of the young man and the additional information that he was supposed to be in London.  Charles found himself reading the description of himself with the detached, slightly wondering air with which a man might be supposed to read his own death notice.  He weighed the personal details quite critically.  Young and tall.  Yes.  Good-looking.  Was he?  Dark blue eyes.  Were they?  He had never thought about them.  Of gentlemanly appearance.  That read like the advertisement of a Cheapside tailor—­what was a gentlemanly appearance, if he had it?  He had always associated it with a cheap lounge suit and a bowler hat.  Very well dressed—­then followed the description of his clothes.  But he couldn’t be well dressed and of gentlemanly appearance at the same time!

These preoccupations floated lightly, almost playfully, on the surface of his mind, but the great fact had sunk to the depths like lead.  His father’s fears had been right, and his departure from Cornwall had drawn attention to his actions on that night.  He was—­what was the phrase?—­wanted by the police.  So was Sisily.  He was searching for Sisily, and the police were searching for both of them.

What had the police discovered about him?  His lips framed the reply.  Everything.  That was to say, all there was to find out.  Obviously they had discovered his visit to Flint House on that night, or at least, that he was out in the storm during the time the murder was committed.  His commonsense told him the reason for Barrant’s reticence.  He had kept quiet in the hope that he would go to his father’s house at Richmond, which no doubt had been closely watched.  Now that Barrant had come to the conclusion that the man he was after was too clever to walk into that trap, he had confided his suspicions to the newspapers in order to guard all avenues of escape by putting the public on the watch for him.

A feeling of helplessness crept over Charles as he contemplated the incredible ingenuity of the mesh of events in which he and Sisily were entangled.  Any moment might terminate his liberty and see him placed under lock and key.  Would it help Sisily if he gave himself up and told all he knew?  That was a question he had asked himself before, and dismissed it because he realized that his own story might involve her more deeply still.  And the loss of time since then, coupled with his own disappearance, intensified the risk which such a course would entail.  There was no hope for her in that direction.  Where, then, were they to look for hope?

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Project Gutenberg
The Moon Rock from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.