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Chapter IV Murder Jack Tarling lay stretched upon his hard
bed, a long cigarette-holder between his teeth, a book on Chinese
metaphysics
balanced on his chest, at peace with the world. The hour was eight
o'clock, and
it was the day that Sam Stay had been released from gaol. It had been a busy day for Tarling, for
he was engaged in a bank fraud case which would have occupied the whole
of his
time had he not had a little private business to attend to. This
private matter
was wholly unprofitable, but his curiosity had been piqued. He lay the book flat on his chest as the
soft click of the opening door announced the coming of his retainer.
The
impassive Ling Chu came noiselessly into the room, carrying a tray,
which he
placed upon a low table by the side of his master's bed. The Chinaman
wore a
blue silk pyjama suit a fact which Tarling noticed. "You are not going out to-night
then, Ling Chu?" "No, Lieh Jen," said the man. They both spoke in the soft, sibilant
patois of Shantung. "You have been to the Man with the
Cunning Face?" For answer the other took an envelope
from an inside pocket and laid it in the other's hand. Tarling glanced
at the
address. "So this is where the young lady
lives, eh? Miss Odette Rider, 27, Carrymore Buildings, Edgware Road." "It is a clan house, where many
people live," said Ling Chu. "I myself went, in your honourable
service, and saw people coming in and going out interminably, and never
the
same people did I see twice." "It is what they call in English a
'flat building,' Ling," said Tarling with a little smile. "What did
the Man with the Cunning Face say to my letter?" "Master, he said nothing. He just
read and read, and then he made a face like this." Ling gave an
imitation
of Mr. Milburgh's smile. "And then he wrote as you see." Tarling nodded. He stared for a moment
into vacancy, then he turned on his elbow and lifted the cup of tea
which his
servant had brought him. "What of Face-White-and-Weak Man,
Ling?" he asked in the vernacular. "You saw him?" "I saw him, master," said the
Chinaman gravely. "He is a man without a heaven." Again Tarling nodded. The Chinese use the
word "heaven" instead of "God," and he felt that Ling had
very accurately sized up Mr. Thornton Lyne's lack of spiritual
qualities. He finished the tea, and swung his legs
over the edge of the bed. "Ling," he said, "this
place is very dull and sad. I do not think I shall live here." "Will the master go back to
Shanghai?" asked the other, without any display of emotion. "I think so," nodded Tarling.
"At any rate, this place is too dull. Just miserable little
taking-money-easily cases, and wife-husband-lover cases and my soul is
sick." "These are small matters," said
Ling philosophically. "But The Master" this time he spoke of the
great Master, Confucius "has said that all greatness comes from small
things, and perhaps some small-piece man will cut off the head of some
big-piece man, and then they will call you to find the murderer." Tarling laughed. "You're an optimist, Ling," he
said. "No, I don't think they'll call me in for a murder. They don't
call
in private detectives in this country." Ling shook his head. "But the master must find murderers,
or he will no longer be Lieh Jen, the Hunter of Men." "You're a bloodthirsty soul,
Ling," said Tarling, this time in English, which Ling imperfectly
understood, despite the sustained efforts of eminent missionary
schools.
"Now I'll go out," he said with sudden resolution. "I am going
to call upon the small-piece woman whom White-Face desires." "May I come with you?" asked
Ling. Tarling hesitated. "Yes, you may come," he said,
"but you must trail me." Carrymore Mansions is a great block of
buildings sandwiched between two more aristocratic and more expensive
blocks of
flats in the Edgware Road. The ground floor is given up to lock-up
shops which
perhaps cheapened the building, but still it was a sufficiently
exclusive
habitation for the rents, as Tarling guessed, to be a little too high
for a
shop assistant, unless she were living with her family. The
explanation, as he
was to discover, lay in the fact that there were some very undesirable
basement
flats which were let at a lower rental. He found himself standing outside the
polished mahogany door of one of these, wondering exactly what excuse
he was
going to give to the girl for making a call so late at night. And that
she
needed some explanation was clear from the frank suspicion which showed
in her
face when she opened the door to him. "Yes, I am Miss Rider," she
said. "Can I see you for a few
moments?" "I'm sorry," she said, shaking
her head, "but I am alone in the flat, so I can't ask you to come
in." This was a bad beginning. "Is it not possible for you to come
out?" he asked anxiously, and in spite of herself, she smiled. "I'm afraid it's quite impossible
for me to go out with somebody I have never met before," she said, with
just a trace of amusement in her eyes. "I recognise the difficulty,"
laughed Tailing. "Here is one of my cards. I'm afraid I am not very
famous
in this country, so you will not know my name." She took the card and read it. "A private detective?" she said
in a troubled voice. "Who has sent you? Not Mr. "Not Mr. Lyne," he said. She hesitated a moment, then threw open
the door wider. "You must come in. We can talk here
in the hall. Do I understand Mr. Lyne has not sent you?" "Mr. Lyne was very anxious that I
should come," he said. "I am betraying his confidence, but I do not
think that he has any claim upon my loyalty. I don't know why I've
bothered you
at all, except that I feel that you ought to be put on your guard." "Against what?" she asked. "Against the machinations of a
gentleman to whom you have been he hesitated for a word. "Very offensive," she finished
for him. "I don't know how offensive you've
been," he laughed, "but I gather you have annoyed Mr. Lyne for some
reason or other, and that he is determined to annoy you. I do not ask
your
confidence in this respect, because I realise that you would hardly
like to
tell me. But what I want to tell you is this, that Mr. Lyne is probably
framing
up a charge against you that is to say, inventing a charge of theft." "Of theft?" she cried in
indignant amazement. "Against me? Of theft? It's impossible that he
could
be so wicked!" "It's not impossible that anybody
could be wicked," said Tarling of the impassive face and the laughing
eyes. "All that I know is that he even induced Mr. Milburgh to say that
complaints have been made by Milburgh concerning thefts of money from
your
department." "That's absolutely impossible!"
she cried emphatically. "Mr. Milburgh would never say such a thing.
Absolutely impossible!" "Mr. Milburgh didn't want to say
such a thing, I give him credit for that," said Tarling slowly, and
then
gave the gist of the argument, omitting any reference, direct or
indirect, to
the suspicion which surrounded Milburgh. "So you see," he said in
conclusion, "that you ought to be on your guard. I suggest to you that
you
see a solicitor and put the matter in his hands. You need not move
against Mr.
Lyne, but it would strengthen your position tremendously if you had
already
detailed the scheme to some person in authority." "Thank you very, very much, Mr.
Tarling," she said warmly, and looked up into his face with a smile so
sweet, so pathetic, so helpless, that Tarling's heart melted towards
her. "And if you don't want a
solicitor," he said, "you can depend upon me. I will help you if any
trouble arises." "You don't know how grateful I am to
you, Mr. Tarling, I didn't receive you very graciously!" "If you will forgive my saying so,
you would have been a fool to have received me in any other way," he
said. She held out both hands to him: he took
them, and there were tears in her eyes. Presently she composed herself,
and led
him into her little drawing-room. "Of course, I've lost my job,"
she laughed, "but I've had several offers, one of which I shall accept.
I
am going to have the rest of the week to myself and to take a holiday." Tarling stopped her with a gesture. His
ears were superhumanly sensitive. "Are you expecting a visitor?"
he asked softly. "No," said the girl in surprise. "Do you share this flat with
somebody?" "I have a woman who sleeps
here," she said. "She is out for the evening." "Has she a key?" The girl shook her head. The man rose, and Odette marvelled how
one so tall could move so swiftly, and without so much as a sound,
across the
uncarpeted hallway. He reached the door, turned the knob of the patent
lock and
jerked it open. A man was standing on the mat and he jumped back at the
unexpectedness of Tarling's appearance. The stranger was a
cadaverous-looking
man, in a brand-new suit of clothes, evidently ready-made, but he still
wore on
his face the curious yellow tinge which is the special mark of the
recently
liberated gaol-bird. "Beg pardon," he stammered,
"but is this No. 87?" Tarling shot out a hand, and gripping him
by the coat, drew the helpless man towards him. "Hullo, what are you trying to do?
What's this you have?" He wrenched something from the man's
hand. It was not a key but a flat-toothed instrument of strange
construction. "Come in," said Tarling, and
jerked his prisoner into the hall. A swift turning back of his prisoner's
coat pinioned him, and then with dexterousness and in silence he
proceeded to
search. From two pockets he took a dozen jewelled rings, each bearing
the tiny
tag of Lyne's Store. "Hullo!" said Tarling
sarcastically, "are these intended as a loving gift from Mr. Lyne to
Miss
Rider?" The man was speechless with rage. If
looks could kill, Tarling would have died. "A clumsy trick," said Tarling,
shaking his head mournfully. "Now go back to your boss, Mr. Thornton
Lyne,
and tell him that I am ashamed of an intelligent man adopting so crude
a
method," and with a kick he dismissed Sam Stay to the outer darkness. The girl, who had been a frightened
spectator of the scene, turned her eyes imploringly upon the detective. "What does it mean?" she
pleaded. "I feel so frightened. What did that man want?" "You need not be afraid of that man,
or any other man," said Tarling briskly. "I'm sorry you were
scared." He succeeded in calming her by the time
her servant had returned and then took his leave. "Remember, I have given you my
telephone number and you will call me up if there is any trouble.
Particularly," he said emphatically, "if there is any trouble
to-morrow." But there was no trouble on the following
day, though at three o'clock in the afternoon she called him up. "I am going away to stay in the
country," she said. "I got scared last night." "Come and see me when you get
back," said Tarling, who had found it difficult to dismiss the girl
from
his mind. "I am going to see Lyne to-morrow. By the way, the person who
called last night is a protιgι of Mr. Thornton Lyne's, a man who is
devoted to
him body and soul, and he's the fellow we've got to look after. By
Jove! It
almost gives me an interest in life!" He heard the faint laugh of the girl. "Must I be butchered to make a
detective's holiday?" she mocked, and he grinned sympathetically. "Any way, I'll see Lyne
to-morrow," he said. The interview which Jack Tarling
projected was destined never to take place. On the following morning, an early worker
taking a short cut through Hyde Park, found the body of a man lying by
the side
of a carriage drive. He was fully dressed save that his coat and
waistcoat had
been removed. Wound about his body was a woman's silk night-dress
stained with
blood. The hands of the figure were crossed on the breast and upon them
lay a handful
of daffodils. At eleven o'clock that morning the
evening newspapers burst forth with the intelligence that the body had
been
identified as that of Thornton Lyne, and that he had been shot through
the
heart. |