by John Creasey
They walked slowly across the library, and Mannering’s mind was humming with the words “and an armed man.” That was something he hadn’t expected. He looked about him, and caught sight of the man sitting unobtrusively in a corner of the room. He was reading, and didn’t look up, even when Fauntley went to a bureau near him, unlocked it, and dropped a key into a drawer. Then he locked the drawer and turned towards the others.
But Mannering knew what had happened, and he could scarcely believe that luck was breaking his way so much. Fauntley kept the key of the strong-room in that bureau. Of course, in many ways it was safe; few people would look for it there, unless they knew it could be found.
Mannering knew; and he was telling himself that the bureau drawer could be prised open in a few seconds.
He glanced again at the guard, a short, stocky fellow who would be difficult to get past; difficult, but not impossible by any means . . .
“What are you going to do after that?” asked Lorna. Mannering, leaning against the marble mantelpiece of the lounge, surveyed his companion silently for several seconds. Lord and Lady Fauntley, abruptly conscious of the duties of parenthood, had disappeared on some mysterious errand, and Mannering had been with their daughter for several minutes. Neither had spoken until that question.
Mannering shrugged his shoulders at last.
“Do I satisfy?” Lorna asked suddenly.
“Y’know, you shouldn’t have said that,” said Mannering. “You’re not made for peddling the obvious.”
“Isn’t this isolation of the young with the eligible just as obvious?” demanded Lorna, her eyes smouldering. “Or do you still preserve your innocence in a world of matchmaking parents?”
“Sometimes it’s folly to be wise,” said Mannering, and took a deep breath. “I like your mother.”
“Poor Dad!”
“Rich, I thought the better word. In more ways than one.”
A tinge of colour flooded the girl’s cheeks. In the soft light of the lounge she had a loveliness that a harsher light might have mocked.
“And are you considering your verdict?” she asked with an effort. “While Mother’s saying, ‘I wonder if,’ and Dad’s grunting, ‘Not a chance, m’dear; the little fool s got no sense.
“It’s a regular performance, then?”
“Almost a vicious habit. But lately it’s been - I’ve been away more often. You may have heard” - her eyes danced - “that I paint.”
He smiled and nodded.
“I’ve heard it rumoured.”
“Of course. So many of your friends belong to the studio set, don’t they?”
Mannering laughed, and took his cigarette-case from his waistcoat pocket. Lorna shook her head as he proffered it.
“You keep saying what you’re not feeling,” Mannering said, as he selected a cigarette and poised it in the air. “It seems out of character to me. There are pretty cats and pretty women, each admirable of their species, but when a woman turns cat she seems all claws - from the man’s point of view.”
“Some men’s. Anyhow” - she flushed - “I’m sorry. What were you thinking of in there?”
“You want the truth?”
“It’s not entirely out of fashion - even in our age.”
“I was wondering what your eyes would look like if a lamp was held in front of them, as it was held over the diamonds.”
“Ye-es. You’re capable of thinking like that. What else?”
“I was wondering what the chances were of breaking into the strong-room,” said Mannering, laughing. He hardly knew what daredevil spirit prompted the statement; it came almost unbidden.
She stared at him for a moment, and he was puzzled by the expression in her eyes.
Finally her lips curved.
“Ye-es,” she said again; “I believe you’re capable of that too.”
Of thinking of it?”
“Even doing it.”
Mannering lit his cigarette, glad of the chance to keep his eyes averted. God! She was near the mark! And he was a fool to have mentioned the idea.
“Hm. Well, it’s a good job I can resist that temptation,” he said. “I’m not thinking of trying it yet. And now, with the night still young, what next?”
“I liked that ‘yet,’” she said.
“Forget it.”
“I doubt if I ever shall, so be careful. As for the rest of the evening, I’d rather like to dance in a crowd, where there’s no room to move or breathe, the noise Negroid, and the band to match. But I think it would be fairer to go back to my studio.”
“You sleep there?”
“The question and answer could be misconstrued,” Lorna said, “but I’ll risk it. Yes, sometimes.”
“Why would it be fair?”
“Fairer, I said. Because I dislike rousing false hopes in fond parents.”
Mannering laughed, and smoke streamed from his lips.
“Frankness can be almost a vice,” he said. “But I rarely wonder what others will think. If I’m amused I’m satisfied.”
“You think I’ve possibilities, then?”
“I’d like to prove it.”
Lorna laughed, but the mockery was back in her eyes.
“Do you ever think of anything but amusement?”
“Why, yes. I think so. I study Ruff’s Guide.”
“That’s an evasion.”
“Naturally,” acknowledged Mannering, chuckling.
“Is there time these days to cope with anything but amusement? It’s a life’s work to watch for every variety.”
“I believe, too, you even work overtime.”
“I wasn’t thinking of musical comediennes.” Mannering smiled. “They’re the novice grades. There are endless other things - and I’ve found them all wanting.”
“It may have been you who were wanting.”
“More than likely, but my education’s not finished.
Well, it’s something past ten. How does the Dernier suggest itself?”
“No other dates?”
“Two. One I’ve already missed; the other I’m willing to forget.”
“Hm.” Her eyes held his, with a glimmer of mingled amusement, mockery, and challenge. “Should I trust myself to such a memory?”
Mannering laughed as he crushed his cigarette into a tray.
“The safest way never to lose a thing is never to have it,” he said.
“I’m ready to try anything once,” said Lorna. “While I powder my nose spread the good news among the parents, and try not to see the light in their eyes.”
She turned away easily, and walked towards the stairs. Mannering stood watching her, and his lips moved.
“A cat,” he said, “but a wild-cat. Lord, what a life! One Lucy and one Hugo produced her. Her!”
And she liked that ‘yet.’
At half-past one they left the Dernier Club, and Mannering handed Lorna into a taxi.
“Chelsea,” he asked, “or Langford Terrace?”
“Langford Terrace,” said Lorna. “Even for the West home’s best - and probably safest.”
Mannering instructed the driver and climbed into the cab.
“That remark,” he said, as they moved from the kerb, “was the fourth you’ve made to-night that wasn’t worthy of you.”
“Both your standards and your arithmetic sound horribly precise,” Lorna said.
“And need revising for the brave new world?” chuckled Mannering. “Well, was the Dernier nearer your standard?”
“Divine - if only there’d been a decent floor, plenty of room, and a breath of air,” she answered.
“You’ve forgotten the Negro band that should have been white,” said Mannering. “Are you trying to convince me you are typical of the variable feminine?”
“I may be, but I wasn’t trying to convince you of anything. I think I’d like to paint you. Head and shoulders.”
“Thanks, but I prefer photographs.”
“They can only reflect what you look like, not what y
ou are.’
“What am I?”
“I haven’t discovered - yet.”
Mannering chuckled.
“I liked that ‘yet,”’ he said.
4: Touch And Go
John Mannering had enjoyed the evening, not solely because of the discovery that Lorna Fauntley was what he called, for want of a better description, intriguing. The Fauntley strong-room remained in his thoughts like a sharp etching - something he could not forget. He remembered, for he had forced them into his mind, the numbers of the safe’s combination; and there was little about the precautions Fauntley took to guard his collection that Mannering didn’t know. If there was one thing that really worried him it was the armed guard.
By now Mannering had thoroughly accustomed himself to the thought that he would start a campaign of cracksmanship, even though so far the thing was hazy in his mind, and he was tempted to laugh at it rather than take it seriously. What easier way of making money than as a gentleman-thief
A thief? The word made him stop and think.
‘Cracksman’ sounded more pleasant; it gave the project a Robin Hood gallantry; but if he was to be honest with himself, and it was absurd to be anything else, he would earn the name of thief - and deserve it.
As he thought of these things a sardonic smile curved the corners of his lips. If the word itself was hard to face, so were facts. Cash he must have, and quickly, or he would go under. Going under was the devil, whereas his very life gave him opportunities to steal in a hundred places - yes, and without the slightest risk of suspicion.
The decision that had been hovering in his mind came to a head on the afternoon following the dinner at the Fauntleys. Mannering weighed up the chances coolly, and decided that the odds favoured him. In the Fauntley strong-room he had been presented with as near a ‘sitter’ as a cracksman could pray for, and it was almost like looking a gift-horse in the mouth to refuse the opportunity.
The decision being reached, he did not propose to lose much time. The quicker he made the plunge the better.
He realised that there were several things he would need, but most important of all, he told himself, was a weapon to help him in emergency. He decided cheerfully that the most effective would be a gas-pistol with a load of diluted gas, but for the moment that was impossible. He had an old Army revolver, however, without ammunition to fit it; if he took it with him it might have a demoralising effect on anyone he met - it was absurd, he knew, to be sure that he would get through without some trouble - and if necessary its butt would come in useful as a club. Yes, the revolver was what he wanted.
The rest was comparatively easy.
Towards evening, with the prospect of the raid on the Fauntley house making his heart beat fast, he spent an hour making various small purchases. For tools he told himself he needed two small screwdrivers, two thin files, and a tiny hammer. He bought a pair of thin rubber gloves from a department store, and later a pair of rubber-soled golf-shoes. Finally - and he chuckled when the idea came - he bought a handkerchief with the initials T.B. on it. The initials meant nothing to him then - and he had no idea what they were likely to mean; he proposed to use it simply as an admirable ‘clue’ to leave behind for the police.
He was ready.
And he was going through with the first effort; he knew that until he did he would be restless; as much as anything else he was hungering for a gamble that carried a real risk, and, providing his victims were sufficiently wealthy to sustain the financial loss, his conscience would not trouble him.
He felt cool enough as he approached the Fauntley home that night, and his nerves seemed steadier than ever as he walked towards Langford Terrace and entered the grounds of the house by the side entrance. It was shadowed there, and he was hidden from the street by a thick hedge. The situation was perfect, for one of the library windows opened on to this side of the house.
And there was a light coming from it, given by the reading-lamp in one corner, where the armed guard was sitting and waiting for the dawn to come. Mannering knew he had only to outwit the man and he was through. Only!
Very softly, and with a set smile on his lips, he approached the window.
Misgivings stronger than any that had attacked him before flooded through John Mannering’s mind as he came closer to the window. The odds against him seemed multiplied enormously; the slightest slip now, and he would be in the armed guard’s power; the police would be called; Fauntley would recognise him. He felt hot, and his hands trembled as he touched the window-sill.
He told himself that he had been too impetuous: he should have taken more than a single afternoon to collect the things he would need for burglary; he wasn’t making capital of his advantages as he should have done; he was acting like a fool, making his first attempt as though he had been schooled in the East End by practised thieves. Before he was qualified to try to raid a place from the outside he would have to learn a lot in the art of safe-breaking, of forcing entries, of covering his tracks.
On the other hand, once he was in the strong-room he could get at the one safe without any trouble. The combination ran through his mind time and time again, word-perfect. But he should have given up the idea when he had heard of the armed guard.
The back of his neck and his forehead were sticky. He could see the guard in a far corner, and he wondered whether the man would shoot to kill if he met with an intruder. His courage seemed to ebb away . . .
Three words that flashed across his mind halted the flight of his nerves, and made his smile more natural. He seemed to see Lorna Fauntley’s eyes, and hear her murmured “Even doing it.”
He was capable of doing it. Damn it, he couldn’t go so far and then back out. The door of the strong-room was less than twenty feet away from him; he could see the polished brass of the door-knob, and a picture of the glittering cascade of the Gabrienne collection came to his mind. He breathed more steadily, and he dipped his gloved right hand into his pocket.
He smiled more when he felt cold steel through the thin rubber of his gloves. The Army revolver, a relic of the days of the War - he had been in Flanders for the last year of it - rested there. He had been wise enough to bring it unloaded; to risk carrying loaded weapons would have been insane, for the authorities dealt harshly with armed thieves. Now the precautions he had taken and the preparations he had made seemed more reasonable.
He left the revolver in his pocket, and took out one of the screwdrivers. Every pocket of his coat contained something that would help him - a file, a torch, the handkerchief marked T.B. He had no real idea of what tools he would want, but the screwdriver would be best for levering up the window.
He glanced up, seeing that the top frame was open a little. The window was unlatched. Unless the bottom frame squeaked as he pushed it up there was a chance that he would get in without rousing the guard. Fauntley had unwittingly relieved him of several causes for anxiety. He knew that he could open the window without starting an alarm bell, for the only alarm was controlled by the strong-room door.
He exerted a little pressure after wedging the chisel end of the screwdriver beneath the window, and felt it move a fraction of an inch. There was no sound at all. Very gently, and with his breath coming faster every second, he levered it up. There was an inch to spare now - ample room for his fingers.
He replaced the screwdriver, and took the revolver from his pocket, resting it on the sill. All the time the noise of late traffic passing the Terrace came to his ears, while occasionally he heard the hurrying footsteps of a man or a woman, and he found it hard not to let these sounds distract him. But as he put his fingers beneath the window he forgot everything except the man sitting in the far corner, whose heavy features were thrown into strong relief by the reading-lamp.
Mannering pushed the window up another inch, fraction by fraction. Suddenly the man in the corner moved. Mannering stopped, his limbs suddenly very cold. The guard lifted his head, looking towards the window, and darted his hand towards his pocket.
“God,” thought Mannering, “it’s all up!”
He couldn’t have turned away if he had wanted to; he felt there was no strength at all in his limbs. He stared, fascinated by the approaching disaster.
And then he saw the handkerchief in the guard’s hand, saw his head go back, and heard a sneeze that seemed to shatter the silence. Mannering’s heart turned over - or so he thought - and then his mind worked very quickly; he saw how he could turn the absurd development to advantage. He was still cold after the moment of fear, but he pushed at the window less cautiously now.
The guard sneezed three times, and by the time he had stopped the window was up two feet or more, and moving noiselessly. Mannering pushed it another foot, and then, as the other put his handkerchief back into his pocket, backed away from the window, taking shelter by the walls. He could see his man, saw the quick glance round the room . . .
“Close,” Mannering muttered under his breath. “Thank the Lord for that sneeze! . . .”
He stopped muttering, and his eyes gleamed. He saw the guard glance towards the window again, and he realised that the other man was probably feeling a draught. Even as the thought flashed through his mind he saw the other move, and he realised that the open window would shout suspicion.
And then Mannering saw how it would also help him.
Breathing very softly, he drew into the shadows, waiting, as the guard came soft-footed towards the window. He could just see the man as he reached the window, and he saw him peer suspiciously. He could almost hear him thinking, asking himself whether he had for once forgotten to close the window or whether it had just been pushed up.
Mannering took just time enough to measure the distance, and then he acted. With the muzzle of the revolver in his hand he swung his right arm. The butt of the gun crashed into the man’s solar plexus; there was a single gasp, not loud enough to make itself heard more than a few yards away, and the guard staggered back.
In an instant Mannering was after him. But as he climbed into the room his coat caught, and he wasted precious seconds. The guard had recovered sufficiently to dart his hand towards his own gun when Mannering looked up. His hand moved, and his unloaded gun was very threatening. The guard hesitated.