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Dead or Alive

Page 25

by Patricia Wentworth


  He pushed back his chair, stood up, nodded abruptly to the manager, and went out.

  Bill and Meg followed him a few minutes later. They walked silently along the grey street and did not speak. Bill was wondering about Della Delorne. Had she attracted Robin O’Hara? Had he sought her because she attracted him, or because he suspected her? Or had he begun by being attracted, and ended in suspecting? On that last night before he went down to Ledstow Place and to his death what had happened between them? Something, beyond all cavil. He had tried to send a message, and because a girl had been in a larking mood his message had gone up in smoke. What had he feared? What had he discovered? What had he written on the scrap of paper which had been burned? No one would ever know.

  Meg was thinking her own thoughts—sad thoughts, hurt thoughts. Robin had been her husband. They had loved each other, and then they had stopped loving. Or perhaps he had never loved her at all. Perhaps there was no real power of loving in him—only a hot flare of passion, and then cold ash. Or perhaps not even that. Perhaps he had only wanted Uncle Henry’s money.… She mustn’t think of that. She must only think that he had died doing his duty.

  They walked to the flat. A little rain began to fall. When they came into Meg’s sitting-room it was so dark that Bill put the light on.

  Meg went to the window and stood there looking out. The dreary houses opposite were grey against the leaden sky. She felt tired, and old, and without courage for the future. Bill oughtn’t to marry someone like that. He ought to marry someone gay, and happy and full of life. A most unregenerate feeling of dislike for this imaginary female warmed her a little. She turned as Bill came up to her and put an arm about her shoulders.

  “What’s the matter, Meg?” And then, “Did you hate it very much, my darling?”

  She nodded. Her eyes stung. Bill loved her—he did really love her. It was in his eyes when he looked at her, and in his voice when he said “My darling.”

  “It’s all over now,” he said. His arm tightened and he gave her a little shake. “When are you going to marry me?”

  “Bill—I’ve been thinking—you oughtn’t to. I feel as if—I mean—you ought to marry someone who hasn’t been under a steam-roller.”

  “Do you feel like that?” said Bill. He put his other arm round her.

  She nodded.

  “Yes, I do.”

  “You won’t when we’re married.” His voice was strong and confident.

  “How do you know?”

  Bill looked at her. It was a loving, teasing look.

  “Silly muggins!” he said.

  “Bill!”

  “You are!” He kissed the tip of her nose. “Any special girl you’d like me to marry instead of you?”

  “N-no,” said Meg.

  “You’d have to hustle a bit, because I’m going to get married next Monday as ever is.”

  “Are you?”

  Meg looked up, and then looked down again. She wasn’t quite sure whether she was going to laugh or cry. She felt somewhere between the two. But she wasn’t cold, and sad, and grey any more. She felt warm and full of light. It wasn’t just Bill’s arms that were round her, it was his steady unchanging love—a love so sure of itself and so sure of her that it could laugh a little tenderly, tease a little, and hold her all the time. She knew that he would never let her go.

  She said against his shoulder,

  “Are you, Bill?”

  And Bill said,

  “We are.”

  Turn the page to continue reading from the Frank Garrett Mysteries

  CHAPTER I

  The rain fell in a fine, steady drizzle. The young man in the armchair looked up from the letter he was writing and glanced with dislike at a prospect where nothing pleased and man appeared viler than usual. It had been raining all day. Everything was very wet. And instead of being the cleaner for this continuous shower-bath, everything, steep tilted roofs, narrow street, small shops, and a wavering, havering, haphazard straggle of men women children and dogs, appeared to be even dirtier than usual.

  The room was a bare one, the arm chair dowdy, sagging, but not uncomfortable. The man who occupied it had one leg crossed above the other at a fantastic angle. He brought his eyes back from the window to a writing-block precariously perched against the tilted knee and went on writing. A loosely built young man of indeterminate features, in repose expressionless. But just now when he had looked at the rain they had changed. Something quick, vivid and angry had looked out. Then he was back at his writing, pen running fast, left hand steadying the block.

  “I think I’ve found the man. Wrong expression—as you were—I am on his track. Dictionary for sleuths, use of—don’t the department issue it? If not, why not? All right, all right, I’m coming to the point. You know I didn’t ask to be dragged into sleuthing, so you’ll just have to take me as you find me. It will, I feel, do you—and the department—a lot of good. Query—is the Foreign Office Secret Service a department? Probably not. That’s the sort of moss a rolling stone like me doesn’t gather. Yes, I’m really coming to it—the point, cher maître, the point.”

  Here the young man grinned suddenly, showing good teeth. He was ready to bet that no one had ever called Colonel Garrett cher maître before, and he had a clear and pleasant picture of what Garrett’s reactions would be. Then he went on writing.

  “He calls himself Pierre Riel. I am told he is Spike Reilly. I think he may be the goods. Someone told a girl, who told a man, who told a girl, who told another man, who told me that Mr. Spike had once talked in his cups. Moral of this—all criminals should join their local Band of Hope. I go now to take a room in the same pub as Spike. Viewed from the outside it presents every appearance of being about as low in the social scale as you can get. If I fall a victim to dirt, drains or bugs, I presume that a grateful government will pay for my obsequies.

  Yours unofficially,

  J.P.T.

  P.S. I shall post this on my way. Another thrilling installment tomorrow.

  P.P.S. Brussels has some fine architectural features and a lot of bells. I like it better when it doesn’t rain.

  P.P.P.S., or what comes next. It’s been raining ever since I got here.

  N.B. That is all, cher maître.”

  The grin showed again for a fleeting moment. Then, with the letter enveloped and stamped, suit-case in hand and raincoat on back, Mr. Peter Talbot clattered down a steep and rickety stair and sallied reluctantly forth into the rain.

  He posted the letter, and pursued a damp and devious course through a number of mean and narrow streets. The odd thing was that his spirits kept on rising. And, paradoxically, this was a depressing circumstance. He even groaned over it slightly himself, because, on his own private barometer, that sudden lift was a certain indication of cyclones ahead, and at this stage of the proceedings while the blood mounted to Peter’s head, he could still be aware that his feet were cold.

  He was whistling between his teeth when he came to the Hotel Dupin and pushed through into its narrow, dingy hall.

  A room? But certainly m’sieu could have a room. If m’sieu would register. And the suit-case of m’sieu would be taken up, o bien sur.

  Peter Talbot stood with the pen in his hand and looked at the register. Five—no, six names up, illegibly scrawled, the name of Pierre Riel. Something sang in his ears. He bent down and signed the good old-fashioned name of John Smith.

  CHAPTER II

  Peter looked presently from a third-floor window, and beheld a back yard under rain—very literally under rain, because the water stood in pools amongst a jumble of old barrels, broken crockery, a mouldering dog kennel, and other odds and ends. There were logs of wood, a perambulator with only one wheel, something that looked like the wreck of a bicycle, and a hip bath with a hole in it. He was wondering where all these things had come from, and wondering too about the odd muttering sound which seemed to come from the room on the right. He had taken it at first for the murmur of voices in conversation, but there w
ere not two voices, there was only one, and it went on, and on, and on.

  There was a communicating door. The first thing you do about a communicating door in a place like this is to find out whether it is locked, and whether there is a bolt on your own side. Well, it was locked all right, but there was no sign of a key, and there wasn’t any bolt. Not so good. Behind that door was M. Pierre Riel, alias Mr. Spike Reilly, and Peter would have preferred that there should be a bolt.

  With his hand on the jamb he listened to the muttering voice. Either Mr. Spike Reilly was drunk, or—or—he saw again very vividly the scrawled name in the register—the very illegible scrawled name. If he hadn’t known what name to look for, the odds would have been against his making head or tail of it.

  The mutter on the other side of the door died down, and then rose again waveringly to a kind of scream. The scream broke off in a gasp. Peter walked down the stairs he had just come up and routed out M. Dupin—small, dark, sallow, with eyes as bright and beady as a rat’s. Rather ratlike about the teeth, Peter thought. The way he had of half cupping his hands too—

  “Who’s the fellow in the room next to mine?” he said. “And what’s the matter with him? Is he ill, or only drunk?”

  M. Dupin cupped his hands and showed his teeth apologetically. Madame Dupin, at the desk, shrugged tightly upholstered shoulders and sent a glance to the ceiling.

  “It is M’sieu Riel.”

  Dupin shrugged too.

  “It is only last night that he arrives and we notice nothing. We think he is a little drunk perhaps. But this morning he does not get up, he does not move. He has a fever, he talks all the time. And what can I do? I say to him, ‘Will you send for your friends—will you send for a doctor—will you tell me of someone to whom I can send?’ And does he answer me? No. He has a delirium. He goes on talking, and there is not a single word of sense in all he says—not one. It is English, English. English all the time. And he calls himself Pierre Riel. Without a doubt that is not his name. Who knows whether we shall not find ourselves in trouble with the police?”

  “Have you sent for a doctor?” said Peter.

  “Assuredly not! Who knows that he can pay for one?” Madame Dupin’s voice was indignant. It was one of those husky voices with no breath behind it.

  Dupin showed his teeth in an ingratiating smile.

  “Now if m’sieu, who is also English, would like to arrange for his compatriot—”

  Peter looked blankly from one to the other. His heart sang. His face showed nothing. He said in a stupid voice,

  “I’ll go up and see him.”

  As he climbed the dark, musty stair, something said in a warning voice, “What a damned fool you are. No one ever gets luck like this if it isn’t to land him into the hell of a mess. You take my advice and get out.” To which he replied rudely, “Who’s getting out?” and walked in upon M. Pierre Riel.

  He shut the door behind him and stood a yard or two inside it and a yard or two from the bed.

  The bed-clothes were tumbled beyond belief. The man on the bed was undoubtedly very ill. He neither saw Peter nor answered him. He talked in that incessant hoarse mutter which had come droning through the door. There was a wash-stand and some water in a jug. An empty glass was tipped over and lay on its side unbroken. Peter half filled it. He knelt by Pierre Riel and held it to his lips. The man gulped the water down, choked on the last of it, and said with his first coherent words,

  “What’s the good of water? Give me brandy.”

  Peter said, “I’ll get you a doctor.” But the man shook his head.

  “No good. Who are you? If you’re a doctor, I don’t want you. Go away. I don’t want anyone—want brandy—cognac—order bottle—” He dropped to the muttering again.

  Peter set down the glass and stood looking at him. “Better get him a doctor. I think he’s going to die. Not much loss to anyone but me. You can’t begin with luck like this and expect it to last. Well, better get on with today’s good deed.” He turned to the door, but before he reached it the muttering voice arrested him. Words were emerging, many at a time, quite clear. Then panting breaths and an unintelligible murmur of sound. Then words again.

  “The money’s—not—enough. I say—it’s not enough. You say there’s no risk—no risk—” He gave a wild, unsteady laugh. “You’re telling me—and perhaps—there’s something I can tell.” There was a blaze of fever in the eyes. The words came tumbling out. “I said—I’d find out—who you were—didn’t I? And I will. And when I do—you’ll have to pay me something more than—a postman’s wages. And if you think I can’t—find out—why then you can think again—do you hear? Because I know—I know—” He stared at Peter with the blazing eyes which saw some shape from his delirium, and said in a clear voice of triumph, “Maud Millicent—what have you got to say to that? Maud Millicent Simpson—what have you got to say to that? If I can find her, I can find you—can’t I? And I’m going to find you—if it takes me from here to—to—” He groaned, flung out an arm, and said vaguely, “Ah now, what was I saying?” The flare had died. The voice dropped to a whisper. “Mind you, it’s hundreds of thousands for you. What do I get? Postman’s wages—I’m nothing but a postman. And I’m through, I tell you—” The voice broke and changed. “Where’s that brandy? Look sharp about it, can’t you!”

  When Peter came back he was lying on his side watching the door, but the eyes had no sense in them and the muttering had begun again.

  Peter went over to the window and stood there with his back to the room listening. This was Spike Reilly whom he had been following, and he thought he was a dying man. What he ought to do, what he had every opportunity of doing, was to pick up that suit-case and go through it. He had only to open the connecting door—there was a key on this side all right—and step into his own room with the suit-case in his hand. Whatever papers there were, he could go through them at his leisure.

  He could—well, he just couldn’t. Irrational thing, one’s code. If Spike had been drunk—oh, yes. If Spike had been dead—why certainly. But since Spike was dying—devil take it, it couldn’t be done. Not if Garrett, the Foreign Office, and Scotland Yard all stood in a row and yelped. This pleasing picture occupied him for a space.

  He wondered how soon the doctor would come, and became aware that the voice had died down. Turning, he saw that the man was looking at him. The look, at first blank, became intent. In a whisper Spike Reilly said, “Who are you?” and even as he asked the question, the eyes went blank again, and the voice failed on a gasp.

  There was no more sound or movement. Nothing. Peter stood where he was and listened. Not a breath. Nothing. Neither Pierre Riel nor Spike Reilly any more. Just a dead man lying there on the tumbled bed.

  Peter picked up the suit-case and went through the communicating door into his own room.

  CHAPTER III

  He would have to be quick. And yet perhaps not so very quick. Their client’s condition had obviously aroused no passionate interest in either M. or Mme. Dupin. He did not think it likely that they would hurry themselves over sending for a doctor. On the other hand, not safe to count on that. Get on with the job, and get on with it quick.

  There was, as a matter of fact, very little in the suit-case. Pyjamas and washing things had been taken out, and had left a good-sized gap. There remained a pair of black laced shoes, a pair of pants, a woollen undervest, a packet of cigarettes, a brand new pair of braces, a small writing-block, a packet of envelopes, and a battered paper-covered novel entitled Her Great Romance. And that was all. He shook the novel and flicked through the pages—just in case. It wasn’t a likely receptacle for papers of a private and particular nature, but you never could tell.

  He repacked the suit-case, took it back into the next room, and turned his attention to the garments which had been flung down anyhow, half on a chair, half trailing to the ground. There was a rain-coat—nothing in the pockets. Trousers—a key-ring and a handful of loose change. Waistcoat pocket—a cheap ci
garette-lighter. He took up the coat—handkerchief and cigarette case in the breast pocket on the left, pocket-book on the right. Peter let everything fall and grabbed the pocket-book. He took it over to the window.

  The first thing that came out was a folded letter. It fell right out on to the floor, and he had to stoop down to pick it up—two sheets, torn from one of the cheaper blocks, and the top one began, “Dear Jimmy—”

  He stood there frowning at the sheet. There was no address, no date. “Dear Jimmy”… He couldn’t remember that he had ever read a private letter belonging to someone else before, and he didn’t like doing it now. But he supposed he had to. Well, it might be a private letter, or it might not. He would just have to see. By the cold, rainy light at the window he read:

  “Dear Jimmy,

  It’s no use your going on asking me to tell you things about Mrs. Simpson, because it wouldn’t be safe for you and it wouldn’t be safe for me—at least that’s the idea I’ve got about it. You’ve never seen her, and she’s never seen you, and I don’t see why you can’t leave her alone. I’m sure I’m sorry I ever mentioned her name, and if it hadn’t been for getting into the same bus like I told you, I don’t suppose I should ever have thought about her again. She didn’t think I’d recognise her either, and I don’t suppose hardly anyone would, because of course it’s fifteen or sixteen years, and she’s aged a lot more than that and everything about her different. But there’s one thing that won’t ever change about her, not if she was a hundred, and when I’d spotted that, sitting opposite her in the bus, well, I was quite sure and I spoke to her. And of course she said I was making a mistake and it was no such thing, so I waited till she got off, and I followed her. And I said, ‘Well, Mrs. Simpson, if you don’t want me to know you, that’s one thing, but if you think you can persuade me that you’re someone else, well, that’s another.’ So then she came off it and we had a talk, and she said she’d got her reasons for keeping quiet, and better for everyone if I didn’t talk. I didn’t like the way she looked at me when she said that, and I told her I’d hold my tongue. And that’s just what I mean to do, so it’s no use your asking me about when I knew her before, or how I knew her again, or where she is, because, as I said to start with, I think we’ll both be a lot safer if I hold my tongue. I’ve got my own ideas, and I’m keeping them to myself, and if you’ll take my advice you’ll clear out of this job you’re in and keep clear, because I don’t like the sound of it.

 

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