I
The firm of Dorrington & Hicks had not been constructed at the time when this case came to Dorrington\'s hand. Dorrington had barely emerged from the obscurity that veils his life before some ten years ago, and he was at this time a needier adventurer than he had been at the period of any other of the cases I have related. Indeed, his illicit gains on this occasion would seem first to have set him on his feet and enabled him first to cut a fair exterior figure. Whether or not he had developed to the full the scoundrelism that first brought me acquainted with his trade I do not know; but certain it is that he was involved at the time in transactions wretchedly ill paid, on behalf of one Flint, a shipstores dealer at Deptford; an employer whose record was never a very clean one. This Flint was one of an unpleasant family. He was nephew to old Cater the wharfinger (and private usurer) and cousin to another Cater, whose name was Paul, and who was also a usurer, though he variously described himself as a "commission agent" or "general dealer." Indeed, he was a general dealer, if the term may be held to include a dealer in whatever would bring him gain, and who made no great punctilio in regard to the honesty or otherwise of his transactions. In fact, all three of these pleasant relatives had records of the shadiest, and all three did whatever in the way of money-lending, mortgaging, and blood-sucking came in their way. It is, however, with old Cater—Jerry Cater, he was called—that this narrative is in the first place concerned. I got the story from a certain Mr. Sinclair, who for many years acted as his clerk and debt-collector.
Old Jerry Cater lived in the crooked and decaying old house over his wharf by Bermondsey Wall, where his father had lived before him. It was a grim and strange old house, with long-shut loft-doors in upper floors, and hinged flaps in sundry rooms that, when lifted, gave startling glimpses of muddy water washing among rotten piles below. Not once in six months now did a barge land its load at Cater\'s Wharf, and no coasting brig ever lay alongside. For, in fact, the day of Cater\'s Wharf was long past; and it seemed indeed that few more days were left for old Jerry Cater himself. For seventy-eight years old Jerry Cater had led a life useless to himself and to everybody else, though his own belief was that he had profited considerably. Truly if one counted nothing but the money the old miser had accumulated, then his profit was large indeed; but it had brought nothing worth having, neither for himself nor for others, and he had no wife nor child who might use it more wisely when he should at last leave it behind him; no other relative indeed than his two nephews, each in spirit a fair copy of himself, though in body a quarter of a century younger. Seventy-eight years of every mean and sordid vice and of every virtue that had pecuniary gain for its sole object left Jerry Cater stranded at last in his cheap iron bedstead with its insufficient coverings, with not a sincere friend in the world to sit five minutes by his side. Down below, Sinclair, his unhappy clerk, had the accommodation of a wooden table and a chair; and the clerk\'s wife performed what meagre cooking and cleaning service old Cater would have. Sinclair was a man of forty-five, rusty, starved, honest, and very cheap. He was very cheap because it had been his foolishness, twenty years ago, when in City employ, to borrow forty pounds of old Cater to get married with, and to buy furniture, together with forty pounds he had of his own. Sinclair was young then, and knew nothing of the ways of the two hundred per cent. money-lender. When he had, by three or four years\' pinching, paid about a hundred and fifty pounds on account of interest and fines, and only had another hundred or two still due to clear everything off, he fell sick and lost his place. The payment of interest ceased, and old Jerry Cater took his victim\'s body, soul, wife, sticks, and chairs together. Jerry Cater discharged his own clerk, and took Sinclair, with a saving of five shillings a week on the nominal salary, and out of the remainder he deducted, on account of the debt and ever-accumulating interest, enough to keep his man thin and broken-spirited, without absolutely incapacitating him from work, which would have been bad finance. But the rest of the debt, capital and interest, was made into a capital debt, with usury on the whole. So that for sixteen years or more Sinclair had been paying something every week off the eternally increasing sum, and might have kept on for sixteen centuries at the same rate without getting much nearer freedom. If only there had been one more room in the house old Cater might have compulsorily lodged his clerk, and have deducted something more for rent. As it was he might have used the office for the purpose, but he could never have brought himself to charge a small rent for it, and a large one would have swallowed most of the rest of Sinclair\'s salary, thus bringing him below starvation point, and impairing his working capacity. But Mrs. Sinclair, now gaunt and scraggy, did all the housework, so that that came very cheap. Most of the house was filled with old bales and rotting merchandise which old Jerry Cater had seized in payment for wharfage dues and other debts, and had held to, because his ideas of selling prices were large, though his notion of buying prices were small. Sinclair was out of doors more than in, dunning and threatening debtors as hopeless as himself. And the household was completed by one Samuel Greer, a squinting man of grease and rags, within ten years of the age of old Jerry Cater himself. Greer was wharf-hand, messenger, and personal attendant on his employer, and, with less opportunity, was thought to be near as bad a scoundrel as Cater. He lived and slept in the house, and was popularly supposed to be paid nothing at all; though his patronage of the "Ship and Anchor," hard by, was as frequent as might be.
Old Jerry Cater was plainly not long for this world. Ailing for months, he at length gave in and took to his bed. Greer watched him anxiously and greedily, for it was his design, when his master went at last, to get what he could for himself. More than once during his illness old Cater had sent Greer to fetch his nephews. Greer had departed on these errands, but never got farther than the next street. He hung about a reasonable time—perhaps in the "Ship and Anchor," if funds permitted—and then returned to say that the nephews could not come just yet. Old Cater had quarrelled with his nephews, as he had with everybody else, some time before, and Greer was resolved, if he could, to prevent any meeting now, for that would mean that the nephews would take possession of the place, and he would lose his chance of convenient larceny when the end came. So it was that neither nephew knew of old Jerry Cater\'s shaky condition.
PAPERS
"HE SAW A FEW DOUBLED PAPERS."
Before long, finding that the old miser could not leave his bed—indeed he could scarcely turn in it—Greer took courage, in Sinclair\'s absence, to poke about the place in search of concealed sovereigns. He had no great time for this, because Jerry Cater seemed to have taken a great desire for his company, whether for the sake of his attendance or to keep him out of mischief was not clear. At any rate Greer found no concealed sovereigns, nor anything better than might be sold for a few pence at the ragshop. Until one day, when old Cater was taking alternate fits of restlessness and sleep, Greer ventured to take down a dusty old pickle-jar from the top shelf in the cupboard of his master\'s bedroom. Cater was dozing at the moment, and Greer, tilting the jar toward the light, saw within a few doubled papers, very dusty. He snatched the papers out, stuffed them into his pocket, replaced the jar, and closed the cupboard door hastily. The door made some little noise, and old Cater turned and woke, and presently he made a shift to sit up in bed, while Greer scratched his head as innocently as he could, and directed his divergent eyes to parts of the room as distant from the cupboard as possible.
"Sam\'l Greer," said old Cater in a feeble voice, while his lower jaw waggled and twitched, "Sam\'l Greer, I think I\'ll \'ave some beef-tea." He groped tremulously under his pillow, turning his back to Greer, who tip-toed and glared variously over his master\'s shoulders. He saw nothing, however, though he heard the chink of money. Old Cater turned, with a shilling in his shaking hand. "Git \'alf a pound o\' shin o\' beef," he said, "an\' go to Green\'s for it at the other end o\' Grange Road, d\'ye hear? It\'s—it\'s a penny a pound cheaper there than it is anywhere nearer, and—and I ain\'t in so much of a \'urry for it, so the distance don\'t matter. Go \'long." And old Jerry Cater subsided in a fit of coughing.
Greer needed no second bidding. He was anxious to take a peep at the papers he had secreted. Sinclair was out collecting, or trying to collect, but Greer did not stop to examine his prize before he had banged the street door behind him, lest Cater, listening above, should wonder what detained him. But in a convenient courtyard a hundred yards away he drew out the papers and inspected them eagerly. First, there was the policy of insurance of the house and premises. Then there was a bundle of receipts for the yearly insurance premiums. And then—there was old Jerry Cater\'s will.
There were two foolscap sheets, written all in Jerry Cater\'s own straggling handwriting. Greer hastily scanned the sheets, and his dirty face grew longer and his squint intensified as he turned over the second sheet, found nothing behind it, and stuffed the papers back in his pocket. For it was plain that not a penny of old Jerry Cater\'s money was for his faithful servant, Samuel Greer. "Ungrateful ole waga-bone!" mused the faithful servant as he went his way. "Not a blessed \'a\'peny; not a \'a\'peny! An\' them as don\'t want it gets it, o\' course. That\'s always the way—it\'s like a-greasing\' of a fat pig. I shall \'ave to get what I can while I can, that\'s all." And so ruminating he pursued his way to the butcher\'s in Grange Road.
Once more on his way there, and twice on his way back, Samuel Greer stepped into retired places to look at those papers again, and at each inspection he grew more thoughtful. There might be money in it yet. Come, he must think it over.
The front door being shut, and Sinclair probably not yet returned, he entered the house by a way familiar to the inmates—a latched door giving on to the wharf. The clock told him that he had been gone nearly an hour, but Sinclair was still absent. When he entered old Cater\'s room upstairs he found a great change. The old man lay in a state of collapse, choking with a cough that exhausted him; and for this there seemed little wonder, for the window was open, and the room was full of the cold air from the river.
"Wot jer bin openin\' the winder for?" asked Greer in astonishment. "It\'s enough to give ye yer death." He shut it and returned to the bedside. But though he offered his master the change from the shilling the old man seemed not to see it nor to hear his voice.
"Well, if you won\'t—don\'t," observed Greer with some alacrity, pocketing the coppers. "But I\'ll bet he\'ll remember right enough presently." "D\'y\'ear," he added, bending over the bed, "I\'ve got the beef. Shall I bile it now?"
But old Jerry Cater\'s eyes still saw nothing and he heard not, though his shrunken chest and shoulders heaved with the last shudders of the cough that had exhausted him. So Greer stepped lightly to the cupboard and restored the fire policy and the receipts to the pickle-jar. He kept the will.
Greer made preparations for cooking the beef, and as he did so he encountered another phenomenon. "Well, he have bin a goin\' of it!" said Greer. "Blow me if he ain\'t bin readin\' the Bible now!"
A large, ancient, worn old Bible, in a rough calf-skin cover, lay on a chair by old Cater\'s hand. It had probably been the family Bible of the Caters for generations back, for certainly old Jerry Cater would never have bought such a thing. For many years it had accumulated dust on a distant shelf among certain out-of-date account-books, but Greer had never heard of its being noticed before. "Feels he goin\', that\'s about it," Greer mused as he pitched the Bible back on the shelf to make room for his utensils. "But I shouldn\'t ha\' thought \'e\'d take it sentimental like that—readin\' the Bible an\' lettin\' in the free air of \'eaven to make \'im cough \'isself blind."
The beef-tea was set simmering, and still old Cater lay impotent. The fit of prostration was longer than any that had preceded it, and presently Greer thought it might be well to call the doctor. Call him he did accordingly (the surgery was hard by), and the doctor came. Jerry Cater revived a little, sufficiently to recognise the doctor, but it was his last effort. He lived another hour and a half. Greer kept the change and had the beef-tea as well. The doctor gave his opinion that the old man had risen in delirium and had expended his last strength in moving about the room and opening the window.
II
Samuel Greer found somewhere near two pounds in silver in the small canvas bag under the dead man\'s pillow. No more money, however, rewarded his hasty search about the bedroom, and when Sinclair returned Greer set off to carry the news to Paul Cater, the dead man\'s nephew.
The respectable Greer had considered well the matter of the will, and saw his way, he fancied, at least to a few pounds by way of compensation for his loss of employment and the ungrateful forgetfulness of his late employer. The two sheets comprised, in fact, not a simple will merely, but a will and a codicil, each on one of the sheets, the codicil being a year or two more recent than the will. Nobody apparently knew anything of these papers, and it struck Greer that it was now in his power to prevent anybody learning, unless an interested party were disposed to pay for the disclosure. That was why he now took his way toward the establishment of Paul Cater, for the will made Paul Cater not only sole executor, but practically sole legatee. Wherefore Greer carefully separated the will from the codicil, intending the will alone for sale to Paul Cater. Because, indeed, the codicil very considerably modified it, and might form the subject of independent commerce.
Paul Cater made a less miserly show than had been the wont of his uncle. His house was in a street in Pimlico, the ground-floor front room of which was made into an office, with a wire blind carrying his name in gilt letters. Perhaps it was that Paul Cater carried his covetousness to a greater refinement than his uncle had done, seeing that a decent appearance is a commercial advantage by itself, bringing a greater profit than miserly habits could save.
The man of general dealings was balancing his books when Greer arrived, but at the announcement of his uncle\'s death he dropped everything. He was not noticeably stricken with grief, unless a sudden seizure of his hat and a roaring aloud for a cab might be considered as indications of affliction; for in truth Paul Cater knew well that it was a case in which much might depend on being first at Bermondsey Wall. The worthy Greer had scarce got the news out before he found himself standing in the street while Cater was giving directions to a cabman. "Here—you come in too," said Cater, and Greer was bustled into the cab.
It was plainly a situation in which half-crowns should not be too reluctantly parted with. So Paul Cater produced one and presented it. Cater was a strong-faced man of fifty odd, with a tight-drawn mouth that proclaimed everywhere a tight fist; so that the unaccustomed passing over of a tip was a noticeably awkward and unspontaneous performance, and Greer pocketed the money with little more acknowledgment than a growl.
"Do you know where he put the will?" asked Paul Cater with a keen glance.
"Will?" answered Greer, looking him blankly in the face—the gaze of one eye passing over Cater\'s shoulder and that of the other seeming to seek his boots. "Will? P\'raps \'e never made one."
"Didn\'t he?"
"That \'ud mean, lawfully, as the property would come to you an\' Mr. Flint—\'arves. Bein\' all personal property. So I\'d think." And Greer\'s composite gaze blankly persisted.
"But how do you know whether he made a will or not?"
"\'Ow do I know? Ah, well, p\'raps I dunno. It\'s only fancy like. I jist put it to you—that\'s all. It \'ud be divided atween the two of you." Then, after a long pause, he added: "But lor! it \'ud be a pretty fine thing for you if he did leave a will, and willed it all to you, wouldn\'t it? Mighty fine thing! An\' it \'ud be a mighty fine thing for Mr. Flint if there was a will leaving it all to him, wouldn\'t it? Pretty fine thing!"
Cater said nothing, but watched Greer\'s face sharply. Greer\'s face, with its greasy features and its irresponsible squint, was as expressive as a brick. They travelled some distance in silence. Then Greer said musingly, "Ah, a will like that \'ud be a mighty fine thing! What \'ud you be disposed to give for it now?"
"Give for it? What do you mean? If there\'s a will there\'s an end to it. Why should I give anything for it?"
"Jist so—jist so," replied Greer, with a complacent wave of the hand. "Why should you? No reason at all, unless you couldn\'t find it without givin\' something."
"See here, now," said Cater sharply, "let us understand this. Do you mean that there is a will, and you know that it is hidden, and where it is?"
Greer\'s squint remained impenetrable. "Hidden? Lor!—\'ow should I know if it was hidden? I was a-puttin\' of a case to you."
"Because," Cater went on, disregarding the reply, "if that\'s the case, the sooner you out with the information the better it\'ll be for you. Because there are ways of making people give up information of that sort for nothing."
"Yes—o\' course," replied the imperturbable Greer. "O\' course there is. An\' quite right too. Ah, it\'s a fine thing is the lawr—a mighty fine thing!"
The cab rattled over the stones of Bermondsey Wall, and the two alighted at the door through which old Jerry Cater was soon to come feet first. Sinclair was back, much disturbed and anxious. At sight of Paul Cater the poor fellow, weak and broken-spirited, left the house as quietly as he might. For years of grinding habit had inured him to the belief that in reality old Cater had treated him rather well, and now he feared the probable action of the heirs.
"Who was that?" asked Paul Cater of Greer. "Wasn\'t it the clerk that owed my uncle the money?"
Greer nodded.
"Then he\'s not to come here again—do you hear? I\'ll take charge of the books and things. As to the debt—well, I\'ll see about that after. And now look here." Paul Cater stood before Greer and spoke with decision. "About that will, now. Bring it."
Greer was not to be bluffed. "Where from?" he asked innocently.
"Will you stand there and tell me you don\'t know where it is?"
"Maybe I\'d best stand here and tell you what pays me best."
"Pay you? How much more do you want? Bring me that will, or I\'ll have you in gaol for stealing it!"
"Lor!" answered Greer composedly, conscious of holding another trump as well as the will. "Why, if there was anybody as knowed where the will was, and you talked to him as violent as that \'ere, why, you\'d frighten him so much he\'d as likely as not go out and get a price from your cousin, Mr. Flint. Whatever was in the will it might pay him to get hold of it."
At this moment there came a furious knocking at the front door. "Why," Greer continued, "I bet that\'s him. It can\'t be nobody else—I bet the doctor\'s told him, or summat."
They were on the first-floor landing, and Greer peeped from a broken-shuttered window that looked on the street. "Yes," he said, "that\'s Mr. Flint sure enough. Now, Mr. Paul Cater, business. Do you want to see that will before I let Mr. Flint in?"
"Yes!" exclaimed Cater furiously, catching at his arm. "Quick—where is it?"
"I want twenty pound."
"Twenty pound! You\'re mad! What for?"
"All right, if I\'m mad, I\'ll go an\' let Mr. Flint in."
The knocking was repeated, louder and longer.
"No," cried Cater, getting in his way. "You know you mustn\'t conceal a will—that\'s law. Give it up."
"What\'s the law that says I must give it up to you,\'stead of yer cousin? If there\'s a will it may say anythin\'—in yer favour or out of it. If there ain\'t, you\'ll git \'alf. The will might give you more, or it might give you less, or it might give you nothink. Twenty pound for first look at it \'fore Flint comes in, and do what you like with it \'fore he knows anythink about it."
Again the knocking came at the door, this time supplemented by kicks.
"But I don\'t carry twenty pound about with me!" protested Cater, waving his fists. "Give me the will and come to my office for the money to-morrow!"
"No tick for this sort of job," answered Greer decisively. "Sorry I can\'t oblige you—I\'m goin\' down to the front door." And he made as though to go.
"Well, look here!" said Cater desperately, pulling out his pocket-book. "I\'ve got a note or two, I think——"
"\'Ow much?" asked Greer, calmly laying hold of the pocket-book. "Two at least. Two fivers. Well, I\'ll let it go at that. Give us hold." He took the notes, and pulled out the will from his pocket. Flint, outside, battered the door once more.
"Why," exclaimed Cater as he glanced over the sheet, "I\'m sole executor and I get the lot! Who are these witnesses?"
"Oh, they\'re all right. Longshore hands just hereabout. You\'ll get \'em any day at the \'Ship and Anchor.\'"
Cater put the will in his breast-pocket. "You\'d best get out o\' this, my man," he said. "You\'ve had me for ten pound, and the further you get from me the safer you\'ll be."
"What?" said Greer with a chuckle. "Not even grateful! Shockin\'!" He took his way downstairs, and Cater followed. At the door Flint, a counterpart of Cater, except that his dress was more slovenly, stood ragefully.
"Ah, cousin," said Cater, standing on the threshold and preventing his entrance, "this is a very sad loss!"
"Sad loss!" Flint replied with disgust. "A lot you think of the loss—as much as I do, I reckon. I want to come in."
"Then you sha\'n\'t!" Cater replied, with a prompt change of manner. "You shan\'t! I\'m sole executor, and I\'ve got the will in my pocket." He pulled it out sufficiently far to show the end of the paper, and then returned it. "As executor I\'m in charge of the property, and responsible. It\'s vested in me till the will\'s put into effect. That\'s law. And it\'s a bad thing for anybody to interfere with an executor. That\'s law too."
Flint was angry, but cautious. "Well," he said, "you\'re uncommon high, with your will and your executor\'s law and your \'sad loss,\' I must say. What\'s your game?"
For answer Cater began to shut the door.
"Just you look out!" cried Flint. "You haven\'t heard the last of this! You may be executor or it may be a lie. You may have the will or you may not; anyway I know better than to run the risk of putting myself in the wrong now. But I\'ll watch you, and I\'ll watch this house, and I\'ll be about when the will comes to be proved! And if that ain\'t done quick, I\'ll apply for administration myself, and see the thing through!"
III
Samuel Greer sheered off as the cousinly interview ended, well satisfied with himself. Ten pounds was a fortune to him, and he meant having a good deal more. He did nothing further till the following morning, when he presented himself at the shop of Jarvis Flint.
"Good mornin\', Mr. Flint," said Samuel Greer, grinning and squinting affably. "I couldn\'t help noticin\' as you had a few words yesterday with Mr. Cater after the sad loss."
"Well?"
"It \'appens as I\'ve seen the will as Mr. Cater was talkin\' of, an\' I thought p\'raps it \'ud save you makin\' mistakes if I told you of it."
"What about it?" Jarvis Flint was not disposed to accept Greer altogether on trust.
"Well it do seem a scandalous thing, certainly, but what Mr. Cater said was right. He do take the personal property, subjick to debts, an\' he do take the freehold prim\'ses. An\' he is the \'xecutor."
"Was the will witnessed?"
"Yes—two waterside chaps well know\'d there-abouts."
"Was it made by a lawyer?"
"No—all in the lamented corpse\'s \'andwritin\'."
"Umph!" Flint maintained his hard stare in Greer\'s face. "Anything else?"
"Well, no, Mr. Flint, sir, p\'raps not. But I wonder if there might be sich a thing as a codicil?"
"Is there?"
"Oh, I was a-wonderin\', that\'s all. It might make a deal o\' difference in the will, mightn\'t it? And p\'raps Mr. Cater mightn\'t know anythink about the codicil."
"What do you mean? Is there a codicil?"
"Well, reely, Mr. Flint," answered Greer with a deprecatory grin—"reely it ain\'t business to give information for nothink, is it?"
"Business or not, if you know anything you\'ll find you\'ll have to tell it. I\'m not going to let Cater have it all his own way, if he is executor. My lawyer\'ll be on the job before you\'re a day older, my man, and you won\'t find it pay to keep things too quiet."
"But it can\'t pay worse than to give information for nothink," persisted Greer. "Come, now, Mr. Flint, s\'pose (I don\'t say there is, mind—I only say s\'pose)—s\'pose there was a codicil, and s\'pose that codicil meant a matter of a few thousand pound in your pocket. And s\'pose some person could tell you where to put your hand on that codicil, what might you be disposed to pay that person?"
"Bring me the codicil," answered Flint, "and if it\'s all right I\'ll give you—well, say five shillings."
Greer grinned again and shook his head. "No, reely, Mr. Flint," he said, "we can\'t do business on terms like them. Fifty pound down in my hand now, and it\'s done. Fifty \'ud be dirt cheap. And the longer you are a-considerin\'—well, you know, Mr. Cater might get hold of it, and then, why, s\'pose it got burnt and never \'eard of agen?"
Flint glared with round eyes. "You get out!" he said. "Go on! Fifty pound, indeed! Fifty pound, without my knowing whether you\'re telling lies or not! Out you go! I know what to do now, my man!"
Greer grinned once more, and slouched out. He had not expected to bring Flint to terms at once. Of course the man would drive him away at first, and, having got scent of the existence of the codicil, and supposing it to be somewhere concealed about the old house at Bermondsey Wall, he would set his lawyer to warn his cousin that the thing was known, and that he, as executor, would be held responsible for it. But the trump card, the codicil itself, was carefully stowed in the lining of Greer\'s hat, and Cater knew nothing about it. Presently Flint, finding Cater obdurate, would approach the wily Greer again, and then he could be squeezed. Meanwhile the hat-lining was as safe a place as any in which to keep the paper. Perhaps Flint might take a fancy to have him waylaid at night and searched, in which case a pocket would be an unsafe repository.
Flint, on his part, was in good spirits. Plainly there was a codicil, favourable to himself. Certainly he meant neither to pay Greer for discovering it—at any rate no such sum as fifty pounds—nor to abate a jot of his rights. Flint had a running contract with a shady solicitor, named Lugg, in accordance with which Lugg received a yearly payment and transacted all his legal business—consisting chiefly of writing threatening letters to unfortunate debtors. Also, as I think I have mentioned, Dorrington was working for him at the time, and working at very cheap rates. Flint resolved, to begin with, to set Dorrington and Lugg to work. But first Dorrington—who, as a matter of fact, was in Flint\'s back office during the interview with Greer. Thus it was that in an hour or two Dorrington found himself in active pursuit of Samuel Greer, with instructions to watch him closely, to make him drunk if possible, and to get at his knowledge of the codicil by any means conceivable.
IV
On the morning of the day after his talk with Flint, Samuel Greer ruminated doubtfully on the advisability of calling on the ship-store dealer again, or waiting in dignified silence till Flint should approach him. As he ruminated he rubbed his chin, and so rubbing it found it very stubbly. He resolved on the luxury of a penny shave, and, as he walked the stree............