The 12.30 from Croydon

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by Crofts, Freeman Wills


  He would have given a good deal for a couple of fingers of brandy. A mistake, he thought, not to have brought a flask. Brandy would have just made the difference. It would have banished all these morbid fears and steadied him. He said to himself that he would remember it next time, and then the very thought of repeating this hideous experience made him sick.

  At long last the half-hour he had set himself passed and his vigil was over. With the coming of action his nerves steadied somewhat. Once again he opened the french window, passed through, locked the door leading to the hall, and returned to the desk. The lock was broken and he was now able with infinite pains to push up the shutter. This released all the drawers and he sat down to go through them.

  He was soon satisfied that he had at least reached Peter’s private papers. Here was his cheque and bank books, his private account books, and all kinds of personal papers. If the letter was in the house, it would be here.

  But Charles could not find it. His search was rapid, but thorough, and when it was over he was positive that it was not in the study.

  Charles grew more and more satisfied that Weatherup had been bluffing. There was no letter. At all events, whether there was or not, he, Charles, could do no more. He knew of no other likely place in the house and he could not search Peter’s bank.

  But though he didn’t find the letter, he came on something else which gave him furiously to think. This was a roll of bank-notes, and when Charles counted them he found they amounted to £135 10s. After a moment’s hesitation, he slipped them into his pocket.

  Closing the desk as carefully as he had opened it, Charles reversed all his other proceedings. He unlocked the door into the hall, left the room by the french window, locked the window behind him and slipped the key into his pocket. Then he set off to walk home, burying the key on the way.

  He was fairly satisfied with what he had done. If he had not found the letter, he had at least left no traces, having kept his rubber gloves on all the time. Moreover, he saw with increasing satisfaction that the roll of bank-notes was going materially to improve his scheme. Yes, he thought things were going as well as he could have hoped.

  Reaching his workshop, he put back the bar in his rack. He would have liked to have hidden it, but Rollins knew of its existence. In his little fireplace he burnt the bank-notes, carefully crumbling the ashes to dust. Then he returned to his rope, took off his shoes, tied them round his neck, and began to climb. He found it a terrible job, but his neck was the penalty for failure, and at last he reached his window. He pulled in his rope, untied the knots, coiled the rope and locked it once more in his wardrobe. Ten minutes later he was in bed.

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  Chapter XVI

  Charles Assists Justice

  On the whole Charles was satisfied with his night’s work. He had carried out a loathsome job with skill and courage. He had kept his head and he had effectively hidden his traces. Granted that the thing had had to be done, it could not have been done better.

  Indeed, those bank-notes had enabled him to make an even more perfect job of it than he had believed possible. Their disappearance, he believed, would supply what had been before missing: the motive. Would it not be argued that Weatherup, wanting money, had burgled Peter’s desk and decamped with the spoils?

  How he wished he could have removed Weatherup’s clothes and suit-case and small possessions! This would have practically proved a voluntary disappearance. He had thought of it when he found the notes, but he hadn’t dared to risk it. He wasn’t positively sure which was Weatherup’s room, and in any case it must be close to the rooms of the women servants, either of whom might have heard him.

  He realized that this next day or two would be nerve-racking, and while he was dressing he kept screwing his courage up to the sticking point.

  The first thing to be tackled was the single item of his scheme necessarily left over till then – the return of the rope to the workshop. This did not present any difficulty. He had merely to wait till Rollins and his wife were out of the way and carry it down. In a few seconds it was hanging in its usual place: where it was known to hang by Rollins.

  Breakfast passed uneventfully and Charles went in due course to the office and settled down to his day’s work. He was surprised not to have heard from The Moat, and was dreadfully anxious to know what was happening there. He was sorely tempted to make some excuse and ring up, but restrained himself.

  About eleven the message arrived which he had been so eagerly expecting. Elsie rang up. She was rather troubled about Weatherup. He had disappeared and had left no message. Peter was away and she didn’t know whether she should do anything about it.

  Charles asked for details and then mildly pooh-poohed the whole thing. It was certainly strange, but the man would turn up. He had gone out on some business of his own and had been delayed. Had he ever done it before?

  He had never done it before and Elsie couldn’t imagine him doing it at all. She sounded quite upset.

  All this was just what Charles had hoped for. He made light of the affair again, but said that as Elsie was evidently worried, he would come round presently and discuss it with her. She was sorry to trouble him, but was evidently relieved. He told her he wouldn’t be long.

  He knew that sooner or later the police would have to be sent for, and he wanted to be the one to advise and carry out this step. Also he wanted, if possible, to have a look in Peter’s dressing-room before the police arrived, in case by some unlikely chance the letter might be there.

  To demonstrate his belief in the unimportance of the matter, he delayed for half an hour before setting out for The Moat. Elsie was obviously glad to see him. She was a good deal worried and poured out the details at once.

  Weatherup, she said, had seemed just as usual on the previous night. His bed had been slept in, but that morning he had not been seen. Nor had any news come from him since. It was quite unprecedented, and altogether unlike what Weatherup might be expected to do. What did Charles advise?

  Charles for the moment didn’t advise anything. He asked questions. Had Weatherup really said or done nothing which would throw light on his action? Had he had any unpleasantness with Peter? Had any letter or caller or message come for him recently? Was anything known of the man’s relations or family?

  Nothing helpful of course came out, though Charles was glad to note that his telephone call did not appear to have been overheard. He gradually became more impressed.

  ‘Has anyone looked in his room?’ he asked.

  ‘Yes, the maids looked. His bed had been slept in.’

  ‘Could they say what clothes he was wearing when he left and also whether he took away his things? It might indicate whether he went away deliberately.’

  ‘I asked that. He was wearing his ordinary butler’s dress except that he had taken his usual off-duty tweed jacket instead of the tail coat. His hat was gone, but the girls missed nothing else.’

  ‘What about looking in the grounds?’

  ‘We did so.’

  Charles allowed himself to become still more impressed.

  ‘When will Peter be home?’ he asked.

  ‘Not till the evening.’

  ‘Well, I suggest that we have a more careful look through the house and grounds and if we find nothing I think we should ring up the police. What do you say, Elsie?’

  Elsie wrung her hands. ‘Oh dear,’ she cried, ‘as if we hadn’t had enough of police! But I agree, we must tell them. Let’s do what you say, have a good search round, and then if we find nothing we’ll ring them up.’

  This was Charles’s opportunity. The two maids were called and he organized the proceedings. He did it skilfully, slipping away quite naturally from the party to make his own investigations. These proved easier than he had anticipated. Not only was there no letter in the dressing-room, but there was no place where one might have been hidden.

  The house complete, they went out into the grounds. The search here was equally thorough and equally un
productive. They returned to the sitting-room. Charles walked up and down.

  ‘It’s getting on to lunch time, Elsie,’ he said presently. ‘I’m not at all sure that we shouldn’t ring up Lucas. Shall I?’

  ‘Yes, Charles, if you will.’

  Superintendent Lucas heard the news without comment save that he would send a man at once. Would Mr Swinburn kindly wait till he came, so as to give him the details?

  Sergeant Bray and a constable arrived in a few minutes. Charles met them and explained what he had been told. They took his statement and Elsie’s and the maids, then disappeared to examine Weatherup’s room.

  ‘You’ll stay to lunch, Charles?’ Elsie invited.

  Charles was sorry, but he wanted to get back to his office. If, however, there was anything he could do, he would come out again. In fact, he would come back in the afternoon in any case, for Elsie must not be left too long alone.

  Elsie said it was good of him. She would be glad to see him.

  As a matter of fact Charles had stood just about as much as he was able. There was his constant dread lest he should say or do something, or omit to say or do something, which might give himself away. That in itself was nerve-racking. But there was more. There was the memory of the night. Wherever he looked he seemed to see that dreadful, motionless shape on the boat-house floor; at all times rang in his ears the soft yet hideous sound of the lead pipe falling on the skull and the faint sucking splash when the remains disappeared over the stern of the boat. Charles was beginning to think he would never be able to blot those sights and sounds from his memory.

  He could not face lunch at the club, so he drove to an inn some five or six miles away and had some bread and cheese and a whisky and soda. Then he returned to his office.

  Nothing of importance had come in and he spent an hour smoking and resting. Then, a good deal recovered, he drove out once again to The Moat. Elsie herself opened the door.

  ‘I saw you coming up,’ she explained. ‘Oh, Charles, isn’t this dreadful!’ she went on, wringing her hands. ‘Fancy what they’ve found. He had broken open Peter’s desk and stolen a lot of money!’

  ‘No!’ answered Charles in shocked tones. ‘Weatherup! I shouldn’t have believed it. I never liked him, but I always looked on him as absolutely honest. You amaze me!’

  ‘It amazed me, I can tell you. Oh, it’s utterly horrible! But do come in.’

  Charles followed her into the sitting-room. ‘There’s no news of him, of course?’

  ‘No, none. The sergeant’s still there in the study. You know, I heard Weatherup in the night.’

  ‘You heard him?’

  ‘Yes, about three this morning.’ She sat down and pointed to a chair. ‘I heard a crack like a pistol shot from somewhere downstairs. I was awake at the time. I thought probably a picture had fallen: I’ve been frightened at night in that way before. So I went down and had a look, but I couldn’t see anything wrong and I supposed it was just the woodwork cracking. But now the sergeant says it must have been the forcing of the desk.’

  ‘My goodness, Elsie, that was plucky of you! It was a mercy you didn’t come upon him in the act. He might have attacked you.’

  ‘He must have been there at the time, so the sergeant says. He must have been either behind the desk or outside the window. See him and he’ll tell you.’

  ‘I certainly shall. It’s just about the most astonishing thing I’ve heard for years! And Weatherup of all people! That’s what I can’t get over.’

  ‘Nor I.’

  ‘Was much money taken?’

  ‘I don’t know exactly how much. I think over a hundred pounds.’

  ‘Oh, well, it might have been worse.’

  Elsie wrung her hands again. ‘It’s not the money,’ she declared, ‘though that’s bad enough. It’s the whole thing. Oh, Charles, it’s terrible, coming so soon after the other! Really I’m beginning to feel as if I couldn’t endure the sight of this place for another day.’

  ‘I’m so sorry, Elsie. And I’m afraid it will worry Peter, too.’

  ‘Peter! I don’t like to think of it. He was worried enough as it was. And he’ll hate not having been here; you know what I mean. My being alone and all that.’

  ‘I expect that was the reason of it, you know,’ said Charles, having hastily thought out the bearings of the remark. ‘If Weatherup was going to – do what he did, he would choose a time when Peter was away; naturally.’

  ‘I suppose so.’ She shook her head again.

  ‘Have you had lunch?’ Charles asked.

  ‘No; I couldn’t think of eating.’

  ‘Now look here, Elsie, go and have some lunch,’ Charles said with decision. ‘Have some coffee or a whisky and soda if you can’t eat. There’s no use in your getting knocked up as well. You go and I’ll speak to the sergeant.’

  ‘What about yourself, Charles?’

  ‘I’ve had it, thanks.’

  Charles surprised himself, so well in hand were his nerves as he crossed the hall and, tapping on the study door, pushed it open and entered. Sergeant Bray rose from the desk.

  ‘Well, sergeant,’ said Charles, ‘I hear you’ve made a discovery?’

  ‘Yes, sir, and it’s a bit surprising too. I shouldn’t have thought the butler was the man for this job.’

  ‘Nor I,’ Charles answered. ‘What’s the meaning of it all?’

  Bray shook his head.

  ‘Is that the broken desk?’ Charles gazed with interest. ‘Mrs Morley says she heard him breaking it open.’

  ‘She heard a sound which we attribute to that cause,’ Bray returned more accurately. ‘You knew the man, Mr Swinburn?’

  This was more like the police. Questions, no information, was their line.

  ‘Oh, yes,’ Charles answered. ‘He was with my late uncle for a number of years. I’d seen him many times.’

  ‘Did you ever hear anything about his relations or family?’

  ‘Not a word.’

  ‘Or if he was going after any woman?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Or, I suppose, of any secret in his life?’

  ‘Nothing of the sort.’

  ‘He made no previous breaks while with the late Mr Crowther?’

  ‘None; at least so far as I know. Have you been through his room?’ Charles didn’t see why all the questioning should be on one side.

  ‘Yes, sir, but I found nothing.’

  Bray was not communicative, and after a little further conversation Charles left the study. He found Elsie having coffee in the dining-room.

  ‘Glad to see you doing that,’ he assured her, then with a change of tone, ‘Do you know what train Peter’s coming by?’

  ‘The one that gets in just before dinner.’

  ‘I’ll meet him,’ Charles declared.

  He stayed on at The Moat for an hour or more discussing the affair with Elsie, or rather letting her talk about it while he sat with the appearance of listening. At the end of that time he felt himself at the end of his tether and pleaded a business engagement. He wanted terribly to be alone, but to go off anywhere by himself would look suspicious, and that he could not risk. However, at the works he was next thing to being alone, and somehow the afternoon dragged away.

  Peter was a surprised man when at the station Charles told him the news. Eagerly he asked for details. Charles, considering carefully what he knew and what he didn’t know, gave them to him.

  ‘I have the car here,’ Charles went on. ‘Get in and I’ll drive you home.’

  Peter was obviously a good deal puzzled as well as distressed by the affair. ‘What could have gone wrong with him?’ he asked more than once. ‘He never gave any hint of being short of cash. And then to go and risk prison for that amount! And look here, Charles, here’s another thing. How did he know that I had the money there? I never told him. I told Elsie, but she would never have repeated it.’

  This was a point Charles had not foreseen. ‘He must have overheard you telling her,’ he suggest
ed.

  ‘I suppose he must,’ Peter agreed doubtfully.

  Charles was relieved by the admission. Peter evidently accepted the man’s guilt.

  ‘Frightfully hard lines on Elsie, this upset,’ Charles went on, ‘especially following so close on the last,’ and he began to talk generalities.

  That evening passed for Charles like a nightmare. What he wanted more than anything else was information. What were the police doing? What had they discovered? Had they any reason to suspect the affair was more serious than it appeared? More vital still, had they any reason to connect him, Charles, with it? So terrible was the craving to know how he stood that more than once he contemplated going down to the police-station to inquire of Sergeant Bray how the case was progressing, in the hope that from the man’s manner he would be able to read the answer to his real question. Indeed, only the utter madness of such a proceeding prevented him.

  The next day it was the same. Oh, if he only knew! Of course he rang up The Moat, but what Peter could tell him was not what he wanted to hear. As a matter of fact Peter had little news. With the single exception that the key of the study french window was missing, nothing had been discovered.

  And so it was the next day and the next. Nothing fresh learned! Charles’s anxiety had by this time passed its peak and every hour that now elapsed was an ease to his mind. If anything dreadful had been discovered, he would have heard of it. Instead of being upset, he should be thankful that everything was going so well. This second terrible crisis in his life had passed, as had the first, leaving him unscathed. He needn’t have been afraid. His scheme was good. As before, he was safe!

  Then on the fourth day he received a dreadful shock.

 

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