"I do," Gertrude answered firmly. "At a quarter before three my

brother and Mr. Bailey left the house, by the main entrance.

I--was--there."

"Gertrude," I said excitedly, "you are dreaming! Why, at a quarter to

three--"

"Listen," she said. "At half-past two the downstairs telephone rang.

I had not gone to sleep, and I heard it. Then I heard Halsey answer

it, and in a few minutes he came up-stairs and knocked at my door.

We--we talked for a minute, then I put on my dressing-gown and

slippers, and went down-stairs with him. Mr. Bailey was in the

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billiard-room. We--we all talked together for perhaps ten minutes.

Then it was decided that--that they should both go away--"

"Can't you be more explicit?" Mr. Jamieson asked. "WHY did they go

away?"

"I am only telling you what happened, not why it happened," she said

evenly. "Halsey went for the car, and instead of bringing it to the

house and rousing people, he went by the lower road from the stable.

Mr. Bailey was to meet him at the foot of the lawn. Mr. Bailey left--"

"Which way?" Mr. Jamieson asked sharply.

"By the main entrance. He left--it was a quarter to three. I know

exactly."

"The clock in the hall is stopped, Miss Innes," said Jamieson. Nothing

seemed to escape him.

"He looked at his watch," she replied, and I could see Mr. Jamieson's

snap, as if he had made a discovery. As for myself, during the whole

recital I had been plunged into the deepest amazement.

"Will you pardon me for a personal question?" The detective was a

youngish man, and I thought he was somewhat embarrassed. "What are

your--your relations with Mr. Bailey?"

Gertrude hesitated. Then she came over and put her hand lovingly in

mine.

"I am engaged to marry him," she said simply.

I had grown so accustomed to surprises that I could only gasp again,

and as for Gertrude, the hand that lay in mine was burning with fever.

"And--after that," Mr. Jamieson went on, "you went directly to bed?"

Gertrude hesitated.

"No," she said finally. "I--I am not nervous, and after I had

extinguished the light, I remembered something I had left in the

billiard-room, and I felt my way back there through the darkness."

"Will you tell me what it was you had forgotten?"

"I can not tell you," she said slowly. "I--I did not leave the

billiard-room at once--"

"Why?" The detective's tone was imperative. "This is very important,

Miss Innes."

"I was crying," Gertrude said in a low tone. "When the French clock in

the drawing-room struck three, I got up, and then--I heard a step on

the east porch, just outside the card-room. Some one with a key was

working with the latch, and I thought, of course, of Halsey. When we

took the house he called that his entrance, and he had carried a key

for it ever since. The door opened and I was about to ask what he had

forgotten, when there was a flash and a report. Some heavy body

dropped, and, half crazed with terror and shock, I ran through the

drawing-room and got up-stairs--I scarcely remember how."




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