The Starvel Hollow tragedy
An Inspector French Case
Freeman Wills Crofts
MY WIFE
who suggested the idea from which this story grew
Ruth Averill moved slowly across the drawing room at Starvel, and stood dejectedly at the window, looking out at the Scotch firs swaying in the wind and the sheets of rain driving across the untidy lawn before the house.
The view was even more depressing than usual on this gloomy autumn afternoon. Beyond the grass-grown drive and the broken-down paling of posts and wire which bounded the grounds, lay the open moor, wild and lonely and forbidding. A tumble of dun-coloured sedgy grass with darker smudges where rock out-cropped, it stretched up, bleak and dreary, to the lip of the hollow in which the dilapidated old house had been built.
To the girl standing in the window with a brooding look of melancholy on her pretty features the outlook seemed symbolical of her life, for Ruth Averill was not one of those whose lives could be said to have fallen in pleasant places.
But, in spite of her unhappy expression, she was good to look at as she stood watching the storm. Though rather under medium height she had a charming figure and something of a presence. She was dark, as though in her veins might flow some admixture of Spanish or Italian blood. Her features were small and delicate, but her firmly rounded chin gave promise of character. She scarcely looked her twenty years of age.
But though she had the fresh vitality of youth, there was something old-fashioned in her appearance not out of accord with her surroundings. She wore her long dark hair piled up in great masses over her broad forehead. Her dress was of the plainest, and in the fashion of three years earlier. Though scrupulously neat, it was worn threadbare. Her shoes were cracked and her stockings showed careful darns.
For Ruth Averill was an orphan, dependent on the bounty of her uncle, Simon Averill, for every penny. And Simon Averill was a miser.
Ruth was born in Southern France, and she had dim recollections of a land of sun and warmth, of jolly people and bright colours. But since she had come to this gloomy old house in the wilds of the Yorkshire moors the joy had gone out of her life. Her companions during childhood had been the two not very prepossessing servants and the still less attractive gardener and out-door man. With her uncle Simon she had nothing in common. Even at the time of her arrival he was elderly and morose, and every day he seemed to grow more self-centred and less approachable.
Freeman Wills Crofts
The Starvel Hollow Tragedy
Contents
CHAPTER ONE: The Tragedy
CHAPTER TWO: The Inquest
CHAPTER THREE: Mr. Tarkington Develops a Theory
CHAPTER FOUR: Inspector French Goes North
CHAPTER FIVE: French Picks Up a Clue
CHAPTER SIX: Talloires, Lac D’Annecy
CHAPTER SEVEN: Posthumous Evidence
CHAPTER EIGHT: Dr. Philpot’s Story
CHAPTER NINE: The Value of Analysis
CHAPTER TEN: Whymper Speaks at Last
CHAPTER ELEVEN: A Startling Theory
CHAPTER TWELVE: A Somewhat Gruesome Chapter
CHAPTER THIRTEEN: The Piece of Yellow Clay
CHAPTER FOURTEEN: The Secret of the Moor
CHAPTER FIFTEEN: French Baits His Trap
CHAPTER SIXTEEN: A Double Recall
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: Concerning Wedding Rings
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: Cumulative Evidence
CHAPTER NINETEEN: The Last Lap
CHAPTER TWENTY: Conclusion
Transcriber’s Notes