request, they just being to let when Constant resolved to leave his
rooms at Oxford House in Bethnal Green, and to share the actual life of
the people. The locality suited the deceased, as being near the People's
Palace. He respected and admired the deceased, whose genuine
goodness had won all hearts. The deceased was an untiring worker;
never grumbled, was always in fair spirits, regarded his life and wealth
as a sacred trust to be used for the benefit of humanity. He had last seen
him at a quarter past nine P.M. on the day preceding his death. He
(witness) had received a letter by the last post which made him uneasy
about a friend. He went up to consult deceased about it. Deceased was
evidently suffering from toothache, and was fixing a piece of
cotton-wool in a hollow tooth, but he did not complain. Deceased
seemed rather upset by the news he brought, and they both discussed it
rather excitedly.
By a JURYMAN: Did the news concern him?
MORTLAKE: Only impersonally. He knew my friend, and was keenly
sympathetic when one was in trouble.
CORONER: Could you show the jury the letter you received?
MORTLAKE: I have mislaid it, and cannot make out where it has got
to. If you, sir, think it relevant or essential, I will state what the trouble
was.
CORONER: Was the toothache very violent?
MORTLAKE: I cannot tell. I think not, though he told me it had
disturbed his rest the night before.
CORONER: What time did you leave him?
MORTLAKE: About twenty to ten.
CORONER: And what did you do then?
MORTLAKE: I went out for an hour or so to make some inquiries.
Then I returned, and told my landlady I should be leaving by an early
train for--for the country.
CORONER: And that was the last you saw of the deceased?
MORTLAKE (with emotion): The last.
CORONER: How was he when you left him?
MORTLAKE: Mainly concerned about my trouble.
CORONER: Otherwise you saw nothing unusual about him?
MORTLAKE: Nothing.
CORONER: What time did you leave the house on Tuesday morning?
MORTLAKE: At about five-and-twenty minutes past four.
CORONER: Are you sure that you shut the street door?
MORTLAKE: Quite sure. Knowing my landlady was rather a timid
person, I even slipped the bolt of the big lock, which was usually tied
back. It was impossible for any one to get in, even with a latch-key.
Mrs. Drabdump's evidence (which, of course, preceded his) was more
important, and occupied a considerable time, unduly eked out by
Drabdumpian padding. Thus she not only deposed that Mr. Constant
had the toothache, but that it was going to last about a week; in
tragi-comic indifference to the radical cure that had been effected. Her
account of the last hours of the deceased tallied with Mortlake's, only
that she feared Mortlake was quarrelling with him over something in
the letter that came by the nine o'clock post. Deceased had left the
house a little after Mortlake, but had returned before him, and had gone
straight to his bedroom. She had not actually seen him come in, having
been in the kitchen, but she heard his latch-key, followed by his light
step up the stairs.
A JURYMAN: How do you know it was not somebody else?
(Sensation, of which the juryman tries to look unconscious.)
WITNESS: He called down to me over the banisters, and says in his
sweetish voice, "Be hextra sure to wake me at a quarter to seven, Mrs.
Drabdump, or else I shan't get to my tram meeting." (Juryman
collapses.)
CORONER: And did you wake him?
MRS. DRABDUMP (breaking down): Oh, my lud, how can you ask?
CORONER: There, there, compose yourself. I mean did you try to
wake him?
MRS. DRABDUMP: I have taken in and done for lodgers this
seventeen years, my lud, and have always gave satisfaction; and Mr.
Mortlake, he wouldn't ha' recommended me otherwise, though I wish to
Heaven the poor gentleman had never--
CORONER: Yes, yes, of course. You tried to rouse him?
But it was some time before Mrs. Drabdump was sufficiently calm to
explain that, though she had overslept herself, and though it would
have been all the same anyhow, she had come up to time. Bit by bit the
tragic story was forced from her lips--a tragedy that even her telling
could not make tawdry. She told with superfluous detail how--when Mr.
Grodman broke in the door--she saw her unhappy gentleman-lodger
lying on his back in bed, stone dead, with a gaping red wound in his
throat; how her stronger-minded companion calmed her a little by
spreading a handkerchief over the distorted face; how they then looked
vainly about and under the bed for any instrument by which the deed
could have been done, the
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