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38
THE MAN IN THE BROWN SUIT

eral adventurous methods, and plumped for stern simplicity. The house had been to let—presumably was still to let. I would be a prospective tenant.

I also decided on attacking the local house-agents, as having fewer houses on their books.

Here, however, I reckoned without my host. A pleasant clerk produced particulars of about half a dozen desirable properties. It took all my ingenuity to find objections to them. In the end I feared I had drawn a blank.

"And you've really nothing else?" I asked, gazing pathetically into the clerk's eyes. "Something right on the river, and with a fair amount of garden and a small lodge," I added, summing up the main points of the Mill House, as I had gathered them from the papers.

"Well, of course there's Sir Eustace Pedler's place," said the man doubtfully. "The Mill House, you know."

"Not—not where——"I faltered. (Really, faltering is getting to be my strong point.)

"That's it! Where the murder took place. But perhaps you wouldn't like——"

"Oh, I don't think I should mind," I said with an appearance of rallying. I felt my bona fides was now quite established. "And perhaps I might get it cheap—in the circumstances."

A master touch that, I thought.

"Well, it's possible. There's no pretending that it will be easy to let now—servants and all that, you know. If you like the place after you've seen it, I should advise you to make an offer. Shall I write you out an order?"

"If you please."

A quarter of an hour later I was at the lodge of the Mill House. In answer to my knock, the door flew open and a tall middle-aged woman literally bounced out.

"Nobody can go into the house, do you hear that?