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The Bulldog Drummond Megapack

Page 188

by H. C. McNeile


  The large young man lit a match and bent down to examine it. And after a while he gave a low whistle. For the patch was still wet, and it was red—that unmistakable red which can only be one thing. It was blood, and why should a tramp or a belated drunk be bleeding?

  He straightened up and lit a cigarette: the mystery was becoming stranger and stranger. That the blood was recent was obvious, otherwise it would have dried in the dust. And it therefore seemed fairly conclusive to him that it had come from the man who had thrown the stone. But why should an injured man, who was so badly hurt that he was bleeding, do what he had done? Why hadn’t he come up to the cottage and asked for help?

  Suddenly Jock began to growl under his breath, though his master could hear nothing suspicious. Until, a few moments later, he heard very faintly in the distance the unmistakable hum of an engine. A motor-car was coming along the road, and the driver had evidently got into a low gear.

  The large young man hesitated; then, with a quick order to his dogs, he stepped back on to the garden path, and, closing the gate, he stood leaning over it. He felt instinctively that this car, nosing its way through the fog, was connected in some way with the unknown stone-thrower who had come out of the night and disappeared into it again, leaving only the ominous red patch to mark his passing.

  Gradually the noise of the car grew louder, until with unexpected suddenness two headlights loomed up out of the mist. They came abreast the gate, and then they halted; the driver had stopped the car. Voices sounded over the noise of the engine; then one of the doors opened and shut, and footsteps approached the gate.

  The man who had got out had his hand actually on the latch, when the glow of a cigarette within a few inches of his face caused him to start violently.

  “Good evening,” said the large young man pleasantly. “Can I be of any assistance?”

  He drew hard at his cigarette, and in the glow he got a quick glimpse of the new-comer. The man wore no hat, and his hair was cropped short, whilst his features had that square cut, Teutonic look which branded him at once as a German, even without the muttered “Gott im Himmel” that he ejaculated under his breath at the shock of finding the gate occupied.

  “Have you seen a man?” he began, when once again a door in the car opened and shut, and further footsteps approached the gate. But this time the visitor carried an electric torch which he flashed on to the large young man’s face. From there it travelled downwards, pausing for a moment on oil-stained hands, and finishing up with the incredibly dirty trousers.

  “Have you been here long, my man?” said the new arrival curtly, and in the darkness the large young man smiled. Evidently by his clothes he had been judged.

  “Nigh on thirty year coom next cherry-picking,” he answered, hoping fervently that his attempt at dialect would pass muster. What dialect it was supposed to be he had no idea, but to his profound relief it seemed to go down.

  “I don’t mean that,” snapped the other. “Have you been standing by this gate for long?”

  He turned and gave a rapid order to the German beside him, who disappeared back into the car, and the engine stopped.

  “Maybe five minutes—maybe more,” said the large young man. “Why do ’ee ask?”

  “Have you seen a man come along the road?”

  “Old Gaffer Sheepshank, he coom along round about seven. He wor drunk.”

  The other swore under his breath.

  “Just recently, I mean. Within the last few minutes.”

  “Noa. I ain’t seen no one. What sort of a man do ’ee mean?”

  But a sudden exclamation from the road interrupted their conversation.

  “Emil,” called out a harsh voice, “come here at once! Bring your torch.”

  The large young man thoughtfully ground out with his heel the cigarette he was smoking, and wondered what was going to happen next. For the gentleman who had called for Emil was now examining with keen interest the patch of blood that had happened to show up clearly in the headlights of the car. And then, after a few moments’ earnest conversation, Emil returned to the gate.

  “Now, look here, my man,” he said quietly, “I take it this is your cottage.”

  “’Tis my fayther’s.”

  “Is your father here?”

  “Not tonight. He be in Norwich.”

  “So you’re all alone in the house?”

  “That’s right, mister.”

  “Are you quite sure?” A sinister note had crept into the speaker’s voice.

  “Course I’m sure. Do ’ee think I’m daft?”

  The torch flashed on again, and by its light the large young man saw that he was covered by a revolver.

  “Get indoors,” snapped the other. “And get a move on, I’m in a hurry. Now,” he continued, when they were both standing in the parlour, “what have you done with the man who came along this road a few minutes ago?”

  “I tell ’ee I ain’t seen no man,” was the stubborn answer. “And I reckons you’d better put that there toy away or it might go off. A pretty thing this—in a man’s own house.”

  The large young man sat down in an arm-chair by the hearth-rug ostensibly to pat the spaniel, but in reality to smuggle his Free Forester tie from the coal-scuttle into his trousers pocket. This man Emil defeated him. His English was perfect, without the suspicion of an accent: to look at he might have been an Englishman. And yet there was something intangible about him that placed him as a foreigner. His clothes were faultless—perhaps a shade too faultless for the country. And on one finger of his left hand he wore a ring with a peculiar blue stone in it.

  The tie smuggled successfully into his pocket the young man rose, the picture of aggrieved, bucolic indignation.

  “Look ’ee ’ere, mister,” he said angrily, “I’m tired of thy fooling. Search the house if it gives thee any satisfaction, and then get thee gone. I’m fair sick of the sight of thy ugly fiz, and if I knew who it was I’d have the law on ’ee tomorrow.”

  But the man called Emil took no notice. His revolver had dropped to his side: his gaze was riveted on the broken window.

  “When did that happen?” he said slowly.

  “What the ’ell’s that to do with thee?”

  “Silence, you fool!”

  His glance wandered to the broken cover of the stuffed weasel, and finally rested on the stone itself, which he bent down and picked up. Then, balancing it in his hand, he fixed the large young man with a pair of dark, penetrating eyes.

  “When did this happen?” he repeated softly.

  “What’s that to do with thee?”

  “Who threw this stone through the window?”

  “Danged if I knows, mister.”

  “How long ago did it happen?”

  For the fraction of a second the young man hesitated: then he made up his mind he would tell the truth. It seemed to him that by doing so he stood a better chance of getting some light thrown on a mystery that was growing more incomprehensible every minute.

  “Nigh about ten minutes,” he said. “T’wor that that took me down to gate.”

  “So.” The other’s eyes bored into him. “So. And you did not see the man who threw the stone?”

  “Noa.”

  “Did he call out to you? Speak to you?”

  “Noa.”

  “What did you do after it happened?”

  “Got cap and went to gate with pups.”

  “And you saw no sign of him?”

  “Noa.”

  The man called Emil crossed to the window and shouted, and his companion who had discovered the blood in the road joined him at once. They stood conversing in low voices in a tongue which the large young man recognised as German. One or two stray phrases came to his ear: “dummer Bauer” (imbecile peasant)…“Zeitvergeudung” (waste of time); remarks which he had no difficulty in interpreting. Up to date, at any rate, it was clear that he had bluffed them into thinking he was a local product. But what infuriated him was that he was still as far off as ev
er from discovering what all the excitement was about. And then suddenly he caught another sentence: “sich versichern” (better make sure).

  Better make sure. Sure of what? He was not left long in doubt. The second man vaulted through the open window and vanished upstairs. His steps could be heard going into each room above: then he came down again and went into the kitchen.

  “Nichts” (nothing), he said, reappearing. “Search him,” ordered his leader, and the large young man recoiled a pace.

  “’Ere—wot do ’ee think ’ee be a’doing of?” he cried, only to find the revolver pointing unwaveringly at his heart.

  “Put your hands above your head!”

  The order was curt, and, after a pause, the large young man obeyed. Not that there was anything incriminating in his pockets, except that confounded Free Forester tie, and his pulse beat a trifle faster when he saw it extracted and thrown on the table. Worse still, it fell in such a position that the name of the shop where it had been bought lay uppermost for all to see, and Norfolk yokels rarely buy their neckwear from Mr. Black, of Jermyn Street. But his luck held; neither man paid any attention to it whatever. Evidently they were looking for something else, and the question which began to hammer at his brain, even before he was allowed to put his hands down, was—what? Assuming that he was a labourer, as they undoubtedly did, what under the sun could they expect to find in his pockets which could possibly prove of the slightest interest to them?

  At last the searcher was satisfied, and once again the two men held an earnest conversation. But this time their voices were so low that the listener could hear nothing. Evidently the man who had searched him was urging Emil to do something, and Emil was doubtful. At length, however, he seemed convinced, and having nodded his head two or three times, his companion returned to the car and re-started the engine, leaving Emil and the large young man alone.

  “Can you keep your mouth shut, my man?”

  The rustle of notes came pleasantly to the ear.

  “If so be, mister, that folks make it worth my while.”

  “A lunatic has escaped from a private asylum,” said Emil, “and he is the poor fellow who threw the stone through your window. We are trying to find him, but we do not wish it talked about. Here are two pounds which will pay for mending the glass.”

  He placed the notes on the table, and the large young man eyed them greedily.

  “In a day or two,” continued the other, “I shall be returning this way, and I shall make a point of calling in at the pub. And if I find that no one knows anything about this there will be three more to mend the cover of the stuffed animal. But if I find that people do know, why then—God help you!”

  He said the last three words very softly, and the large young man stared at him thoughtfully. For the moment he had forgotten his role of bucolic yokel; he was only conscious that opposite him was standing a very dangerous customer. And as his eyes fell on that tell-tale tie lying on the table he became conscious also of a profound feeling of relief that his vis-à-vis’ cricketing education had been neglected.

  “You understand what I say?”

  “Aye, mister. I’ll say nowt.”

  With a nod the man called Emil left the room and strode down the garden path. And it was not until the sound of the engine was getting faint in the distance that the large young man stretched himself and lit another cigarette.

  “What the devil does it all mean, Jerry?” he said, apostrophising the bulldog. “Why does Mr. Emil tell me such a fatuous lie, even if he does think I’m a half-wit? Why do people throw bricks through the window, and leave pools of blood in the road? Presumably there is some reason, but for the life of me I can’t see what it is at the moment.”

  He glanced at his watch: it was nearly one o’clock, and he gave a prodigious yawn.

  “Tomorrow we will battle with the enigma,” he announced. “Tomorrow father will bring the grey matter to bear on what is at present shrouded in impenetrable gloom. Tonight—bed.”

  And even as he spoke, sharp and clear through the stillness there came the sound of one solitary shot.

  The dogs stirred; the large young man stiffened abruptly. The noise had come from the direction in which the car had gone, and he waited tensely. Silence: the sound was not repeated. But there had been no mistaking what it was. Someone had fired a revolver.

  “Stay where you are, boys!”

  The front door banged behind him, and the dogs, after one wistful look, relapsed once more into slumber, as their master, running with the easy stride of a born athlete, followed the car. The mist was still heavy, but as he got farther from the cottage, clear pockets began to appear from time to time. And it was as he was passing through one of these, that he heard in front of him the thrumming of an engine. He had caught up with the car.

  He halted abruptly; then, getting on to the grass verge, he crept forward cautiously. The noise of the engine grew louder; he could hear voices ahead. And then suddenly, looming out of the fog which had again closed down on the road, he saw the red tail light of the car.

  Inch by inch he moved towards it, fearful that at any moment a sudden eddy of breeze might clear the mist away and show him up. But he need not have worried: he had arrived at the end of the entertainment. He was still two or three yards from the back of the car when the driver let in his gear, the red light disappeared into the fog, and half a minute later all was silent again.

  The large young man stepped out into the road and moved a few paces forward. What had they found in that particular spot to fire at? Was it the man they were looking for—the man who had presumably thrown the stone through the window? And even as he asked himself the question there came the ominous answer. No small patch this time, but a great dark pool stained the road at his feet. Blood again, and he grunted savagely.

  “The poor devil must have damned near bled to death,” he muttered under his breath.

  With the help of a box of matches he searched the surrounding ground, but he could find nothing. At one point the grass seemed a little beaten down, but whether that had been done by the man in the car or by somebody else earlier in the day it was impossible to tell. And at last he gave it up and started back to the cottage.

  He walked slowly, his hands in his pockets. Try as he would, he could get no possible solution that fitted. There always seemed to be something that refused to come into line. If, as appeared obvious, a wounded man was being pursued by the occupants of the car—a wounded man, moreover, who was capable of throwing a stone with considerable force, and after doing so of walking or crawling over a quarter of a mile—why had he not come to the cottage? Answer—because he guessed the cottage would be searched. Then why throw the stone? What good could it possibly do?

  He opened the gate and turned up the path, vainly racking his brains for a solution. The dogs stirred lazily, and for a while he stood in the door staring round the room. And then his eyes narrowed. The things on the table had been moved. The oil bottle and rag were not in the same position; the gun itself was not where he had left it.

  Quietly he walked across, and sitting down in the chair he opened the drawer of the table. And there he found proof positive; some papers which had been in front were now pushed to one side. Someone had been in the room in the last quarter of an hour. The two notes still remained on the cloth: it was clearly not the work of a tramp or a passing thief. So there was no doubt left in his mind as to whom it was the work of. Somebody had been left behind when the car drove away with instructions to watch the cottage, and he had seized the opportunity of the owner’s absence to search it. The point was whether he was still there.

  The large young man’s eyes strayed towards the kitchen door: it was as he had left it. Unlikely, he reflected, that the man would be in the house, but he decided to make sure. He sauntered across and flung the door open; the room beyond was empty. Presumably therefore, if his visitor was there at all he was outside, hiding somewhere in the little garden.

  There the dogs
would come in. Only too well did their master know the unfailing courtesy with which they all three welcomed strangers inside the house: in all probability they had sat round the man as he searched hoping for biscuits. Outside it would be a very different matter.

  “Jock! Jerry!”

  He opened the front door, the terrier and the bulldog beside him.

  “See him off! Good dogs! See him off!”

  And then things happened quickly. Like a streak of lightning the terrier shot across a flower bed, barking furiously; his grunting companion at his heels. Came a commotion in some shrubs, and a yell of terror followed by ominous tearing sounds. Then footsteps going at speed up the road, urged on evidently by Jock.

  Not so Jerry. Not for him such violent exercise at these ungodly hours: besides, his part of the performance was over. Snorting dispassionately, he waddled into sight, and deposited at his master’s feet the spoils of war. Then he returned to his basket, whilst the large young man examined the catch.

  “First blood to us, Jerry,” he remarked approvingly. “The seat of his pants, or I’m a Dutchman. That’ll larn the blighter. For all that, I wish to Heaven I could think why we are thus honoured.”

  He gave another vast yawn, and went over to the window; whatever the solution of the mystery might prove to be, there was nothing more to be done that night. The cottage did not boast of a telephone, and the nearest police station was five miles away. And since his car was being repaired in Sheringham, and would not be back till the following morning, there was no possible method of getting there except by walking, the mere thought of which caused him to break into a cold sweat.

  Jock had returned, and his master pulled down the lower sash of the window. Broken glass fell on the floor, though most of it still remained between the two panes—large, jagged pieces, wickedly dangerous for dog’s paws. So he raised the top sash carefully, and even as he put out one hand to catch the rest, he saw it. In between the fragments lay a piece of crumpled paper.

 

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