CHAPTER I. -- HOPE!
CHAPTER II. — REEDER'S INVESTIGATION
CHAPTER III. — DEATH
CHAPTER IV. — THE ARREST
CHAPTER V. — THE RED STAINS
CHAPTER VI. — MYSTERY
CHAPTER VII. — THE REVOLVER CLUE
CHAPTER VIII. — RED ROBE
CHAPTER IX. — THE SECOND TRAP
CHAPTER X. — THE FINAL PLUNGE
CHAPTER I. -- HOPE!
A few seconds later a
square wooden case was heaved through the porthole and fell with a
splash in the water. For a moment one sharp corner was in sight, then
it sank slowly beneath the yellow flood. A small black buoy bobbed
up, and the waterman watched it with interest. To the buoy was
attached a stout cord, and the cord was fastened to the case. He
waited, moving his oars slowly, until the buoy was on the point of
being sucked out of sight; then, with a turn of his wrist, he hooked
an oar under the cord—literally hooked, for at the end of the short
blade was a little steel crook.
Pushing the boat forward,
he reached for the buoy and drew this into the stern sheets, fastened
the cord round a wooden pin, and, lifting his oars, allowed the tide
to carry him under the steamer's stern. Anchored in midstream was a
dingy-looking barge and towards this he guided the skiff.
A heavily-built young man
came from the aft deck of the barge, and, reaching down a boathook,
drew the skiff alongside. The swarthy man held on to the side of the
barge, whilst the boathook was transferred to the taut line astern.
The younger man did no more than fasten the soaking cord to a small
bight. By this time the occupant of the skiff was on board.
'Nobody about, Ligsey?' he
asked gruffly.
'Nobody, cap'n,' said the
younger man.
The captain said nothing
more, but walked to the deck-house astern and disappeared down the
companion-way, pulling the hatch close after him. There he stayed
till the estuary was a black void punctured with dim ships' lights.
Ligsey went forward to
where his youthful assistant sat on an overturned bucket, softly
playing a mouth-organ. He stopped being musical long enough to remark
that the tide was turning.
'We going up to-night?' he
asked.
Ligsey nodded. He had
already heard the chuff-chuff of the motor in the stern of the barge,
where the skipper was starting it.
'What we hangin' around
here for?' asked the youth curiously. 'We've missed one tide—we
could have been up to Greenwich by now. Why don't Captain Attymar—'
'Mind your own business!'
growled the mate.
He heard the swarthy man
calling him and went aft.
'We'll get that case in
and stow it.' he said in a low voice. 'I left a place in the bricks.'
Together they pulled
gingerly at the cord and brought the square, soaked packing-case to
sight. Ligsey leaned over and gripped it with an instrument like a
pair of huge ice-tongs, and the dripping case was brought to the
narrow deck and stowed expeditiously in the well of the barge.
The invariably
carried bricks between a little yard on the Essex coast and Tenny's
Wharf. Everybody on the river knew her for an erratic and a
dangerous-steering craft. The loud chuffing of her engine was an
offence. Even nippy tug.boats gave her yawing bows a wide berth.
The boy was called aft to
take charge of the engine, and Ligsey took the tiller. It was five
o'clock on a spring morning when she came to Tenny's Wharf, which is
at Rotherhithe.
As a wharfage it had few
qualities attractive to the least fastidious of bargees. It consisted
of a confined space with room for two builders' lorries to be backed
side by side (though it required some manoeuvring to bring them into
position), and the shabby little house where Joe Attymar lived.
Through the weather-beaten gate, which opened at intervals to admit
the builders' carts, was Shadwick Lane. It had none of the
picturesque character of the slum it used to be, when its houses were
of wood and water-butts stood in every back-yard. Nowadays it
consists of four walls, two on either side of the street. Bridging
each pair is an inverted 'V' of slate, called a roof, and at frequent
intervals there are four red chimney-pots set on a small, square,
brick tower. These denote roughly where lateral walls divide one
hutch from another. Each partition is called a 'house,' for which
people pay rent when they can afford it. The walls which face the
street have three windows and a doorway to each division.
Joe Attymar's house did
not properly stand in the lane at all, and Shadwick Lane was only
remotely interested in the barge-master, for the curious reason that
he could reach his house and yard by Shadwick Passage, a tortuous
alley that threaded a way between innumerable back-yards, and under
the shadow of a high warehouse, to Tooley Street. Year after year the
swarthy man with the little iron-grey beard and the shaggy eyebrows
brought his barge up the river, always with a cargo of bricks. And
invariably the barge went down empty and without his presence; for,
for some reason, there was neither passenger nor skipper on the
down-river trip.
This fact was unknown to
the people of Shadwick Lane. They were even unaware that Joe Attymar
did not sleep in his house more than one night every month. They
knew, of course, from the muddy old motor-car that he drove through
the wide gates occasionally, that he went abroad, but guessed that he
was engaged in the legitimate business of lighterman.
THERE are certain minor
problems, which from time to time cause the chiefs of Scotland Yard
to move uneasily and impatiently in their padded chairs and say to
their immediate subordinates "Do something." Mr. Attymar,
though he was blissfully unaware of the fact, was one of those minor
problems.
There are gaming houses
which harass the police, strange little clubs and other
establishments less easy to write about, but Mr Attymar was not
associated with one of these. Such problems are, in one shape or
another, perennial! Occasionally they grow acute and just at that
moment the question of systematic smuggling was worrying Scotland
Yard considerably.
Chief Constable Mason sent
for Inspector Gaylor.
'They've pulled in a
fellow who was peddling dope in Lisle Street last night,' he said,
'You might see him after his remand. I have an idea he'll squeak.'
But the man in question
was no squeaker, though he had certainly given that impression when
he was taken red-handed. He said enough, however, to the patient
detective to suggest that he might say more.
'All that I could find
out,' said Gaylor, 'is that this selling organization is nearly
foolproof. The gang that we rushed last year isn't handling the
output, but I'm satisfied that it still has the same governor.'
'Get him,' said the Chief,
who was in the habit of asking for miracles in the same tone as he
asked for his afternoon tea. And then a thought struck him. 'Go along
and see Reeder. The Public Prosecutor was telling me today that
Reeder is available for any extra work. He may be able to help,
anyway.'
Mr. Reeder heard the
request, sighed and shook his head. 'I'm afraid it is
rather—um—outside my line of business. Dope? There used to be a
man named Moodle. It may not have been his name, but he had
associations with these wretched people—'
'Moodle, whose name was
Sam Oschkilinski, has been dead nearly a year,' said Gaylor.
'Dear me!' said Mr.
Reeder, in a hushed voice appropriate to one who has lost a dear
friend. 'Of what did he die?'
'Loss of breath,' said
Gaylor vulgarly.
Mr. Reeder knew nothing
more that he could recall about dope merchants.
'Haven't you some record
on your files?' suggested Gaylor.
'I never keep files,
except—um—nail files,' said Mr Reeder.
'Perhaps,' suggested
Gaylor, 'one of your peculiar friends—'
'I have no friends,' said
Mr. Reeder
But here he did not speak
the exact truth.
Mr. Reeder was an
authority on poultry and his acquaintance with Johnny Southers began
in a fowl-house. Johnny lived three doors from Mr. Reeder. He was
rather a nice young man, fair-haired and good-looking. He had in Mr
Reeder's eyes the overwhelming advantage of being a very poor
conversationalist.
Anna Welford lived in the
house opposite, so that it may be said that the scene was set, for
the curious tragedy of Joe Attymar, on a very small stage.
It was through the
unromantic question of a disease which attacked Johnny Southers'
prize hens that Mr. Reeder met Anna. She happened to be in the
Southers' back garden when Mr. Reeder was engaged in his diagnosis.
She was a slim girl, rather dark, with amazing brown eyes.
Johnny did not fall in
love with her at first sight. He had known her since she was so high:
when he was a boy she was endurable to him. As a young man he thought
her views on life were sound. He discovered he was in love with her
as he discovered he was taller than his father. It was a subject for
surprise.
It was brought home to him
when Clive Desboyne called in his new car to take Anna to a
dinner-dance. He resented Mr. Desboyne's easy assurance, the
proprietorial way he handed Anna into the car. Thereafter Johnny
found himself opening and examining packing-cases and casks and
barrels at the Customs House with a sense of inferiority and the
hopelessness of his future.
In such a mood he
consulted his authority on poultry, and Mr. Reeder listened with all
the interest of one who was hearing a perfectly new and original
story which had never been told before by or to any human being.
'I know so very
little—um—about love,' said Mr. Reeder awkwardly. 'In
fact—er—nothing. I would like to advise you to—um—let matters
take their course.'
Very excellent, if vague,
advice. But matters took the wrong course, as it happened.