The Missing Bank Manager
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CHAPTER XV. MR. FREDERICK HOLLIS Starmidge hastily pulled some garru ’r.ts about him, and flinging a travel-ling-coat over his shoulders, hurried downstairs, to find a sleepy-looking policeman in the hall. "How did this man get here—at this time of night?” he asked as they set off coward the police-station. “Came in a taxi-cab from Ecclesborough,” answered the policeman. “I haven’t heard any particulars. Mr. Starmidge, except that he’d read the news in the London papers this evening and set off here in consequence. He's in Mr. Polko’s house, sir.” Starmidge walked into the superintendent’s parlour to And him in company with a young man whom the detective at once sized up as a typical London clerk —a second glance assured him that his clerkship was of the legal variety. “Here’s Detective-Sergeant Starmidge,” said Pollke. “Starmidge, this gentleman’s Mr. Simmons, from Londor. Mr. Simmons says he’s a clerk to a Mr. Hollis, a London solicitor. And, having read that description in the papers this last evening, he’s certain that the man who came to the Station Hotel here on Saturday is his governor.” Starmidge sat down and looked again at the visitor—a tall, sandy-haired, freckled young man who was obviously a good deal puzzled. “Is Mr. Hollis missing, then?” asked Starmidge. Simmons looked as if he found it somewhat difficult to explain matter s. “Well,” he answered, “it’s this way. I’ve never seen him since Saturday. And he hasn't been at his rooms—his private rooms—since Saturday. In tire ordinary course, he ought to have been at business first. thing yesterday—we’d some very important business on yesterday morning, which wasn’t done, because of Ms absence. He neva:r turned up yesterday at all—nor to-day either —we never heard from or of him. And so, when I read that description in ths papers this evening I caught the first express I could get down here at least to Ecclesborough—l had to motor from there.” “That description describes Mr. Hollis, then?’ asked Starmidge. “Exactly! I’m sure it’s Mr. Hollis it’s him to a T!” answered the clerk. “I recognised it at once.” “Let’s get everything in order.” sad Starmidge, with a glance at Polke. “To begin with, who is Mr. Hollis?” "Mr. Frederic!: Hollis, solicitor, 59b South Square, Cray’s Inn,” replied Simmons, promptly. “Andwell and Roll s, is the n ime of the firm —but there isn’t any Andwell —hasn’t been for many a y ?ar—he’s dead, long since, is Andwell. Mr. Hollis is the only proprietor.” ‘Don’t know him at all,” remarked Starmidge. 4 What’s lis particular line of practice?” “Conveyancing,” sa.d Simmons. “Then naturally I shouldn’t,” observed Starmidge. “My acquaintance is chiefly
STORY
J. S. FLETCHER
with police-court solicitors. And you say he’d private rooms somewhere? Where now?” “Paper Buildings, Temple,” replied the clerk. “He’d a suite of rooms there —he’s had ’em for years.” “Bachelor, then?” inquired the detective. “Yes —he’s a bachelor,” agreed Simmons. “You know he hasn’t been at his rooms since Saturday—you’ve ascertained that?” continued Starmidge. “He’s never been at his rooms since he left them after breakfast on Saturday morning,” replied Simmons. “I went there at 11 o’clock Monday—that was yesterday—again at four; twice on Tuesday. I was coming away from the Temple when I got the paper and read about this affair.” “When did you see him last?” asked Starmidge. “Half-past twelve Saturday. He went out, dressed, just as it says in your description. And,” concluded the clerk, with a shake of the head which suggested his own inability to understand matters, “he never said a word to me .about coming down here.” “Did he say anything to anybody at his rooms about going away?—for the week-end, for instance,” asked the detective. “There’d be somebody there, of course.” “Only a woman who tidied up for him and got his breakfast ready in the morning,” said Simmons. “He took all his other meals out. No, he said nothing to her. But he wasn’t a weekender; he very rarely left his rooms except for the office.” “Any of his relations been after him?” inquired Starmidge. “I don’t know anything about his relations—nor friends, either,” answered the clerk. “Don’t even know the address of one of them, or I’d have gone to seek him on Monday—everything’s at a standstill. He was a lonely sort of man—l never heard of his relations or friends.” “How’ long have you been with him, then?” asked the detective. “Some time ?” “Six years,” replied Simmons. “And you’ve no doubt, from the description in the papers, that the gentleman who came here on Saturday last is Mr. Hollis?” asked Starmidge. The clerk shook his head with an air of conviction. “None!” he answered. “None whatever!” Starmidge helped himself to a cigar out of an open box which Lay on Polke’s table. He lighted it carefully, and smoked for a minute or two in silence. Then he looked at Polke. “Well there’s a very obvious question to put to Mr. Simmons after all that,” he remarked. “Have you any idea,” lie continued, turning to the clerk, “of any reason that w'ould bring Mr. Hollis to Scarnham?" Simmons shook his head more vigorously than before. “Not the ghost of an idea!” he exclaimed..
“There was no business being done with anybody at Scarham?” asked Starmidge. “Not in our office!” asserted Simmons. “I’m sure of that. I know all the business that we have in hand. To tell you the truth, gentlemen, though you may think me very ignorant, I never even heard of Scarnham, myself, until I read the paper this evening.” “Quite excusable,” said Starmidge. “I never heard of it myself until Monday. Well —this is all very queer, Mr. Simmons. What does Mr. Polke think? And what’s Mr. Polke got to suggest?” Polke, who had been listening intently, turned to the clerk. “Did you chance to look at Mr.
Hollis’s letters —recent letters, I mean,”, he asked, “to see If you could find anything inviting him down here?” “I did,” replied Simmons, promptly. “I looked through all the letters on his desk and in his drawers, yesterday afternoon. I didn’t find anything that explained his absence. And when I was at his rooms this evening 1 looked at some letters on his mantelpiece—nothing there. I tell you, I haven’t the least notion as to what could bring him to Scarnham.” “And I sup'pose none of your fellowclerks have, either?" asked Polke.
Simmons smiled, and glanced at Starmidge. “We’ve only myself and another —a junior clerk —and a boy,” he said. “It’s not a big practice—only a bit of good conveyancing now and then, and some family business. Mr. Hollis isn’t dependent on it —he’s private means of his own.” “Aye, just so!” observed Polke. “And I should say, Starmidge, that it was private business brought him down here—if lie’s the man, as he certainly sems to be. But—whose?” Starmidge turned again to the clerk. “You’ve a good memory, I can see,” he said. “Now, did you ever hear Mr. Hollis mention the name of Horbury?” “Never,” replied Simmons.
“Did you ever hear him speak of Chestermarkes’s Bank” asked Starmidge. “No—never! Never heard either name in my life until I saw them in the papers,” asserted Simmons. “Who looks after the banking account at Hollis’s?” asked the detective.
“I mean the business account, you know. Not his private one.” “I do,” said Simmons.. “Always have done, since I went there.” “You never saw any cheques paid to those names—or any cheques from
them?” inquired Starmidge. “Think now!”
4 No —I’m absolutely sure of it,” said the clerk. “Horbury, perhaps, I might not remember, but I should have remembered Chestermarke —it’s an uncommon name, that —to me, anyway.” “Well,” said Starmidge, after a pause, during which all three looked
at each other as men look who have come to a dead stop in the progress of things, “there’s one thing very certain, Mr. Simmons. If that was your governor who came down to the Station Hotel here on Saturday evening last, he certainly telephoned from there to Chestermarke’s Bank as soon as he arrived. And he got a reply from there, and he evidently went out to meet whoever sent it —that sender seeming to be Mr. Horbury, the manager. And so,” he concluded, turning to Polke, “what we’ve got*to find out is—what did Hollis come here at all for?” “We shan’t find that out to-night,” said Polke, with a yawn.
“Quite so—so we’ll adjourn till morning, when Mr. Simmons shall see Mrs. Pratt —just to establish things,” remarked Starmidge. “In the meantime he’d better come round with me to my place, and I’ll get him a bed.” Neither the police-superintendent nor the detective had the slightest doubt after hearing Simmons’ story that the man who presented himself at the Station Hotel at Scarnham on the evening of John Horbury’s disappearance was Mr. Frederick Hollis, solicitor, of Gray’s Inn. If they had still retained any doubt it would have disappeared next morning when they took the clerk down to see Mrs. Pratt. The landlady described her customer even more fully than before; Simmons had no doubt whatever that she described his employer; he couldn’t have been more certain, he said, that Mrs. Pratt was talking about Mr. Hollis if she’d shown him a photograph of that gentleman.
“So we can take that for settled,” remarked Polke, as the three left the hotel and went back to the town. “The man who came here last Saturday night was Mr. Frederick Hollis, solicitor, of South Square, Gray’s Inn, London. That’s established, I take it, Starmidge.” “Seems so,” agreed the detective. “Then the next question is—where’s he got to?” said Polke. “I think the next question is—has anybody ever heard of him in connection with Mr. Horbury, or the Chester - markes,” observed Starmidge. “There’s no doubt he came down here to see one or the other of them —Horbury, most likely.” “And who’s to tell us anything?” asked Polke.
“Miss Fosdyke’s a relation of Horbury’s,” replied Starmidge. “She may know Hollis by name. Mr. Neale’s always been in touch with Horbury—he may have heard of Hollis. And—so may the bankers.”
“The difficulty is to make them say anything,” said Polke. “They’ll only tell what they please.” “Let’s try the other two, anyway,” counselled Starmidge. “They may be able to tell something. For as sure as I am what I am, the whole secret of this business lies in Hollis’s coming down here to see Horbury, and in what followed on their meeting. If we could only get to know what Hollis came here for —ah!”
But they got no further information from either Betty Fosdyke or Wallington Neale. Neither had ever ever h€*ard of Mr. Frederick Hollis, of Gray’s Inn. Betty was certain, beyond doubt, that he was no relation of
the missing bank manager; she had the whole family-tree of the Horburys at her finger-ends, and declared . no Hollis was connected with even its outlying twigs. Neale had never heard the name of Hollis mentioned by Horbury; and ho added that he was absolutely sure that during the last live years no person of that name had dealings with Chestermarke’s Bank—open dealings, at any rate. Secret dealings with the partners, severally or collectively, or with Horbury, for that matter, Mr. Hollis might have had, but Neale was certain he had had no ordinary business with any of them. Polke took heart of grace and led Simmons across to the bank. To his
astonishment, the partners now received them readily and cordially; then even listened with apparent interest to the clerk’s story, and asked him some questions arising out of it. But each declared that he knew nothing about Mr. Frederick Hollis, and was utterly unaware of any reason that could bring him to Scamham: it was certainly on no business of theirs, as a firm, or as private individuals, that he came. “He came, of course, to see Horbury,” said Joseph at last. "That’s dead certain. No doubt they met. And after that —well, they seem to have vanished together. Gabriel followed Polke into the hall and drew him aside..
‘'Did this clerk tell you whether his master was a man of standing?” he asked. “Man of private means, Mr. CL«stermarke, with a small, highly respectable practice—i eonveyancirg solictor.” answered Polke. “Oh!” replied Gabriel. “Jus: »). Well—we know nothing about him.’ Polke and his companion ret-jriiei to the Scamham Arms, where Stir* midge was in consultation with Betty and Neale. “They know nothing at all over there.” ho reported. “Never heard of Hollis. What’s to be done nov.*?” (To Le continued.)
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 147, 12 September 1927, Page 14
Word Count
2,106The Missing Bank Manager Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 147, 12 September 1927, Page 14
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