I got out the car in next to no time, and drove rapidly to Fernly.
Jumping out, I pulled the bell impatiently.
There was some delay in answering, and I rang again.
Then I heard the rattle of the chain and Parker, his impassivity of countenance quite unmoved, stood in the open doorway.
I pushed past him into the hall.
‘Where is he?’ I demanded sharply.
‘I beg your pardon, sir?’
‘Your master.
Mr Ackroyd.
Don’t stand there staring at me, man.
Have you notified the police?’
‘The police, sir?
Did you say the police?’
Parker stared at me as though I were a ghost.
‘What’s the matter with you, Parker?
If, as you say, your master has been murdered ‘ A gasp broke from Parker.
‘The master? Murdered?
Impossible, sir!’
It was my turn to stare.
‘Didn’t you telephone to me, not five minutes ago, and tell me that Mr Ackroyd had been found murdered?”‘ The, sir?
Oh! no indeed, sir.
I wouldn’t dream of doing such a thing.’
‘Do you mean to say it’s all a hoax?
That there’s nothing the matter with Mr Ackroyd?’
‘Excuse me, sir, did the person telephoning use my name?’
‘I’ll give you the exact words I heard.
“Is that Dr Sheppard?
Parker, the butler at Fernly, speaking.
Will you please come at once, sir.
Mr Ackroyd has been murdered.”‘ Parker and I stared at each other blankly.
‘A very wicked joke to play, sir,’ he said at last, in a shocked tone.
‘Fancy saying a thing like that.’
‘Where is Mr Ackroyd?’ I asked suddenly.
‘Still in the study, I fancy, sir.
The ladies have gone to bed, and Major Blunt and Mr Raymond are in the billiard room.’
‘I think I’ll just look in and see him for a minute,’ I said.
‘I know he didn’t want to be disturbed again, but this odd practical joke has made me uneasy.
I’d just like to satisfy myself that he’s all right.’
‘Quite so, sir.
It makes me feel quite uneasy myself.
If you don’t object to my accompanying you as far as the door, sir-?’
‘Not at all,’ I said.
‘Come along.’
I passed through the door on the right, Parker on my heels, traversed the little lobby where a small flight of stairs led upstairs to Ackroyd’s bedroom, and tapped on the study door.
There was no answer.
I turned the handle, but the door was locked.
‘Allow me, sir,’ said Parker. Very nimbly, for a man of his build, he dropped on one knee and applied his eye to the keyhole.
‘Key is in the lock all right, sir,’ he said, rising. ‘On the inside.
Mr Ackroyd must have locked himself in and possibly just dropped off to sleep.’
I bent down and verified Parker’s statement. ‘It seems all right,’ I said, ‘but, all the same, Parker, I’m going to wake your master up.