The Clue of the Silver Key - Edgar Wallace (read e book txt) 📗
- Author: Edgar Wallace
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packet of cartridges, the bullets of which corresponded to those
extracted from the unfortunate Tickler. In his mind, however, he was
satisfied that there was some connexion between that flat in Baynes Mews
and the murder of the little thief. The finding of the dress clothes
signified little; it might only mean that someone, for reasons best known
to himself, wanted a place where he could change without going home. Such
things happen in the West End of London, and in the east or any other end
of any other large city.
The absence of the bed rather puzzled him, but here again it simply
removed one explanation of the flat being used. Yet, if he could have
foreseen the future, he would have known that he had in his possession a
clue more valuable than the science of ballistics could have given to
him.
MARY LANE’S PARTY was a very dull one. She was one of ten young people,
and young people can be very boring.
Three of the girls had a giggling secret, and throughout the meal made
esoteric references to some happening which none but they understood. The
young men were vapid and vacuous, after their kind. She was glad to get
away on the excuse of a matinee.
Mary lived in a large block of flats in the Marylebone Road.
These three small rooms and a kitchenette were home and independence to
her. She seldom received visitors, rarely men visitors, and never in any
circumstances invited a guest so late at night. She was staggered when
the lift-man told her that ‘a gentleman had just gone up to her flat’.
‘No, miss, I’ve never seen him before. It wasn’t Mr Allenby, but he says
he knows you.’
He opened the door of the lift and walked along the corridor with her. To
her amazement she saw Leo Moran, who had evidently rung the bell of the
flat several times, and was returning to the elevator when they met.
‘It is unpardonable of me to come so late, Miss Lane, but when I explain
to you that it’s rather a vital matter I’m sure you won’t be angry with
me. Your maid is asleep.’
Mary smiled. ‘I haven’t a maid,’ she said.
The situation was a little embarrassing: she did not want to ask him into
the flat; nor could she talk to him in the passage. She compromised by
asking him in and leaving the front door open.
Moran was nervous; his voice, when he spoke, was husky; the hand that
took a large envelope from his inside pocket was unsteady.
‘I wouldn’t have bothered you at all, but I had rather a disconcerting
letter when I got home, from—an agent of mine.’
She knew Moran, though she had never regarded him as a friend, and felt a
sense of resentment every time he had come unbidden to her dressing-room.
Since she received her allowance from old Hervey, she had it also through
the bank of which Leo Moran was manager.
‘I’ll be perfectly frank with you, Miss Lane,’ he said, speaking quickly
and nervously. ‘It’s a matter entirely personal to myself, in the sense
that I am personally responsible. The one man who could get me out of my
trouble is the one man I do not wish to approach—your guardian, Mr
Hervey Lyne.’
To say she was astonished is to put it mildly. She had always regarded
Moran as a man so perfectly self-possessed that nothing could break
through his reserve, and here he was, fidgeting and stammering like a
schoolboy.
‘If I can help you of course I will,’ she said, wondering what was coming
next.
‘It concerns some shares which I purchased on behalf of a client of the
bank. Mr Lyne signed the transfer, but the other people—that is to say,
the people to whom the shares were transferred—have just discovered that
it is necessary also that your name shall be on the transfer, as they
were originally part of the stocks left in trust to you. I might say,’ he
went on quickly, ‘that the price of this stock is exactly the same, or
practically the same, as it was when it was taken over.’
‘My name—is that all you want? I thought at least it was something
valuable,’ she laughed.
He put the paper on the table; it was indubitably a stock transfer; she
had seen such documents before. He indicated where her name should be
signed, and she noticed above it the scrawl of old Lyne.
‘Well, that’s done.’ There was no mistaking his relief. ‘You’ll think
it’s awful of me to come at this hour of the night. I can’t tell you how
grateful I am. It simply meant that I had paid out money of the bank’s
without the necessary authorization. Also, if old Mr Lyne died tomorrow,
this transfer would be practically valueless.’
‘Is he likely to die tomorrow?’
He shook his head. ‘I don’t know; he’s a pretty old man.’ Abruptly he
held out his hand. ‘Good night, and thank you again.’
She closed the door on him, went back to her kitchenette to make herself
a cup of chocolate before she went to bed, and sat for a long time at the
kitchen table, sipping the hot decoction, and trying to discover
something sinister in his midnight visitation. Herein she failed. If
Hervey Lyne died tomorrow? By his agitation and hurry one might imagine
that the old man was in extremis. Yet, the last time she had seen old
Hervey, he was very much in possession of his faculties.
She was at breakfast the following morning when Dick Allenby called her
up and told her of his loss. She listened incredulously, and thought he
was joking until he told her of the visit of Surefoot Smith.
‘My dear—how terrible!’ she said.
‘Surefoot thought it was providential. Moran thought nothing.’
‘Was he there?’ she asked quickly.
‘Yes—why?’
She hesitated. Moran had so evidently wished his visit to her to be a
private matter that it seemed like betraying him.
‘Oh, nothing,’ she said. And then, as an afterthought: ‘Come round and
tell me all about it.’
He was there in half an hour, singularly unemotional and cheerful, she
thought.
‘It really isn’t as dramatically important as it sounds,’ he said. ‘If it
has been stolen, as Surefoot thinks it has, with the idea of pinching the
patent, the buyer will be shrewd enough to make a search of the
registrations at the various Patent Offices. I had an acknowledgement
from Germany this morning that it has been entered there.’
He was interrupted by a knock at the outer door and she opened it to
admit a second visitor. It was not usual, she explained apologetically to
Dick, that she should receive guests so early, but Mike Hennessey had
telephoned, asking whether he might come.
The first thing she noticed when Mike came into the room was his
embarrassment at finding Dick Allenby there. A genial soul was Mike,
big-faced, heavy-featured, sleepy-eyed, constitutionally lazy and
lethargic in his movements. He was never a healthy-looking individual,
but now he looked positively ill, and she remarked upon the fact. Mike
shook his head.
‘Had a bad night,’ he said. ‘Good morning, Mr Allenby—don’t go: I’ve
nothing private; only I wanted to see this young lady about our play.
It’s coming off.’
‘Thank Heaven for that!’ said Mary gratefully.’ It’s the best news I’ve
had for months.’
‘It’s about the worst I’ve had,’ he grumbled.
‘Has Mr Wirth withdrawn his support?’
It was nearer the truth than she guessed. Mr Wirth’s weekly cheque had
been due on the previous day, it had not arrived and Mike was taking no
chances. ‘The notice goes up tonight that we finish on Saturday,’ he
said. ‘I’ve had the luck to let the theatre—I wish I’d taken a better
offer that I had last week.’
He was even more nervous than Moran had been; could not keep his hands
still or his body either. He got up from the chair, walked to the window,
came back and sat down, only to rise again a few moments later.
‘Who is this old fellow Wirth? What’s his job?’ asked Dick.
‘I don’t know. He’s in some sort of business at Coventry,’ said Mike. ‘I
thought of running up there today to see him. The point is this’—he came
to that point bluntly—‘tomorrow night’s Treasury, and I haven’t enough
money in the bank to pay the artistes. I may get it today, in which case
there’s no fuss. You’re the heaviest salary in the cast. Mary: will you
trust me till next week if things go wrong?’
She was staggered at the suggestion. In the case of other productions
Mike’s solvency had always been a matter of the gravest doubt, but Cliffs
of Fate had been under more distinguished patronage, and the general
impression was that, whatever else happened, the money for its
continuance would come in.
‘Of course I will, Mike,’ she said; ‘but surely Mr Wirth hasn’t—’
‘Gone broke? No, I shouldn’t think so. He’s a strange man,’ said Mike
vaguely.
He did not particularize his patron’s strangeness, but was satisfied to
leave it at that. His departure was almost as abrupt a gesture as any he
had performed.
‘There’s a pretty sick man,’ said Dick.
‘Do you mean he’s ill?’
‘Mentally. Something’s upset him. I should imagine that the failure of
old Wirth’s cheque was quite sufficient; but there’s something else
besides.’ He rose. ‘Come and lunch,’ he invited, but she shook her head.
She was lunching at home; her matinee excuse at the overnight party had
been on the spur of the moment. She wondered how many would remember it
against her.
Dick went on to Scotland Yard, and had to wait half an hour before
Surefoot Smith returned. He had no news of any importance. A description
of the stolen gun had been circulated.
‘But that won’t help very much. It’s hardly likely to be pawned or
offered for sale in the Caledonian Market,’ said Surefoot. And then,
abruptly: ‘Do you know Mr Washington Wirth?’
‘I’ve heard of him.’
‘Have you ever met him? Great party-giver, isn’t he?’
Dick smiled. ‘He’s never given me a party, but I believe he’s rather fond
of that sort of amusement.’
Surefoot nodded. ‘I’ve just been up to the Kellner Hotel. They know
nothing about him, except that he always pays in cash. He’s been using
the hotel for three years; orders a suite whenever he feels inclined,
leaves the supper and the orchestra to the head waiter; but that’s the
only thing they know about him—that his money is good money, which is
all they want to know, I suppose.’
‘Are you interested in him?’ asked Dick, and told the story of Mike
Hennessey’s agitation.
Surefoot Smith was interested.
‘He’s got a bank, has he? Well, he may be one of those Midland people.
I’ve never understood what makes the corn and coal merchants go in for
theatricals. It’s a form of insanity that’s getting quite common.’
‘Mike will tell you all about it,’ suggested Allenby.
Mr Smith’s lips curled.
‘Mike’ll tell us a whole lot,’ he said sarcastically. ‘That fellow
wouldn’t tell you his right hand had four fingers, for fear you brought
it up in evidence against him. I know Mike!’
‘At any rate, he’s got a line on Wirth,’ said Dick.’ He’s been financing
this play.’
Since he could find nobody to lunch with, he decided to
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