‘No,’ said Cheyne, considerably surprised, ‘and I should like to know why you were expecting me and how you know I was ill.’
The man smiled deprecatingly.
‘If I was really up to my job I suppose I’d tell you that detectives knew everything, or at least that I did, but I never make any mystery between friends, leastwise when there isn’t any. I knew you were ill because I was down at Warren Lodge a month ago looking for you and Miss Cheyne told me, and I was expecting you to call because I wrote asking you to do so. However, if you didn’t get my letter, why then it seems to me I owe the pleasure of this visit to something else.’
‘You’re quite right,’ said Cheyne. ‘You do. But before we get on to that, tell me what you called and wrote about.’
‘I’ll do so, sir. I called because I had got some information for you, and when I didn’t see you I wrote for the same reason asking you to look in here.’
The man spoke civilly and directly, but yet there was something about him which rubbed Cheyne up the wrong way—something furtive in his manner, by which instinctively the other was repelled. It was therefore with rather less than his usual good-natured courtesy that Cheyne returned: ‘Well, here I am then. What is your information?’
‘I’ll tell you, sir. But first let me recall to your mind what I—acting for my firm—was asked to find out.’ He stressed the words ‘acting for my firm,’ and as he did so shot a keen questioning glance at Cheyne. The latter did not reply and Speedwell, after pausing for a moment, went on:
‘I was employed—or rather my firm was employed’—what his point was Cheyne could not see, but he was evidently making one—‘my firm was employed by the manager of the Edgecombe Hotel to investigate a case of alleged drugging which had taken place in the hotel. That was all, wasn’t it?’
‘That or matters arising therefrom,’ Cheyne replied cautiously.
The detective smiled foxily.
‘Ah, I see you have taken my meaning, Mr Cheyne. That or matters arising directly therefrom. That, sir, is quite correct. Now, I have found out something about that. Not much, I admit, but still something. Though whether it is as much as you already are cognisant of is another matter.’
Cheyne felt his temper giving way.
‘Look here,’ he said sharply. ‘What are you getting at? I can’t spend the day here. If you’ve anything to say, for goodness’ sake get along and say it and have done with this beating about the bush.’
Speedwell made a deprecating gesture.
‘Certainly, sir; as you will. But’—he gave a dry smile—‘have you not overlooked the fact that you called in to consult me?’
‘I shall not do it now,’ Cheyne said angrily. ‘Give me the information that you’re being paid for and that will complete our business.’
‘No, sir, but with the utmost respect that will only begin it. I’ll give you the information right away, but first I’d like to come to an understanding about this other business.’
‘What under the sun are you talking about? What other business?’
‘The breaking and entering.’ Speedwell spoke now in a decisive, businesslike tone. ‘The breaking and entering of a house in Hopefield Avenue—Laurel Lodge, let us call it—on an evening just six weeks ago—on the fifth of April to be exact. I should really say the burglary, because there was also the theft of an important document. The owners of that document would be glad of information which would lead to the arrest of the thief.’
This astounding statement, made in the calm matter-of-fact way in which the man was now speaking, took Cheyne completely aback. For a moment he hesitated. His character was direct and straightforward, but for the space of two seconds he was tempted to prevaricate, to admit no knowledge of the incidents referred to. Then his hot temper swept away all considerations of what might or might not be prudent and he burst out: ‘Well, Mr Speedwell, what of it? If you are so well informed as you pretend, you’ll be aware that the parties lost no document on that night. I don’t know what you’re after, but it looks uncommonly like an attempt at blackmail.’
Mr Speedwell seemed pained at the suggestion. He assured Cheyne that his remarks had been misinterpreted, and deprecated the fact that such an unpleasant word had been brought into the discussion. ‘All the same,’ he concluded meaningly, ‘I am glad to have your assurance that the document in question was not stolen from the house.’
Cheyne was not only mystified, but a trifle uneasy. He saw now that he had been manœuvred into a practical admission that he had committed burglary, and there was something in the way the detective had made his last remark that seemed vaguely sinister.
‘Well, what business of yours is it?’ he said brusquely. ‘What do you hope to get out of it?’
Speedwell nodded as he looked at the other out of his close-set furtive eyes.
‘Now, sir,’ he answered approvingly, ‘that’s what I like. That’s coming to business, that is. I thought perhaps I could be of service to you, that’s all. Here are these parties looking for you to make a prosecution for burglary, and here you are looking for them for a paper they have. And here am I,’ his face was inexpressibly sly, ‘in a position to help either party, as you might say. There’s an old saying, sir, that knowledge is power, and many a time I’ve thought it’s a true one.’
‘And you want to sell your knowledge?’
‘Isn’t it reasonable, and natural? It’s my business to get knowledge, and I have to work hard to get it too. You wouldn’t have me give away the fruits of my work? It’s all I have to live by.’
‘Your knowledge belongs to your firm.’
‘No sir, not in this case it doesn’t. All this work was done in my own time; it was my hobby, so to speak. Besides, my firm didn’t ask for the information and don’t want it.’
‘What do you want for it?’
A momentary gleam appeared in Mr Spedwell’s eyes, but he replied quietly and without emotion: ‘Two hundred pounds. Two hundred pounds and you shall hear all I know, and have my best help in whatever you want to do into the bargain. And in that case I won’t be able to tell the other parties where you are to be found, so being as their question was addressed to me and not to my firm.’
‘Two hundred pounds!’ Cheyne cried. ‘I’ll see you far enough first. Confound your impertinence!’ His anger rose and he almost choked. ‘Don’t you imagine you are going to blackmail me! But I’ll tell you what I am going to do. I’m going right in now to the head of your firm to let him know the way you conduct his business. Two hundred pounds. I don’t think!’
He flung himself out of the room and called the girl in the outer office.
‘I want to see the principal of the firm,’ he shouted. ‘It’s important. Either Mr Horton or Mr Lavender will do. As soon as possible, please.’
The girl seemed half startled and half amused. ‘Who did you want to see?’ she asked.
‘Mr Horton or Mr Lavender,’ Cheyne repeated firmly, fixing her with a wrathful stare.
‘I—I’m afraid I don’t know where they are,’ she stammered, the corners of her mouth twitching. Yes, she was laughing at him. Confound her impertinence also!
‘You don’t know?’ he shouted furiously. ‘When will they be in?’
The girl looked scared, then her amusement evidently overcame her apprehension and she giggled.
‘Not today, I’m afraid,’ she answered. ‘You see Mr Horton has been dead over ten years and Mr Lavender at least five.’
Cheyne glared at her as he asked thickly:
‘Then who is the present principal?’
‘Mr Speedwell.’
‘Damn,’ said Cheyne: then as he looked at the smiling face of the pretty clerk he suddenly felt ashamed of himself.
‘I’m sure I beg your pardon,’ he said, and as he saw how neatly he had got his deserts he laughed ruefully himself. This confounded temper of his, he thought, was always putting him into the wrong. He was just determining for the thousandth time that he would be mor
e careful not to give way to it in future when Mr Speedwell’s melancholy voice fell on his ears.
‘Ah, that is better, sir. Won’t you come back and let us resume our discussion?’
Cheyne re-entered the private room.
‘I’m sorry I lost my temper,’ he said, ‘but really your proposition was so very—I may say, amazing, that it upset me. Of course you were not serious in what you said?’
Mr Speedwell leaned forward and became the personification of suave amiability.
‘I sell my wares in the best market, Mr Cheyne,’ he declared. ‘You couldn’t blame me for that; it’s only business. But I don’t want to drive a hard bargain with you. I would rather have an amicable settlement. I’m always on for peace and goodwill. An amicable settlement, sir; that’s what I suggest.’ He beamed on Cheyne and rubbed his hands genially together.
‘If you have information which would be useful to me I am prepared to pay its full value. As a matter of fact I called for that purpose. But you couldn’t have any worth two hundred pounds or anything like it.’
‘No? Well, just what do you want to know?’
‘Dangle’s address.’
‘I can give you that. Anything else?’
Cheyne hesitated. Should he ask for all the information he could get about the sinister quartet and their mysterious activities? He had practically admitted the burglary. Should he not make the most of his opportunity? In for a penny, in for a pound.
‘Did you ever hear of a man called Sime?’ he asked.
‘Of course, sir. Number Three of the quartet.’
‘I should like his address also.’
‘I can give it to you. And Blessington’s?’
‘Yes, Blessington’s too.’
Cheyne was amazed by the knowledge of this Speedwell. He would give a good deal to find out how he had obtained it.
‘What are the businesses of these men?’
‘That,’ said Mr Speedwell, ‘is three questions. First: What is Dangle’s business? Second : What is Sime’s business? Third: What is Blessington’s business? Yes, sir, I can answer these questions also.’
‘How did you find all that out?’
Mr Speedwell smiled and shook his head.
‘There, sir, you have me. I’m afraid I can’t tell you that. You see, if we professional detectives were to give away our little methods to you amateur gentlemen we should soon be out of business. You, sir, will appreciate the position. It would be parting with our capital, and no business man can afford to do that. Anything else, Mr Cheyne?’
‘You mentioned a paper?’
‘Yes, sir?’
‘Where is it?’
‘That I can answer partially.’
‘What is it about?’
‘I do not know.’
‘Ah, then there is something you do not know. What is the enterprise these men are going into in connection with the paper?’
‘That Mr Cheyne, I do not know either. You see I am perfectly open with you. I have been conducting a sort of desultory inquiry into these men’s affairs, partly because I was interested, partly because I thought I could turn my information into money. I have reached the point indicated in my answers. I can proceed with, the investigation and learn the rest of what you wish to know, assuming of course that we come to suitable terms. You can have the information I have already gained now, with of course the same proviso.’
‘What are your terms?’
‘Twenty pounds a question. You have asked six questions to which I can give complete answers and one which I can answer partially; say six twenties and one ten—total, one hundred and thirty pounds.’
‘But it’s iniquitous, scandalous, extortionate! I shouldn’t think of paying such a sum.’
‘No, sir? That’s a matter for yourself alone. It seems to me, then, that our business is completed.’ The man paused, then as Cheyne made no move continued confidentially. ‘You see, sir, I needn’t tell a gentleman like yourself that value is relative and not absolute. If I hadn’t another party willing to pay for my information about you I couldn’t perhaps afford to refuse what you might be pleased to offer. But if I don’t get my hundred and thirty from you I’ll get it from the other party. It’s a matter of £ s. d. for me.’
‘But how do I know you won’t get my hundred and thirty and then go to the other party for his?’
Mr Speedwell smiled craftily.
‘You don’t know, sir. In these matters one person has to take the other’s word. You pay your money and you get the information you ask for. You don’t pay and I keep it. It’s for you to say what you’ll do.’
Cheyne sat in thought. It was evident this man could give him valuable information, and he was well aware that if he had employed him to obtain it it might easily have cost him more than the sum asked. He did not doubt, either, that the quartet had asked for information about himself. When his dead body had not been found it would have been a likely move. But he was surprised that they should have asked under their own names. But then again, they mightn’t have. Speedwell might have found these out. It was certainly an extraordinary coincidence that himself and the gang should have consulted the same private detective, though of course there was nothing inherently impossible in it.
On the whole he felt disposed to pay the money. He was comfortably enough off and he would scarcely feel it. The payment would not commit him to anything or put him in any way in the power of this detective. Moreover, the man was evidently skilful at his job and it might be useful enough to have him on his side. And last, but not least, after his failure of the day before it would be a pleasure to go back to Miss Merrill and tell her how well he had succeeded on this occasion.
‘Look here,’ he said. ‘I don’t think you can expect me to believe that these people came and asked you to find the burglar who had made off with their confidential paper, so that they might prosecute. That’s rather tall, you know. Why didn’t they go direct to the police?’
‘I’m only telling you what they said. I’m not saying I believed it was really what they wanted.’ Speedwell paused. ‘As a matter of fact I don’t mind telling you what I think,’ he went on presently. ‘I believe they are scared about you, and they want to find you to finish up the job they bungled. That’s what I think, but I may be wrong.’
‘And if I pay you your hundred and thirty you’ll give me your pledge not to give them the information?’
Mr Speedwell looked pained.
‘I don’t think I said that, sir. It was two hundred that was mentioned. But see here. I don’t want to be grasping. If you make it the even hundred and fifty I’ll answer your questions and not theirs. Is it a bargain, sir?’
‘Yes,’ said Cheyne. ‘I have my cheque-book here and I’ll fill you in a cheque for the money as soon as I get your replies.’
Mr Speedwell beamed.
‘Excellent, sir. An amicable settlement. That’s what I like. Well, sir, I can trust you to keep your word. Here are the answers to your questions.’ He took a bulky note-book from his pocket and continued:
‘First question, Dangle’s present address: Earlswood, Dalton Avenue, Wembley.’ He waited while Cheyne wrote the address, then went on: ‘Second question, Sime’s present address: 12 Colton Street, Putney.’ Again a pause and then: ‘Third question, Blessington’s present address: Earlswood, Dalton Av—’
‘The same as Dangle’s?’
‘The same as Dangle’s, or rather, to be strictly accurate, Dangle’s is the same as Blessington’s. Blessington lives at this place and has for several years; Dangle joined him about six weeks ago, to be precise, on the day after the incident which I have just forgotten.’
Cheyne nodded with a rueful smile.
‘Well, then, these men’s occupations?’
Mr Speedwell was not to be hurried.
‘Fourth question,’ he proceeded methodically, ‘Dangle’s occupation. Dangle, Mr Cheyne, is just an ordinary town sharp. He has a bit of money and adds to it in the usual way
s. He’s in with a card-sharping gang and helps them in their stunts—for a consideration. He frequents a West End gaming room, and if there is any fat pigeon around he’ll lend a hand in the plucking. The sister helps as a decoy. They’re a warm pair and I should think are watched by the police. They’ll not want their dealings with you to come into the limelight anyway, so you’ve a pull over them there.’
‘Has Dangle no ostensible profession?’
‘Not that I know of, unless you call billiard playing a profession.’
‘You might give me the address of the gaming rooms.’
‘27 Greenway Lane, Knightsbridge.’
‘What about Sime?’
‘Sime is another of the same kidney. He does the night club end and brings likely mugs on to the gaming rooms. A plausible ruffian, Sime. A man without scruple and bad to be up against. He has no ostensible business either.’
‘And Blessington?’
‘Blessington is, in my opinion, the worst of the three. He has ten times the brains of the other two put together and is an out and out scoundrel. He’s well enough off in a small way and is supposed to have made his money by systematic blackmail. He’s supplying the cash for this little do of yours, whatever it may be. He is believed at Wembley to be something in the city, but I don’t think he has any job. Lives on the interest of his money, I should think.’
Cheyne noted the replies, marvelling how the detective had come to learn so much. Then he asked his seventh question.
‘Where is the paper?’
‘That, sir, I can only answer partially. It is, or was up until quite lately, in Blessington’s possession. Whether he carries it about with him or keeps it in his house or in his bank I don’t know. He may even have lent it to one of the others, but he is the chief of the enterprise and it appears to belong to him.’
‘That’s all right,’ Cheyne admitted. ‘Now what were you going to tell me apart from these questions—the information you wrote about?’
‘Simply, sir, that the man who drugged you in the Edgecombe Hotel in Plymouth was named Stewart Blessington, that he lived at Wembley, and that he drugged you in order to ascertain if you carried on your person a certain paper of which he was in search.’
Inspector French and the Cheyne Mystery Page 11