all his ranting words, I didnât think the fellow had got it in him.â
He paused a minute, then turned to Tuppence with decision.
âWill you go out and get a policeman, or ring up the police station from somewhere?â
Tuppence nodded. She too, was very white. Tommy led Mrs Honeycott downstairs again.
âI donât want there to be any mistake about this,â he said. âDo you know exactly what time it was when your sister came in?â
âYes, I do,â said Mrs Honeycott. âBecause I was just setting the clock on five minutes as I have to do every evening. It loses just five minutes a day. It was exactly eight minutes past six by my watch, and that never loses or gains a second.â
Tommy nodded. That agreed perfectly with the policemanâs story. He had seen the woman with the white furs go in at the gate, probably three minutes had elapsed before he and Tuppence had reached the same spot. He had glanced at his own watch then and had noted that it was just one minute after the time of their appointment.
There was just the faint chance that some one might have been waiting for Gilda Glen in the room upstairs. But if so, he must still be hiding in the house. No one but James Reilly had left it.
He ran upstairs and made a quick but efficient search of the premises. But there was no one concealed anywhere.
Then he spoke to Ellen. After breaking the news to her, and waiting for her first lamentations and invocations to the saints to have exhausted themselves, he asked a few questions.
Had any one else come to the house that afternoon asking for Miss Glen? No one whatsoever. Had she herself been upstairs at all that evening? Yes sheâd gone up at six oâclock as usual to draw the curtains â or it might have been a few minutes after six. Anyway it was just before that wild fellow came breaking the knocker down. Sheâd run downstairs to answer the door. And him a black-hearted murderer all the time.
Tommy let it go at that. But he still felt a curious pity for Reilly, and unwillingness to believe the worst of him. And yet there was no one else who could have murdered Gilda Glen. Mrs Honeycott and Ellen had been the only two people in the house.
He heard voices in the hall, and went out to find Tuppence and the policeman from the beat outside. The latter had produced a notebook, and a rather blunt pencil, which he licked surreptitiously. He went upstairs and surveyed the victim stolidly, merely remarking that if he was to touch anything the Inspector would give him beans. He listened to all Mrs Honeycottâs hysterical outbursts and confused explanations, and occasionally he wrote something down. His presence was calming and soothing.
Tommy finally got him alone for a minute or two on the steps outside ere he departed to telephone headquarters.
âLook here,â said Tommy, âyou saw the deceased turning in at the gate, you say. Are you sure she was alone?â
âOh! she was alone all right. Nobody with her.â
âAnd between that time and when you met us, nobody came out of the gate?â
âNot a soul.â
âYouâd have seen them if they had?â
âOf course I should. Nobody come out till that wild chap did.â
The majesty of the law moved portentously down the steps and paused by the white gatepost, which bore the imprint of a hand in red.
âKind of amateur he must have been,â he said pityingly. âTo leave a thing like that.â
Then he swung out into the road.
It was the day after the crime. Tommy and Tuppence were still at the Grand Hotel, but Tommy had thought it prudent to discard his clerical disguise.
James Reilly had been apprehended, and was in custody. His solicitor, Mr Marvell, had just finished a lengthy conversation with Tommy on the subject of the crime.
âI never would have believed it of James Reilly,â he said simply. âHeâs always been a man of violent