I. — THE THREAT
II. — MURDER!
III. — THE RED ACES
IV. — J.G. REEDER'S THEORY
V. — THE MISSING POLICEMAN
VI. — THE VEILED WOMAN
VII. — WHO KILLED WENTFORD?
VIII. — REEDER—THE DEVIL
IX. — TRAPPED!
X. — THE RAID
XI. — DEDUCTION
I. — THE THREAT
WHEN a young man is very
much in love with a most attractive girl he is apt to endow her with
qualities and virtues which no human being has ever possessed. Yet at
rare and painful intervals there enter into his soul certain wild
suspicions, and in these moments he is inclined to consider the
possibility that she may be guilty of the basest treachery and double
dealing.
Everybody knew that
Kenneth McKay was desperately in love. They knew it at the bank where
he spent his days in counting other people's money, and a
considerable amount of his lunch hour writing impassioned and
ill-spelt letters to Margot Lynn. His taciturn father, brooding over
his vanished fortune in his gaunt riverside house at Marlow, may have
employed the few moments he gave to the consideration of other
people's troubles in consideration of his son's new interest.
Probably he did not, for George McKay was entirely self-centred and
had little thought but for the folly which had dissipated the money
he had accumulated with such care, and the development of fantastical
schemes for its recovery.
Kenneth went over to
Beaconsfield every morning on his noisy motorbike and came back every
night, sometimes very late, because Margot lived in London; they
dined together at the cheaper restaurants and sometimes saw a film.
Kenneth was a member of an inexpensive London club which sheltered at
least one sympathetic soul. Except for Rufus Machfield, the confidant
in question, he had no friends.
'And let me advise you not
to make any here,' said Rufus.
He was a military-looking
man of forty-five, and most people found him rather a bore, for the
views which he expressed so vehemently, on all subjects from politics
to religion, which are the opposite ends of the ethical pole, he had
acquired that morning from the leading article of his favourite
daily. Yet he was a genial person—a likeable man.
He had a luxurious flat in
Park Lane, a French valet, a Bentley and no useful occupation.
'The Leffingham Club is
cheap.' he said, 'the food's not bad and it's near Piccadilly.
Against that you have the fact that almost anybody who hasn't been to
prison can become a member–'
'The fact that I'm a
member—' began Ken.
'You're a gentleman and a
public school man,' interrupted Mr Machfield sonorously. 'You're not
rich, I admit—'
'Even I admit that,' said
Ken, rubbing his untidy hair.
Kenneth was tall,
athletic, as good-looking as a young man need be, or can be without
losing his head about his face. He had called at the Leffingham that
evening especially to see Rufus and confide his worries. And his
worries were enormous. He looked haggard and ill: Mr Machfield
thought it possible that he had not been sleeping very well. In this
surmise he was right.
'About Margot—' began
the young man. Mr Machfield smiled. He had met Margot, had
entertained the young people to dinner at his flat, and twice had
invited them to a theatre party.
Kenneth took a letter from
his pocket and passed it across to his friend, and Machfield opened
and read it.Dear Kenneth: I'm not
seeing you any more. I'm broken hearted to tell you this. Please
don't try to see me—please! M.
'When did this come?'
'Last night. Naturally, I
went to her flat. She was out. I went to her office—she was out. I
was late for the bank and got it hot and strong from the manager. To
make matters worse, there's a fellow dunning me for two hundred
pounds—every thing comes at once. I borrowed the money from father.
What with one thing and another I'm desperate.'
Mr Machfield rose from his
chair.
'Come home and have a
meal, he said. 'As for the money—'
'No, no, no!' Kenneth
McKay was panic-stricken. 'I don t want to borrow from you.' For a
moment he sat in silence, then: 'Do you know a man named Reeder—J.G.
Reeder?'
Machfield shook his head.
'He's a detective,'
explained Kenneth. 'He has a big bank practice. He was down at our
place today—weird-looking devil. If he could be a detective anybody
could be!'
Mr Machfield said he
recalled the name.
'He was in that railway
robbery, wasn't he? J.G. Reeder—yes. Pretty smart fellow—young?'
'He's as old as—well,
he's pretty old. And rather old-fashioned.'
Rufus snapped his finger
to the waiter and paid his bill.
'You'll have to take pot
luck—but Lamontaine is a wonderful cook. He didn't know that he was
until I made him try.'
So they went together to
the little flat in Park Lane. and Lamontaine, the pallid, middle-aged
valet who spoke English with no trace of a foreign accent, prepared a
meal that justified the praise of his master. In the middle of the
dinner the subject of Mr Reeder arose again.
'What brought him to
Beaconsfield—is there anything wrong at your bank?'
Rufus saw the young man's
face go red.
'Well—there has been
money missing; not very large sums. I have my own opinion, but it
isn't fair to—well, you know.'
He was rather incoherent,
and Mr Machfield did not pursue the inquiry.
'I hate the bank anyway—I
mean the work. But I had to do something, and when I left Uppingham
my father put me there—in the bank, I mean. Poor chap, he lost his
money at Monte Carlo or somewhere—enormous sums. You wouldn't dream
that he was a gambler. I'm not complaining, but it's a little trying
sometimes.'
Mr Machfield accompanied
him to the door that night and shivered.
'Cold—shouldn't be
surprised if we had snow,' he said.
In point of fact the snow
did not come until a week later. It started as rain and became snow
in the night, and in the morning people who lived in the country
looked out upon a white world: trees that bore a new beauty and
hedges that showed their heads above sloping drifts.