Death by Gaslight

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Death by Gaslight Page 20

by Michael Kurland


  Barnett turned to Moriarty. “Something’s happened to her,” he said.

  Moriarty considered. “I believe you are right,” he said. “She has been covering that series of murders?”

  “Yes.” Barnett felt the blood drain from his face. “My God! You don’t think—”

  Moriarty put out a restraining hand. “No, I don’t,” he said. “Stay calm.”

  Inglestone looked from one to the other of them. “I say!” he said. “You don’t suppose something has happened to Miss Perrine?”

  “Something has definitely happened to Miss Perrine,” Moriarty said. “Even my rather sketchy acquaintance with her over the past two years tells me that she didn’t run off. And she certainly isn’t skulking about on some London street, following a suspect. If she were, she would have found a better way to communicate than a brief note. And she certainly would have informed her father.”

  “But—”

  “On the other hand, Mr. Barnett, the pattern of this murderer we’re dealing with shows that he doesn’t attack women; that he doesn’t make the sort of mistake that would have enabled Miss Perrine to walk in on him; and that he doesn’t conceal bodies. So, as no body has been found, we must conclude that whatever happened to Miss Perrine, it was not the doing of our multiple killer.”

  “That’s very reassuring,” Barnett said. “She may be lying bleeding on some street, sliced up by some maniac, but at least it’s a different maniac! I’ve got to get back to London!”

  “What for?” Moriarty asked.

  “What do you mean, what for? To find Cecily. Nobody else seems even to be looking.”

  “I shall remedy that,” Moriarty said. “I’ll put a telegram in at the desk, and there will be five hundred people out looking for her in an hour.”

  “I say, you chaps really do seem to be taking this thing seriously,” Inglestone said. “You don’t actually suppose that anything nasty has happened to the young lady, do you?” He chuckled. “Well, if it has, it would serve old Caterby-Cahors right, I’ll tell you.”

  Barnett stared incredulously at Inglestone for a second, not sure he had heard right. How callous it was possible to be about someone one didn’t know very well. And Inglestone didn’t seem to think he had said anything at all strange.

  “I’d better pass the telegram in now,” Moriarty said, rising and heading for the door. “Meet you in the lobby, Barnett.”

  Barnett also rose. “Very good chatting with you, Inglestone,” he said. “We must do it again sometime. You don’t mind paying, do you? There’s a good chap!” And with that, he slapped Inglestone on the back and hurried after Moriarty.

  “I say!” Inglestone exclaimed.

  “I really think I should go back to London,” Barnett told Moriarty, catching up to him in the lobby.

  “I have given a telegram to the porter,” Moriarty said. “It will be clacking its ways over the wires in ten minutes and will be delivered to 64 Russell Square within the hour. It is now ten o’clock. Before midnight, five hundred people will be searching for the young lady. By tomorrow morning the first report on the search will be awaiting me at the desk of this hotel. If there is any definite word on her whereabouts earlier, I will be immediately notified. Believe me, Barnett, I know how you feel; but no more could be done if you were present, and I need you here.”

  “I appreciate that,” Barnett said. “I certainly don’t want to desert you. But we both know that any of fifty men could do what you would have me do tomorrow. I am not in any way essential to your plan. I should get on the next train to London.”

  Moriarty put his hand on Barnett’s shoulder and peered at him intently. “Understand me,” he said. “I am not an unfeeling man. If there were anything that you could do in London that would further the search for Cecily Perrine, I would hire a special for you and put you on it. If there were any way in which my presence would help, I would join you.”

  “Thank you, Professor,” Barnett said. “I’m sure you’re right; and I appreciate what you say more than I can tell you. It’s just that—”

  “Furthermore,” Moriarty said, “whatever your opinion of yourself, the fact is that I do need you here. You are not irreplaceable, but you are intelligent, competent, and resourceful, and the man with whom I would have to replace you might lack one or more of those virtues.

  “I pledge you this, Barnett: if any word comes of Miss Perrine—at all—and it seems desirable for you to go to London, I’ll have that special put on for you immediately. In any case, we shall both be on the next regular train for London. I shall leave it midway, but you will go on through.”

  “The next train?” Barnett asked.

  “Yes. There are no more trains scheduled tonight, and the first train out tomorrow morning is the, let’s see”—he pulled out his schedule—“the 6:08 doesn’t run on Saturdays, so we shall be on the 7:42. Will that suffice?”

  “I suppose,” Barnett said unhappily, “that it will have to.”

  He slept fitfully that night. If asked, he would have sworn that he slept not at all. Complex images kept springing into his mind, unbidden. Images of the myriad ways in which Cecily, by chance or by design, could have discovered the mysterious murderer. And then the image would unfold and become horrible, as the murderer, in turn, found Cecily. Barnett’s mind rebelled from the worst possibilities, but even the ones his mind would accept did not bear dwelling upon.

  The loading of the treasure was set to begin an hour before sunrise, which, according to Whitaker’s Almanack, would occur at 5:42. And so at a little after four in the damp, chilly morning of the first Saturday in April, Barnett found himself dressing by candlelight so that he could go to watch large, heavily guarded boxes being loaded onto goods wagons in the predawn blackness for transport to London. And do his small part in seeing that they did not arrive.

  The reporters, sketch artists, and such of the idly curious as could drag themselves out of bed at such an hour, were to be assembled on a three-tiered grandstand specially erected in the goods yard for the event. This would give them a splendid view of the proceedings and yet keep them out of the way. The real crowds would gather later in the morning, when the military guard was added and the treasure train prepared to leave.

  Barnett had wondered how they were going to move treasure from the ship to the goods wagons in the dark; even with the route marked with a line of lanterns, it would not seem a prudent procedure from the standpoint of security. And indeed, when he and Professor Moriarty arrived and took their seats in the front row of the grandstand, the brightest object around was the conductor’s lantern, which was carried by the railway guard. There was no line of lanterns, and no apparent motion from what Barnett believed to be the direction of H.M.S. Hornblower, a quarter mile away at Stonehouse Basin. “Are we early?” he whispered to the guard, looking around at the ten or fifteen other people already in the stands.

  “No sir, you’m jest a’time,” the guard told him in a broad north-counties accent. And as if merely waiting for his word, the entire goods yard was suddenly bathed in an intense white light.

  Barnett blinked, squinted, and shielded his eyes from the intense glare. “What on earth is that?” he asked no one in particular.

  “They appear to have four Drummond apparatuses mounted in towers,” Moriarty said. “We are now bathed in a light as bright as the sun, if rather more limited in scope.”

  “Drummond?” Barnett peered out from between his fingers. His eyes were starting to adjust now, and he could see slightly between his fingers as he shut off most of the light with his hands. The professor was right; except for the bizarre shadows cast by the four light sources, it could have been daylight within the limited area of the goods yard.

  “The light is generated by application of a flame of hydrogen gas burned in a stream of oxygen to a core of calcium oxide. You should be intimately familiar with the principle, fond as you are of attending the music halls.”

  “Music halls?” Barnett asked.
>
  “Calcium oxide is perhaps better known as lime,” Moriarty explained.

  “Limelight!”

  “Correct. The same light that illuminates your favorite singers, jugglers, and acrobats, done on a much larger scale. This sort of Drummond apparatus is usually found in lighthouses, where the beam can be seen from twenty miles away. The only difference is the shape of the mirrored reflector; parabolic in lighthouses, and, I would assume, conical here. It covers a much wider field, you see.”

  “I see,” Barnett said. And he was beginning to. He took his hands away from his face and looked around. “It’s quite a shock, going from pitch-black to daylight in an instant. I’m not sure that the human eye was built to take that sort of transition.”

  The grandstand was now filling up rapidly with the gentlemen of the press. The area before them, a loading platform with one of the specially prepared goods wagons pulled up before it, was curiously devoid of life and motion. It reminded Barnett of a stage setting in the moments before the curtain went up on the first act. Which, he realized, was probably a fair assessment. Lord East had arranged this show for the press, and he was going to see that they got their money’s worth. For whatever motive, Lord East craved the public eye, and he had spent thirty years learning how to stay in it.

  A line of red-coated soldiers marched into the limelight from the left, the direction of the Hornblower, and the Lord East treasure. Leading them, astride three spirited chargers, were a colonel, a brigadier, and Lord East. It was, as it had been contrived to be, an inspiring sight.

  As the reporters fell silent at Lord East’s approach, Moriarty leaned over to Barnett and whispered, “Ready?”

  “Yes,” Barnett replied, feeling his heart beat faster.

  Moriarty nodded. “We have one thing to thank that mysterious murderer for,” he commented.

  “We do? What’s that?”

  “Were it not for him, Sherlock Holmes would even now be sitting behind us disguised as an itinerant colorman, breathing down our necks.”

  “He did have three Scotland Yard men following you about,” Barnett reminded Moriarty.

  “Yes, but we were able to divert them with little trouble. Holmes would have been much more difficult to get rid of. Even now he must be spending whatever time he can spare in wondering where I’ve got to. It is these small things that make life worth living.”

  “You are a vindictive man, Professor,” Barnett said.

  “Nonsense!” Moriarty whispered. “I would gladly be willing to relinquish the childish pleasure I get in thwarting him if he would give up following me about and spying on me. I think East is about to speak.”

  “Welcome!” Lord East bellowed to the assemblage on the grandstand, maneuvering his horse in close to the railing. “I apologize for getting you all up at such a ridiculous hour to witness the loading, but we want to have a clear run to London during the daylight hours. I’m sure you can understand.” As he spoke, his horse began walking around in a small circle. His lordship, trying to ignore this, gradually twisted around in his saddle until he was speaking over the animal’s rump. Then, in a sudden fit of anger, he put his spurs to the animal to make it obey the reins. The horse responded by kicking up sharply with its hind feet, causing his lordship to lose his stirrups and almost fly head over rump to the earth below. He caught himself, barely, by grabbing onto the saddle with both hands, pulled himself up, and savagely yanked the horse around to face the group. “Military mount,” he said in an annoyed undertone that carried across the field. “Always give the best of everything to the military!”

  The soldiers had now formed a double line leading from somewhere to the left of the limelit area to the loading platform. The shifting of the Lord East Collection from the battleship to the railway train was about to commence. “It should take a bit over two hours to transfer the entire collection into the ten goods wagons,” Lord East explained, having regained control of his mouth. “But you must understand that this is, metaphorically speaking, only the tip of a vast iceberg. Hundreds and hundreds of man-hours have already gone into the preparations. Wafting the collection ashore and loading it onto the baggage carts which will bring it here was a process which began yesterday evening and was not completed until but a short time ago.”

  “’E don’t want us to think it was easy,” someone behind Barnett muttered.

  “Where is the official photographer?” Lord East fretted. “I wanted the whole process captured on glass plates. History is being made here!”

  The first baggage cart appeared, pushed between the twin rows of soldiers and onto the loading platform by an octet of workmen who, judging by their appearance and dress, must have been brought back from India by Lord East. It held twelve large statues of different ancient gods and goddesses of various Indian religions, deities that would have been very surprised to have ended up on the same small cart. The workmen rapidly and efficiently prised the statuary off the cart and into the goods wagon, tying the pieces into place with a complex of ropes and scaffolding.

  There was a pause in the loading now, and a certain amount of backtracking, while the official photographer bustled up and set up his apparatus to the side of the grandstand. Lord East and his entourage assumed a variety of poses that were supposed to suggest the earlier stages of the operation before continuing with the job.

  The next cart held what looked like a load of bricks. Lord East’s audience broke into a subdued chattering at the sight of it, as the reporters tried to guess the history and purpose of the load. Some of the suggestions as to the uses to which the bricks could be put were rather imaginative. “Sun-baked bricks,” Lord East explained, “forming a lovely frieze that went around the wall of a four-thousand-year-old temple. Quite beautiful. A pair of hunters accosting a lion, I believe. The bricks were all numbered with Chinese chalk when we took it apart, but many of the numbers seem to have rubbed off during the journey. Or perhaps during the five years in storage. I hope we can reassemble it, nonetheless; it really was quite striking.”

  Barnett’s brief but essential part in Professor Moriarty’s master plan for the acquisition of the Lord East Collection was to be enacted as the third treasure chest was being loaded. What he was to do was clear, and not overly difficult, given the known habits of his brother reporters. Why he was to do it was another matter. Moriarty was not communicative with his plans. It was enough for one to execute his part; one was not called upon to understand what he was doing, or why. Barnett gave a mental shrug as he prepared to move.

  The third wagon was loaded now, and sealed; the fourth was about to be rolled into its place before the platform. Lord East rode over to the loading platform to supervise as his most precious cargo was installed in its place.

  Barnett unostentatiously moved up one row in the grandstand and over toward the middle. His colleague Inglestone was sitting a few seats over from where Barnett now found himself, doing his best to ignore Barnett’s existence. He must be still smarting from having to pay the bill the night before, Barnett decided. He would serve well as Barnett’s unwitting ally.

  Barnett slid over along the bench and slapped Inglestone on the back. “How are you, friend?” he asked solicitously. “Sleep well?”

  “As well as could be expected, old man,” Inglestone said frostily. “You owe me fourteen bob.”

  “Do I?” Barnett leaned back, his elbows on the seat behind. He pitched his voice just loud enough so that the reporters in the seats surrounding could overhear. “Well then, I’ll tell you what: I’ll give you a chance to get even.”

  “How’s that?” Inglestone asked, sounding annoyed. “It wasn’t a question of a wager, old man; this was cold, hard cash.”

  “Ah, yes,” Barnett said. “But there’s wagers and there’s wagers.” He indicated the first treasure chest, now being loaded into the wagon. “I’ll bet you five quid on the nose that there’s nothing in that there box.”

  Inglestone turned to stare at him. “What do you mean?” he asked.
“The treasure chest?”

  “You’ve got it,” Barnett said. “Five quid says that the so-called treasure chest is empty.”

  “What are you saying, Barnett?” the columnist for the Evening Standard demanded, his mustache twitching.

  The first chest was now in place in the goods wagon, and the second was being brought up. “I say they’re empty,” Barnett said.

  “That’s ridiculous!” the Morning Intelligencer-Whig declared. “Do you know what you’re saying?”

  “Have you seen inside any of those chests?” Barnett demanded. “I’m saying there’s a reason. I say they’re empty!”

  Heinrich von Hertzog, British correspondent for the Berliner Tagenblatt, nodded his head sagely. “It could be,” he said. “It makes sense.”

  Barnett was glad to hear that, because the one thing that had worried him was that his accusation made no sense whatsoever, as far as he could tell. “Of course it does,” he agreed.

  “What sort of sense?” Jameson of the Daily Telegraph demanded.

  “Lord East creates all this excitement, all this preparation, all this display, to draw attention to the treasure train,” von Hertzog explained. “But the real treasure is sent otherwise. A clever man, Lord East.”

  Barnett nodded. “I’ll up it to ten quid,” he said. “Any takers? Ten quid says those boxes are as empty as an editor’s heart.”

  “That’s nonsense!” Inglestone said. “It certainly doesn’t make any sense that I can see. Do you know what you’re talking about, Barnett?”

  The second chest was now in place. “Ten quid says I do,” Barnett said.

  “Come on, Barnett,” Jameson said. “Don’t try to make money on your friends. If you know something, spill it. Don’t just sit there looking smug.”

 

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