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Captain Jan Henderson master of the cargo ship Henrietta Anne trading between London and Holland is working with mysterious conspirators (Sir Gregory Fawsitt and Lady Judith Martellon) to smuggle goods from Holland to London. His deck boy, David, falls in love with Judy, a pretty dancer. When Anthony Loman, an haggard traveler, staggers up the stairs of the tenement house at Bunter’s Buildings, Judy listens while he is flung to his death. As Police Sergeant Sanders’ investigation draws closer to the truth, will the killers be brought to justice? „The Magnificent Hoax” is a novel of drug-smuggling with yacht cruises to the Orient, Scotland Yard, aristocratic beauties and London’s waterfront.
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Contents
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
CHAPTER XXIII
CHAPTER XXIV
CHAPTER XXV
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
CHAPTER XXVIII
CHAPTER XXIX
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
CHAPTER XXXII
CHAPTER I
A HUMAN BEING, the shrunken shadow of a man he seemed, was toiling slowly and painfully up the stone steps of the gaunt tenement house. With his left hand he grasped the iron balustrade. His head remained immovably lowered. His footsteps grew wearier and wearier. On the last landing but one he paused for breath. He leaned for a moment or two against the rail. His eyes, sad eyes they were, set in hollow depths, looked wistfully out of the dust-encrusted window, over the tops of the houses, to the curving line of the river with its tangled cluster of masts, a semi-derelict steamer or two moored against the wharves. He moved across to the narrow cracked slit of clouded glass. His fingers failed to dislodge it, to make the slightest effect upon its fastening. It seemed as though it had remained closed since the day it was built. He looked out for a few minutes like a prisoner from his cell, then he returned to his task. Wearily he crawled up to the landing and turned to face the last flight of stairs. After the third step he halted, trembling. It was the one place he dreaded. There was a gap in the balustrade for at least three yards. From where he was, he clutched the end of the iron rail and looked fearfully downwards. All that he could see was a terrifying pool of blackness.
“What a hell of a place,” he muttered to himself. He stood there shivering. It seemed impossible, with his insignificant stock of courage, that he should ever pass that unprotected space. Presently he decided that he must move over to the wall side and lean against that for the remainder of the journey. For a moment or two, however, that glance below seemed to have completely unnerved him. His knees were shaking. There seemed to be a vacuum at the back of his head.
From the landing below there was a sudden stream of light. A door had been opened. A gaudily dressed woman stepped out and paused for a moment, swinging a key upon her finger. She caught a glimpse of the shrinking figure above.
“Hello!” she exclaimed. “Who’s that?”
“I’m Loman,” he answered. “Anthony Loman–the top-floor lodger here. I’m just home from abroad and the climb is almost too much for me. You look good-natured,” he went on wistfully. “I wonder whether you would mind–er–leaving your door open whilst I tackle these last few steps.”
She laughed in a kind way.
“I believe you’re afraid of that gap in the balustrade,” she said.
“I am,” he confessed with a groan. “My nerve isn’t good.”
“Stay where you are,” she directed, “and I’ll come and help you up.”
“You’re very kind,” he murmured.
She swung up to his side, the powder puff which she had been using still in her hand. Her movements were unusual in their grace, and there was a certain elegance about her entirely at variance with her showy clothes and clumsy use of cosmetics. She seemed to envelop him with a wave of cheap perfume as she reached his side and passed her strong arm through his.
“Now then,” she said encouragingly, “you have nothing to fear. I’ll be your balustrade. You can lean on me as much as you like. One step–two–up we go. Nothing when you’ve got an arm to help you, is it? You’re the only one on this landing, aren’t you.”
“I am all alone up here,” he answered. “My room is just an attic.”
She looked around at the bare walls, at the heavy door of the fire escape which stood half open. The stark nakedness of the place oppressed her. She shivered as she tightened her grip upon his arm.
“Aren’t you lonely up here?” she asked.
“I want to be,” he assured her.
She shook her head.
“This house is full of bad characters, you know,” she warned him. “I should hate to be up here all alone. There are ten other rooms on my landing. It seems to me that the occupants must spend at least half their time in prison, but anyhow when they’re about they are human beings. I should hate it up here–without a soul near. How the wind whistles through that fire escape door, too!”
“I’m not afraid,” he told her weakly. “I’m only glad to get back. I’ve been in danger. I have been abroad and in hospital but I still have work to do.”
“What sort of work?” she enquired curiously.
“Not work that one talks about. One has to keep one’s mouth closed all the time.”
“Well, is there anything else I can do for you?” she asked. “I’ll be getting along if there isn’t. This place gives me the shivers.”
He made no answer. He had suddenly become almost a dead weight upon her supporting arm. There was an eager, half-terrified light in his deep-set eyes. His trembling finger was pointing towards the door of his room a few feet away.
“What’s that?” he gasped. “For God’s sake tell me. What is it?”
The girl’s eyes followed the direction of his shaking forefinger. She passed her other arm around him. It was obvious that he was on the point of collapse.
“Nothing to be afraid of,” she assured him encouragingly. “It’s just a telegram pinned onto your door.”
“A telegram!” he gasped.
“Yes. Don’t you understand?” she explained. “The telegraph boy has evidently been here, found no one at home and pinned it to the door. Better than pushing it underneath, anyway. Don’t tell me you’re afraid of a telegram!”
The man made no movement. She was conscious, however, that he was making a great struggle.
“Here–give me your key,” she went on. “I’ll open the door for you. I can’t stand about here all night. Give me your key, then I’ll open the door for you and you can go inside and read your telegram. Seems to me you’ve come out of hospital a bit before your time.”
He moved unsteadily forward, still relying chiefly upon her support. She unlocked the door and pushed it back. His head remained fixed all the time. His eyes were rivetted upon the telegram attached to the door by a bent pin. His own name in crude white paint stared at him: L-0-M-A-N.
“Let’s see if we can get any light,” she suggested. “I expect your metre has run out.”
She tried the switch, A feeble light shone out from the single burner. She looked around. It was an attic room with a small iron bedstead, a single chair, a plain deal chest of drawers. There was no pretence at carpet or furnishings of any sort. “Why don’t you take down your telegram?” she asked. “Shall I do it for you? Here you are.”
She drew out the pin, threw it away and passed him the envelope. A feminine curiosity stirred for a moment in her.
“Want me to read it for you?”
His fingers gripped the envelope. He released her arm. His strength seemed to be returning.
“No,” he declined, with unexpected firmness. “Thank you very much. Miss–Judy, isn’t it?”
“That’s the only name I have hereabouts,” she admitted with a little laugh. “It’s good enough. My, you seem bare here,” she added, looking round. “Haven’t you got anything to eat, or a teapot or anything?”
He moistened his dry lips.
“I’m all right,” he assured her. “I thank you very much for your help. Miss Judy.”
He held the door open. He now seemed feverishly anxious for her to go. She watched the hand which gripped the telegram. It was still shaking violently.
“Are you quite sure that you’re fit to be left alone?” she asked bluntly.
“I must be left alone,” he insisted. “I must read this–message.”
“Well, if it’s good news I shall expect you to come and tell me about it,” she declared, as she held the handle of the door in her fingers. “Eighty-seven, just below. Judy’s the only name on the door–Judy of Bunter’s Buildings. That’s a nice name and address, isn’t it? This is your last chance, Mr. Loman. I haven’t much to give away, but I should like to do something for you. What about a loaf of bread and some margarine? There’s a cup of tea left in my pot, too–only wants warming up.”
“Thank you,” he said wearily, “I need nothing. I must read this message. Afterwards I may need to go out again. I do not wish to seem discourteous,” he added, with what seemed to be a queer reversion to a former forgotten manner of speech, “but I wish you to go. I am pursued by enemies. Now that I have this message, for my safety’s sake I must go further and hide. The Society for which I work will provide me with food and shelter. I have plenty of friends when I dare to communicate with them.”
She indulged in a transient grimace as she turned away. She had intended to slam the door as a slight protest against his ingratitude. She caught a glimpse of him, however, at the last moment–a wan, shadowy figure brought almost to the threshold of death by weakness and anxiety–and she changed her mind. She slipped away noiselessly. Once or twice on her way down the stone steps she paused to listen. There came no sound from the room above.
For a young woman who professed to have been late for several of her engagements, Judy of Bunter’s Buildings seemed in a curiously undecided frame of mind after she had regained the privacy of her apartment. The first thing she did was to prop the door a few inches open by means of some books and then wheel up a heavy chair to keep it in position. Afterwards she turned out her light and stood for a long time close to that slightly opened space. The minutes passed. The silence which reigned in the upper storeys, at any rate, of the bleak, squalid building, was unbroken. She slipped off her shoes and stood in front of the window. The street below was thronged with people, mostly of the lower nautical type, dwarfed out of all recognition. Lights were flaming from the scattered stalls. Through the window, which she had cautiously opened a few inches, she heard the strains of raucous music from a public house and the shouts of the street vendors around the corner. She opened it still farther and leaned out so far, grasping the side of the sash for security, that she could see the entrance to the building below. All manner of people passed it. No one entered. She drew away for a time wearily. This period of watching was full of sickening doubts. She had always hated inaction. She had one last look out of the window, glancing across at the river with its traffic of barges, motor craft, and wheezy old steamers being drawn by tugs to what, it seemed, must be their last home. She glanced down at Bunter’s Wharf, lying up alongside which was the only decent-looking steamer in sight–a queerly shaped, apparently top-heavy cargo boat. Then she turned back into the room and, with her hands behind her back, commenced a stealthy regular promenade of its narrow limits.
Of all sounds in this gathering darkness that was the one which she had dreaded most. She stood by the door, breathlessly silent, and listened. Someone was mounting the stairs from below, mounting not with the tired uncertainty of a sick man but with a long, bounding stride, shuffling but full of eagerness to arrive at his destination. To her excited apprehensions there was menace in these rapidly approaching footsteps. They had reached the last flight. She crept a little nearer to the crack in the door. Her long delicate fingers trembled as she drew it an inch or two more open. The ascending figure shaped itself through the darkness. A human being–indeterminate of age and physique in his long soiled mackintosh and the hat pulled over his eyes… He was on the landing now. She stood still and let him pass. What she could see of his face was horrible. Deep-set, evil eyes. The complexion of a vampire. The weak slobbery mouth of an idiot. She closed her eyes and drew back, shrinking, into the room.
She remained in the place after the ascending figure had passed, numb for several moments. Then she called out after him. There was no reply. She leaned over the threshold. He was crossing the landing above now, walking swiftly towards Loman’s door. She called out once more, but even to herself her voice sounded feeble. The knowledge was suddenly swept in upon her that effort of any sort was useless. Nothing could stop what was to happen. She picked up her small hat and thrust a pin savagely through it. Once more she disfigured her face with dabs of the cheap cosmetics, then she threw everything into her bag and opened the door with trembling fingers. There was no sound to be heard. Was it all over, she wondered? She herself had need of the balustrade as she descended that flight of stairs. Halfway down she stopped as though paralysed. The sound was so faint that it barely reached her ears, but it had its own peculiar horror. It was the cry of a man terrified unto death–the cry of death itself. She turned and ran down the flights of stone steps one after the other into the misty gloom of the night.
CHAPTER II
THE SALOON bar of the Green Man, the nearest place of refreshment to Bunter’s Wharf, was having one of its gala evenings. The mate of the Henrietta Anne, trading chiefly between Amsterdam and the port of London, had arrived home earlier in the day to find his full master’s certificate awaiting him, and he was celebrating this auspicious epoch of his life in true riverside fashion. There were half a dozen men from his own ship: Joe Havers, the Customs House officer, Tom Bowles, the motor-boat agent, and a few more habitués of the place crowded together. There was a jar of tobacco at anyone’s disposal and drinks were free. Captain Jan Henderson–his mother had been a Dutchwoman–was a powerful-looking, burly fellow and, though his face was flushed and his speech somewhat thick, he was still coherent enough.
“Come on, lads, and help yourselves,” he shouted. “I’m half a Dutchman but this is no Dutch treat! Keep your money in your pockets. The captain pays! That’s the motto to-day.”
“The captain pays!” they all echoed. “Here’s your health, sir.”
“And may you bring the Henrietta Anne up to the wharf many a time as slick as you brought her yesterday afternoon,” a youngster in the uniform of a petty officer shouted. “A real treat it was–not an inch to spare.”
The captain looked around.
“Judy, my lass,” he called out. “One more of those dances and a trifle more leg and less skirt about it! Give the young lady another glass of port,” he roared out to the barman. “Have a look at the tumblers here, Fred.”
Judy, who had removed her hat and revealed a really magnificent head of silky chestnut-coloured hair only a trifle spoilt by rough usage, turned on the gramophone, picked up her skirts and began to dance to the music. It was a popular music hall song of years ago and they all joined in the chorus. Round and round she swung and a murmur of mild applause became almost a furore. Her wickedly shaded eyes sparkled. A streak of natural colour triumphed over the clumsy patches of rouge. The barman, in response to a wink from the captain, pushed on the switch of the gramophone and increased the pace. The girl seemed to become a whirl of gaudy and voluminous, but in their way provocative, underclothes. She sprang onto a chair and the applause grew louder. There was something almost Rubens-like in the bacchanalian swing of her arms, the twistings of her body, the coarse but apparently honest joy in her own abandon. The small audience roared out the chorus at the tops of their voices. The glasses shook upon the mirrored shelves… And then quite suddenly there was a paralysing chaos, a strangled, unnatural silence. All eyes were turned towards the swing door which had been gently pushed open. They remained fixed in consternation upon the neatly dressed, broad-shouldered man who had suddenly entered. He looked around quickly and his eyes seemed to take in everyone. There was nothing in his appearance, however, to justify the commotion which his arrival had excited.
“Well, well, well,” he exclaimed. “Quite a pleasant little evening you’re having, I see. Some dance, that, Judy, eh? If you had lifted your skirts a few inches higher I should have had to hold my hat over my face. Duty, you know! Hard thing, duty, and very disagreeable at times. No need to look so scared, gentlemen–nor you, Fred,” he went on, nodding genially to the barman. “You’re well within time and everyone seems to be thoroughly good-humoured, I’m glad to see. I’m not on the rampage, I can assure you. So long as there’s no brawling I like to see you all having a glass or two. What’s this little celebration for?”
They all began to tell him, but the captain roared them down.
“Master’s certificate, sir, waiting for me when I got into port–and God knows I’ve earned it! The old pals are having a drink with me. Honour us by taking just one, Sergeant.”
“I’m hanged if I won’t,” was the pleasant reply.”
“I’m not much of a seaman myself, but they tell me there’s no one knows the river like you, Captain, and no one can bring a steamer of the tonnage of the Henrietta Anne into dock as you do. Mine’s whisky, barman, out of the special bottle.”
“I’ll see to that, sir,” Sam Martin, the proprietor of the public house, declared. “You leave it to me.”
He himself brought over a tumbler filled from a mysterious bottle. The newcomer divided it into two and filled his own up with soda water.”
“Well, here’s the best to all of you,” he said.”
“Yes, I’ll smoke a cigar, too, since you’re so kind, Captain. I’m sorry to break into a party like this but you can start again as soon as I’ve had a word or two with the young lady there. Get clear away before closing time and all keep as good-humoured as you are now and there won’t be any trouble looking for you round the corner.”
There was a hearty murmur of good-healths and approval. Sergeant Sanders was a hard man at times, but on the whole he was a popular officer. Judy, who had clambered down from the chair, was busy with her coiffure. She swung round. There was nothing but indifference in her face.
“What do you want with me, Sergeant?” she asked.
“Nothing that will do you any harm, my dear,” was the pleasant reply. “Just a question or two. We have to get inquisitive now and then, you know. What about asking Mr. Martin here to let us step into his room for a moment, then we shan’t interfere with the party. You will be able to come back and finish your little song and dance. I shan’t say that I won’t stop and see it–so long as you all promise not to tell the Missus!”
Preceded by the landlord, he led the girl away to the small room at the back of the saloon bar. The captain ordered fresh drinks all round. Nevertheless there was restraint. They wanted Judy back again. They wanted to know what the sergeant had to say to her, and why the door leading into the bar parlour was fast closed.
“What is it you want, Sergeant?” the girl asked, flinging herself into a horsehair easy chair and crossing her legs. “I’ve done nothing wrong that I know of.”
“I’m pretty sure of that, my dear,” the sergeant assured her soothingly. “Somehow I don’t think you’re the sort that are out for the ordinary peccadilloes.”
She looked at him with expressionless face. The rouge had cracked a little on her cheeks and the darkening around her eyes made them seem of an abnormal size.
“I see they didn’t make you a detective for nothing,” she observed. “Well, come on, what is it?”
“I was called to Bunter’s Buildings this evening,” he began. “Been a bit of a tragedy there. Someone–we can’t tell whether it was a lodger, or a visitor, or a stranger–seems to have fallen off the outside fire escape from the top floor. Fell clean down into Bunter’s Alley. We won’t talk about that too much. You were up on the top floor this evening, weren’t you?”
“I was,” Judy assented. “Don’t tell me that it was the poor gentleman I helped into his room?”
The sergeant sighed.
“There’s no one in this world will ever be able to tell who it was unless the searchers are able to do something about his clothes, or they find something amongst his belongings,” he announced gravely. “Twelve storeys onto a cobbled pavement is a big fall, and what they found in the Alley is best not thought of. We just want to know why you were up there and whom you saw?”
“That’s easy enough,” Judy declared. “I came out of my room about the usual time–something like seven o’clock–and I saw that poor loony who has a room in the attic–only he’s nearly always away–leaning against the balustrade. He’s been ill, they say, away in hospital somewhere. Anyway he was as nervous as a kitten. He didn’t want to pass that place where the rail’s broken. I went and helped him, took his arm and got him into his room. He wasn’t fit to be left, but what could one do? I offered to get him some tea or even something to eat, but he almost pushed me out.”
“Well, you played the good Samaritan so far as you could,” the sergeant remarked. “There was no one else in the room, I suppose?”
“There was no one there and no place for anyone to hide,” she assured him. “I turned on the light myself. It was not very good but it was enough for me to see that.”
“Just so,” the sergeant nodded. “I wonder–you’re a pretty observant young lady, Miss Judy–I wonder if, looking round, you happened to notice anything that might have been there? A telegram or letter or anything of that sort?”
“Why, of course I did,” she acknowledged. “When we got up there was a telegram pinned onto his door. I left him with it in his hand.”
“He didn’t open it whilst you were there, then?”
“He did not,” she replied. “To tell you the truth–it’s only natural, I imagine–I was a trifle curious. He didn’t seem to me to be the sort of person to have telegrams. I hoped he would open it whilst I was in the room, but he didn’t. He just waited for me to go, getting more and more nervous. I could see that there was no chance, so I came away.”
The sergeant stroked his stubbly moustache.
“That seems all right,” he said. “You helped him up to his room like a kindly young lady would. He found a telegram there which he wouldn’t open until you left him. When you went away it was there in his hand.”
“That is the precise truth,” Judy agreed. “Do you mind if I smoke?”
“The fire escape door, now,” the sergeant continued, nodding his assent. “You didn’t happen to notice whether it was bolted or locked or anything of that sort?”
She threw away the match with which she had lit her cigarette and inhaled deeply for a moment.
“It never is,” she replied, waving the smoke away. “It wouldn’t be much good to anyone in a crisis if one had to fumble about with keys or a bolt. It just opens naturally with a handle and you can step out if you want to. I’ve not a very good head myself, but when I took my room the caretaker opened it and made me see where the iron steps began.”
“Rather a dangerous arrangement,” the police officer reflected. “Supposing that poor fellow, for instance, who you say was so ill, had any suicidal intentions, he had only to open the door and walk out.”
“That’s quite true,” she agreed with a shudder. “It isn’t the way I should choose, myself, though.”
The sergeant sighed.
“Well, it all seems clear enough,” he concluded, rising slowly to his feet. “I suppose the poor devil was expecting something from that telegram, he was disappointed and he just did what dozens of these poor down-and-outs do in this part of the world. I should like to have seen the telegram, though.”
“Have your men looked for it?” Judy asked.
“Well, in a sense they have,” the other admitted.
“It certainly wasn’t in the room–or any traces of it. It’s very hard to say what was in his pockets when he was picked up. They may be able to judge better later on. On the other hand he may have torn it up and thrown the pieces away just as he took the leap. What kind of age did he seem to you, Judy?”
“I don’t think he could have been old–not even middle-aged,” she reflected, “but he was wasted as though with fever. He was shaking all over just as though he had D.T. It’s my belief he’d been in hospital somewhere and they’d let him out too soon.”
The sergeant moved towards the door.
“Well, I’m sorry to have broken in upon your evening, Judy. You can get back to it now as soon as you like. I’m going to slip out the other way. Same address if we want you for the inquest, I suppose?”
“Same address, and thank you,” she replied. “I did my best for that poor fellow,” she added a little wistfully. “I’m sorry.”
“Maybe he’s better off,” Sanders reflected.
CHAPTER III
THE DAY after the indeterminate inquest upon the body of the unknown man found in Bunter’s Alley, Sergeant Sanders presented himself at the tenement house, mounted to the top floor but one, and knocked at Judy’s door. It was not until after his second effort that it was grudgingly opened and Judy, clad in a flaming negligee but looking exceedingly weary and dishevelled, gazed out upon her visitor. As soon as she recognised him she made a feeble effort to shut him out, a gesture which he gently but firmly resisted.
“Judy, my dear,” he said soothingly, “don’t be afraid of an old friend. We treated you all right at the inquest, didn’t we? I only want a word or two with you. You’re alone, I see.”
She opened the door a little wider.
“Yes, I’m alone,” she admitted, “and likely to be until I get over that horrible afternoon in your stuffy Court House. I can’t sleep at nights for thinking of it.”
“I’m not blaming you,” he declared. “It was a sight to turn up a strong man. However, they did their best. Our old coroner, he would have waited until you came to from your faint and had you in again. Dr. Grayson, he’s a gentleman, though.”
The sergeant was inside the room by now, with its cheap bazaar-like ornamentations, its shabby pink bows and fans, its tawdry bed hangings. He looked doubtfully at the chairs and subsided onto the edge of the bed.
“What is it you want?” she asked.
He stroked his chin.
“Well, Judy,” he said, “this matter of identification still presents complications. The poor chap was unrecognisable all right, but what was left of his clothes seemed somehow too good for your friend, Mr. Loman, and besides that, these few little trinkets don’t look as though they belonged to a tenant of Bunter’s Buildings.”
He displayed a battered gold cigarette case, the crushed fragments of a briquet, a stained pocketbook–the material of which, however, was of fine morocco.”
“Ever seen any of these before?” he asked, looking at her keenly.
She shook her head.
“Never,” she declared. “They might very well have been Mr. Loman’s, though. He was quite well dressed and looked as though he belonged to the West End the first day he came here.”
“That’s quite in accordance with our own information,” the sergeant agreed. “The coroner had the same idea when he adjourned the inquest. There’ll never be a definite verdict, so far as I can see. ‘Some person unknown.’ That’s how they’ll bury him and that’s what he is. Opens up an interesting question, though.”
“What question?” she demanded.”
“The question of who Mr. Loman really was.”
She sat down on the bed by his side. She was nervously twisting and untwisting her hands.
“He was a queer chap anyway,” she admitted.
“He was always fond of these sudden disappearances, although he had never been away so long as this time. As to throwing himself off that fire escape, I should never have dreamed that he would have the courage to do such a thing.”
“Someone else,” the visitor reflected, “might have thrown him off.”
He was sitting side by side with Judy and he could almost feel the little shivers that were going through her body. He dived into his pocket and produced a flask.
“Got two glasses and any water fit to drink?” he enquired.
She pointed to a shelf. He found two tumblers of coarse glass, washed them out with tap water and rescued a syphon from the floor.
“Quite a handy man at a picnic, aren’t you?” she observed, with an attempt at lightness. “There are some biscuits in that cupboard.”
He found them and placed the glass of whisky-and-soda in her hand.
“Judy,” he said, “there’s no one going to worry you about this job but you must buck up and help us so far as you can.”
“How can I help you?” she asked.
“Perhaps not at all,” the sergeant admitted soothingly. “However, we’ll see later on. The question we’re up against now is: Are those remains really the remains of Mr. Loman. If so, did he have a visitor that night, and where’s the telegram?”
She remained silent with her eyes fixed upon the opposite wall.
“Think hard,” he begged. “You’re sure you didn’t see a stranger about the place that evening?”
“Not a sign of one,” she declared.”
“Or did you see anything more of the telegram?”
“I saw it when I unpinned it from the door,” she replied, “and that’s all. Mr. Loman fairly snatched it away from me. I never saw him open it, even. Wherever he is–in hell or wandering about the streets–he took it with him.”
Her visitor sighed heavily.
“I’m disappointed, Judy,” he confessed, taking a sip from his tumbler. “I thought he might have put his head in at the door to say good-bye to you and just beg you not to mention that he was going away. You see, it wouldn’t have seemed important to you then, so you would have promised all right, naturally. Now it’s become very important indeed.”
“Why should he say good-bye to me even if he were doing a flit?” she demanded. “He wasn’t one of my friends. He’s never been in this room in his life. He was a poor skeleton of a fellow that I just took pity on that last day and helped up to his room. He’s never been anything to me, Mr. Sanders. Don’t you get any wrong ideas in your head.”
“I’m not harbouring any, of my own good will,” he assured her, “but I don’t see how it happens, Judy, that you–a strong young woman–have come to this broken-down state just because they asked you to identify some remains that oughtn’t to have been exhibited. Days ago it was, and here you are shivering and all, so to speak, on edge.”
“Perhaps I’ve been drinking too much,” she confessed doggedly. “We were all pretty gay, you know, at the Green Man that night. We went on board the boat after we left the pub–the whole crowd of us.”
He stroked his stubbly moustache.
“You sometimes make me a bit thoughtful, young lady,” he admitted. “You seem to go the whole hog with these fellows and yet every now and then there seems something about you entirely different.”
Judy was recovering herself.
“You do take notice, don’t you?” she remarked with a chuckle.
“That’s my job,” he answered. “You’ve never given us any trouble, Judy, and I’m not looking to bring any on you, but there’s a mystery about that man Loman, a mystery about the telegram, a mystery about the remains that were found smashed to pulp down in the Alley. It’s our business to get at the bottom of these things.”
“Well, you generally find out what you want to.”
The sergeant rose to his feet. He shook the biscuit crumbs from his overcoat and replaced the flask in his pocket.
“We find out grains of truth now and then,” he acknowledged, “but we make some awful boggles sometimes. Of course, the Chief says my great fault is that I’m too credulous.”
“It doesn’t seem to me that you’re that way.”
“This case, for instance,” he went on, “I’ve got to take the whole of it on trust.”
“What do you mean?”
Sergeant Sanders passed his coat sleeve over his black Homburg hat. Judy slipped off the bed and stood by his side.
“Well,” he pointed out, “I have to believe you when you tell me that there was never anything between you and Loman and that he didn’t show you the contents of the telegram. I have to believe you when you tell me that you didn’t see him except for those few minutes when you helped him upstairs and you didn’t know that he was thinking of committing suicide, and your evidence in Court that you heard no sounds of a struggle on the top floor… With all that believing, you see, I don’t get anywhere. That’s what being too credulous means. I have to try and find another loose end.”
She stretched herself lazily. There was something of the old colour in her cheeks and light in her eyes.
“Well,” she acknowledged, “that whisky has done me a great deal of good. I guess I shall go down and visit my friends at the Green Man as soon as it’s opening time. Shall I be seeing you there?”
He shook his head.
“You never can tell. I may stick around here or I may find myself working at the other end of the case.”
“What do you mean–the other end of the case?” she asked, with a suspicious gleam in her eyes.
“Miss Judy,” he explained, “the first thing a detective has to learn is that there are two ways of going to work about a job like this. You can start from what actually happened and go forward, or you can imagine what may have happened, work backwards on some of your ideas, and try and pick up a bit of the truth that way. Seems to me that’s what I’m driven to.”
“I wish you luck, Mr. Sanders,” she said.
He smiled, drew on a pair of worn dogskin gloves, forgot his manners so far as to cram his hat over his head, and opened the door. From the other side of the threshold he looked back.
“Before I say good-bye, Judy,” he ventured ingratiatingly, “you wouldn’t like to tell me, I suppose, what really happened to Mr. Loman? No, I know you wouldn’t, so I shan’t ask you.”
He closed the door quickly. The boot she had thrown at him fell harmlessly against its panels. The sergeant went down the stone steps whistling softly to himself.