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Louis Tracy >> Number Seventeen
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16 This eBook was produced by Jim Weiler, xooqi.com
Number Seventeen
by Louis Tracy, 1915
CHAPTER I
THE OUTCOME OF ARTISTIC CURIOSITY
"Taxi, sir? Yes, sir. No. 4 will be yours."
A red-faced, loud-breathing commissionaire, engaged in the lucrative
task of pocketing sixpences as quickly as he could summon cabs,
vanished in a swirl of macintoshes and umbrellas.
People who had arrived at the theater in fine weather were emerging
into a drizzle of rain. "All London," as the phrase goes, was flocking
to see the latest musical comedy at Daly's, but all London, regarded
thus collectively, is far from owning motor cars, or even affording
taxicabs, so the majority of the play-goers were hurrying on foot
towards tube railways and omnibus routes.
Still, a popular light opera could hardly fail to draw many patrons
from the upper ranks of society, and, in the crush at the main exit,
Francis Berrold Theydon, hesitating whether to walk or wait the hazard
of a cab, deemed himself fortunate when a panting commissionaire
promised to secure a taxi "in half a minute."
Automobiles of every known variety were snorting up to the curb and
bustling off again as promptly as their users could enter and bestow
themselves in dim interiors. Being a considerate person-- wishful also
to light a cigarette-- Theydon moved out of the way. In so doing, he
was cannoned against by an impetuous footman, whose cry, "Your car,
sir," led him to follow the man's alert eyes.
He saw a tall, elderly gentleman, with clean-shaven, shrewd, and
highly intelligent features, of the type which finance, or the law, or
a combination of both, seems to evolve only in big cities, escorting a
young lady from the vestibule. Then Theydon remembered that he had
noticed this self-same girl's remarkable beauty as she was silhouetted
in white against the dark background of a first-tier box. He had even
speculated idly as to her identity, and had come to the conclusion, on
catching her face in profile, that she must be the daughter of the man
seated by her side but half-hidden behind a heavy curtain.
The likeness was momentarily lost now while the two neared him, yet
discovered anew when they halted for a second at his elbow. Oddly
enough, the man was carrying an umbrella, which he proceeded to open,
and his daughter's astonished question put their relationship beyond
doubt.
"Dad," she said, with a charming smile in which there was just a hint
of a pout, "aren't you coming home with me?"
"No. I must look in at the Constitutional Club. It's only a step. I'll
take no harm. This sleet looks worse than it is when every drop shines
in the glare of so many lamps. Now, in with you, Evelyn! Tell Downs to
come back, and don't forget which club. Anyhow, I'll tell him myself."
"Shall I wait up for you?"
"Well-- er-- I shan't be late. I'll be free by the time Downs
returns."
"No. 4 taxi!" came a voice, and Theydon saw his commissionaire perched
on the step of a cab swinging in deftly behind the waiting car. The
girl, gazing at her father, happened to look for an instant at
Theydon, who, fearful lest his candidly admiring glance might have
been a trifle too sustained, pretended a hurried interest in an
unlighted cigarette. That was all. The three crossed the pavement
almost simultaneously.
The next moment the unknown goddess was gone, though Theydon snatched
a final glimpse of her, faintly visible, yet no less radiantly lovely,
as she leaned forward from the depths of the limousine, and waved a
white-gloved hand to her father through a window jeweled with
raindrops.
There was nothing in the incident to provoke a second thought.
Assuredly, Frank Theydon-- as his friends called him-- was not the
only man in the vestibule of Daly's Theater who had found the girl
well worth looking at, and it was the mere accident of propinquity
which enabled him to overhear the quite commonplace remarks of father
and daughter.
A score of similar occurrences had probably taken place in the like
circumstances that night in London, and the maddest dreamer of
fantastic dreams would not have heard the fluttering wings of the
spirit of romance in connection with any one of them. It was by no
means marvelous, therefore, but rather in obedience to the accepted
law of things as they are when contrasted with things as they might
be, if Theydon both failed to attach any importance to that chance
meeting and proceeded forthwith to think of something else.
He did not forget it, of course. His artist's eyes had been far too
interested in a certain rare quality of delicate femininity in the
girl's face and figure, and his ear too quick to appreciate the music
of her cultured voice, that he should not be able to recall such
pleasant memories later. Indeed, during those fleeting moments on the
threshold of the theater, he had garnered quite a number of minor
impressions, not only of the girl, but of her father.
In some respects they were singularly alike. Thus, each had the same
proud, self-reliant carriage, the same large, brilliant eyes, serene
brow and firm mouth, the same repose of manner, the same clear,
incisive enunciation. Neither could move in any company, however
eclectic, without evoking comment.
They held in common that air of refinement and good breeding which is,
or should be, the best-marked attribute of an aristocracy. It was
impossible to imagine either in rags, but, given such a
transformation, each would be notable because of the amazing
difference that would exist between garb and mien.
It must not be imagined that Theydon indulged in this close analysis
of the physical characteristics of two complete strangers while his
cab was wheeling into the scurry of traffic in Cranbourn Street.
Rather did he essay a third time to light the cigarette which he still
held between his lips. And yet a third time was his intent balked.
A policeman stopped the east-bound stream of vehicles somewhat
suddenly at the corner of Charing Cross road; owing to the mud, the
taxi skidded a few feet beyond the line; a lamp was torn off by a
heavy wagon coming south; and a fierce argument between taxi driver
and policeman resulted in "numbers" being demanded for future
vengeance. Then Theydon took a hand in the dispute, poured oil on the
troubled waters by tipping the policeman half a crown and the driver
half a sovereign-- these sums being his private estimate of damages to
dignity and lamp-- and the journey was resumed, with a net loss, to
the person who had absolutely nothing to do with the affair, of twelve
and sixpence in money and nearly ten minutes in time.
Theydon was not rich, as shall be seen in due course, but he was
generous and impulsive. He hated the notion of any one suffering for
having done him a service, and the taxi man might reasonably be deemed
a real benefactor on that sloppy night.
So far as he was concerned, the delay of ten minutes was of no
consequence. It only meant a slightly deferred snuggling down into an
easy chair in his flat with a book and a pipe. That is how be would
have expressed himself if questioned on the point. In reality it
influenced and controlled his future in the most vital way, because,
once the cab had crossed Oxford Street and turned into the quiet
thoroughfare on which the first block of Innesmore Mansions abutted,
he passed into a new phase of existence.
The cigarette, lighted at last after the altercation, had filled the
cab with smoke to such an extent that Theydon lowered a window. At
that moment the driver was slowing down to take the corner of the even
more secluded road which contained Innesmore Mansions and the gardens
appertaining thereto, and nothing else. Necessarily, Theydon was
looking out, and he was very greatly surprised at seeing the unknown
gentleman of the theater walking rapidly round the same corner.
He could not be mistaken. The stranger tilted back his umbrella and
raised his eyes to ascertain the name of the street, as though he was
not quite sure of his whereabouts, and the glare of a lamp fell
directly on his clean-cut, almost classical face.
Being thus occupied, he did not glance at the passing cab, or
recognition might possibly have been mutual-- possibly, though not
probably, because, during that brief pause on the steps of the
theater, he stood beside Theydon; hence, he was half-turned toward his
daughter while they were discussing the night's immediate program.
In itself the fact that he had gone in the direction of Innesmore
Mansions rather than toward the Constitutional Club was in nowise
remarkable. Nevertheless, he had deceived his daughter-- deceived her
intentionally, and the knowledge came as a shock to his unsuspected
critic in Theydon.
He did not look the sort of man who would stoop to petty evasion of
the truth. It was as though a statue of Praxiteles, miraculously
gifted with life, should express its emotions, not in Attic Greek, but
in the up-to-date slang of the Strand.
"Well, I'm dashed!" said Theydon, or words to that effect, and his cab
sped on to the third doorway. Innesmore Mansions arranged its roomy
flats in blocks of six, and he occupied No. 18.
He held a florin in readiness; the rain, now falling heavily, did not
encourage any loitering on the pavement. For all that, he saw out of
the tail of his eye that the other man was approaching, though he had
paused to examine the numbers blazoned on a lamp over the first
doorway.
"Good night, sir, and thank you!" said the taxi driver.
The cab made off as Theydon ran up a short flight of steps. Innesmore
Mansions did not boast elevators. The flats were comfortable, but not
absurdly expensive, and their inmates climbed stairs cheerfully; at
most, they had only to mount to a second storey. Each block owned a
uniformed porter, who, on a night like this, even in May, needed
rousing from his lair by a bell if in demand.
Theydon took the stairs two at a stride, opened the door of No. 18,
which, with No. 17, occupied the top landing. He was valeted and
cooked for by an ex-sergeant of the Army Service Corps and his wife,
an admirable couple named Bates, and the male of the species appeared
before Theydon had removed coat and opera hat in the tiny hall.
"Bring my tray in fifteen minutes, Bates, and that will be all for
tonight," said Theydon.
"Yes, sir," said Bates. "Remarkable change in the weather, sir."
"Rotten. Who would have expected this downpour after such a fine day?"
Bates took the coat and hat, and Theydon entered his sitting room, a
spacious, square apartment which faced the gardens. He had purposely
prevented Bates from coming immediately with his nightly fare, which
consisted of a glass of milk and a plate of bread and butter.
Truth to tell, the artistic temperament contains a spice of curiosity,
which is, in some sense, an exercise of the perceptive faculties.
Theydon wanted to raise a window and look out, an unusual action, and
one which, therefore, would induce Bates to wonder as to its cause.
For once in his life a man who bothered his head very little about
other people's business was puzzled, and meant to ascertain whether or
not the unknown was really calling on some resident in Innesmore
Mansions. It was a harmless bit of espionage. Theydon scarcely knew
the names of the other dwellers in his own block, and his acquaintance
did not even go that far with any of the remaining tenants of 48
fiats, all told.
Still, to a writer, the vagaries of the tall stranger were decidedly
interesting, so he did open a window, and did thrust his head out, and
was just in time to see the owner of the limousine which would call at
the Constitutional Club in a quarter of an hour mount the steps
leading to Nos. 13-18. Somehow, the discovery gave Theydon a veritable
thrill.
Could that pretty girl's father, by any chance, he coming to visit
him? A wildly improbable development had been whittled down to a
five-to-one chance. He closed the window and waited, yes, actually
waited, for the bell to ring!
The sitting room door was open, and it faced the hall door. Footsteps
sounded sharply on the slate steps of the stairway; when Theydon heard
some one climbing to the topmost landing he was almost convinced that,
as usual, the unexpected was about to happen. It did happen, but took
its own peculiar path. The unknown rang the bell of No. 17, and, after
a slight delay, was admitted.
Theydon smiled at the anticlimax. A trivial mystery had developed
along strictly orthodox lines. A rather good-looking and distinctly
well-dressed lady, a Mrs. Lester, occupied No. 17. She lived alone,
too, he believed. At any rate, he had never seen any other person,
except an elderly servant, enter or leave the opposite flat, and he
had encountered the tenant herself so seldom that he was not quite
certain of recognizing her apart from the environment of the staircase
which provided their occasional meeting place.
Then he sighed. Romance evidently denied her magic presence to one who
wooed her assiduously by his pen. He was yet to learn that the
alluring sprite had not only favored him with her attentions during
the past twenty minutes, but meant to stick to him like his own shadow
for many a day. And he frowned, too.
He did not approve of that pretty girl's father visiting the
attractive Mrs. Lester in conditions which savored of something
underhanded and clandestine. The man had deliberately misled his
daughter. He left her with a lie on his lips; yet never were
appearances more deceptive, for the stranger had the outward aspect of
one whose word was his bond.
"Oh, dash it all, what business is it of mine, anyhow?" growled
Theydon, and he laughed sourly as he sat down to write a letter which
Bates could take to the post, thus himself practicing a slight deceit
intended solely to account for the deferred bringing of the tray.
It was apparently an unimportant missive which could well have been
postponed till the morning, being merely an announcement to a firm of
publishers that he would pay a business call later in the week. In
less than five minutes it, and another, making an appointment for
Wednesday, this being the night of Monday, were written, sealed,
directed and stamped.
He rang. Bates came, with laden hands, thinking the tray was in
demand.
"Kindly post those for me," said Theydon, glancing at the letters.
"Better take an umbrella. It's raining cats and dogs."
The man had found the door open, and left it so when he entered.
Before he could answer, the door of No. 17 was opened and closed, with
the jingle inseparable from the presence of many small panes of glass
in leaden casing, and footsteps sounded on the stairs. For some
reason-- probably because of the unusual fact that any one should be
leaving Mrs. Lester's flat at so late an hour, both men listened.
Then Bates recollected himself.
"Yes, sir," he said.
Oddly enough, the man's marked pause suggested a question to his
employer.
"Mrs. Lester's visitor didn't stop long," was the comment. "He came up
almost on my heels."
"I thought it must ha' bin a gentleman," said Bates.
"Why a 'gentleman'?" laughed Theydon.
"I mean, sir, that the step didn't sound like a lady's."
"Ah, I see."
Vaguely aware that he had committed himself to a definite knowledge as
to the sex of Mrs. Lester's visitor, Theydon added:
"I didn't actually see any one on the stairs, but I heard an arrival,
and jumped to the same conclusion as you, Bates."
Tacitly, master and man shared the same opinion-- it was satisfactory
to know that Mrs. Lester's male visitors who called at the
unconventional hour of 11:30 p. m. were shown out so speedily.
Innesmore Mansions were intensely respectable.
No lady could live there alone whose credentials had not satisfied a
sharp-eyed secretary. Further, Theydon was aware of a momentary
disloyalty of thought toward the distinguished-looking father of that
remarkably handsome girl, and it pleased him to find that he had
erred.
Bates went out, closing the door behind him: he donned an overcoat,
secured an umbrella and presently descended to the street. Yielding
again to impulse, Theydon reopened the window and peered down. The
stranger was walking away rapidly. A policeman, glistening in cape and
overalls, stood at the corner, near a pillar box.
The tall man, who topped the burly constable by some inches, halted
for a moment to post a letter. Whether by accident or design he held
his umbrella so that the other could not see his face. Then he
disappeared. Bates came into view. He dropped Theydon's letters into
the box, but he and the policeman exchanged a few words, which, his
employer guessed, must surely have dealt with the vagaries of the
weather.
For an author of repute Theydon's surmises had been wide of the mark
several times that night. The policeman had seen the unknown coming
out from the doorway of Nos. 13-18, and had noted his stature and
appearance.
"Who's the toff who just left your lot?" he said, when Bates arrived.
"Dunno," said Bates. "Some one callin' on Mrs. Lester, I fancy. Why?"
"O, nothing. On'y, if I was togged up regardless on a night like this
I'd blue a cab fare."
"I didn't see him meself," commented Bates. "My boss 'eard him come,
an' both of us 'eard him go. He didn't stay more'n five minnits."
"Wish I was in his shoes. I've got to stick round here till six in the
morning," grinned the policeman.
"Well, cheer-o, mate."
"Cheer-o."
Bates looked in on his master before retiring for the night.
"What time shall I call you, sir?" he said.
Theydon was in the pipe and book stage, having exchanged his dress
coat for a smoking jacket. He was reading a treatise on aeronautics,
and, like every novice, had already formulated a flying scheme which
would supersede all known inventions.
"Not later than 8," he said. "I must be out by 9. And, by the way, I
may as well tell you now. After lunch tomorrow I am going to
Brooklands. I return to Waterloo at 6:40. As I have to dine in the
West End at 7:30, and my train may be a few minutes behind time, I
want you to meet me with a suitcase at the hairdresser's place on the
main platform. I'll dress there and go straight to my friend's house.
It would be cutting things rather fine if I attempted to come here."
"I'll have everything ready, sir."
Bates was eminently reliable in such matters. He could be depended on
to the last stud.
The storm which had raged overnight must have cleared the skies for
the following day, because Theydon never enjoyed an outing more than
his trip to the famous motor track. His business there, however, lay
with aviation. A popular magazine had commissioned him to write an
article summing up the progress and practical aims of the airmen and
he was devoting afternoon and evening to the quest of information. A
couple of experts and a photographer had given him plenty of raw
material in the open, but he looked forward with special zest to an
undisturbed chat that night with Mr. James Creighton Forbes,
millionaire and philanthropist, whose peculiar yet forcible theories
as to the peaceful conquest of the air were for the hour engaging the
attention of the world's press.
He had never met Mr. Forbes. When on the point of writing for an
appointment he had luckily remembered that the great man was a
lifelong friend of the professor of physics at his (Theydon's)
university, and a delightfully cordial introductory note was
forthcoming in the course of a couple of posts. This brought the
invitation to dinner. "On Tuesday evening I am dining en famille,"
wrote Mr. Forbes, "so, if you are free, join us at 7:30, and we can
talk uninterruptedly afterward."
The train was not late. Bates, erect and soldierly, was standing at
the rendezvous. With him were two men whom Theydon had never before
seen. One, a bulky, stalwart, florid-faced man of forty, had something
of the military aspect; the other supplied his direct antithesis,
being small, wizened and sallow.
The big man had a round, bullet head, prominent bright blue eyes, and
the cheek bones, chin and physical development of a heavyweight
pugilist. His companion, whose dark and recessed eyes were noticeably
bright, too, could not be more than half his weight, and Theydon would
not have been surprised if told that this diminutive person was a
dancing master. Naturally he classed both as acquaintances of his
valet, encountered by chance on the platform at Waterloo.
He was slightly astonished, therefore, when the two faced him,
together with Bates. A dramatic explanation of their presence was soon
supplied.
"These gentlemen, sir, are Chief Inspector Winter and Detective
Inspector Furneaux of Scotland Yard," said the ex-sergeant, in the
awed tone which some people cannot help using when speaking of members
of the Criminal Investigation Department.
Though daylight had not yet failed it was rather dark in that corner
of the station, and Theydon saw now what he had not perceived earlier,
that the usually sedate Bates was pale and harassed looking.
"Why, what's up?" he inquired, gazing blankly from one to the other of
the ominous pair.
"Haven't you seen the evening papers, Mr. Theydon?" said Winter, the
giant of the two.
"No, I've been at Brooklands since two o'clock. But what is it?"
"You don't know, then, that a murder was committed in the Innesmore
Mansions last night or early this morning?"
"Good Lord, no! Who was killed?"
"A Mrs. Lester, the lady--"
"Mrs. Lester, who lives in No. 17?"
"Yes."
"What a horrible thing! Why, only the day before yesterday I met her
on the stairs."
It was a banal statement, and Theydon knew it, but he blurted out the
first crazy words that would serve to cloak the monstrous thought
which leaped into his brain. And a picture danced before his mind's
eye, a picture, not of the fair and gracious woman who had been done
to death, but of a sweet-voiced girl in a white satin dress who was
saying to a fine-looking man standing by her side: "Dad, aren't you
coming home with me?"
His blurred senses were conscious of the strange medley produced by
the familiar noises of a railway station blending with the quietly
authoritative voice of the chief inspector.
"Mr. Furneaux and I have the inquiry in hand, Mr. Theydon," the
detective was saying. "We called at your flat, and Bates told us of
the sounds you both heard about 11:30 last night. I'm afraid we have
rather upset you by coming here, but Bates was unable to say what time
you would return home, so I thought you would not mind if we
accompanied him in order to find out the hour at which it would be
convenient for you to meet us at your flat-- this evening, of course."
"You have certainly given me the shock of my life," Theydon gasped.
"That poor woman dead, murdered! It's too awful! How was she killed?"
"She was strangled."
"O, this is dreadful! Shall I wire an apology to the man I'm dining
with?"
"No need for that, Mr. Theydon," said Winter, sympathetically. "I'm
sorry now we blurted out our unpleasant news. But you had to be told,
and it was essential that we should get your story some time tonight.
Can you be home by eleven?"
"Yes, yes. I'll be there without fail."
"Thank you. We have a good many inquiries to make in the meantime.
Goodby, for the present."
The two made off. Winter had done all the talking, but Theydon was far
too disturbed to pay heed to the trivial fact that Furneaux, after one
swift glance, seemed to regard him as a negligible quantity. It was
borne in on him that the detective evidently believed he had something
of importance to say, and meant to render it almost impossible that he
should escape questioning while his memory was still active with
reference to events of the previous night.
And he had so little, yet so much, to tell. On his testimony alone it
would be a comparatively easy matter to establish beyond doubt the
identity of Mrs. Lester's last known visitor. And what would be the
outcome? He dared hardly trust his own too lively imagination. Whether
or not his testimony gave a clew to the police, the one irrevocable
issue was that somewhere in London there was a girl named Evelyn who
would regard a certain young man, Francis Berrold Theydon to wit, as a
loathsome and despicable Paul Pry.
Bates, somewhat relieved by the departure of the emissaries of
Scotland Yard, recalled his master's scattered wits to the affairs of
the moment.
"It's getting on for seven, sir," he said. "I've engaged a dressing
room."
"Tell you what, Bates," said Theydon abstractedly, "it is my fixed
belief that you and I could do with a brandy and soda apiece."
"That would be a good idea, sir."
The good idea was duly acted on. While Theydon was dressing Bates told
him what little he knew of the tragedy, which was discovered by Mrs.
Lester's maid when she brought a cup of tea to her mistress' bedroom
at ten o'clock that morning.
Bates himself was the first person appealed to by the distracted
woman, and he had the good sense to leave the body and its
surroundings untouched until a doctor and the police had been summoned
by telephone. Thenceforth the day had passed in a whirl of excitement,
active in respect to police inquiries and passive in its resistance to
newspaper interviewers. He saw no valid reason why his employer's
plans should be disturbed, so made no effort to communicate with him
at Brooklands.
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