Room 13

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Room 13 Page 10

by Edgar Wallace


  “No, sir. I’m sure there was no struggle.”

  “I should think not,” agreed Craig. “Jeff Legge never had a chance of showing fight.”

  The girl was lying on the sofa, her head buried in her arms, her shoulders shaking, and the sound of her weeping drew the detective’s attention to her.

  “Has she been here before tonight?”

  “Yes, she came, and I had to throw her out – Emanuel told me she was not to be admitted.”

  Craig made a few notes in his book, closed it with a snap and put it in his pocket.

  “You understand, Stevens, that, if you’re not under arrest, you’re under open arrest. You’ll close the club for tonight and admit no more people. I shall leave a couple of men on the premises.”

  “I’ll lock up the beer,” said Stevens facetiously.

  “And you needn’t be funny,” was the sharp retort. “If we close this club you’ll lose your job – and if they don’t close it now they never will.”

  He took aside his assistant.

  “I’m afraid Johnny’s got to go through the hoop tonight,” he said. “Send a couple of men to pull him in. He lives at Albert Mansions. I’ll go along and break the news to the girl, and somebody’ll have to tell Peter – I hope there’s need for Peter to be told,” he added grimly.

  16

  A surprise awaited him when he came to the Charlton. Mrs Floyd had gone – nobody knew whither. Her husband had followed her some time afterwards, and neither had returned. Somebody had called her on the telephone, but had left no name.

  “I know all about her husband not returning,” said Craig. “But haven’t you the slightest idea where the lady is?”

  The negative reply was uncompromising.

  “Her father hasn’t been here?” His informant hesitated.

  “Yes, sir; he was on Mrs Floyd’s floor when she was missing – in fact, when Major Floyd was down here making inquiries. The floor waiter recognised him, but did not see him come or go.”

  Calling up the house at Horsham he learnt, what he already knew, that Peter was away from home. Barney, who answered him, had heard nothing of the girl; indeed, this was the first intimation he had had that all was not well. And a further disappointment lay in store for him. The detective he had sent to find Johnny returned with the news that the quarry had gone. According to the valet, his master had returned and changed in a hurry, and, taking a small suitcase, had gone off to an unknown destination.

  An enquiry late that night elicited the fact that Jeff was still living, but unconscious. The bullet had been extracted, and a hopeful view was taken of the future. His father had arrived early in the evening, and was half mad with anxiety and rage.

  “And if he isn’t quite mad by the morning, I shall be surprised,” said the surgeon. “I’m going to keep him here and give him a little bromide to ease him down.”

  “Poison him,” suggested Craig.

  When the old detective was on the point of going home, there arrived a telephone message from the Horsham police, whom he had enlisted to watch Peter’s house.

  “Mr Kane and his daughter arrived in separate motor-cars at a quarter past twelve,” was the report. “They came within a few minutes of one another.”

  Craig was on the point of getting through to the house, but thought better of it. A fast police car got him to Horsham under the hour, the road being clear and the night a bright one. Lights were burning in Peter’s snuggery, and it was he himself who, at the sound of the motor wheels, came to the door.

  “Who’s that?” he asked, as Craig came up the dark drive, and, at the sound of the detective’s voice, he came half-way down the drive to meet him. “What’s wrong, Craig? Anything special?”

  “Jeff’s shot. I suppose you know who Jeff is?”

  “I know, to my sorrow,” said Peter Kane promptly. “Shot? How? Where?”

  “He was shot this evening between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock, at the Highlow Club.”

  “Come in. You’d better not tell my girl – she’s had as much as she can bear tonight. Not that I’m worrying a damn about Jeff Legge. He’d better die, and die quick, for if I get him–”

  He did not finish his sentence, and the detective drew the man’s arm through his.

  “Now, listen, Peter, you’ve got to go very slow on this case, and not talk such a darned lot. You’re under suspicion too, old man. You were seen in the vicinity of the club.”

  “Yes, I was seen in the vicinity of the club,” repeated Peter, nodding. “I was waiting there – well, I was waiting there for a purpose. I went to the Charlton, but my girl had gone – I suppose they told you – and then I went on to the Highlow, and saw that infernal Lila – by the way, she’s one of Jeff’s women, isn’t she?”

  “To be exact,” said the other quietly, “she’s his wife.”

  Peter Kane stopped dead.

  “His wife?” he whispered. “Thank God for that! Thank God for that! I forgive her everything. Though she is a brute – how a woman could allow – but I can’t judge her. That graft has always been dirty to me. It is hateful and loathsome. But, thank God she’s his wife, Craig!” Then “Who shot this fellow?”

  “I don’t know. I’m going to pull Johnny for it.”

  They were in the hall, and Peter Kane spun round, open-mouthed, terror in his eyes.

  “You’re going to pull Johnny?” he said. “Do you know what you’re saying, Craig? You’re mad! Johnny didn’t do it. Johnny was nowhere near–”

  “Johnny was there. And, what is more, Johnny was in the room, either at the moment of the shooting or immediately after. The elevator-boy has spoken what’s in his mind, which isn’t much, but enough to convict Johnny if this fellow dies.”

  “Johnny there!” Peter’s voice did not rise above a whisper.

  “I tell you frankly, Peter, I thought it was you.”

  Craig was facing him squarely, his keen eyes searching the man’s pallid face. “When I heard you were around, and that you had got to know that this fellow was a fake. Why were you waiting?”

  “I can’t tell you that – not now,” said the other, after turning the matter over in his mind. “I should have seen Johnny if he was there. I saw this girl, Lila, and I was afraid she’d recognise me. I think she did, too. I went straight on into Shaftesbury Avenue, to a bar I know. I was feeling queer over this – this discovery of mine. I can prove I was there from a quarter to ten till ten, if you want any proof. Oh, Johnny, Johnny!”

  All this went on in the hall. Then came a quick patter of footsteps and Marney appeared in the doorway.

  “Who is it – Johnny? Oh, it is you, Mr Craig? Has anything happened?” She looked in alarm from face to face. “Nothing has happened to Johnny?”

  “No, nothing has happened to Johnny,” said Craig soothingly. He glanced at Peter. “You ought to know this, Marney,” he said. “I can call you Marney – I’ve known you since you were five. Jeff Legge has been shot.”

  He thought she was going to faint, and sprang to catch her, but with an effort of will she recovered.

  “Jeff shot?” she asked shakily. “Who shot him?”

  “I don’t know. That’s just what we are trying to discover. Perhaps you can help us. Why did you leave the hotel. Was Johnny with you?”

  She shook her head.

  “I haven’t seen Johnny,” she said, “but I owe him – everything. There was a woman in the hotel.” She glanced timidly at her father. “I think she was an hotel thief or something of the sort. She was there to – to steal. A big Welsh woman.”

  “A Welshwoman?” said Craig quickly. “What is her name?”

  “Mrs Gwenda Jones. Johnny knew about her, and telephoned her to tell her to take care of me until he could get to me. She got me out of the hotel, and then we walked down
the Duke of York Steps into the Mall. And then a curious thing happened – I was just telling daddy when you came. Mrs Jones – she’s such a big woman–”

  “I know the lady,” said Craig.

  “Well, she disappeared. She wasn’t exactly swallowed up by the earth,” she said with a faint smile, “and she didn’t go without warning. Suddenly she said to me: ‘I must leave you now, my dear. I don’t want that man to see me.’ I looked round to find who it was that she was so terribly afraid of and there seemed to be the most harmless lot of people about. When I turned, Mrs Jones was running up the steps. I didn’t wish to call her back, I felt so ridiculous. And then a man came up to me, a middle-aged man with the saddest face you could imagine. I told you that, daddy?”

  He nodded.

  “He took his hat off – his hair was almost white – and asked me if my name was Kane. I didn’t tell him the other name,” she said with a shiver. “‘May I take you to a place of safety, Miss Kane?’ he said. ‘I don’t think you ought to be seen with that raw-boned female.’ I didn’t know what to do, I was so frightened, and I was glad of the company and protection of any man, and, when he called a cab, I got in without the slightest hesitation. He was such a gentle soul, Mr Craig. He talked of nothing but the weather and chickens! I think we talked about chickens all the way to Lewisham.”

  “Are you sure it was Lewisham?”

  “It was somewhere in that neighbourhood. What other places are there there?”

  “New Cross, Brockley–” began Craig.

  “That’s the place – Brockley. It was the Brockley Road. I saw it printed on the corner of the street. He took me into his house. There was a nice, motherly old woman whom he introduced to me as his housekeeper.”

  “And what did he talk about?” asked the fascinated Craig.

  “Chickens,” she said solemnly. “Do you know what chickens lay the best eggs? I’m sure you don’t. Do you know the best breed for England and the best for America? Do you know the most economical chickens to keep? I do! I wondered what he was going to do with me – I tried to ask him, but he invariably turned me back to the question of incubators and patent feeds, and the cubic space that a sitting hen requires as compared with an ordinary hen. It was the quaintest, most fantastic experience. It seems now almost like one of Alice’s dreams! Then, at ten o’clock, I found a motor-car had come for me. ‘I’m sending you home, young lady,’ he said.”

  “Were you with him all the time, by the way?” asked Craig.

  She shook her head.

  “No, some part of the time I was with his housekeeper, who didn’t even talk about chickens, but knitted large and shapeless jumpers, and sniffed. That was when he was telephoning; I knew he was telephoning because I could hear the drone of his voice.”

  “He didn’t bring you back?”

  “No, he just put me into the car and told me that I should be perfectly safe. I arrived just a few minutes ahead of daddy.”

  The detective scratched his chin, irritated and baffled.

  “That’s certainly got me,” he said. “The raw-boned lady I know, but the chicken gentleman is mysterious. You didn’t hear his name, by any chance?”

  She shook her head.

  “Do you know the number of the house?”

  “Yes,” she said frankly, “but he particularly asked me to forget it, and I’ve forgotten it.” Then, in a more serious tone:

  “Is my – my–”

  “Your nothing,” interrupted Peter. “The blackguard was married – married to Lila. I think I must have gone daft, but I didn’t realise this woman was planted in my house for a purpose. That type of girl wouldn’t come at the wages if she had been genuine. Barney was always suspicious of her, by the way.”

  “Have you seen Johnny?” the girl asked Craig.

  “No, I haven’t seen him,” said Craig carefully. “I thought of calling on him pretty soon.”

  Then it came to her in a flash, and she gasped.

  “You don’t think Johnny shot this man? You can’t think that?”

  “Of course he didn’t shoot him,” said Peter loudly. “It is a ridiculous idea. But you’ll understand that Mr Craig has to make inquiries in all sorts of unlikely quarters. You haven’t been able to get hold of Johnny tonight?”

  A glance passed between them, and Peter groaned.

  “What a fool! What a fool!” he said. “Oh, my God, what a fool!”

  “Father, Johnny hasn’t done this? It isn’t true, Mr Craig. Johnny wouldn’t shoot a man. Did anybody see him? How was he shot?”

  “He was shot in the back.”

  “Then it wasn’t Johnny,” she said. “He couldn’t shoot a man in the back!”

  “I think, young lady,” said Craig with a little smile, “that you’d better go to bed and dream about butterflies. You’ve had a perfect hell of a day, if you’ll excuse my language. Say the firm word to her, Peter. Who’s that?” He turned his head, listening.

  “Barney,” said Peter. “He has a distressing habit of wearing slippers. You can hear him miles away. He’s opening the door to somebody – one of your people, perhaps. Or he’s taking your chauffeur a drink. Barney has an enormous admiration for chauffeurs. They represent mechanical genius to him.”

  The girl was calmer now.

  “I have too much to thank God for today, for this terrible thing to be true,” she said in a low voice. “Mr Craig, there is a mistake, I’m sure. Johnny couldn’t have committed such a crime. It was somebody else – one of Jeffrey Legge’s associates, somebody who hated him. He told me once that lots of people hated him, and I thought he was joking; he seemed so nice, so considerate. Daddy, I was mad to go through that, even to make you happy.”

  Peter Kane nodded.

  “If you were mad, I was criminal, girlie,” he said. “There was only one man in the world for you–”

  The door opened slowly, and Barney sidled in.

  “Johnny to see you folks,” he said, and pulled the door wider.

  John Gray was standing in the passage, and his eyes fell upon Craig with a look of quiet amusement.

  17

  In another second the girl was in his arms, clinging to him, weeping convulsively on his shoulder, her face against his, her clasped hands about his neck.

  Craig could only look, wondering and fearing. Johnny would not have walked into the net unwarned. Barney would have told him that he was there. What amazed Craig, as the fact slowly dawned upon him, was that Johnny was still in evening dress. He took a step toward him, and gently Johnny disengaged the girl from his arms.

  “I’d like to see the right cuff of your shirt, Johnny,” said Craig.

  Without a word, Gray held up his arm, and the inspector scrutinised the spotless linen, for spotless it was. No sign of a stain was visible.

  “Either somebody’s doing some tall lying, or you’re being extraordinarily clever, Johnny. I’ll see that other cuff if I may.”

  The second scrutiny produced no tangible result.

  “Didn’t you go home and change tonight?”

  “No, I haven’t been near my flat,” he said.

  Craig was staggered.

  “But your man said that you came in, changed, took a suitcase and went away.”

  “Then Parker has been drinking,” was the calm reply. “I have been enjoying the unusual experience of dining with the detective officer who was responsible for my holiday in Devonshire.”

  Craig took a step back.

  “With Inspector Flaherty?” he asked.

  Johnny nodded.

  “With the good Inspector Flaherty. We have been exchanging confidences about our mutual acquaintances.”

  “But who was it went to your flat?” asked the bewildered Craig.

  “My double. I’ve always contende
d that I have a double,” said Johnny serenely.

  He stood in the centre of the astounded group. Into Marney’s heart had crept a wild hope.

  “Johnny,” she said, “was it this man who committed the crime for which you were punished?”

  To her disappointment he shook his head.

  “No, I am the gentleman who was arrested and sent to Dartmoor – my double stops short of these unpleasant experiences, and I can’t say that I blame him.”

  “But do you mean to say that he deceived your servant?’

  “Apparently,” said Johnny, turning again to the detective who had asked the question.

  “I take your word, of course, Johnny, as an individual.”

  Johnny chuckled.

  “I like the pretty distinction. As an official, you want corroboration. Very well, that is not hard to get. If you take me back to Flaherty, he will support all I have told you.”

  Peter and the detective had the good taste to allow him to take leave of the girl without the embarrassment of their presence.

  “It beats me – utterly beats me. Have you ever heard of this before, Peter?”

  “That Johnny had a double? No, I can’t say that I have.”

  “He may have invented the story for the sake of the girl. But there is the fact: he’s in evening dress, whilst his servant distinctly described him as wearing a grey tweed suit. There is no mark of blood on his cuff, and I’m perfectly certain that Stevens wouldn’t have tried to get Johnny in bad. He is very fond of the boy. Of course, he may be spinning this yarn for the sake of Marney, but it’ll be easy enough to corroborate. I’ll use your phone, Peter,” he said suddenly. “I’ve got Flaherty’s number in my book.”

  The biggest surprise of the evening came when a sleepy voice, undeniably Flaherty’s, answered him.

  “Craig’s speaking. Who have you been dining with tonight, Flaherty?”

  “You don’t mean to tell me that you’ve called me up in the middle of the night,” began the annoyed Irishman, “to ask me who I’ve been dining with?”

  “This is serious, Flaherty. I want to know.”

 

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