Читать книгу THE MAELSTROM & THE GRELL MYSTERY (British Mystery Classics) - Frank Froest - Страница 8
Chapter V
ОглавлениеThe early evening papers were on the streets before Jimmie Hallett rose, and the inevitable reporters had established a blockade of his hotel. He cursed them while he shaved. As an old newspaper hand himself, he had little taste to be served up again all hot and spiced for the delectation of a morbidly hungry public.
He surveyed a salver full of cards that had been brought up to him with a scowl. Vivid recollections came to him of the way in which he had himself dealt in "personal sketches," and "personal statements "on big stories, and he began to conceive a certain fellowfeeling for his long-forgotten victims. But his chin grew dogged.
"I'll see 'em in hell before I'll talk. Go away and tell 'em I'm dead."
The liveried functionary who had brought the cards gave as near an approach to a grin as his dignity permitted. "Yes, sir," he said quietly; "they'll not believe it, sir."
Hallett swung his eyes sideways to the man, and his hand slipped to his trousers pocket. It was no use getting angry. "Say, what are you getting out of this, sonnie?" he demanded. "It's all right. You needn't answer." A bank-note crackled between his fingers.
"If you can clear out the gang below this is yours. It's more than they'll give you."
"Very good, sir. There'll be no harm in telling them you're in a very critical condition, sir, I suppose?"
"Not in the least. If they've any bowels of compassion they won't worry a dying man. It will stave 'em off for a while, perhaps."
As a matter of fact, beyond a mild headache and some stiffness, he felt scarcely a trace of the attentions of his overnight assailant. He was uncertain whether that was a tribute to the skill of the divisional surgeon or to the hardness of his skull. He inwardly congratulated himself that the injury was not a particularly noticeable disfigurement. Indeed a skillful brushing of the hair almost hid it.
He descended to breakfast with an appetite that of itself was proof that his general health remained unaffected, and discovering that there was a back entrance to the hotel, decided to make use of it, lest some pertinacious reporter might still be lingering in the reception hall. He wanted to know something of what the police were doing, and a visit to Scotland Yard seemed the best way of finding out. In the background of his thoughts there was perhaps less concern that a murderer should be brought to justice than curiosity in regard to the lady of the fog.
There is a way, mostly used by tradesmen, at the Palatial Hotel, which leads through a narrow alley for fifty yards on to the Embankment. Through this Hallett sauntered. He was halfway through when a tap on the shoulder caused him to wheel. He confronted a slim-built, shallow-faced man, of lank moustache and burning black eyes.
"Pardon," he said. "Your name is Hallett?" He spoke silkily and the extremely correct pronunciation of his words showed that he was neither English nor American.
"Well?" demanded Hallett shortly. He feared that he had been run down by a reporter after all.
"You were at the place where this man was killed yesterday eh?" The man shook a newspaper under his face.
"Well?" said Hallett again. He had resumed his walk but the other was keeping pace with him.
A hand caught at his arm. The burning black eyes were within three inches of his face. "You know who killed heem, eh?" The English had become a little less correct under stress of some excitement. "You have not told the pol-lice yet. You will not tell them?"
Hallett shook himself free angrily. "Look here, my man," he said. "I don't propose to answer your questions, so you can put that in your pipe and smoke it. Now git."
The foreigner's hand dropped to his pocket. He did not remove it, but pressed something hard through the cloth against the young man's ribs. "You are hasty, Mr. Hallett," he remonstrated. "You don't know what it is you say what you're up against. This is a pistol you can feel "he pressed it close "and unless you listen quietly I shall keel you dead. Understand?"
"Well?" said Hallett quietly.
"You were at the house. You saw who killed the old man? You would know him again?" The man did not wait for an answer. "You must keep your mouth shut. This is for a warning. If you see him again you not tell eh? There are many of us. You will be watched. And if you split "A prod with the pistol finished the sentence.
The theory that his molester was a reporter had long ago been abandoned by Jimmie Hallett. It was evidently thought that he had seen the face of the man at Linstone Terrace Gardens and he was to be terrorised into silence. He had sense enough to reflect that for all the audacity of the hold-up, the threat of surveillance was bluff perhaps even the concealed pistol was bluff. Not that his actions would have differed much even had he supposed them real.
He took a quick step backwards and sideways and a bullet that tore its way through the cloth of the other man's pocket told that that part of the story was reliable. Then Hallett's knee was in his back and Hallett's arms were woven in a strangle-hold about his throat. The man collapsed, gurgling.
The whole business had occurred in barely two seconds of time. As they fell there was a third arrival.
"Hold him down a minute, Mr. Hallett. That's all right." The third man possessed himself of the squirming captive's wrists and twisted them behind his back to Hallett. Then he methodically and quickly ran his hands through the prostrate man's clothing, possessing himself of a still smoking Derringer and a formidable sheath-knife.
"Thank you, sir. Now this gentleman might get up. We'll run him along to King Street station and see what Mr. Menzies has to say about it."
Then Hallett noted that the man who had come to his assistance was the liveried functionary who had accepted his five-pound note to put off the press men less than an hour ago. But he no longer wore livery. He was in quiet, unassuming tweeds and his manner was not exactly that which might be expected from a waiter to an hotel guest even in the circumstances.
He surprised Hallett's look of enquiry and smiled as he locked his arm into that of the prisoner. "Detective Sergeant Royal, sir," he explained. "I'll let you know all about it later. What's your name, my man?" He shook his captive slightly.
"Smeeth William Smeeth," said the man sullenly, and Royal winked at Hallett.
"That's a good old Anglo-Saxon name," he said. "Come along."
It was in the Criminal Investigation office at King- Street, while they were awaiting Menzies, that Royal gave his explanation with a certain apologetic tone. "It was this way, Mr. Hallett. You see, Mr. Menzies asked me to keep an eye on you when you were sent home yesterday. Of course he thought you were all right, but it doesn't do to take anyone's say-so in our trade. This is murder, you see, and though it seemed all right, you might have forged or stolen the introduction you had. We couldn't be sure your name was really Hallett."
"And sandbagged myself on the back of the head," interpolated Hallett with irony.
Royal gave a shrug. "Mr. Menzies doesn't take any risks, sir. It couldn't do you any harm. They know me at the hotel and that's how it was I was able to get into livery and walk into your room pretty well as I liked."
A new light broke upon Hallett. "I get you. I thought perhaps I was a bit fogged when I got up and had forgotten where I put things. You've been searching my room."
Royal's face never shifted a muscle. "I don't admit it, sir. That would be illegal without your permission."
"Illegal or not, you did it," retorted Hallett. "I hope you're quite satisfied."
"Oh, there'll be no more trouble about that. Mr.
Menzies told me on the telephone just now that he'd cabled to the States and they've put your reputation straight. Besides, there's what I learned about you."
"I suppose you read my letters," ventured Hallett. "No. Don't worry to soothe me down. I'd probably have half killed you if I'd caught you at it, but I'm quite calm now. By the way, there was a fiver
A flush mounted to the temples of the detective and! he shook his head in vehement denial of the implication contained in the broken sentence. "I had to take it or you might have suspected something. I passed it on to the servants and told 'em what to do. I never saw the press people myself. Some of 'em might have known me. When you went down to breakfast I changed my clothes and slipped a 'phone message through to headquarters. They told me to hang on to you till Mr. Menzies had seen you. You'd never have known a word about it if it hadn't been for our bird down below." He jerked his head in the direction of the cells.
Hallett began to appreciate some of the realities of detective work. Before he could make any comment, Menzies came in. He nodded affably to the young man.
"Morning, Mr. Hallett; not much the worse for last night, I see. I've got a little job for you presently. Meanwhile I want to see your friend down below. Like to come along?"
He made no apology for the espionage he had set on foot and Hallett did not think it worth while to thrash out the subject again.
"William Smith," it seemed, had already been searched with care and thoroughness. Royal explained to his chief that nothing which would serve as a hint to who he was had been found on him nothing but the pistol, nine cartridges, and some money.
"Have you looked for the name of the tailor on his clothes the brace buttons, the inside of the breast pocket, the trousers band?" demanded Menzies.
"Of course, sir," said Royal. He was a trifle offended that it should even be thought that he had neglected so elementary a precaution. "There's nothing nothing at all."
Preceded by a uniformed inspector they went down to the cells. Smith looked up sullenly from the bench on which he was seated and met Menzies' gaze squarely. The detective chief was no believer in Lombroso's theories of physiognomy, but he studied the face intently. In point of fact he was analysing the features to discover if he had seen the man before. He wanted, too, to get some clue as to the manner he should adopt authoritative and official, or familiar and persuasive.
"Well, sonny," he said gently. "You've tumbled into a mess. Attempted murder is a serious business in this country."
Smith glanced at him blackly over his shoulder. Menzies went on : "Of course we don't believe the cockand-bull story you told Mr. Hallett of there being a gang of you--"
"You don't, eh?" exclaimed the prisoner, wheeling in sudden passion to face his visitors. "Then you are what shall I say wooden blockheads." He pointed a long slender forefinger at each of them in turn. "You I and you! and you! I tell you, you will be marked. I failed but there are others who will not fail, if you persist."
Royal turned away to hide a snigger. This kind of melodrama failed to impress him.
"No doubt, no doubt," assented Menzies soothingly. He might have been calming down a headstrong questioner at a vestry meeting. "But there are a good many police officers in London. It will take a long time to kill 'em off. Now why don't you be reasonable, Mr. Smith?"
"Pah!" interrupted the prisoner. He spat on the cell floor to indicate his contempt.
"You've shown you know something about this murder," went on Menzies. "The judge is pretty sure to take that into account one way or the other at your trial. I, of course, should tell him if you helped us. It would probably make a difference, you know."
The prisoner showed two rows of yellow teeth in an unmirthful, contemptuous grin. "Go away, woodenhead. I shall not go to prison, but you will die. You don't know what you call what you are up against."
"Perhaps I've got an idea," said Menzies. His voice changed. "I don't know whether you're playing the fool, my man," he said sternly, "or whether you really believe that kind of wild talk. Perhaps your friend Errol will be able to enlighten us."
"Errol?" said Smith blankly. "I know him not." "I hear you," said Menzies. "You think over what I've said, my lad. Meanwhile, we'll have a doctor to look at you."