FIFTH NARRATIVE
1. CHAPTER I
(continued)
At nine, the next morning, I was ready for my visitor. At half past nine,
I heard steps outside my door. "Come in, Gooseberry!" I called out.
"Thank you, sir," answered a grave and melancholy voice. The door opened.
I started to my feet, and confronted--Sergeant Cuff.
"I thought I would look in here, Mr. Blake, on the chance of your being
in town, before I wrote to Yorkshire," said the Sergeant.
He was as dreary and as lean as ever. His eyes had not lost
their old trick (so subtly noticed in Betteredge's NARRATIVE)
of "looking as if they expected something more from you than
you were aware of yourself." But, so far as dress can alter
a man, the great Cuff was changed beyond all recognition.
He wore a broad-brimmed white hat, a light shooting jacket,
white trousers, and drab gaiters. He carried a stout oak stick.
His whole aim and object seemed to be to look as if he had
lived in the country all his life. When I complimented him
on his Metamorphosis, he declined to take it as a joke.
He complained, quite gravely, of the noises and the smells
of London. I declare I am far from sure that he did not speak
with a slightly rustic accent! I offered him breakfast.
The innocent countryman was quite shocked. HIS breakfast
hour was half-past six--and HE went to bed with the cocks
and hens!
"I only got back from Ireland last night," said the Sergeant,
coming round to the practical object of his visit, in his own
impenetrable manner. "Before I went to bed, I read your letter,
telling me what has happened since my inquiry after the Diamond
was suspended last year. There's only one thing to be said
about the matter on my side. I completely mistook my case.
How any man living was to have seen things in their true light,
in such a situation as mine was at the time, I don't profess
to know. But that doesn't alter the facts as they stand.
I own that I made a mess of it. Not the first mess, Mr. Blake,
which has distinguished my professional career! It's only
in books that the officers of the detective force are superior
to the weakness of making a mistake."
|