A False Mirror - Charles Todd [154]
He found the pills then, and went to kneel by Mr. Putnam. As he gave him one to swallow dry, he found that Felicity had already fetched a glass of water from the kitchen.
“That was a bloody stupid thing to do,” he told the injured man, infusing wrath into his voice. “Can’t you follow orders, for God’s sake? Why didn’t you wait to see if I was there, why did you take it on yourself to challenge him?”
“Old fools never learn. I was afraid you hadn’t come back from the fire—no, that’s not true. Don’t you see? I had to try to save him. I failed them all, Margaret and Nan, and even Matthew. If I’d waited for you to speak to him, I might not have got the chance. But I didn’t fail you—you have what you want, a full confession.”
Bennett was saying, “We lost Granville as he came up the hill. I see now why the constables never saw anything, it’s bloody difficult in the dark. I went back to see if he’d given us the slip and returned to Hampton Regis. Pity he didn’t try to burn the rectory down. We weren’t watching Miss Trining’s house. We can’t prove which boat hook it was, but we’ve got the hammer. The handle’s in a bad way, but the head is all right. You’re sure of your facts, then, Rutledge?”
“We turned the surgery upside down looking for a weapon, Bennett. Remember? And all the while that hammer was in the one place we never really searched—Granville’s medical bag. I was reminded when I watched Dr. Hester digging in his bag that it could easily conceal a weapon of the right size. Like a hammer. But Granville couldn’t leave it there, he’d have to hide it again. The rectory was ideal. Both Putnam and I saw it. He could swear it wasn’t his, that it hadn’t been there in his box of tools before Granville came to stay.”
“Granville should have thrown it into the sea,” Bennett answered.
“It’s possible he intended to use it again on Nan Weekes. But she was asleep and it was easier to smother her. It’s a hammer to work metal, not something you’d readily find in a surgery. For all I know, Granville or his wife kept it there to deal with a rusty damper in the office fireplace or a stubborn latch on the garden gate. But there it was, the perfect weapon. Something Mallory might have brought with him and taken away again. But then Mallory never came. Hamilton walked away under his own power. Granville didn’t know that when he murdered his wife. He thought in the end we’d find Hamilton dead and blame Mallory for killing him.”
“He covered it over well enough. Clever bastard. Begging your pardon, Rector. But there won’t be lettering left on that scorched handle,” Bennett said, fuming.
“We don’t need it now. We heard his confession tonight, Putnam and I, and that will see him hang.”
Dr. Hester had finished with Putnam and turned to Hamilton, who shook his head and pointed to the prisoner. Hester went over to look at Granville’s hand.
Watching them, Bennett confessed, “I’d never have suspected the doctor. We respected him, trusted him. It’s not right.” After a moment he added, “You took a hell of a chance with Putnam, you know.”
“If he’d forgot for an hour that he’s a man of the cloth, it wouldn’t have turned nasty,” Rutledge retorted. “And I needed him to look at the hammers.”
He glanced around, saw that Mallory was just bringing a chair for Hamilton, who looked out on his feet, one hand pressing hard against his ribs. Felicity Hamilton was leaning against the wall by the rector, forlorn tears running down her face unheeded, the revolver shoved into a pocket of her robe.
Mallory touched Hamilton on the shoulder, nodding toward her. He roused himself, tried to stand again, and then decided against it. But he held his hand out to his wife, and after a moment she came forward to take