The Clue of the Silver Key by Edgar Wallace (ereader android .TXT) 📕
'Hey!'
Reluctantly Tickler turned. He had been quick to identify the silent watcher. By straightening his shoulders and adding something of jauntiness to his stride he hoped to prevent the recognition from becoming mutual.
Surefoot Smith was one of the few people in the world who have minds like a well-organized card index. Not the smallest and least important offender who had passed through his hands could hope to reach a blissful oblivion.
'Come here--you.'
Tickler came.
'What are you doing now, Tickler? Burglary, or just fetching the beer for the con. men? Two a.m.! Got a home?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Ah, somewhere in the West End! Gone scientific, maybe. Science is the ruin of the country!'
Rights or no rights, he passed his hands swiftly over Tickler's person; the little man stretched out his arms obediently and sm
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of yours?’
‘Good God! You don’t think that Dornford killed him?’
‘Why shouldn’t he?’ asked the other truculently ‘He owed Lyne money, and
Lyne had threatened to put him into the court unless he paid on the very
day of the murder. If you know Dornford’s reputation as well as I do, you
know that that’s the one thing he’d want to avoid. He prides himself upon
being a gentleman, though his father was a horse dealer and his
mother—well, I won’t talk about her! Bankruptcy means being kicked out
of all his clubs. A bird like that would do almost anything to avoid
social extinction—is that the right word? Thank you very much.’
‘Where is he?’
‘That’s what I’d like to know,’ said Surefoot grimly. ‘He hasn’t been
seen since we saw him!’
SUREFOOT SMITH WAS one of those individuals who never seem to do any
work. He was to be seen at odd hours of the day, and sometimes in odd
places of the West End. It seemed that he was able to dispense with
sleep, for you were as likely to meet him at four o’clock in the morning
as at four o’clock in the afternoon.
He had a villa at Streatham.
‘He’s the type of man,’ Dick Allenby once described him, ‘who was
foreordained to live with a married sister.’
In addition, he had a room in Panton Street, Haymarket, and not the more
fashionable part of Panton Street either. In all probability this was his
real home, though the Streatham villa was not such a myth as his
colleagues chose to imagine it.
Thieves knew him and respected him; the aristocrats of the underworld,
who were his special prey, avoided him with great care, but not always
with conspicuous success. He was the terror of the little card-sharping
gangs; confidence men hated him, for he had put more of their kind in
prison than any two officers of Scotland Yard. He had hanged three men,
and bitterly regretted that a fourth had escaped the gallows through the
lunacy of a sentimental jury.
His pleasures were few. Beer was more of a necessity than a dissipation;
for how can one sneer at a man who consumes large quantities of malted
liquor necessary for his well-being and happiness, and find anything
commendable in the physical wreck who seeks, through copious potions of
Vichy water, to combat the excesses of his youth?
In the privacy of his Panton Street room, he worked out his problems in a
way peculiar to himself. He invariably wrote on white blotting-paper with
a pencil, and seldom employed any other medium except when he was called
upon to furnish a conventional report to his superiors. He invariably
covered both sides of his blotting-paper with writing which nobody but he
could read. It was a shorthand invented thirty years ago by a freakish
schoolmaster, and the only man who had ever learned it thoroughly was
Surefoot Smith. He had not only learned it, but improved upon it. It was
his boast that no human being could decode anything he ever wrote; many
had had the opportunity and tried, for after Mr Smith had finished with
his blotting-paper it was passed on to junior officers for a more proper
use.
He worked out Leo Moran’s movements chronologically so far as they could
be traced. One portion of the day previous to the murder had been clearly
marked. Moran had broadcast a lecture on banking and economics. Surefoot
Smith smiled at a whimsical thought. He would not die without honour, if
he was the detective who brought about the first execution of a
broadcaster.
After his lecture he had gone to the Sheridan Theatre; thence to Dick
Allenby’s flat. After that, home, where he had found a letter—Surefoot
Smith conceded him the truth of this—which sent him in search of Mary
Lane.
What had he been doing on the morning of the murder? Possibly the
accountant had called him up and told him that his leave was not granted.
Mr Accountant Smith had not said as much, but then between bank employees
there was a certain freemasonry, and one didn’t expect, or was a fool if
one did, that they would tell everything about their comrades, even if
they were comrades suspected of forgery and murder.
Surefoot Smith allowed also the element of self-preservation to enter
into the accountant’s evidence. He himself might not be free from blame;
the success of the forgery might be due in not a little measure to his
own negligence. Everybody had something to hide—and possibly the
accountant was no exception.
One thing was certain; the plane had been ordered at a moment’s notice.
That was not the method by which Moran intended leaving the country.
What was the stock to the transfer of which he had been so anxious to get
Mary Lane’s signature? Without a very long and careful search it was
unlikely that that question would be answered.
Jerry Dornford’s disappearance presented a problem of its own. His man in
Half Moon Street said he was not worrying; Mr Dornford often went away
for days together, but where, the man could not say, because Mr Dornford
was not apparently of a confiding nature. If the valet guessed, he
guessed uncharitably. Here was a man also without money, and almost
without friends. He had one or two who had country houses, but inquiries
of these had produced no result. The servant remembered the names and
addresses of a lady or two, but they could throw no light on the mystery.
Dornford owned an estate in Berkshire. Part of it was farmland, which
produced enough income to pay the interest on the mortgage; and if the
mortgagees did not foreclose it was because a sale would bring only a
portion of the money which had been advanced. There had been a house on
the property, but this had been sold to a local golf club many years
before, and all that remained of Gerald Dornford’s possessions were about
three hundred acres of pine and heather.
Here was a man who certainly could not afford two or three addresses.
The bullet had not been found, though the turf had been taken up, to the
distress of the park authorities, and the ground sifted to the depth of a
foot. There was a possibility that it might have passed at such an angle
that it fell into the canal or against the opposite bank. It all depended
on what angle the shot had been fired from. If Surefoot Smith’s first
theory held ground and the old man had been killed by a bullet fired from
a rifle on the upper floor of Parkview Terrace, the bullet should have
been found within a few feet of where the chair had stood. If it had been
fired from Dornford’s car, it could hardly have passed through the body
and reached the canal.
Smith was in constant touch with Binny, but the man could give no further
information. He had not heard the whiz of the bullet as it passed him,
not even heard its impact, and offered here a perfectly reasonable
excuse, that the noise of Dornford’s car would, had it coincided with the
shot, have deadened all other sound.
It was four o’clock on a Saturday afternoon, and Surefoot Smith, who had
spent most of the night on his feet, found himself dozing in his chair, a
practice which for some reason he regarded as evidence of approaching
senility. He got up, washed his face in the bathroom wash-basin, and went
out into the Haymarket, not very certain as to the way he should take or
in what direction he should continue his investigations.
He crossed Piccadilly Circus and was standing aimlessly watching a
traffic jam at the corner of Shaftesbury Avenue, when somebody bumped
into him. His unconscious assailant was moving on with a muttered apology
when Surefoot crooked his finger in his overcoat.
‘What’s the matter with you, Mike?’
There was reason for his surprise. In twenty-four hours the appearance of
Mike Hennessey had changed. The big face had grown flabby; heavy pouches
were under his eyes; his unshaven face was a sickly yellow. Was it
Surefoot’s fancy, or did he turn a shade whiter at the sight of him?
‘Hullo!’ he stammered.’ Well…now…isn’t that curious, meeting you?’
‘What’s the matter, Mike?’ asked Surefoot.
It was his habit to suspect criminal intentions in the most innocent of
men, and his very question was accusative.
‘Eh? Nothing. I’m sort of walking about in a dream today…that play
coming off and everything.’
‘I’ve been phoning you all the morning. Where have you been?’
Mike started. ‘Phoning me, Mr Smith—Surefoot, old boy? I’ve been out of
town. What did you want me for?’
‘You weren’t at home, you weren’t at the theatre. Why were you keeping
out of the way?’
Mike tried to speak, swallowed, then, huskily: ‘Let’s go and have a drink
somewhere. I’ve got a lot on my mind, Surefoot, a terrible lot.’
There was a brasserie in a side street near the Circus, where beer could
not be legally supplied until six o’clock. Nevertheless they made for
this spot and the head waiter bustled up with a smile. ‘Do you want to
have a little private talk, Mr Smith? You don’t need to sit out here; the
place is like a morgue. Come into the manager’s office.’
The manager’s office was not a manager’s office at all, except by
courtesy. It was a very small private room. ‘I’ll bring you some tea, Mr
Smith. You’ll have coffee, won’t you, Mr Hennessey?’ Hennessey, sitting
with his eyes shut, nodded.
‘What’s on your mind?’ asked Smith bluntly. ‘Washington Wirth?’
The closed eyes opened and stared at him. ‘Eh? Yes.’ He blinked at his
questioner.’ I think…well, he won’t be in the theatrical business any
more, and naturally that’s worrying me, because he’s been a good friend
of mine.’
He seemed to find a difficulty, not only in speaking, but in breathing.
His chest puffed up and down, and then: ‘Is that what you wanted to see
me about?’ he asked jerkily.
‘That was just what I wanted to see you about. He was a friend of yours?’
‘A patron,’ said Mr Hennessey quickly. ‘I looked after him when he was in
town, I didn’t know very much about him except that he had a lot of
stuff—money, I mean.’
‘And you didn’t ask him where he got it, Mike?’
‘Naturally,’ said Hennessey, avoiding his eyes.
The head waiter came at that moment with a tray which contained two large
bottles of beer, a bottle of gin, cracked ice and a siphon. ‘Tea,’ he
said formally, put it down, and left them.
Surefoot Smith was in no sense depressed as he broke the law.
‘Now come across, Mike,’ he said, not unkindly. ‘I want to hear just who
this fellow Wirth is.’
Mike licked his dry lips. ‘I’d like to know where I am first,’ he said
doggedly. ‘Not that I could tell you anything, Surefoot—not anything for
certain. What’s my position? Suppose I thought he was somebody else and
said: “Listen—you either help me, or I’m going to ask questions.’”
‘Yes, suppose you blackmailed him?’ interrupted Smith brutally.
Mike winced at this. ‘It wasn’t blackmail. I wasn’t sure—do you get my
meaning? I was putting up a bluff. I wanted to see how far he’d go.’ And
then suddenly he broke down and covered his face with his big,
diamond-ringed hands, and began to sob. ‘Oh, my God! It’s awful!’ he
moaned.
Other men would
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