Red Aces

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Red Aces Page 19

by Edgar Wallace


  “No, nothing has been taken out of here,” said Gaylor in answer to his question, “except the papers. Here’s something that may amuse you more.”

  He opened a door leading to the bedroom. Here was a cupboard – it was little bigger. The walls and floor were covered with white tiles, as also was the back of the door. From the ceiling projected a large nozzle, and in one of the walls were two taps.

  “How’s that for luxury? Shower bath – hot and cold water. Doesn’t that make you laugh?”

  “Nothing makes me laugh except the detectives in pictures,” said Mr Reeder calmly. “Do you ever go to the pictures, Gaylor?”

  The inspector admitted that occasionally he did.

  “I like to see detectives in comic films, because they always carry large magnifying glasses. Do they make you laugh?”

  “They do,” admitted Mr Gaylor, with a contemptuous and reminiscent smile.

  “Then get ready to howl,” said Mr Reeder, and from his pocket took the largest reading glass that Gaylor had ever seen.

  Under the astonished eyes of the detective Reeder went down on his knees in the approved fashion, and began carefully to scrutinize the floor. Inch by inch he covered, stopping now and again to pick up something invisible to the Scotland Yard man, and placed it in an envelope which he had also taken from his pocket.

  “Cigar-ash?” asked Gaylor sardonically.

  “Almost,” said Mr Reeder.

  He went on with his search, then suddenly he sat back on his heels, his eyes ablaze, and held up a tiny piece of silver paper, less than a quarter of an inch square. Gaylor looked down more closely.

  “Oh, it is a cigarette you’re looking for?”

  But Mr Reeder was oblivious to all sarcasm. Inside the silver was a scrap of transparent paper, so thin that it seemed part of the tinsel. Very carefully, however, he separated the one from the other, touched its surface and examined his fingertips.

  “Where’s the fireplace?” he asked suddenly.

  “There’s a fireplace in the kitchen – that’s the only one.”

  Mr Reeder hurried downstairs and examined this small apartment. There were ashes in the grate, but it was impossible to tell what had been burnt.

  “I should like to say,” said Gaylor, “that your efforts are wasted, for we’ve got enough in the diary to hang Southers twice over. Only I suspect you when you do things unnecessarily.”

  “The diary?” Mr Reeder looked up.

  “Yes, Attymar’s.”

  “So he kept a diary, did he?” Mr Reeder was quite amused. “I should have thought he would, if I had thought about it at all.”

  Then he frowned.

  “Not an ordinary diary, of course? Just an exercise book. It begins – let me see–shall we say two weeks ago, or three weeks?”

  Gaylor gazed at him in amazement.

  “Mason told you?”

  “No, he didn’t tell me anything, partly because he hasn’t spoken to me. But, of course, it would be in a sort of exercise book. An ordinary printed diary that began on the first of January would be unthinkable. This case is getting so fascinating that I can hardly stop laughing!”

  He was not laughing; he was very serious indeed, as he stood in the untidy yard before the little house and threw his keen glance across its littered surface.

  “There is no sign of the tender that brought Ligsey here? The little boy on the barge was much more informative than he imagined! I’ll tell you what to look for, shall I? A black, canoe-shaped motor-boat which might hold three people at a pinch. Remember that – a canoe-shaped boat, say ten feet long.”

  “Where shall I find it?” asked the fascinated Gaylor.

  “At the bottom of the river,” said Mr Reeder calmly, “and in or near it you will find a little anvil which used to keep the gate open!”

  Mr Reeder had a very large acquaintance with criminals, larger perhaps than the average police officer, whose opportunities are circumscribed by the area to which he is attached; and he knew that the business of detection would be at a standstill if there were such a thing in the world as a really clever criminal. By the just workings of providence, men who gain their living by the evasion of the law are deprived of the eighth sense which, properly functioning, would keep them out of the hands of the police.

  He made yet another survey of the house before he left, pointed out to Gaylor something which that officer had already noticed, namely, the bloodstains on the floor and the wall of a small lobby which connected the main living-room with the yard.

  “Naturally I saw it,” said Gaylor, who was inclined to be a little complacent. “My theory is that the fight started in the sitting-room; they struggled out into the passage–”

  “That would be impossible,” murmured Mr Reeder.

  6

  John Southers made a brief appearance at the Tower of London Police Court – a dazed, bewildered young man, so overwhelmed by his position that he could do no more than answer the questions put to him by the magistrate’s clerk.

  Gaylor had seen him earlier in the morning.

  “He said nothing except that he went to Attymar’s house – oh, yes, he admits that – by appointment. He says Attymar kept him waiting for some time before he opened the door, and then only allowed him to come into the lobby. He tells some rambling story about Attymar sending him to meet a man at Highgate. In fact, it’s the usual Man story.”

  Mr Reeder nodded. He was not unacquainted with that mysterious man who figures in the narratives of all arrested persons. Sometimes it was a man who gave the prisoner the stolen goods in the possession of which he had been found; sometimes it was the man who asked another to cash a forged cheque; but always it was a vague Somebody who could never be traced. Half the work of investigation which occupied the attention of the detective force consisted of a patient search for men who had no existence except in the imaginations of prisoners under remand.

  “Did he see him?” asked Mr Reeder.

  Gaylor laughed.

  “My dear chap, what a question!”

  Mr Reeder fondled his bony chin.

  “Is it possible to – um – have a little chat with our friend Southers?”

  Gaylor was dubious, and had reason for his doubt. Chief Constable Mason and the high men at Headquarters were at the moment writhing under a periodical wave of criticism which sweeps across Scotland Yard at regular intervals; and their latest delinquency was the cross-examination of a man under suspicion of a serious crime. There had been questions in Parliament, almost a Royal Commission.

  “I doubt it,” said Gaylor. “The chief is feeling rather sick about this Hanny business, and as the kick has come down from your department it isn’t likely that they’ll make an exception. I’ll ask Mason and let you know.”

  Mr Reeder was home that afternoon when Anna Welford called. She was most amazingly calm. Mr Reeder, who had shown some hesitation about receiving her, was visibly relieved.

  “Have you seen Johnny?” was the first question she asked.

  Mr Reeder shook his head, and explained to her that in the strictest sense he was not in the case, and that the police were very jealous of interference.

  “Clive has been to see me,” she said when he had finished, “and he has told me everything – he is terribly upset.”

  “Told you everything?” repeated Mr Reeder. She nodded.

  “About Ligsey, and the story that Clive told you. I understood – in a way. He is doing everything he can for Johnny; he has engaged a lawyer and briefed counsel.”

  For the second time Mr Reeder motioned her to a chair, and, when she was seated, continued his own restless pacing.

  “If there was any truth in that story, your Johnny should be rather well off,” he said. “The wages of sin are rather – um – high. Yet his father t
old me this morning – I had a brief interview with him – that young Mr Southers’ bank balance is not an excessive one.”

  He saw her lower her eyes and heard the quick little sigh.

  “They’ve found the money – I thought you knew that,” she said in a low voice.

  Mr Reeder halted in his stride and peered down at her.

  “They’ve found the money?”

  She nodded.

  “The police came and made a search about an hour ago, and they found a box in the tool-shed, with hundreds of pounds in it, all in notes.”

  Mr Reeder did not often whistle; he whistled now.

  “Does Mr Desboyne know this?” he asked.

  She shook her head.

  “Clive doesn’t know. It happened after he had left. He’s been terribly nice – he’s made one confession that isn’t very flattering to me.”

  Reeder’s eyes twinkled.

  “That he is – um – engaged to somebody else?” he suggested, and she stared at him in amazement.

  “Do you know?”

  “One has heard of such things,” said Mr Reeder gravely.

  “I was very glad,” she went on. “It removed the” – she hesitated – “personal bias. He really is sorry for all he has said and done. Johnny’s trouble has shaken him terribly. Clive thinks that the murder was committed by this man Ligsey.”

  “Oh!” said Mr Reeder. “That is interesting.”

  He stared down at her, pursing his lips thoughtfully.

  “The – um – police rather fancy that Mr Ligsey is dead,” he said, and there was a note of irritation in his voice as though he resented the police holding any theory at all. “Quite dead – um – murdered, in fact.”

  There was a long pause here. He knew instinctively that she had come to make some request, but it was not until she rose to go that she spoke her thoughts.

  “Clive wished to see you himself to make a proposition. He said that he did not think you were engaged on the – official side of the case, and he’s got a tremendous opinion of your cleverness, Mr Reeder, and so of course have I. Is it humanly possible for you to take up this case…on Johnny’s side, I mean? Perhaps I’m being silly, but just now I’m clutching at straws.”

  Mr Reeder was looking out of the window, his head moving slowly from side to side.

  “I’m afraid not,” he said. “I really am afraid not! The people on your – um – friend’s side are the police. If he is innocent, I am naturally on his side, with them. Don’t you see, young lady, that when we prove a man’s guilt we also prove everybody else’s innocence?”

  It was a long speech for Mr Reeder, and he had not quite finished. He stood with his hands deep in his pocket, his eyes half closed, his body swaying to and fro.

  “Let me see now…if Ligsey were alive?… A very dense and stupid young man, quite incapable, I should have thought, of – um – so many things that have happened during the last twenty-four hours.”

  After Anna had left, he went to Southers’ house and interviewed Johnny’s father. The old man was bearing his sorrow remarkably well. Indeed, his principal emotion was a loud fury against the people who dared accuse his son.

  He led the way to the tool-shed in the yard and showed the detective just where the box had been hidden.

  “Personally, I never go into the shed. It’s Johnny’s little cubby hutch,” he said. “The lad is fond of gardening, and, like you, Mr Reeder, has a fancy for poultry.”

  “Is the shed kept locked?”

  “No, I’ve never seen it locked,” said old Southers.

  The place from which the box had been extracted was at the far end of the shed. It had been concealed behind a bag of chicken-seed.

  Mr Reeder took a brief survey of the garden: it was an oblong strip of ground, measuring about a hundred yards by twenty. At the further end of the garden was a wall which marked the boundary of the garden which backed on to it. The garden could be approached either from the door leading to a small glass conservatory, or along a narrow gravel strip which ran down one side of the house. Ingress, however, was barred by a small door stretched across the narrow path.

  “But it’s seldom locked,” said Southers. “We leave it open for the milkman; he goes round to the kitchen that way in the morning.”

  Mr Reeder went back to the garden and walked slowly along the gravel path which ran between two large flower-beds. At the farther end was a wired-in chicken run. Mr Reeder surveyed the flower-beds meditatively.

  “Nobody has dug up the garden?” he asked, and, when the other replied in the negative: “Then I should do a bit of digging myself if I were you, Mr Southers,” he said gently; “and whether you tell the police what you find, or do not tell the police, is entirely a matter for your own conscience.”

  He looked up at the sky for a long time as though he were expecting to see an aeroplane, and then: “If it is consistent with your – um – conscience to say nothing about your discovery, and if you removed it or them to a safe place where it or they would not be found, it might be to the advantage of your son in the not too distant future.”

  Mr Southers was a little agitated, more than a little bewildered, when Mr Reeder took his leave. He was to learn that the ban on his activities in regard to the Attymar murder had been strengthened rather than relaxed, and he experienced a gentle but malignant pleasure in the thought that in one respect he had made their task a little more difficult.

  It was Gaylor who brought the news.

  “I spoke to the chief about your seeing Southers in Brixton, but he thought it was best if you kept out of the case until the witnesses are tested.”

  Mr Reeder’s duties in the Public Prosecutor’s Department were to examine witnesses prior to their appearance in court, to test the strength or the weakness of their testimony, and he had been employed in this capacity before his official connection with the department was made definite.

  “At the same time,” Gaylor went on, “if you can pick up anything we’ll be glad to have it.”

  “Naturally,” murmured Mr Reeder.

  “I mean, you may by accident hear things – you know these people: they live in the same street: and I think you know the young lady Southers is engaged to?”

  Mr Reeder inclined his head.

  “There’s another thing, Mr Reeder.” Gaylor evidently felt he was treading on delicate ground, having summarily declined and rejected the assistance of his companion. “If you should hear from Ligsey–”

  “A voice from the grave,” interrupted Mr Reeder.

  “Well, there is a rumour about that he’s not dead. In fact, the boy on the barge, Hobbs, says that Ligsey came alongside last night in a skiff and told him to keep his mouth shut about what he’d seen and heard. My own opinion is that the boy was dreaming, but one of Ligsey’s pals said he’d also seen him or heard him – I don’t know which. That’s a line of investigation you might take on for your own amusement–”

  “Investigation doesn’t amuse me,” said Mr Reeder calmly; “it bores me. It wearies me. It brings me in a certain – um – income, but it doesn’t amuse me.”

  “Well,” said the detective awkwardly, “if it interests you, that’s a line you might take up.”

  “I shall not dream of taking up any line at all. It means work, and I do not like work.”

  Here, however, he was permitting himself to romance.

  That afternoon he spent in the neighbourhood which Ligsey knew best. He talked with carmen and van boys, little old women who kept tiny and unremunerative shops, and the consequence of all his oblique questionings was that he made a call in Little Calais Street, where lived an unprepossessing young lady who had gained certain social recognition – her portrait would appear in the next morning’s newspapers – because she had been engaged to the missing man. Sh
e had, in fact, walked out with him, amongst others, for the greater part of a year.

  Miss Rosie Loop did not suggest romance; she was short, rather stout, had bad teeth and a red face; but for the moment she was important, and might not have seen Mr Reeder but for the mistaken idea she had that he was associated with the press.

  “Who shall I say it is?” asked her blowsy mother, who answered the door.

  “The editor of The Times,” said Mr Reeder without hesitation.

  In the stuffy little kitchen where the bereaved fiancée was eating bread and jam, Mr Reeder was given a clean Windsor chair, and sat down to hear the exciting happening of the previous night.

  “I haven’t told the press yet,” said Rosie, who had a surprisingly shrill voice for one so equipped by nature for the deeper tones. “He come last night. I sleep upstairs with mother, and whenever he used to anchor off the crik he used to come ashore, no matter what time it was, and throw up a couple of stones to let me know he was here. About ’arf past two it was last night, and lord! it gave me a start.”

  “He threw up the stones to let you know he was there?” suggested Mr Reeder.

  She nodded violently.

  “And was it Mr Ligsey?”

  “It was him!” she said dramatically. “I wouldn’t go to the window for a long time, but mother said ‘Don’t be such a fool, a ghost carn’t hurt yer,’ and then I pulled up the sash and there he was in his old oilskin coat. I asked him where he’d bin, but he was in a ’urry. Told me not to get worried about him as he was all right.”

  “How did he look?” asked Mr Reeder.

  She rolled her head impatiently.

  “Didn’t I tell yer it was the middle of the night? But that’s what he said – ‘Don’t get worried about anything’ – and then he popped off.”

  “And you popped in?” said Mr Reeder pleasantly. “He didn’t have a cold or anything, did he?”

 

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