“Because he’s been murdered. And don’t forget something else. He’s King’s Evidence—I promised him that, and you haven’t a case to go to a jury without him.”
The detective hesitated.
“But if he had anything to do with murdering his wife—”
“He didn’t. I believe that, and so will you. He was double-crossed. After his wife had seen him, he was told she’d got to disappear in case she shot her mouth. He thought she was just going to be kept somewhere in hiding, like he was. He’ll tell you all about it. The Grand Panjandrum knew he’d never stand for killing his wife, so that was the story. And that’s why he’s going to squeal. You are going to squeal, aren’t you, Ellshaw?”
The man licked his lips.
“Yes, I’ll talk. I’ll tell everythink I know.” His voice had gone back to its normal level, but it was coarse and raspy with the blind vindictiveness of the passion that was sweating down inside him. “But I didn’t kill Florrie. Nobody ’ad to kill ’er. I didn’t know nothink about it. I’ll tell yer.”
The Saint lighted a cigarette and drew the smoke down into his lungs.
“There you are, Claud,” he murmured. “Your case is all laid out for you. Shall I start the story or shall Ellshaw?”
Teal nodded.
“I think we’d better wait a moment before we begin,” he said. “Our police methods are useful sometimes. We’ve got young Nulland.”
“You have?”
“Yes.” Mr Teal was beginning to recover some of his habitual bored smugness. “He was held up with a puncture just outside Sunningdale, and a motor-cycle patrol spotted him—I had a phone call while the doctor was here last. He’s being sent back under guard—they ought to arrive any minute now.”
Simon raised his eyebrows.
“So you know that he wasn’t kidnapped after all?”
“It doesn’t look like it,” replied the detective stolidly. “Anyhow, there was nobody with him when he was found, and he hadn’t any convincing story to tell. We’ll soon know, when he gets here.”
The Saint let go a trickle of smoke, but before he could speak again a car hummed slowly up the road and stopped opposite the house. He sat up, with the careless lights wakening in his blue eyes, and listened to the tread of footsteps coming up the drive.
“Didn’t I tell you we were going to have fun?” he remarked. “I think your police are wonderful.”
Mr Teal looked at him for a moment, and then went out to open the front door.
Simon’s glance followed him, and then turned back to the man who sat quivering in the arm-chair. He swung his legs off the table.
“You’re the exhibit, aren’t you?” he said softly.
He turned the chair round so that Ellshaw faced the door and must be the first person whom the returning prodigal would see when he entered the room. Then he went back to his perch on the table and went on with his cigarette. Outwardly he was quite calm, and yet he was waiting for a moment which in its own way was the tensest climax of the adventure. Out of the twisted tangled threads, in breathless pauses between the shuttling of move and counter-move and unexpected revelation, he had at last built up a pattern and a theory. All the threads were in place, and it only wanted that last flash of the shuttle to bind them all irrefragably together—or tangle the web once more and set him back to the place where he began.
Inspector Oldwood came first; then the Honourable Kenneth Nulland; last of all came Teal, completing the party and closing the door behind him. Presumably the guard who had brought Nulland over from Sunningdale had been dismissed, or told to wait outside.
Simon did not so much as glance at the two detectives. His eyes were fixed on the pale fish-like face of Lord Ripwell’s son and heir.
He saw the face turn whiter, and saw the convulsive twitch of the young man’s hands and the sudden glazing of his eyes. Nulland’s lips moved voicelessly once or twice before any sound came.
“Oh God,” he said, and went down without another word in a dead faint.
Simon Templar drew a deep breath. “Now I can tell you a story,” he said.
9
Nulland sat on the sofa after they had brought him round. He sat staring at Ellshaw as if his brain was still incredulously trying to absorb the evidence of his eyes, and Ellshaw stared back at him with dry lips and stony eyes.
“I think this all began more than a year ago,” said the Saint.
Chief Inspector Teal searched for a fresh wafer of chewing-gum and unwrapped it. It was significant that at this time he made no attempt to assert his own authority to take charge of the proceedings, and, after one curious glance at him, Inspector Oldwood pulled out his pipe and found his way to a chair without interrupting.
“The idea, of course, was to get hold of Ripwell’s money,” Simon went on, lighting a cigarette. “Probably any other millionaire’s money would have done just as well, but Ripwell was the obvious victim close at hand. The question was how to do it. Ordinary swindling could be ruled out: Ripwell was much too keen a business man to let himself be diddled out of anything more than paltry sums. That left, on the face of it, one other chance—extortion. Well, that was tried, in a tentative sort of way. Ellshaw came here with some minor secret out of Ripwell’s past, and the result was just about what one would expect. Ripwell laid a trap for him, gave him a good scare, as he thought, and then didn’t bother to prosecute him.”
“How on earth did you know that?” asked Oldwood, with some surprise.
“From your cop outside—I was having a chat with him, and it just happened to come out. But I recognized Ellshaw from the description of this attempted blackmailer, which you probably couldn’t have done, and that made a lot of difference. But even so, it was only incidental evidence. It just clinched an explanation of why the blackmail had to be tackled afresh in a more roundabout way. I don’t think Ellshaw’s little effort was ever meant to succeed. It was meant to give a direct line on the way Ripwell could be expected to react to a bigger proposition, and it washed him out pretty completely. So that was when the real plot started.”
“You mean, to murder Lord Ripwell?” said Teal hesitantly.
“Yes. Of course, wilful murder was a much bigger proposition, but it had to be faced. And it was about the only solution. If Ripwell’s money couldn’t be extorted out of him, it could still be inherited. I’ll give our friend all the credit for looking at it cold-bloodedly, facing the facts, seeing the answer, and making the best possible use of the bare material at his disposal. Take a look at Nulland for yourselves—weak, vain, rather stupid, a gambler, capable of extraordinary viciousness when he’s in liquor—”
Mr Teal’s cherubic pink face seemed to go a shade less rubicund.
“But—good God!” he said. “To murder his own father—”
Simon looked at him oddly.
“You know, Claud, there are times when I ask myself whether anyone could possibly be so dumb as you try to make yourself out,” he remarked compassionately. “All I’m doing is telling you the facts about Nulland’s character as I had them from Martin Irelock, and he ought to know what he’s talking about. He does know, too, and he could prove it. Naturally he wouldn’t think of doing it, and I’m not too prejudiced, and I’ve got Ellshaw for a witness. Irelock wants to cover up Nulland. That’s why he put down that fake bloodstained handkerchief tonight, to make it look more positively like kidnapping—and I’m ready to bet that he actually told Kenneth to run away in the first place—because he could see that Nulland was shaking in his boots at the idea of being surrounded with detectives, even a wretched imitation of a detective like you, Claud. Irelock knew that Nulland couldn’t get through the rest of the evening, let alone the week-end, without getting caught out, and he was ready to go to any lengths to save him. He’s been setting himself up as a shield all along. Anywhere between last week and a year ago, when Nulland thought he’d killed Ellshaw, Irelock played guardian angel.”
“Do you mean Irelock was in it with
him?” stammered Mr Teal blankly.
The Saint’s lips twitched helplessly, but he held back the scathing retort which they were shaping automatically. His keen ears had caught an infinitesimal sound outside the room, and in one amazing soundless moment he had hitched himself off the table and crossed over to the door. He turned the handle and whipped it open, and his long arm shot out and caught Martin Irelock as the secretary was turning away.
“Come in,” said the Saint’s gentlest voice. “Come in and help me finish my story.”
Irelock came in because he had to. With the Saint’s iron grip on his arm, he had no option. He was in his pyjamas and a thick camel-hair dressing-gown, and his unnaturally old doll-like face was even greyer than it had been when he had swallowed his recent glassful of whisky and nitroglycerine. Simon closed the door again and stayed with his back to it.
“What’s the matter?” demanded Irelock, in a strangely weak voice. “I heard somebody arrive—”
“Lots of people have been arriving, dear old fruit,” said the Saint heartily. “In fact, the whole cast is more or less assembled. We were only waiting for you to complete the party. And now I want you to tell all these nice kind policemen how you set out to get hold of Ripwell’s millions.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Irelock throatily.
“No?” The Saint’s voice returned to gentleness. “Well, you’ve got a lot of good precedents for that remark. I think nearly all the best murderers have said it. But this time we know too many of the answers. In fact, I think I could almost finish the job without any help from you. We all know how, when you first got the idea of making yourself rich, you tried Ripwell on blackmail—through Ellshaw here. And we were just starting to reconstruct your next move. We’ve seen how you must have figured out that if you couldn’t get anything out of Ripwell, it’d be a damned sight easier to get it out of his son. We’ve got a good idea of how you set about it. Using Ellshaw again, you must have engineered Kenneth into a gamble with him. You knew Kenneth’s weaknesses. You fed him plenty of drink at the same time. Ellshaw is such a damn bad card-sharper that people see through him even when they are tight, as Teal told me. Kenneth saw through him. There was a quarrel, then a fight. Ellshaw got laid out—as you’d planned. And then you sobered Kenneth up and told him Ellshaw was dead. You said you’d find a way to get rid of the body and cover up the evidence, and later you told him you’d done it. And from that moment he was in your power to do what you liked with—while you were making him believe, all the time, that you were his best friend. All you had to do was to hide your partner—Ellshaw—away, while you got rid of Ripwell, and then, after Kenneth had inherited the money, everything was set for you to start putting on the screw.”
“That’s right, guv’nor,” Ellshaw broke in savagely. “That’s wot ’e told me. An’ I shammed dead, an’ everythink. And then the dirty double-crossin’ swine—”
“The man’s raving,” said Irelock unsteadily.
“Nuts,” said the Saint crisply. “You’re through, and you know it. Kenneth’s here to tell the world how you kidded him you were saving him from the gallows. Ellshaw’s here to tell us that that’s the plot as you put it up to him. And Ellshaw’s here as well to tell us how you double-crossed him by killing his wife!”
Ellshaw was coming up out of his chair with a red flame in his eyes. His fingers were curled and rigid like claws.
“Yes, that’s wot you did,” he snarled. “You told me she wouldn’t come to no ’arm—you swore you was only goin’ to ’ide ’er away somewhere. And you killed ’er! You murdered my wife. You told me a lot of lies. You knew I wouldn’t’ve let yer do it if I’d known. And you were goin’ to keep me workin’ in with you, ’elpin’ yer to mike money an’ playin’ all yer dirty games, when all the time you’d got Florrie’s blood on yer ’ands. My Gawd, if ’anging isn’t too good for yer—”
His voice went into a sort of shriek. Oldwood, who was nearest, wrapped powerful arms round him and held him back.
“That’s the swine as did it!” screamed Ellshaw. “’E told me wot ’e was up to, ’ow ’e was goin’ to kill Lord Ripwell an’ then put the black on ’is son fer ’aving killed me in a fight. I know all about it! An’ I can tell yer ’ow ’e meant to kill Mr Templar in Duchess Place—”
“Take it easy,” said Oldwood, struggling with him.
Teal thrust himself forward at last, a massive figure of belated officialdom coming into its egregious own. He looked at Nulland.
“Is that true?”
The young man swallowed.
“Yes,” he said in a low voice. “At least, the part about me is.”
“You ran away tonight because you thought we were after you?”
The other nodded without speaking, and Teal turned back to Irelock.
“Have you got any answer to make?”
Irelock stood silent, looking from face to face. His mouth tightened, making his Kewpie face seem even more grotesquely grown up, but he did not open it to reply. The detective waited; then he shrugged.
“Very well. I shall have to take you into custody, of course. I had to warn you that anything you say may be taken down and used in evidence against you.”
For the first time since he had come into the room, Irelock met his eyes. He even smiled slightly.
“That’s hardly necessary, Inspector,” he said. “You seem to have plenty of evidence already. I think I can flatter myself that it took a clever man to catch me.” His gaze wandered significantly over to the Saint. “When did you first…suspect me?”
“When you saw a face at the window,” Simon told him, “and the party broke up at a very psychological moment. I hadn’t anything definite even then, but I began to wonder.”
Irelock nodded.
“That was bad luck, of course,” he said matter-of-factly. “But I had to do something to stop Kenneth finding out that Ellshaw had been seen alive. Then, after I’d started a scare, I thought I might as well go on with it. If I’d been lucky, I might have got you and Ripwell in the garden—as it was, you nearly got me.” He touched his forearm, where the bullet had grazed him. “But it made my story more circumstantial. It was only afterwards that I realized that Kenneth might be suspected, and I had to try and manufacture some evidence in his favour.”
“Why did you drink your own poison?”
“Partly because Teal wouldn’t drink, and by that time I knew I’d got to get rid of both of you together. Partly because you’d just been saying things which showed me that you were fairly hot on my trail—I didn’t know what you might have said to Teal already. It was the only time I lost my nerve. I tried to turn the idea into a way of throwing you off the scent again.”
“Do you realize the meaning of all you’re saying?” asked Teal grimly.
Irelock sighed.
“Oh, yes. Quite well. But there doesn’t seem to be much point in giving you any more trouble. After all, you’ve got other witnesses. You ought not to have Ellshaw, but that’s another piece of bad luck. I told him that if he saw a red light in my window he was to keep away, but apparently he didn’t keep away far enough.”
“One more question,” said the Saint. “Why didn’t you kill me in Duchess Place?”
“Because I hadn’t got a gun,” answered Irelock simply. “I never set out to go in for that sort of crime—not till it was thrust on me. I notice that murderers in books always have guns, but they aren’t really easy for the amateur to get hold of. I should have got rid of you like I got rid of Mrs Ellshaw—knocked you out and sunk you in the river while you were unconscious. It was only when things began to happen down here that I got hold of Ripwell’s old revolver. And of course he did have some ammunition, but he’d forgotten it.”
“Have you still got this gun?” Teal asked quickly.
Irelock’s lips moved in a wan smile, and he put his right hand into the breast of his dressing-gown. Three of them at least caught the sudden cunning shift of his eyes, and r
ealized too late what was coming—it was queer, Simon reflected afterwards, how completely they had been taken in by his implied surrender, when every one of them should have known that the murderers who make a full and calm confession at the moment when they are unmasked are as rare as fresh pineapples in Lapland.
What Ellshaw knew, or what he guessed, none of them ever discovered. It is only on record that he was the first of them to move, the only one to get up and go straight for Irelock. Twice the room rocked to the crash of the heavy gun, and Ellshaw staggered at the impact of each shot, but he held on his course. He must have been dead on his feet, but in some uncanny way he caught Irelock at the door and fell on his arm, dragging the revolver down so that it could only aim at the floor. It took two men to unlock the clutch of his fingers on Irelock’s wrist, and the bruises of that dying grip were still stamped on the other’s flesh a fortnight later, when he stepped down from the dock to wait for the answer to the greatest mystery of all.
THE CASE OF THE FRIGHTENED INNKEEPER
1
Business took Simon Templar to Penzance, though nobody ever knew exactly what he had to do there. He took Hoppy Uniatz with him for company, but Hoppy never saw him do it. Simon parked him in the bar of a convenient pub for an hour, and that was that. For all that this story can record, he may have spent the hour in another pub across the street, talking to nobody and watching nothing. The Saint’s business was as irregular as himself and directed by the same incalculable twists of motive: he was liable to do a great many important things with apparent aimlessness, and a great many unimportant things with the most specious and circumstantial parade of reasons.
It is about two hundred and eighty miles from London to Penzance, which the Saint drove in five hours, including one break for a cigarette and a drink in Taunton, and after that one hour for which Hoppy Uniatz was alone, he climbed back into his car as if he was cheerfully prepared to drive the same two hundred and eighty miles home without further delay.
The Saint Goes On (The Saint Series) Page 16