The stranger stepped aside to let her pass down first, and she was compelled to acknowledge the courtesy with a little nod. He followed her closely, instinct told her that; but so many people were following closely in that hurried slither to the platform.
There was some time to wait – two full minutes – and she strolled to the deserted end of the platform to get away from the crowd. She disliked crowds at all times, and this morning she hated them.
‘Excuse me!’
She had heard that form of introduction before, but there was something in the voice which now addressed her which was unlike any of the impertinent overtures to which she had grown accustomed.
She turned and confronted the stranger. He was looking at her with a pleasant little smile.
‘You’ll think I’m crazy, I guess,’ he said; ‘but somehow I just had to come along and talk to you – you’re scared of elevators?’
She might have frozen him – at least, she might have tried – but for some unaccountable reason she felt glad to talk to him. He was the kind of man she had known in the heyday of Aunt Martha’s prosperity.
‘I am a little scared,’ she said, with a quick smile. ‘It is absurd, because they are so safe.’
He nodded.
‘I’m a little scared myself,’ he confessed easily. ‘Not that I’m afraid of dying, but when I think of the thousands of human beings whose future rests upon me and my life – why my hair goes up every time I cross the street.’
He was not asking her to be interested in himself. She felt that he was just voicing a thought that had occurred to him in a simple, natural way. She looked at him with greater interest.
‘I’ve just been buying a lunatic asylum,’ he said, and with an enquiring lift of his eyebrows, which at once asked permission and offered thanks when it was granted, he lit a cigar.
She stared at him and he laughed.
Whilst suspicion was gathering in her eyes, the train came hissing into the station.
The girl saw with dismay that it was crowded, and the mob which besieged each doorway was ten deep.
‘You won’t catch this,’ said the man calmly. ‘There’ll be another in a minute.’
‘I’m afraid I must try,’ said the girl, and hurried along to where the surging throng were struggling to get aboard.
Her strange companion followed with long strides, but even with his assistance there was no chance of obtaining foothold, and she was left behind with a score of others. ‘Time’s money,’ said the grey-haired stranger cheerfully. ‘Don’t be mean with it!’
‘I can’t afford to be anything else,’ said the girl, pardonably exasperated. ‘Possibly you haven’t to face the wrath of an employer with a watch in his hand and doom on his face.’
She laughed a little in spite of her vexation.
‘I’m so sorry,’ she pleaded; ‘but I did not intend allowing myself the luxury of a grumble about my worries – you were saying you have bought a lunatic asylum.’
He nodded, a twinkle in his eye.
‘And you were thinking I had just escaped from one,’ he said accusingly. ‘Yes, I’ve just bought the Coldharbour Asylum – lock, stock, and barrel –’
She looked at him incredulously.
‘Do you mean that?’ she asked, and her scepticism was justified, for the Coldharbour Asylum is the largest in London, and the second largest in the world.
‘I mean it,’ he said. ‘I am going to build the cutest residential club in London on that site.’
There was no time to say any more. Another train came in and, escorted by the grey-haired man, who in the shortest space of time had assumed a guardianship over her which was at once comforting and disconcerting, she found a seat in a smoking carriage. It was so easy to chat with him, so easy to confide hopes and fears which till that moment she had not put into words.
She found herself at Oxford Circus all too soon, and oblivious of the fact that the hands of the station clock pointed to twenty minutes after nine. ‘A sheep as a lamb,’ said her footsteps hollowly, as she went leisurely along the vaulted passageway to the lift.
‘Were you going to Oxford Circus?’ she asked, suddenly seized with a fear that she had taken this purchaser of lunatic asylums out of his way.
‘Curiously enough, I was,’ he said. ‘I’m buying some shops in Oxford Street at half-past nine.’
Again she shot a swift glance at him, and he chuckled as he saw her shrink back a little.
‘I am perfectly harmless,’ he said mockingly.
They stepped out into Argyll Street together, and he offered his hand.
‘I hope to meet you again,’ he said, but did not tell her his name – it was King Kerry – though, he had read hers in the book she was carrying.
She felt a little uncomfortable, but gave him a smiling farewell. He stood for some time looking after her.
A man, unkempt, with a fixed, glassy look in his eye, had been watching the lift doors from the opposite side of the street. He started to cross as the grey-haired stranger made his appearance. Suddenly two shots rang out, and a bullet buzzed angrily past the grey man’s face.
‘That’s yours, Mister!’ howled a voice, and the next instant the owner was grabbed by two policemen.
A slow smile gathered at the corners of the grey-haired man’s lips.
‘Horace,’ he said, and shook his head disapprovingly, ‘you’re a rotten shot!’
On the opposite side of Oxford Street, a man watched the scene from the upper window of a block of offices.
He saw the racing policemen, the huge crowd which gathered in a moment, and the swaying figures of the officers of the law and their half-mad prisoner. He saw, too, a grey-haired man, unharmed and calm, slowly moving away, talking with a sergeant of police who had arrived on the scene at the moment. The watcher shook a white fist in the direction of King Kerry.
‘Some day, my friend!’ he said between his clenched teeth, ‘I will find a bullet that goes to its mark – and the girl from Denver City will be free!’
CHAPTER III
Mr Tack stood by the cashier’s desk in the ready-made department. He wore upon his face the pained look of one who had set himself the pleasant task of being disagreeable, and yet feared the absence of opportunity.
‘She won’t come; we’ll get a wire at eleven, saying she’s ill, or her mother has been taken to the infirmary,’ he said bitterly, and three sycophantic shop-walkers, immaculately attired in the most perfect fitting of frockcoats, who stood at a respectful distance, said in audible tones that it was really disgraceful.
They would have laughed at Mr Tack’s comment on the sick mother, but they weren’t sure whether he wanted them to laugh, because Mr Tack was a strict Churchman, and usually regarded sickness as part and parcel of the solemn ritual of life.
‘She goes on Saturday week – whatever happens,’ said Mr Tack grimly, and examined his watch. ‘She would go at once if it wasn’t for the fact that I can’t get anybody to take her place at a minute’s notice.’ One of the shop-walkers, feeling by reason of his seniority of service that something was expected from him, remarked that he did not know what things were coming to.
It was to this unhappy group that Elsie Marion, flushed and a little breathless, came in haste from the stuffy dressing-room which Tack and Brighten’s provided for their female employees.
‘I’m so sorry!’ she said, as she opened the glass-panelled door of the cash rostrum and swung herself up to the high stool.
Mr Tack looked at her. There he stood, as she had predicted, his gold chronometer in his hand, the doom on his face, an oppressive figure.
‘Nine o’clock I was here, miss,’ he said.
She made no reply, opening her desk, and taking out the check pads and the spikes of her craft.
‘Nine o’clock I was here, miss,’ repeated the patient Mr Tack – who was far from patient, being, in fact, in a white heat of temper.
‘I’m very sorry!’ she repeated.
&n
bsp; A young man had strolled into the store, and since the officials responsible for piloting him to the counter of his desire were at that moment forming an admiring audience about Mr Tack, he was allowed to wander aimlessly. He was a bright boy, in a fawn dustcoat, and his soft felt hat was stuck on the back of his head. He had all the savoir faire and the careless confidence which is associated with one profession in the world – and one only. He drew nearer to the little group, having no false sense of modesty.
‘You are sorry!’ said Mr Tack with great restraint. He was a stout little man with a shiny bald head and a heavy, yellow moustache. ‘You are sorry! Well, that’s a comfort! You’ve absolutely set the rules – my rules – at defiance. You have ignored my special request to be here at nine o’clock – and you’re sorry!’
Still the girl made no reply, but the young man in the soft felt hat was intensely interested.
‘If I can get here, Miss Marion, you can get here!’ said Mr Tack.
‘I’m very sorry,’ said the girl again. ‘I overslept. As it is, I have come without any breakfast.’
‘I could get up in time,’ went on Mr Tack.
Elsie Marion turned on him, her patience exhausted. This was his way – he would nag from now till she left, and she wanted to see the end of it. She scented dismissal, anyway.
‘What do you think I care,’ she asked, stung to wrath, ‘about what time you got up? You’re horribly old compared to me; you eat more than I, and you haven’t my digestion. You get up because you can’t sleep, probably. I sleep because I can’t get up.’
It was a speech foreign to her nature, but she was stung to resentment.
Mr Tack was dumbfounded. Here were at least six statements, many of them unthinkably outrageous, which called for reprimand.
‘You’re discharged,’ he snorted. The girl slipped down from her stool, very white of face.
‘Not now – not now!’ said Mr Tack hastily. ‘You take a week’s notice from Saturday.’
‘I’d rather go now,’ she said quietly.
‘You’ll stay to suit my convenience,’ breathed Mr Tack, ‘and then you will be discharged without a character.’
She climbed back to her stool, strangely elated.
‘Then you’ve got to stop nagging me,’ she said boldly. ‘I’ll do whatever it is my duty to do, but I won’t be bullied. I don’t want your linen-draper’s sarcasms,’ she went on recklessly, encouraged by the sympathetic smile of the young man in the soft felt hat, who was now an unabashed member of the audience, ‘and I won’t have your ponderous rebukes. You are the head of a beastly establishment in which your hirelings insult defenceless girls who dare not resent. One of these days I’m going to take the story of Tack and Brighten to The Monitor.’
It was a terrible threat born of a waning courage, for the girl was fast losing her exhilaration which came to her in her moment of temporary triumph; but Mr Tack, who was no psychologist, and did not enquire into first causes, turned pink and white. Already The Monitor had hinted at scandal in ‘a prosperous sweating establishment in Oxford Street’, and Mr Tack had the righteous man’s fear of publicity.
‘You – you dare!’ he spluttered. ‘You – you be careful, Miss – I’ll have you out of here, by Jove! Yes – neck and crop! What can we do for you, sir?’
He turned sharply to the young man in the trilby hat, having observed him for the first time.
‘My name’s Gillett,’ said the youth bluntly, ‘and I am a representative of The Monitor – er – I want to see this young lady for two minutes.’
‘Go to the devil!’ said Mr Tack defiantly.
The young man bowed.
‘After I have interviewed this young lady,’ he said.
‘I forbid you to give this man information about my business,’ exploded the enraged partner.
The reporter closed his eyes wearily.
‘My poor fellow,’ he said, shaking his head, ‘it isn’t about your business I want to see this lady, it’s about King Kerry.’
Mr Tack opened his mouth in astonishment.
‘Mr King Kerry?’ he said. ‘Why, that’s the gentleman who is buying this business!’
He blurted it out – a secret which he had so jealously guarded. He explained in one sentence the reason for the economies, the sales at less than cost, the whole disastrous and nefarious history of the past months.
‘Buying this business, is he?’ said Gillett, unimpressed. ‘Why, that’s nothing! He was nearly murdered at Oxford Circus Tube Station half an hour ago, and he’s bought Portland Place Mansions since then.’
He turned to the alarmed girl.
‘Told me to come along and find you,’ he said. ‘Described you so that I couldn’t make any mistake.’
‘What does he want?’ she asked, shaking.
‘Wants you to come to lunch at the Savoy,’ said Mr Gillett, ‘and tell him whether Tack and Brighten’s is worth buying at the price.’
Mr Tack did not swoon, he was too well trained. But as he walked to his private office he swayed unsteadily, and the shop-walker in the Ribbon Department, who was a member of the Anti-Profanity League, heard what Mr Tack was saying to himself, and put his fingers in his ears.
CHAPTER IV
A bewildered man sat in a cell at Vine Street, his aching head between his large, grimy hands. He was trying, in his dull brutish way, to piece together the events of the previous night and of that morning. He remembered that he had met a man on the Thames Embankment. A gentleman who had spoken coldly, whose words had cut like a steel knife, and yet who had all the outward evidence of benevolence. And then that this man had struck him, and there had come another, a smooth-faced, young-looking man, who had taken him to a house and given him a drink.
The stranger had led him to a place, and told him to watch, and they had followed this grey-haired man through streets in a taxi-cab.
Horace Baggin had never ridden in a motor car of any description before, and he remembered this. He remembered all that had happened through a thin alcoholic haze. They had gone to South London and then they had come back, and the man had left him at a tube station with a pistol. Presently the grey-haired man had made his appearance, and Baggin, mad with artificial rage, unthinking, unreasoning, had stepped forward and shot wildly, and then the police had come. That was all.
Suddenly a thought struck him, and he started up with an oath. He was wanted for that other affair in Wiltshire. Would they recognize him? He pressed a little electric bell, which was placed in the wall of the cell, and the turnkey came and surveyed him gravely through the grating.
‘What is the charge?’ Baggin asked eagerly.
‘You know what the charge is,’ said the other; ‘it was read over to you in the charge-room.’
‘But I have forgotten,’ said the man sullenly. ‘It won’t hurt you to tell me what I am charged with, will it?’
The officer hesitated. Then –
‘You are charged with attempted murder and with manslaughter.’
‘What manslaughter?’ asked Baggin quickly.
‘Oh, an old affair, you know, Baggin!’
‘Baggin!’
So they knew his name.
Well, there was one gleam of hope, one chance for him. This rich stranger who had lured him out to shoot the grey-haired man, he could help. He was a toff, he was; he lived in a grand house.
What was his name?
Baggin paced his cell for some quarter of an hour, racking his aching brain for the name which eluded him. Yes, curiously enough, he had seen the name, though the other might not have suspected the fact. In the hallway of the house to which the stranger took him was a tiny stand with glass and silver things, fragile and dainty, on which, as they had entered, Baggin had seen some letters addressed to the man, and he, naturally curious, and gifted moreover with the ability to read handwriting, had deciphered the name as – as – Zeberlieff!
That was the name, ‘Zeberlieff’, and Park Lane, too – the house was in Park Lane. H
e remembered it now. He was elated at the result of his thought, a little exhausted too.
He called the gaoler again, and the weary official obeyed, not without resentment.
‘What do you want now?’ he asked bitterly.
‘Can you let me have a sheet of paper, an envelope and a pencil?’
‘I can,’ said the gaoler. ‘Who do you want to write to – a lawyer?’
‘That’s it,’ said Baggin. ‘He is my own private lawyer,’ he said proudly. ‘A regular “nut” he is, too; he won’t half put it across you people if you don’t behave properly.’
‘Not so much lip!’ said the gaoler, and went away, to return in a few moments with the necessary vehicles of communication.
He passed them through the open grating in the door, and Horace sat down to the unaccustomed task of composing a letter, which was not incriminating to his employer, but which conveyed to him a sense of his responsibility, and the danger in which he stood if he did not offer the succour which was required of him.
‘Honoured Sir,’ the letter ran (it would serve no useful purpose to faithfully expose the liberties he took with the English language), ‘some time ago I did a job of work for you. I am now in great trouble having shot the gentleman, and I should be very much obliged if you would assist me to the best of your ability.’
It was a noteworthy contribution to the literature of artfulness. Horace Baggin had been inspired to remember Zeberlieff as an old employer in the mythical period when Horace Baggin preferred hard work to the illicit calling which had ended so disastrously for him.
‘Zeberlieff,’ said the gaoler as he read the address and scanned the letter; ‘why, that’s an American millionaire, ain’t it?’
The Man Who Bought London Page 2