Cleek stood a moment holding the burnt
label between his thumb and forefinger and regarding
it silently, his face a blank as far as any expression
of his feelings was concerned. Then, of a sudden,
his gaze transferred itself to one of the two other
labels which, like this one, had escaped entire destruction
by the fire; and carefully picking them up, he laid
them inside his pocket notebook, gave a casual, offhand
sort of glance at the windows of Lord St. Ulmer’s
room, and then quietly resumed his sauntering walk
in the direction of the house.
The twilight was now so rapidly fading
that it might be said to be all but dark when he reached
the main entrance to the building and found one of
the footmen busily engaged in lighting up the huge
electric chandelier which served to illuminate the
broad hallway of the Grange. But neither the
General nor any of the ladies was visible, all, as
he correctly surmised, being engaged in the matter
of dressing for dinner.
“Pardon me, sir,” said
the footman, turning at the sound of his step as he
came in, “I was just about to step out into the
grounds to ascertain if you might not, by chance,
have lost yourself or failed to hear the dressing
gong, sir. It is quite half an hour since Miss
Lorne requested me to be on the lookout for you, and
I was getting anxious.”
“Extremely kind of you, I must
say,” said Cleek serenely. “But never
give yourself any uneasiness upon my account so long
as I remain here. I am given to taking my time
on all occasions, my man. I think out all the
plots of my novels prowling about in silence and alone,
and an interruption is apt to destroy a train of thought
forever.” And having thus given the man
an idea that he was an author and accounted
beforehand for any possible need for prowling about
the place when the others were asleep he
went further, and gave him half a crown to salve his
injured feelings, and won in return for it something
which he would have held cheaply bought at a sovereign.
“Now tell me,” he went
on, “why did Miss Lorne ask you to be ’on
the lookout’ for me? Has anything extraordinary
occurred?”
“Oh, no indeed, sir,”
replied the footman with a full half-crown’s
worth of urbanity; the generosity of the gentleman
had touched him on his weakest part. “You
see, sir, it being the butler’s evening off,
and Mr. Harry having been called away before any arrangements
were made with regard to your sleeping quarters, sir,
Miss Lorne requested me to say that she had spoken
to mistress, and you were to have any vacant suite
in the house which might best meet your pleasure, sir.
I was to wait here and conduct you through all the
unoccupied ones in the house.”
Cleek smiled. Oho! That
was it, eh? Well, there was a thoughtful ally
and no mistake! Knowing full well that it would
be awkward for him to be put off into some inconvenient
wing of the house, should he have cause to leave it
secretly and to communicate with Dollops and Narkom
at any time, she had taken this step to serve and
to assist him. What a woman! What a gem
of a woman she was!
His thoughts worked rapidly, and his
mind was made up in a twinkling.
“Quite so, quite so! Very
kind and very thoughtful,” he said composedly.
“I always prefer the second story of a building it’s
a fad of mine, and Miss Lorne recollects it.
So if there are any rooms vacant upon the second floor ”
“Only one, sir, and it’s
the least comfortable one in the house, I’m
afraid, being next to that occupied by Lord St. Ulmer.”
“Lord St. oh, ah yes!
That’s the gentleman who is ill, isn’t
it?”
“Yes, sir. That’s
why I spoke of it as being uncomfortable. Butler
says he’s a very crochety gentleman. But
sick folk are always that, sir; so maybe you’d
be disturbed a deal in the night.”
“Hum-m-m! Yes, that is
a drawback, certainly. Might take it into his
head to get up and wander about during the night, and
so keep one awake. Does he?”
“I couldn’t say, sir;
never set eyes on him since he arrived. Nobody
in the house has except master and butler. Don’t
think he would be likely to move about much, though,
sir, for I’ve heard his ankle’s sprained
and he can’t put a foot to the ground.
Butler always carries up his meals; at least, he has
done it so far, his lordship having arrived only the
night before last. Like as not I’ll have
to carry up his dinner to-night, this being, as I’ve
said, sir, butler’s evening off.”
Cleek made a mental tally. Then
if none of the servants at the Grange had seen his
lordship, with the single exception of Johnston, the
butler Quite so, quite so!
His lordship wouldn’t know what the other servants
were like, so, of course He glanced
at the footman out of the tail of his eye. Livery,
dark bottle-green almost black; would pass
for black in anything but a brilliant light. Waistcoat,
narrow black and yellow stripes. No cords, no
silver buttons. Hum-m-m! With a black-and-yellow
striped waistcoat and in a none too brilliantly lighted
room and a sickroom was not likely to be
anything else unless the man was too much of an ass
to keep up the illusion by attending to details an
ordinary suit of evening clothes would do the trick.
And he wouldn’t have a doctor and wouldn’t
see any outsiders, this Lord St. Ulmer, eh? Oh,
well you never know your luck, my lord;
you never do!
Mental processes are more rapid in
the action than in the recording. Not ten seconds
had passed from the time the footman ceased speaking
when Cleek answered him.
“Oh, well, if it’s a case
like that, and his lordship isn’t likely to
disturb me by wandering round his room in the night,
I dare say I can risk the rest, as I’m a very
sound sleeper. The room’s on the second
floor; that’s the main thing,” he said
offhandedly. “So you may show me to it
at once.”
“Very good, sir; this way if
you please, sir,” the footman replied, and forthwith
led him to the room in question.
It was one immediately adjoining that
occupied by Lord St. Ulmer, but unfortunately, having
no connection with it, the wall which divided the
two was quite solid. Had there been a door
But there was not. Cleek saw at a glance that
matters were not to be simplified in that way; whoever
might wish to see into that room must first get
into it: there was no other way.
“All right, this will do; you
may go,” he said as soon as he was shown to
the place he had chosen; and taking him at his word,
the footman gently closed the door and disappeared.
Cleek gave him but a minute or two to get below stairs,
then slipped out on tiptoe and followed, getting out
of the house unseen and running at all speed in the
direction of the stables.
At the angle of the wall he stopped
suddenly, and began to whistle “Kathleen Mavourneen.”
He hadn’t rounded off the third bar before the
wall door clicked and swung open, and Dollops was beside
him.
“Kit bag quick!”
whispered Cleek. “Need an evening suit,
and the chap who was going to lend me one went off
and forgot all about it. Move sharp, I’m
in a hurry.”
“Right ho!” said Dollops,
and vanished like a blown-out light. In half a
minute’s time he was back again, and the kit
bag with him.
“Here you are, gov’ner.
Shall I get out the evenin’ clothes, and put
the bag back under the hedge, or will you take it
with you?”
“I’ll take it. There
are other things I shall want. Where’s Mr.
Narkom?”
“Gone back to town, sir to the Yard.
Want him?”
“No, not yet; maybe not to-night
at all. Nip off and get yourself something to
eat and be back here by nine o’clock at the latest.
I shall very likely need you. Cut along!”
Then he caught up the kit bag, whisked away with it
into the darkness, and five minutes later stood again
in the room which he had so recently left.
Accustomed to rapid dressing, he got
into his evening clothes in less time than it would
have taken most men to unpack and lay them out ready
for use when required; and then, taking the half-burnt
labels from his pocketbook, carried them to the light
and studied them closely. None was so big as
the one which he had first inspected nor bore so much
printed matter; but fortunately one was a fragment
of the exactly opposite side, so that by joining the
two together he was able to make out the greater part
of it.
Clearly, then, the original label,
making allowance for what had been totally destroyed
by the flames, must have read:
JETANOLA
AN UNRIVALLED PREPARATION
FOR BOOTS, SHOES, AND ALL LEATHER
GOODS
MANUFACTURED SOLELY BY
FERDINAND LOVETSKI
63 ESSEX ROW
SOHO
After all, the imaginative reporter
had not been so far out when he figured those mysterious
markings upon the dead man’s shirt bosom to
read “63 Essex Row,” an address where one
Ferdinand Lovetski once did manufacture a certain
kind of blacking for boots, shoes, etc. Not
that they really did stand for that, of course, or
that this ingenious person had done anything more
than work out as a solution to the riddle of the marks
a name and an address that were eventually to come
into the case as they now had done but
in a totally different manner from what the author
of the theory intended or supposed.
Of two things Cleek was certain beyond
all question of error. First: that the dead
man was not Ferdinand Lovetski not in any
way connected with Ferdinand Lovetski to be precise;
second: that the markings on the shirt were not
made with “Jetanola” or any other kind
of blacking; and ingenious as the theory was, he was
willing to stake his life that those marks no more
stood for 63 Essex Row than they did for 21 Park Lane.
For one thing, what would be the sense of smearing
them on the dead man’s shirt bosom if they merely
stood for that? It was all very well for that
imaginative reporter to suggest that it was a sign
given by the assassin to the whole anarchistical brotherhood
that a debt of vengeance had been paid and a traitor
punished; but the brotherhood did not need any such
sign. If the man were Lovetski it would know of
his death without any such silly nonsense as that.
It knew the men it “marked,” and it knew
when those men died, and by whose hand, too; and it
did not go about placarding its victims with clues
to their identity or signs of whose hands had directed
the exterminating blow.
And Ferdinand Lovetski it never had
“marked” never had issued any
death sentence against, never had sought to punish,
never, indeed, had taken any interest in for
the simple reason that, as Cleek knew, the man had
been in his grave these seven years past! He knew
that beyond all question; for in those dark other
times that lay behind him forever in his
old “Vanishing Cracksman” days, in those
repented years when he and Margot had cast their lot
together and he had been the chosen consort of the
queen of the Apaches in those wild times
Lovetski, down on his luck, bankrupt through dissipation,
a thief by nature, and a lazy vagabond at heart, had
joined the Apaches and become one of them. Not
for long, however. Within six months word had
come to him of the death of a relative in his native
Russia, and of a little property that was now his
by right of inheritance; and he was for saying good-bye
to his new colleagues and journeying on to Moscow to
claim his little fortune. But the law of the
Apaches is the law of the commonwealth, and Margot
and her band had demanded the usual division.
Lovetski had rebelled against it; he had sworn that
he would not share; that what was his should remain
his only as long as he lived and it did.
But five days later his knife-jagged body was fished
out of the Seine and lay in the morgue awaiting identification;
Margot went thrice to see it before it went into the
trench with others that were set down in the records
as unknown.
That was seven years ago; and now
here was Lord St. Ulmer, or some one in his room,
burning labels that had to do with the days when that
dead man was in honest business, and had lost it simply
through dissipation after the police had discovered
that 63 Essex Row was used in part as a meeting place
for several “wanted” aliens, and had raided
it and closed it up.
Lovetski had never belonged to the
brotherhood; he had never even known that they met
under that roof until the time of the raid; but he
had been arrested with every other inmate of the house,
held as a suspect to await examination at the hands
of a magistrate, and in the meantime his business
had gone to the dogs. After that drink got him,
and acquaintances made in the place of detention became
associates and pals. It was only a step from
that to the Apaches, and from the Apaches to the Seine
and the trench; and the little fortune in Russia was
never claimed.
And now this Lord St. Ulmer was burning
labels that once had been the property of that man,
was he? And burning them at this particular period,
of all others, when somebody, who evidently had some
undesirable knowledge regarding him, had been mysteriously
done to death and the Yard was out on the trail of
the crime!
What did that mean? How did Lord
St. Ulmer come into possession of those labels?
And having come into possession of them, why had he
suddenly become anxious to get rid of them?
What few paltry effects Lovetski had
possessed when he joined the Apaches were left in
the room he hired from old Marise Madame
Serpice’s mother at the inn of the
“Twisted Arm.” The Apaches had gone
through them, and voted them not worth ten sous
the lot and very probably they were not.
Still there might have been letters, and there might
have been some unused labels; fellows of that sort
would be apt to keep things of that kind merely to
back up maudlin boasts of former standing. And
if there had been, if this Lord St. Ulmer had come
into possession of things that were left in the secret
haunts of the Apaches Decidedly
it would be an advantage to get a look at his lordship,
and that, too, as expeditiously as possible.
A footman’s waistcoat merely
that. He had one, that he knew; but was it in
the kit bag? He went over and reopened the bag,
and examined its contents. Good old Dollops!
What strokes of inspiration the chap sometimes had!
There it was, the regulation thing the stripes,
perhaps, a trifle broader than those the General’s
servants wore, but quite near enough to pass muster
with a stranger. Now, then, upon what pretext?
How? When? Hullo! What was that?
The dinner gong, by Jupiter!
Certainly! The very thing.
“Master wishes to know if there is any especial
dish your lordship fancies, or shall I bring up just
what cook has prepared?” That would do the trick
to a turn; and he need be only four or five minutes
late in going down to join his host and the ladies.
He whisked off his coat, waistcoat,
and necktie, and made the change in a twinkling.
Another and more subtle “change” yet
made even quicker altered his countenance
so completely that not one trace of likeness to Mr.
Philip Barch remained. A moment later he had passed
swiftly out of the room and was tapping upon Lord St.
Ulmer’s door.