Hangman's Holiday lpw-9

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Hangman's Holiday lpw-9 Page 18

by Dorothy L. Sayers


  'I suppose I've been taking more notice on account of that conversation we had in the train.' Pender laughed, a little self-consciously. 'It just makes me wonder--you know how one does--whether anybody else had happened to hit on that drug you mentioned--what was its name?'

  The man ignored the question.

  'Oh, I shouldn't think so,' he said. 'I fancy I'm the only person who knows about that. I only stumbled on the thing by accident myself when I was looking for something else. I don't imagine it could have been discovered simultaneously in so many parts of the country. But all these verdicts just show, don't they, what a safe way it would be of getting rid of a person.'

  'You're a chemist, then?' asked Pender, catching at the one phrase which seemed to promise information.

  'Oh, I'm a bit of everything. Sort of general utility-man. I do a good bit of studying on my own, too. You've got one or two interesting books here, I see.'

  Pender was flattered. For a man in his position--he had been in a bank until he came into that little bit of money--he felt that he had improved his mind to some purpose, and he knew that his collection of modern first editions would be worth money some day. He went over to the glass-fronted bookcase and pulled out a volume or two to show his visitor.

  The man displayed intelligence, and presently joined him in front of the shelves.

  'These, I take it, represent your personal tastes?' He took down a volume of Henry James and glanced at the fly-leaf. 'That your name? E. Pender?'

  Pender admitted that it was. 'You have the advantage of me,' he added.

  'Oh! I am one of the great Smith clan,' said the other with a laugh, 'and work for my bread. You seem to be very nicely fixed here.'

  Pender explained about the clerkship and the legacy.

  'Very nice, isn't it?' said Smith. 'Not married? No. You're one of the lucky ones. Not likely to be needing any sulphate of . . . any useful drugs in the near future. And you never will, if you stick to what you've got and keep off women and speculation.'

  He smiled up sideways at Pender. Now that his hat was off, Pender saw that he had a quantity of closely curled grey hair, which made him look older than he had appeared in the railway carriage.

  'No, I shan't becoming to you for assistance yet awhile,' said Pender, laughing. 'Besides, how should I find you if I wanted you?'

  'You wouldn't have to,' said Smith. 'I should find you. There's never any difficulty about that.' He grinned, oddly. 'Well, I'd better be getting on. Thank you for your hospitality. I don't expect we shall meet again--but we may, of course. Things work out so queerly, don't they?'

  When he had gone, Pender turned to his own arm-chair. He took up his glass of whisky, which stood there nearly full.

  'Funny!' he said to himself. 'I don't remember pouring that out. I suppose I got interested and did it mechanically.' He emptied his glass slowly, thinking about Smith.

  What in the world was Smith doing at Skimmings's house?

  An odd business altogether. If Skimmings's housekeeper had known about that money.... But she had not known, and if she had, how could she have found out about Smith and his sulphate of . . . the word had been on the tip of his tongue then.

  'You would not need to find me. I should find you.' What had the man meant by that? But this was ridiculous. Smith was not the devil, presumably. But if he really had this secret--if he liked to put a price upon it--nonsense.

  'Business at Rugby--a little bit of business at Skimmings's house.' Oh, absurd!

  'Nobody is fit to be trusted. Absolute power over another man's life . . . it grows on you.'

  Lunacy! And, if there was anything in it, the man was mad to tell Pender about it. If Pender chose to speak he could get the fellow hanged. The very existence of Pender would be dangerous.

  That whisky!

  More and more, thinking it over, Pender became persuaded that he had never poured it out. Smith must have done it while his back was turned. Why that sudden display of interest in the bookshelves? It had had no connection with anything that had gone before. Now Pender came to think of it, it had been a very stiff whisky. Was it imagination, or had there been something about the flavour of it?

  A cold sweat broke out on Pender's forehead.

  A quarter of an hour later, after a powerful dose of mustard and water, Pender was downstairs again, very cold and shivering, huddling over the fire. He had had a narrow escape--if he had escaped. He did not know how the stuff worked, but he would not take a hot bath again for some days. One never knew.

  Whether the mustard and water had done the trick in time, or whether the hot bath was an essential part of the treatment, at any rate Pender's life was saved for the time being. But he was still uneasy. He kept the front door on the chain and warned his servant to let no strangers into the house.

  He ordered two more morning papers and the News of the World on Sundays, and kept a careful watch upon their columns. Deaths in baths became an obsession with him. He neglected his first editions and took to attending inquests.

  Three weeks later he found himself at Lincoln. A man had died of heart failure in a Turkish bath--a fat man, of sedentary habits. The jury added a rider to their verdict of Misadventure, to the effect that the management should exercise a stricter supervision over the bathers and should never permit them to be left unattended in the hot room.

  As Pender emerged from the hall he saw ahead of him a shabby hat that seemed familiar. He plunged after it, and caught Mr Smith about to step into a taxi.

  'Smith,' he cried, gasping a little. He clutched him fiercely by the shoulder.

  'What, you again?' said Smith. 'Taking notes of the case, eh? Can I do anything for you?'

  'You devil!' said Pender. 'You're mixed up in this! You tried to kill me the other day.'

  'Did I? Why should I do that?'

  'You'll swing for this,' shouted Pender menacingly.

  A policeman pushed his way through the gathering crowd.

  'Here!' said he, 'what's all this about?'

  Smith touched his forehead significantly.

  'It's all right, officer,' said he. 'The gentleman seems to think I'm here for no good. Here's my card. The coroner knows me. But he attacked me. You'd better keep an eye on him.'

  'That's right,' said a bystander.

  'This man tried to kill me,' said Pender. The policeman nodded.

  'Don't you worry about that, sir,' he said. 'You think better of it. The 'eat in there has upset you a bit. All right, all right.'

  'But I want to charge him,' said Pender.

  'I wouldn't do that if I was you,' said the policeman.

  'I tell you,' said Pender, 'that this man Smith has been trying to poison me. He's a murderer. He's poisoned scores of people.'

  The policeman winked at Smith.

  'Best be off, sir,' he said. 'I'll settle this. Now, my lad'--he held Pender firmly by the arms--'just you keep cool and take it quiet. That gentleman's name ain't Smith nor nothing like it. You've got a bit mixed up like.'

  'Well, what is his name?' demanded Pender.

  'Never you mind,' replied the constable. 'You leave him alone, or you'll be getting yourself into trouble.'

  The taxi had driven away. Pender glanced round at the circle of amused faces and gave in.

  'All right, officer,' he said. 'I won't give you any trouble. I'll come round with you to the police-station and tell you about it.'

  'What do you, think o' that one?' asked the inspector of the sergeant when Pender had stumbled out of the station.

  'Up the pole an' 'alf-way round the flag, if you ask me,' replied his subordinate. 'Got one o' them ideez fix what they talk about.'

  'H'm!' replied the inspector. 'Well, we've got his name and address. Better make a note of 'em. He might turn up again. Poisoning people so as they die in their baths, eh? That's a pretty good 'un. Wonderful how these barmy ones thinks it all out, isn't it?'

  The spring that year was a bad one--cold and foggy. It was March when Pender went down t
o an inquest at Deptford, but a thick blanket of mist was hanging over the river as though it were November. The cold ate into your bones. As he sat in the dingy little court, peering through the yellow twilight of gas and fog, he could scarcely see the witnesses as they came to the table. Everybody in the place seemed to be coughing. Pender was coughing too. His bones ached, and he felt as though he were about due for a bout of influenza.

  Straining his eyes, he thought he recognised a face on the other side of the room, but the smarting fog which penetrated every crack stung and blinded him. He felt in his overcoat pocket, and his hand closed comfortably on something thick and heavy. Ever since that day in Lincoln he had gone about armed for protection. Not a revolver--he was no hand with firearms. A sandbag was much better. He had bought one from an old man wheeling a barrow. It was meant for keeping out draughts from the door--a good, old-fashioned affair.

  The inevitable verdict was returned. The spectators began to push their way out. Pender had to hurry now, not to lose sight of his man. He elbowed his way along, muttering apologies. At the door he almost touched the man, but a stout woman intervened. He plunged past her, and she gave a little squeak of indignation. The man in front turned his head, and the light over the door glinted on his glasses.

  Pender pulled his hat over his eyes and followed. His shoes had cr�pe rubber soles and made no sound on the sticking pavement. The man went on, jogging quietly up one street and down another, and never looking back. The fog was so thick that Pender was forced to keep within a few yards of him. Where was he going? Into the lighted streets? Home by bus or tram? No. He turned off to the left, down a narrow street.

  The fog was thicker here. Pender could no longer see his quarry, but he heard the footsteps going on before him at the same even pace. It seemed to him that they were two alone in the world--pursued and pursuer, slayer and avenger. The street began to slope more rapidly. They must be coming out somewhere near the river.

  Suddenly the dim shapes of the houses fell away on either side. There was an open space, with a lamp vaguely visible in the middle. The footsteps paused. Pender, silently hurrying after, saw the man standing close beneath the lamp, apparently consulting something in a notebook.

  Four steps, and Pender was upon him. He drew the sandbag from his pocket.

  The man looked up.

  'I've got you this time,' said Pender, and struck with all his force.

  Pender had been quite right. He did get influenza. It was a week before he was out and about again. The weather had changed, and the air was fresh and sweet. In spite of the weakness left by the malady he felt as though a heavy weight had been lifted from his shoulders. He tottered down to a favourite bookshop of his in the Strand, and picked up a D. H. Lawrence 'first' at a price which he knew to be a bargain. Encouraged by this, he turned into a small chop-house, chiefly frequented by Fleet Street men, and ordered a grilled cutlet and a half-tankard of bitter.

  Two journalists were seated at the neat table.

  'Going to poor old Buckley's funeral?' asked one.

  'Yes,' said the other. 'Poor devil! Fancy his getting sloshed on the head like that. He must have been on his way down to interview the widow of that fellow who died in a bath. It's a rough district. Probably one of Jimmy the Card's crowd had it in for him. He was a great crime-reporter--they won't get another like Bill Buckley in a hurry.'

  'He was a decent sort, too. Great old sport. No end of a legpuller. Remember his great stunt about sulphate of thanatol?'

  Pender started. That was the word that had eluded him for so many months. A curious dizziness came over him and he took a pull at the tankard to steady himself.

  '. . . looking at you as sober as a judge,' the journalist was saying. 'He used to work off that wheeze on poor boobs in railway carriages to see how they'd take it. Would you believe that one chap actually offered him--'

  'Hullo!' interrupted his friend. 'That bloke over there has fainted. I thought he was looking a bit white.'

  THE FOUNTAIN PLAYS

  'Yes,' said Mr Spiller, in a satisfied tone, 'I must say I like a bit of ornamental water. Gives a finish to the place.'

  'The Versailles touch,' agreed Ronald Proudfoot.

  Mr Spiller glanced sharply at him, as though suspecting sarcasm, but his lean face expressed nothing whatever. Mr Spiller was never quite at his ease in the company of his daughter's fiancé, though he was proud of the girl's achievement. With all his (to Mr Spiller) unamiable qualities, Ronald Proudfoot was a perfect gentleman, and Betty was completely wrapped up in him.

  'The only thing it wants,' continued Mr Spiller, 'to my mind, that is, is Opening Up. To make a Vista, so to say. You don't get the Effect with these bushes on all four sides.'

  'Oh, I don't know, Mr Spiller,' objected Mrs Digby in her mild voice. 'Don't you think it makes rather a fascinating surprise? You come along the path, never dreaming there's anything behind those lilacs, and then you turn the corner and come suddenly upon it. I'm sure, when you brought me down to see it this afternoon, it quite took my breath away.'

  'There's that, of course,' admitted Mr Spiller. It occurred to him, not for the first time, that there was something very attractive about Mrs Digby's silvery personality. She had distinction, too. A widow and widower of the sensible time of life, with a bit of money on both sides, might do worse than settle down comfortably in a pleasant house with half an acre of garden and a bit of ornamental water.

  'And it's so pretty and secluded,' went on Mrs Digby, 'with these glorious rhododendrons. Look how pretty they are, all sprayed with the water--like fairy jewels--and the rustic seat against those dark cypresses at the back. Really Italian. And the scent of the lilac is so marvellous!'

  Mr Spiller knew that the cypresses were, in fact, yews, but he did not correct her. A little ignorance was becoming in a woman. He glanced from the cotoneasters at one side of the fountain to the rhododendrons on the other, their rainbow flower-trusses sparkling with diamond drops.

  'I wasn't thinking of touching the rhododendrons or the cotoneasters,' he said. 'I only thought of cutting through that great hedge of lilac, so as to make a vista from the house. But the ladies must always have the last word, mustn't they--er--Ronald?' (He never could bring out Proudfoot's Christian name naturally.) 'If you like it as it is, Mrs Digby, that settles it. The lilacs shall stay.'

  'It's too flattering of you,' said Mrs Digby, 'but you mustn't think of altering your plans for me. I haven't any right to interfere with your beautiful garden.'

  'Indeed you have,' said Mr Spiller. 'I defer to your taste entirely. You have spoken for the lilacs, and henceforward they are sacred.'

  'I shall be afraid to give an opinion on anything, after that,' said Mrs Digby, shaking her head. 'But whatever you decide to do, I'm sure it will be lovely. It was a marvellous idea to think of putting the fountain there. It makes all the difference to the garden.'

  Mr Spiller thought she was quite right. And indeed, though the fountain was rather flattered by the name of 'ornamental water', consisting as it did of a marble basin set in the centre of a pool about four feet square, it made a brave show, with its plume of dancing water, fifteen feet high, towering over the smaller shrubs and almost overtopping the tall lilacs. And its cooling splash and tinkle soothed the ear on this pleasant day of early summer.

  'Costs a bit to run, doesn't it?' demanded Mr Gooch. He had been silent up till now, and Mrs Digby felt that his remark betrayed a rather sordid outlook on life. Indeed, from the first moment of meeting Mr Gooch, she had pronounced him decidedly common, and wondered that he should be on such intimate terms with her host.

  'No, no,' replied Mr Spiller. 'No, it's not expensive. You see, it uses the same water over and over again. Most ingenious. The fountains in Trafalgar Square work on the same principle, I believe. Of course, I had to pay a bit to have it put in, but I think it's worth the money.'

  'Yes, indeed,' said Mrs Digby.

  'I always said you were a warm man, Spiller,' said M
r Gooch, with his vulgar laugh. 'Wish I was in your shoes. A snug spot, that's what I call this place. Snug.'

  'I'm not a millionaire,' answered Mr Spiller, rather shortly. 'But things might be worse in these times. Of course,' he added, more cheerfully, 'one has to be careful. I turn the fountain off at night, for instance, to save leakage and waste.'

  'I'll swear you do, you damned old miser,' said Mr Gooch offensively.

  Mr Spiller was saved replying by the sounding of a gong in the distance.

  'Ah! there's dinner,' he announced, with a certain relief in his tone. The party wound their way out between the lilacs, and paced gently up the long crazy pavement, past the herbaceous borders and the two long beds of raw little ticketed roses, to the glorified villa which Mr Spiller had christened 'The Pleasaunce'.

  It seemed to Mrs Digby that there was a slightly strained atmosphere about dinner, though Betty, pretty as a picture and very much in love with Ronald Proudfoot, made a perfectly charming little hostess. The jarring note was sounded by Mr Gooch. He ate too noisily, drank far too freely, got on Proudfoot's nerves and behaved to Mr Spiller with a kind of veiled insolence which was embarrassing and disagreeable to listen to. She wondered again where he had come from, and why Mr Spiller put up with him. She knew little about him, except that from time to time he turned up on a visit to 'The Pleasaunce', usually staying there about a month and being, apparently, well supplied with cash. She had an idea that he was some kind of commission agent, though she could not recall any distinct statement on this point. Mr Spiller had settled down in the village about three years previously, and she had always liked him. Though not, in any sense of the word, a cultivated man, he was kind, generous and unassuming, and his devotion to Betty had something very lovable about it. Mr Gooch had started coming about a year later. Mrs Digby said to herself that if ever she was in a position to lay down the law at 'The Pleasaunce'--and she had begun to think matters were tending that way--her influence would be directed to getting rid of Mr Gooch.

 

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