3,49 €
Scotland Yard unearths the mysterious disappearance of a wealthy, eccentric banker, the reason for a dead man in his bank, and the vanishing of the bank’s funds. The background shifts from the bank to the club, and the missing millionaire’s known habits give necessary leads to the unscrambling of the mystery. Oppenheim continues to hold up his end. An enjoyable read! E. Phillips Oppenheim was a British author who wrote nearly 150 novels during his career. He styled himself as the „prince of storytellers,” and is credited with creating the ‘rogue male’ genre of adventure thrillers and was one of the earliest writers of spy fiction.
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
Contents
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
XVII
XVIII
XIX
XX
XXI
XXII
XXIII
XXIV
XXV
XXVI
XXVII
XXVIII
XXIX
I
Adam Blockton, on the day of his curious disappearance, passed the time between half-past twelve and ten minutes past one precisely as he had passed that particular period of his life on every morning of the year except Sundays for a quarter of a century–seated in a large leather easy chair pulled up towards the bay window of the Norchester County Club. He sipped champagne from a pint bottle of old Veuve Clicquot, smoked with obvious pleasure a shabby blackened pipe, and carried on a mumbling conversation which sounded like a monologue but was really addressed to the statue a few yards away from the pavement outside–the statue of an elderly man in a long frock coat, whose singularly benevolent appearance was sufficient evidence of a life of municipal triumphs and a generously used chequebook.
On that particular morning, however, as several people afterwards testified, there was a slight flush upon the leathery cheeks of the elderly gentleman in the armchair, an unusual light, too, in his clear blue eyes. He beckoned to the only other occupant of the room, Giles Mowbray, his solicitor, a man of apparently about the same age as himself, who was searching for a newspaper at the round table in the middle of the apartment.
“Come you here, Giles,” he ordered.
Giles Mowbray shuffled deferentially across to the speaker. He had been solicitor to Sir Adam Blockton since the day he had received his articles and entered his father’s firm, but he sometimes felt that he knew as little about the man and his affairs now as fifty years ago. Sir Adam pointed with his pipe to the statue outside.
“Do you see the old man, Giles?” he asked.
“Seen him most mornings, Adam, for half a century.”
“There is something different about him to-day,” Sir Adam persisted. “Look at the old hypocrite. There’s something in his face–he’s got a smile coming. I believe he knows.”
“Knows what?”
Sir Adam grinned and indulged in a single interjection.
“Ah!”
The lawyer had never been a man of imagination and he looked puzzled, as indeed he was.
“I cannot see any change,” he confessed.
Adam Blockton replaced his pipe in his mouth, sucked it slowly and sipped his wine. The lawyer, in a moment of retrospect, meditated upon the fact that never once, in the twenty or thirty years during which he had carried out his present morning’s programme, had he offered to share with anyone the contents of his carefully frozen bottle.
“You are a fool, Giles,” his old friend declared abruptly.
“Maybe, Adam,” was the indifferent reply.
“How long have you been my lawyer?”
“Getting on for fifty years.”
“How much do you know of my affairs?”
“Nothing.”
Adam Blockton chuckled.
“You speak the truth, anyway,” he observed. “You know nothing of my affairs, Giles, nor does my solitary cashier, nor do those two clerks who stand behind their mahogany desks and pay out my money or draw it in. Neither does he,” Sir Adam concluded, pointing with his pipe to the statue outside.
The lawyer was a trifle uneasy as he glanced through the fine, rounded window at the cold granite figure upon its pedestal.
“You are a very rich man, Adam,” he mumbled. “That the whole world knows. You are almost the last man in the United Kingdom who owns a bank of his own and refuses to incorporate for fear of having to issue a balance sheet, they say,” he added with a wheezy chuckle. “You are one who has kept a tight hold on his own moneybags. Some day–”
“Some day,” Adam Blockton interrupted ruthlessly. “How many more years do you suppose there are for me? I have been asking that old blitherer outside. That’s one reason why the grin that you can’t see is there on his face. I am eighty-seven, Giles.”
“You are as strong as a horse,” the other declared. “Why, your father–there he stands still proud and disdainful after all these years of Norchester fogs and rains. He was over eighty when they made the drawings for that statue.”
Adam Blockton had the air of one who had ceased to listen. The club steward, according to custom, came softly into the room a few moments later, filled up the glass of its most distinguished member and leaned over his chair.
“Ten minutes past one, Sir Adam,” he announced deferentially. “Your cutlets are coming up.”
Adam Blockton gave signs of assent and waved the man away. The lawyer, too, shuffled off. He knew his old friend better than to linger. Sir Adam, who was alone now in the room, leaned back in his chair, a queer, faraway look in his narrow, ferretlike eyes as he gazed out at that stony, unresponsive figure. It was a showery day in May and the raindrops from a recent downpour were tumbling down the window pane. Nevertheless, the face of the statue was still clearly visible. It seemed to the old man seated there in his chair, with his pipe growing cold in his fingers, that the fancied grin was also still there upon those carved lips.
The steward, in the busy luncheon-room of the club, glanced up at the clock and frowned. It was two minutes after the time when the multi-millionaire banker was accustomed to take his place and the entrée dish with its silver cover had already been reverently placed in front of the chosen chair. He turned and left the room, crossed the hall and entered the reading lounge.
“Sir Adam,” he announced, “your cutlets–”
He went no further. The hall across which he had passed had been empty, the room in which he stood was empty, the easy chair was unoccupied. Sir Adam Blockton had disappeared.
II
The first few hours of this singular disappearance of its most notable member from the exclusive club in the heart of a busy city were filled with curiosity rather than apprehension. Towards evening, however, there was a development of the latter sentiment. An informal meeting was held at the club, at which were present Mr. Giles Mowbray, the solicitor, who, owing to his somewhat upset condition, was accompanied by his nephew, Mr. Martin Mowbray; Captain Elmhurst, the Chief Constable; Mr. Richard Groome, the cashier of the bank, and, standing respectfully in the background, Henry Lawford, the chief steward and manager of the club.
Mr. Giles Mowbray, still a trifle incoherent from the shock, presented the case.
“Sir Adam came in at exactly his customary time,” he told the little company. “He occupied his usual chair, was served with his usual drink by Lawford here, everything was only a page out of his everyday history. He called me over to listen to one of his usual jeers against his father’s statue. He seemed well enough in health but inclined to wander. I left him preparing to finish his glass of wine and I expected to see him in the dining room within a few minutes according to his day-by-day custom. That is all I have to tell you, gentlemen.”
Captain Elmhurst, a slim, middle-aged man who had preserved his military appearance and manner of speech, nodded comprehendingly.
“Well, that is simple enough,” he said. “Let us go back a little. Tell us what you saw of Sir Adam during the morning, Mr. Groome.”
“Scarcely anything, sir,” the cashier, a withered-looking little person, grey-haired, bespectacled and with a very anxious expression, replied. “Nothing unusual happened at the bank. At half-past nine punctually Sir Adam arrived. He wished me good morning, he wished the two other gentlemen associated with the bank good morning and went into his private room. There were very few letters and most of these were advertisements. In about ten minutes I received my usual summons to enter. Sir Adam was reading the Times and smoking his pipe.
“‘Nothing important for you, Groome,’ he said, pushing a little pile towards me. ‘Four or five enterprising tradesmen who desire to open an account with the firm. The rest are advertisements and prospectuses.’”
“Do you think,” Captain Elmhurst asked, “that Sir Adam gave you all the letters he received?”
“With the exception of one which he left unopened upon the table, sir, I am sure of it.”
“There were no signs of papers having been destroyed or anything in the wastepaper basket?” the Chief Constable continued. “This is an entirely informal meeting, you understand, Mr. Groome, and you will not be betraying a confidence if you give us an exact idea of the contents of the letters handed to you for attention.”
“Certainly, sir–certainly,” Groome replied nervously. “There were five applications to open accounts with the bank and as is our custom we sent a printed slip announcing that the firm was not seeking any further business and that we must respectfully decline negotiations.”
“And the remainder of the papers?”
“Prospectuses of new companies, sir, and enquiries. Not a single letter except this one which Sir Adam left upon his desk unopened,” he added, producing from his breast pocket a coroneted mauve envelope. “This I can tell you, knowing the handwriting very well, is from Sir Adam’s daughter, Lady Pengwill. She married Lord Pengwill when he was the Honourable Charles Pengwill, and before he came into the title some twenty-five years ago.”
Captain Elmhurst handled the letter and laid it on the table.
“Thank you very much, Mr. Groome,” he said. “Are you sure that no business of importance took place this morning likely to upset Sir Adam?”
“No business ever takes place at the bank, sir,” the cashier confided. “For the last few years Sir Adam’s policy has been to wind up the business quietly. We have had wonderful offers from wealthy firms in a first-class position but nothing has ever changed Sir Adam’s determination. Not a new account has been opened in the ledgers for nearly two years.”
There was a little murmur of astonishment. Mr. Mowbray, Junior, was unable to resist asking the obvious question.
“Then what on earth do you do with your money and Sir Adam’s own huge fortune?” he asked.
The cashier’s expression for a moment was the expression of a dreamy child. He took off his glasses and wiped them.
“I have no means of knowing, sir,” he answered.
“And I think, Martin,” his uncle put in, “this is not a question we have the right to ask just now.”
“Of course not,” the young man agreed. “But to think that you have there the whole correspondence of a banker of enormous wealth! Not a line about investments of any sort, nothing from stock-brokers or anybody else connected with the money market! It seems odd. If Sir Adam were not such a frightfully wealthy man it would give rise to ridiculous suspicions.”
“The time for this sort of conversation has scarcely arrived,” his uncle said stiffly. “The question simply is–what has become of Sir Adam Blockton? No one here seems to be able to help in the least and I gather from what you told me, Lawford, that there were no replies to our enquiries posted in the hall as to whether anyone had seen or spoken to Sir Adam after he was left alone in the reading room.”
“That is so, sir,” the steward acknowledged. “No member entering or leaving the club saw anything of Sir Adam. The usual offices were naturally searched at once. Two of the members–Mr. Williams and Mr. Marshall–happened to meet on the steps and were talking there when I left the reading room for the dining room. They were still there when I returned and found Sir Adam had disappeared. They are absolutely certain that Sir Adam did not leave the club.”
“What about his car?” Captain Elmhurst enquired.
“It arrived at half-past two, as usual,” the steward replied. “It waited for half an hour, and finding that Sir Adam was not here returned to the bank and then on to the garage. I spoke to the chauffeur on the telephone a few minutes ago. He reported that he had heard nothing from his master since he had left him here before lunch.”
“What members of the family are within reach?” Captain Elmhurst asked.
Mr. Giles Mowbray leaned forward in his chair.
“There’s Lady Pengwill, from whom he received a letter this morning, but she lives in London. His other daughter, Lady Tidswell, lives at Wrotton Park, which is quite close.”
“What about Lady Pengwill’s daughter, Lady Diana?” young Mowbray enquired. “I thought I saw her in the town the other day.”
“I believe that she is somewhere in the neighbourhood,” his uncle admitted.
“Lady Diana,” Groome announced, “is staying with her aunt, Lady Tidswell, at Wrotton Park.”
“She hasn’t been into the bank lately, I suppose?” Captain Elmhurst asked.
“No member of the family,” Mr. Groome confided, “is allowed to visit the bank except by special appointment.”
“Were there any telephone enquiries of any importance this morning? Anything at all likely to upset Sir Adam?” Captain Elmhurst suggested.
“The bank is not connected with the telephone,” Groome replied.
“God bless my soul!” the Chief Constable exclaimed.
“You are comparatively a newcomer,” Mr. Mowbray sighed, “and of course the conditions you have come up against do sound ridiculous.”
“I understood,” Elmhurst continued, “that Sir Adam was one of the richest men in England. I have heard stories of his wealth ever since I came here.”
“There is no doubt about his wealth, I think,” Giles Mowbray admitted. “You may remember how astonished everyone was over his first application for War Loan, many years ago, for a million pounds. Lately, however, he has led the life of a hermit. Every now and then one hears of some huge sums invested, always in very sound concerns. Many of the financial papers have openly declared that these have been made by a north country banker and have given the name of Sir Adam Blockton, and they have never been contradicted. This, however, is only vague talk. The financial affairs of Sir Adam are not our immediate concern. What we want to know is what has become of him.”
“Without a doubt,” Captain Elmhurst declared, “the matter is becoming one for the police.”
The door of the room in which this informal discussion was taking place was suddenly opened. A young woman of most attractive appearance stood upon the threshold. She was fair-complexioned, with well-shaped features, brown-haired and with eyes neutral in the uncertainty of their colour, but intriguing in their brightness and their depth. She looked at the men gathered round the table and there was a quiver of indignation in her tone as she addressed them.
“Perhaps somebody would be good enough to tell me what this is all about?” she asked, and although her tone was brusque her voice had a smooth and pleasant quality. “They tell me below–and the thing is ridiculous–that my grandfather has disappeared.”
Mr. Mowbray’s mumble was confused and inarticulate. Long before it had resolved itself into speech his nephew was upon his feet–a grave young man but with an agreeable voice and manner.
“Lady Diana, perhaps you will allow me to explain,” he begged. “Your grandfather certainly does seem to be–er–missing since just before luncheon-time. This is a perfectly informal meeting of one or two of his friends to discuss the matter.”
The girl came a little further into the room, moving with a graceful sway, a perplexed look in her eyes, a dubious smile at the corners of her lips.
“Missing?” she repeated. “Don’t tell me that my grandfather has gone in for melodrama!”
“He has given us all a shock, anyhow,” the young man replied, placing a chair for the newcomer within the small circle. “This is just what has happened.”
He told her concisely and in well-chosen words. When he had finished she laughed, not unkindly but somewhat contemptuously. She glanced round the circle, evidently not quite sure as to the various identities.
“But you can’t any of you conceive that my grandfather, a man of absolutely fixed habits, should, without the least reason, embark upon an enterprise of this sort?” she demanded.
“Let me point out, young lady,” Giles Mowbray said, leaning slightly towards her, “it is some twenty or thirty years since your grandfather has departed from his usual habit of lunching in the club here at ten minutes past one. His cutlets are invariably ready at that hour, his small bottle of wine is served to him in the lounge, where he arrives at half-past twelve and where he sits and smokes until the moment comes for him to take his seat in the dining room. He arrived this morning at his usual time in his own car, driven by his own chauffeur. He was finishing his wine when our steward here summoned him to luncheon. To anyone who knew your grandfather intimately the precision of his movements was–er–almost epic. Time passed. Everyone was naturally disturbed. There was no sign of your grandfather. Three minutes later the steward sought him in the reading room. The place was empty. No one had seen him leave the club. He has not returned to the bank, as was his invariable custom, and his cashier here will tell you that he has neither seen nor heard of him since. His car and chauffeur arrived here at two-thirty for him, waited for half-an-hour and are now in the garage. Bearing in mind all these circumstances, Lady Diana, I think that you will see that we, as day-by-day acquaintances–I will not say friends, because he had no friends–and my nephew and I, as his legal representatives, were justified in holding this informal meeting. Captain Elmhurst has attended it on behalf of the police.”
Lady Diana, who was evidently a law unto herself in this world, drew a cigarette from a very beautiful gold case and calmly lit it.
“I am most intrigued,” she admitted.
“Perhaps you can help us,” Martin Mowbray observed.
Captain Elmhurst passed over the unopened letter which lay upon the table.
“This is the only communication your grandfather received this morning which he did not open,” he confided. “Perhaps you would feel yourself justified in seeing if the contents in any way explain the affair.”
Lady Diana accepted the letter a little languidly. She glanced at the handwriting with a faint grimace.
“It is from my mother,” she announced.
“So we gathered. We wondered whether, under the circumstances, you would feel disposed to open it,” Captain Elmhurst suggested.
“On your life I wouldn’t!” she declared. “If there is anything my grandfather hates it is to have his letters or newspapers interfered with. I should be cut off with a million or two if I touched it. I am running no risks of that sort, thank you!”
“It might become the duty of the police at any moment to open it,” Martin Mowbray reminded her.
“Let them do it, then, with pleasure,” the young lady said, crossing her legs and sending the elderly solicitor’s eyes up to the ceiling. “I don’t suppose my grandfather’s left even a million to the police. They have nothing to lose by it. No, I am not butting-in on this affair at all. I am not afraid of the old gentleman, mind you, but I have a deadly fear of being left out of his Will.”
Mr. Giles Mowbray thought it time to assert himself.
“I am your grandfather’s solicitor, as you know, Lady Diana,” he said, “and I sympathise with your feelings in the matter. I will take charge of the letter for the moment.”
He slipped it into his breast coat-pocket. The Chief Constable smiled slightly.
“I have every sympathy with the young lady’s discretion,” he observed, “but as the letter might clear up the mystery and it is scarcely likely that Sir Adam has left you a million, Mowbray, I think you might venture to break the seal.”
The solicitor shook his head.
“I trust,” he said, “that the necessity will not arise. If it does I shall do so in your presence.”
The girl glanced round at the faces of the five men. Every one was on the whole expressionless but in each there was a touch of that queer sense of apprehension which had been conveyed in Giles Mowbray’s few words.
“You don’t mean to tell me,” the girl asked incredulously, “that you think anything really serious has happened to my grandfather?”
Nobody returned a straightforward answer. The girl laughed scornfully.
“A pack of childish nonsense, I call this!” she exclaimed. “As though anything could have happened to the old boy!”
The young man opposite looked at her across the table. There was rebuke in his clear grey eyes, a note of rebuke in his tone.
“The circumstances connected with your grandfather’s disappearance, Lady Diana, were at first inexplicable. They have now become sinister. Perhaps you do not realise that every room in the club has been searched. There is not a foot of vacant space which has not been examined. It is a great many years since anyone has seen your grandfather walk more than about the length of this room. Perhaps you can suggest, yourself, some means by which he is eluding us.”
The girl refused to be rebuked. She smiled at the young man, who was certainly very good to look at.
“All right,” she agreed, “I will take all that you say for granted. It was impossible for him to have left the reading room without being observed. Neither he nor his remains could leave the club; ergo–one of your premises must be wrong. My own impression is that my grandfather is fooling us all. He has done it before in a small way and has put his tongue in his cheek this time with a vengeance. You have done all that reasonable men could be expected to do. Let Mr. Mowbray go into his affairs and find out if there is any reason for this disappearance.”
“I shall communicate with every member of the family at once,” the lawyer said, “and I shall act upon their instructions. If in the meantime the police interfere, I am powerless.”
“What do the police intend to do, Captain Elmhurst?” Lady Diana asked.
The Chief Constable rose to his feet.
“I shall confer with the Clerk to the County Magistrates and my own Chief Inspector,” he said. “I know of no precedent for a case of this description but certainly I shall not interfere until the family have had a reasonable time to make their own enquiries. In the meantime, have you the keys of the bank, Mr. Groome?”
“They are in my pocket, sir,” the cashier replied.
“I should propose, gentlemen,” Captain Elmhurst continued, “that we make an unofficial examination of the bank premises.”
Giles Mowbray rose from his chair. The hands which were pressed against the table in front of him were visibly shaking. His voice was harsh and strained. The shock of the day’s events was beginning to tell upon him.
“I take the strongest possible exception to that course, Captain Elmhurst,” he protested. “The disappearance of my old friend, Sir Adam, has not yet become a matter for criminal investigation. I decline to allow my client’s papers to be tampered with in any way.”
There was a moment’s silence. Every one of the little party seemed to have realised the note of passionate emotion underlying the lawyer’s few quavering words. Somehow or other the atmosphere had become electrical. The fear of this strange thing that had happened was beginning to make itself felt. The silence was unexpectedly broken by Mr. Groome.
“I apologise for any seeming discourtesy to Mr. Mowbray,” he said, “but I welcome the proposal of Captain Elmhurst. I have long wished for an opportunity to speak to one of the family, and suggest that the condition of the bank should be looked into. In another year’s time I should have reached the age when the Blocktons, for the last hundred years, have granted pensions to their servants. I have marked off the days one by one but I should never have reached the end of the year. I should have gone mad!”
Groome’s measured speech came like a bomb-shell to everyone. For years he had been known by sight to most of them–a silent, suave figure who seemed to appear from nowhere and yet who was always there behind his desk at the bank ready to answer any question as to Sir Adam’s whereabouts. Never once had his manner or voice varied. He had become the perfect human automaton. It was his first self-disclosure as a human being. The Chief Constable turned towards Lady Diana.
“You might be taken as representing the family here, Lady Diana,” he pointed out. “Have you any objection to just taking a casual glance at the bank premises with Mr. Groome, myself, and naturally Mr. Mowbray and his nephew? It seems to me that your presence would regularise the proceeding.”
Giles Mowbray shook his head.
“I refuse to come,” he said. “The action is premature. I protest. Sir Adam will never forgive us.”
“What about your nephew then?”
“At his own risk,” the lawyer declared. “It may cost him his place in the firm. If there is any trouble with Sir Adam I shall disown him. We shall probably have a telephone message from my client at any moment and when he finds that his private affairs have become public property there will be trouble–a very great deal of trouble.”
“I regret to differ from my uncle and I am willing to come,” Martin Mowbray said calmly.
The girl rose to her feet and buttoned up her coat.
“I am ready,” she declared. “Anything is better than sitting around here wondering what we are going to do next. I think, Mr. Mowbray, as you persist in taking my grandfather’s disappearance so seriously I had better have my mother’s letter back again.”
The lawyer passed it to her across the table.
“You understand, Lady Diana,” he warned her, “my nephew goes against my wishes. If you accompany him it may cost you a fortune. Sir Adam never permits any liberties to be taken with his belongings. If he finds that you have been prying into his affairs you will be out of his Will as soon as he can find a pen to scratch through your name.”
“If you go on talking like this,” the girl remarked, “I shall begin to think that you have an idea of your own as to Sir Adam’s whereabouts.”
The old man began to shake again in his chair. He looked at her gloomily.
“You would be entirely wrong,” he muttered. “I have no idea,–I don’t suppose anyone else has,–but I have known Sir Adam longer than any of you and this is what I do feel: If anything strange has happened to him he will come out of it all right.”
“We all hope so,” Captain Elmhurst said kindly. “Nevertheless, as the affair stands at present, I think it requires investigation.”
“By whom?” the old man demanded with uneasy belligerence.
“By his friends–and by the law.”
III
A shower of rain was drenching the streets when the little party arrived at the premises of Blockton’s Bank, which were situated about two hundred yards away from the club. Mr. Groome, with unsteady fingers, first opened the heavy iron gates and then with a smaller key the massive front doors. One by one his companions passed on into the gloomy, vaultlike place. The cashier closed the doors after them and turned on the lights.
“It smells like a church,” Lady Diana observed. “Mouldy enough for one, too.”
Mr. Groome took no notice of her remark. He had worked himself up into a state of desperate calm, but every word he uttered sounded grim and portentous.
“You will allow me to show you the premises my own way,” he begged. “Will you follow me behind the counters, please?”
He lifted a flap and they followed him to the far end, where the woodwork in front was heightened and there was a spy-hole window.
“This is my place,” he pointed out. “From here I can check any deposits and payments and supply my clerks with any money necessary.” He touched three drawers in front of him. “This one,” he went on, “should contain Treasury notes, the other silver, the far one notes larger than five pounds.”
He pulled them open. Deep and ample receptacles they were–but empty. Where the notes should have been there were oblong strips of cardboard secured by rubber bands but there was nothing between them. Mr. Groome passed on.
“This is where the first clerk would stand,” he continued. “I will show you his drawers.”
He drew another key from his bunch and opened the three. All of them were empty.
“This is the second clerk’s desk,” he indicated, moving on a few yards.
Again he opened three drawers, again there was the same grim emptiness.
“Where is all the cash kept at night?” Martin Mowbray asked.
“It goes into the office. Not one single penny is left in any of these receptacles.”
“Supposing Sir Adam should turn up a little late in the morning?” Captain Elmhurst enquired.
“We could not pay,” was the prompt reply. “I am bound to add, however, that such a thing has never happened. Since Sir Adam took over the control of the bank he has never been later than half-past nine in his office. The bank opens at ten. At a quarter to ten the two clerks come into the office and receive one hundred pounds each from Sir Adam. Years ago it used to be one thousand pounds each. I have known the time when it was five thousand. To-day the hundred pounds is seldom touched.”
“Blockton’s Bank!” Martin Mowbray muttered to himself.
“Gentlemen, you will now allow me to show you the remainder of the premises here,” the cashier went on.
“What about the old man’s office?” Diana asked. “All my life I have wanted to go in there and I have never been allowed to cross the threshold.”
“We will visit that last, if you please,” Mr. Groome begged.
He led them into a further recess of the bank, the nature of which was concealed by folding oak screens. These he pushed on one side. Behind them was a row of chairs, six empty desks–nothing else. There were disfigurements upon the wall where fittings seemed to have been removed. Apart from that there remained not even a cupboard.
“The screen was first erected,” the cashier continued, “to give an impression of space beyond. As you see, there is nothing. Now I will show you Sir Adam’s private office.”
They followed him to the heavy, old-fashioned oak door, the upper panels of which were of glass, covered with faded red silk. Groome unlocked and threw it open. He turned on the electric light and they all looked round curiously. Somehow, the room, although its contents were still in good condition, seemed to preserve an air of great antiquity. The two fauteuils and the divan of worn leather, the square heavy table, the two high-backed chairs which faced one another on either side of it, one obviously for Sir Adam himself and the other for a possible client, the mirror on the mantelpiece, were all Georgian–not only undeniably of that period but with the air of having brought with them some part of the atmosphere of those days. The deep red Turkey carpet covered every inch of the floor. Upon the table there stood only a huge inkstand and a black oak case of stationery. Over the chimney-piece was an oil painting which seemed to be a picture of the statue opposite the club. There was no other attempt at decoration in the room. Martin Mowbray looked round him in puzzled fashion.
“What about the safes, Mr. Groome?” he asked.
The cashier shook his head.
“There are none up here of any account,” he said solemnly.
“But where on earth is the money, deeds and all that sort of thing?”
“I will show you,” the other replied.
He moved over to a spot near the hearth-rug and raised a flap of the carpet. Beneath it in the oak flooring was a brass ring attached to a trap door. Groome raised it and, feeling for a moment underneath, turned on an electric light. Diana leaned eagerly forward, an action which she was to regret for many weeks to come.
“I want to look at the money chests,” she explained.
She stooped a little lower and peered into the vault. Almost immediately her shriek rang out even above the sound of the falling door, the brass ring of which had slipped from Groome’s nerveless fingers. Diana had staggered back against the table, her hands stretched out in front of her, cowering back as though seeking to escape from some terrible sight. Groome stood like a waxen figure, his face utterly destitute of colour, blank, undiluted panic in his hollow eyes. He, too, swayed on his feet and caught at the edge of the mantelpiece for support. His groan was thrilling enough but it lacked the clear note of dramatic horror which had vibrated in the girl’s voice. The whole company, for a few seconds, seemed spellbound. Then Martin Mowbray pulled himself together. He leaned forward and caught hold of the ring.
“Don’t!” the girl shrieked. “Don’t! It’s horrible!”
The young man sank on to his knees and his fingers gripped the ring. He glanced at Elmhurst.
“Look after Lady Diana,” he enjoined. “We’ve got to know what’s down here.”
He threw back the door. The cellar below might have stood for a chamber of horrors, for its walls were lined with a number of black upright boxes shaped like coffins, and only comprehensible when one realised that there were names painted in white letters upon each. The electric light was insufficient to penetrate the distant corners, but if possible the obscurity of the object which lay in the middle distance lent it even a deeper horror. It was only after a few moments of terrified concentration that the two men on their knees realised that they were staring at the figure of a human being all crumpled up, as though he had fallen or been thrown from the topmost of the short flight of stairs leading from the office to the floor of the cellar, or arrived there as the result of one terrific blow. The agony of sudden death was lurking at the corners of his mouth and in his staring eyes. By his side, where it had dripped from him, lay a pool of blood. The Chief Constable and Martin Mowbray were staring at one another. The same thought had blazed its way into the consciousness of both of them.
“It isn’t Sir Adam,” the young lawyer gasped.
Elmhurst shook his head.
“Twice his size,” he muttered. “Drop the door.”
Mowbray hesitated but did as he was told. Both men stood up. The Chief Constable plunged into direct speech.
“There has been a tragedy here,” he announced. “It looks like a murder. But listen, Lady Diana. The victim is not your grandfather.”
“Not Sir Adam?” she cried.
“No. It is impossible to say who it is but it is not Sir Adam. This has become my affair now. The best thing for you to do would be to go away. This is a man’s job. Young Mowbray can stay with me.”
She sank nervously into one of the high-backed chairs, gripping the arms with her fingers. Speech for the moment was quite impossible.
“Groome, I must rely upon you,” the Chief Constable continued. “Will you ring up the police station? Say I want an inspector and two men here at once, also the police doctor and an ambulance.”
The cashier nodded. His queer little voice seemed more subdued than ever. He was moistening his lips and struggling for breath.
“It wasn’t Sir Adam, did you say?”
“Nobody I ever saw before,” Mowbray assured him.
“A stranger to me, too,” Elmhurst declared.