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The Riddle of the Rail E-Book

Fred M. White

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Beschreibung

Infrequently puzzles can be solved. However, the main character, inspector Norcliff, is trying to solve this problem. The inspector had no resemblance to the average detective fiction; Indeed, he represented the exterior much more like a successful middle-aged businessman, than a hunter of his fellow creatures. He was the best in the business. Therefore, he was ready to take on a new business with great enthusiasm.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2018

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Contents

Chapter I

Chapter II

Chapter III

Chapter IV

Chapter V

Chapter VI

Chapter VII

Chapter VIII

Chapter IX

Chapter X

Chapter XI

Chapter XII

Chapter XIII

Chapter XIV

Chapter XV

Chapter XVI

Chapter XVII

Chapter XVIII

Chapter XIX

Chapter XX

Chapter XXI

Chapter XXII

Chapter XXIII

Chapter XXIV

Chapter XXV

Chapter XXVI

Chapter XXVII

Chapter XXVIII

Chapter XXIX

Chapter XXX

Chapter XXXI

Chapter XXXII

Chapter XXXIII

Chapter XXXIV

Chapter XXXV

Chapter XXXVI

Chapter XXXVII

Chapter XXXVIII

Chapter XXXIX

Chapter XL

Chapter XLI

Chapter XLII

Chapter XLIII

CHAPTER I

The foreman porter of the goods yard with two of his hands trailing behind him paused at length before a waggon in the midst of a clatter of laden trucks on the isolated siding and indicated it with grimy forefinger.

“Now get to it,” he directed. “And don’t you leave that van till it’s empty, mind. Here’s the manager of Tiptons downs in the office carrying on as if the Devon and Central Railway belonged to them. Says that he ought to have had the stuff three days ago.”

“So ‘e should,” one of the porters said sotto voce.

“Yes, that’s right enough, Bill,” the foreman agreed. “It’s this holiday excursion traffic that throws everything out and gives us double work for no more pay. But get on with it. Tiptons’ lorry will be here any minute now.”

The two railwaymen mounted the waggon and proceeded to strip back the heavy tarpaulin that lay over it to protect its somewhat fragile contents from the vagaries of the English climate. The van itself was filled with spring produce from the Warwickshire district–early gooseberries, potatoes, spring rhubarb and the like–which had been sent down to the West by goods train with a view to the Whitsuntide holidays. But, as the foreman said, the goods train had been shunted here and there over the hundred and fifty miles to make room for the various excursion trains radiating from the Midlands right down to what is known as the Cornish Riviera. It was rather unfortunate for the consignee of these perishable goods, but there was no help for it. All the railway authorities could do now was to expedite the unloading as quickly as possible, and then their side of the task was finished.

Hardly had half the tarpaulin been rolled back before one of the workmen looked across at his mate, who was tugging at the other end, and shouted something that the latter failed to understand.

“What’s up, mate?” the second man asked. “Blime, but you look as if you’d seen a ghost, Bill!”

“You just come ‘ere,” the other man whispered hoarsely. “There, my lad, what d’you make of that?”

The speaker pointed to something lying on the top of a layer of baskets filled with early gooseberries. It was the body of a man, a middle-aged, well-dressed man with a small brown moustache and pointed beard, reclining there as if he had been asleep. But it was no ordinary sleep, as both the railwaymen, looking down upon him, knew only too well. They had seen too much of that sort of thing during the years in France to be mistaken.

“Yes, he’s dead enough,” the first man said, as he glanced into the face of his companion. “And it don’t look as if there’d been any violence, either. No marks and no blood, nor nothing.”

“Yes, an’ no robbery, neither,” the other man put in. “Just twig ‘is watch chain an’ the diamond pin in ‘is scarf.”

“Yes, an’ that there hothouse rose in ‘is buttonhole. He must ‘ave crept into the waggon when it was waiting in one of the sidings with the object getting a lift on the cheap. An’ yet a cove dressed as ‘e is, with that gold watch chain and diamond pin an’ all the rest of it, ain’t the sort as can’t pay ‘is fare. Looks to me like a first-class passenger.”

“Yes, you’re about right there. You nip along as far as the office an’ ask Mr. Gregory to come this way. This is a job not for the handlin’ o’ the likes of you and me.”

A little later on, a man in authority came down into the siding. He asked a question or two, then made a brief inspection for himself and, without further delay, dispatched one of the workmen to Barnstaple police headquarters, in search of a superintendent.

A quarter of an hour later, the body of the dead man was lifted out on to the line for the inspection of the superintendent. He made a more or less perfunctory examination before he spoke.

“Um, I can’t make this out at all. No signs of violence whatever, no bones broken and no blood. I am not a medical man, so I cannot say for certain, but I should say that the poor fellow has been dead for a day or two. One of you go along and fetch the ambulance, so that we can take the body as far as the mortuary.”

Meanwhile, the superintendent, together with the man in authority, stood idly waiting there. To them presently came a little, inquisitive-looking man, with rimless pince-nez and an expression of something more than curiosity on his pinched features. He was lame as to his left leg, but he hopped along dexterously enough as he plied the superintendent with all sorts of questions.

“Now, look here,” the superintendent said. “It’s no use worrying me, Mr. Jagger, because I can’t tell you any more than you know. Yes, the body was found on the top of a waggon load of vegetable matter! and there it lies for you to see for yourself. Who the man is and how he got there is a mystery, and probably will remain so till after the inquest. But I don’t mind telling you that there are no signs of violence on the body, and nothing to suggest that the man did not die a natural death. And this much I don’t mind saying. Whoever the man is, he wasn’t short of money. Beyond his diamond pin and gold watch and chain, I found over forty pounds in his note-case. And that is all you will learn for the present.”

“Oh, that’s good enough to get on with,” the little lame man said cheerfully. “You see, I must look after the interests of my paper, and, besides, I am the local correspondent on the ‘Daily Bulletin.’ I must get away and telephone this at once.”

There was nothing more that could be done until the body of the dead man had been examined by the police doctor, and even he was comparatively puzzled when he made his examination in the mortuary, attended by the superintendent of police.

“I can’t for the life of me make it out,” he said. “I can see no sign of any marks that would indicate foul play. I can’t find anything wrong, not even the slightest derangement of clothing. And look at that rose in the buttonhole. A Gloire de Dijon, unless I am greatly mistaken, and certainly a flower that must have come from a greenhouse at this time of the year. It is a bit faded, of course, but not a single leaf has been disturbed.”

“Poison,” the superintendent suggested. “Man poisoned and then his body carried, in the hours of darkness, and placed in the waggon. Not a bad way of getting rid of a corpse, so that it will eventually be found perhaps a hundred and fifty miles from where the crime was committed. See what I mean?”

“No, I confess that I do not,” the doctor admitted. “I presume that train came direct from Brendham, or, at any rate was placed on rail somewhere in that district.”

“Well, certainly the train started near about there and, in the ordinary course of things, wound have come straight through. But, you see, there has been such a tremendous amount of holiday traffic which has only been cleared off this morning, and that means that the goods train must have been held up three or four times on the way. Of course, I can’t say without making inquiries, but the train might have been shunted in two or three places during the nights since it started for the West. However, we shall see.”

“When would you like to have the inquest?” the doctor asked.

“Well, in the ordinary course of events, it ought to be to-morrow, but in the circumstances, I should like to have it postponed for another day, at least. You see, this appears to be something quite out of the common, and, in any case, it may be a few days before the man’s friends turn up to identify him. He might be travelling on business and writing no letters, so that his relatives would not have the slightest idea that he was dead. I don’t know why, but I feel that this is going to turn into a very big thing. One of those tragedies that the public freeze on to and all the papers lay themselves out for special features. We shall have half the reporters in London down here before to-morrow is out. That is why I want the inquest put off a bit, because I am quite certain that the Yard will have to have a hand in this business. In fact, I think I shall get on the telephone to London at once.”

The superintendent was not far wrong in his conjecture, for the next morning’s issue of the ‘Daily Bulletin’ came out with flaring headlines and a more or less pyrotechnic description of the strange event that had come to light in the goods-yard at Barnstaple station. All of which the superintendent recognised as the handwork of that smart reporter Jagger. He had scarcely assimilated the melodrama before he was called to the telephone. He could hear by the hum of the wire that he was on a long-distance call and it did not require much intelligence on his part to guess that Scotland Yard was at the other end of the line.

“Inspector Norcliff speaking,” came the words, more or less distinctly. “That Westport headquarters? Oh yes, Mr. Grierson. About that railway mystery. Sorry I could not get on to you yesterday, but I was out of town all day. As a matter of fact, I have just read the account of the finding of the body in this morning’s ‘Daily Bulletin.’ No fresh developments, I suppose?”

“No, sir,” Grierson replied. “And, so far, no inquiries as regards the dead man. I may say that our doctor here is considerably puzzled. He agrees with me that there has been foul play somewhere, but there is no sign of that to be seen on the corpse. If you could only make it convenient to get down here–”

“Oh, you need not trouble about that,” came the reply. “I am catching the eleven ten from town, and I am bringing one of our own medico-scientific experts with me.”

With that, the brief conversation ended and the superintendent went back to his work. He was glad enough to hear that he was going to have the finest assistance that the brains of Scotland Yard could lend him, with a view to the solution to a case which he frankly admitted was a little outside his grasp.

“Well, that’s all right, so far,” he told himself. “I can’t do any more for the present, though perhaps the ‘Daily Bulletin’ account might help in bringing forward somebody to identify the body.”

CHAPTER II

Inspector Norcliff sat in the corner of a first-class carriage on the Western bound express with a companion seated opposite him. They had the compartment entirely to themselves, so that they could discuss what was already known as the Barnstaple mystery without being overheard. The inspector bore no sort of likeness to the average sleuth of fiction; indeed, he presented an appearance much more like a successful middle-aged business man than a hunter of his fellow creatures. He was tall and rather inclined to slimness, with grey moustache and nearly pointed beard, and his dress was that of a prosperous city man, such as might be seen by the hundred every morning on the suburban lines.

His companion, on the other hand, was insignificant looking, not to say shabby. He wore a blue serge suit, which might have been slept in, and a soft collar that resembled a rag more than anything else. But his keen, intellectual features and his high forehead proclaimed him to the thoughtful observer as an individual distinctly out of the common. And indeed, the man known as Vincent Trumble had more than a passing reputation amongst the ranks of those who are interested in psycho-analysis and medical jurisprudence. For the time being, at any rate, he was more or less attached to Scotland Yard and one of its most valued staff.

“Well, doctor, what do you make of it?” Norcliff asked.

Trumble looked up from the ‘Daily Bulletin,’ which he had been studying, word for word so far as the railway mystery was concerned, ever since the train steamed out of London.

“Oh, I am not going to commit myself, my friend,” Trumble smiled. “All the same, this is a most interesting account. That reporter chap down at Westport must be a bit of a genius in his way. With very little to go upon he hasn’t missed a single point.”

“Yes, that’s all very well,” Norcliff said. “But it doesn’t get us any further. Was that man murdered?”

“My dear chap, how on earth can I tell? If you ask me, as man to man, I should suggest that he was. Of course, there might have been some reason why he hid himself on the top of that vegetable waggon. For instance, he might be a fugitive from justice. If you accept that view, then there is nothing out of the way in the fact that he was wearing a valuable gold watch and chain and a diamond pin, to say nothing of the fact of his being in possession of some considerable means. The Midland police may have been after him, for all we know to the contrary.”

“If they had been, I should have known it,” Norcliff said.

“Oh no, you wouldn’t, my friend. There has been no time. The hue and cry will not really begin until all the police offices in England have duly digested that sensational column in to-day’s ‘Daily Bulletin.’ A point to me, I think, Inspector.”

“One up, doctor,” Norcliff smiled. “Go on.”

“Oh, well, it is only a game, so far as we are concerned at present,” the doctor said. “I am only showing you what might be. The man was getting away from his pursuers, and he hit upon that ingenious method of putting as much ground as possible between himself and those upon his track. Probably, he hoped to reach Plymouth or Falmouth and get passage on some outward-bound boat. And then, instead of a prosaic ending like that, he died suddenly on the way. We may be in pursuit of a phantom, after all.”

“Yes, we might,” Norcliff agreed, “but if he died a natural death, the post-mortem examination will show that.”

“Of course it will. But there is another side to the question. Suppose it wasn’t a natural death, and suppose the man was not running away from justice? Don’t you think it most extraordinary thing that one who was evidently a professional or high-class business man should know exactly how to get on board that goods train? I mean, he could not have boarded it at the point of dispatch without being seen, because that smart little journalist managed to elicit the fact that the waggon was loaded in daylight. I don’t know where he got the information, probably by asking fruit dealers in Westport. At any rate, there it is, and it’s a guinea to a gooseberry that the journalistic faculty has not gone wrong.”

“But what does it lead up to?” Norcliff asked.

“Well, it leads up to this. That dead man, whoever, he is, must have made a very careful study of railway procedure, so far as goods trains are concerned. He must have discovered that, in certain circumstances, covered waggons and the like might possibly be detained en route between the Midlands and Westport. I mean, he must have been cognisant of the fact that there were certain stopping places especially at this time of year. I take it that, usually, those fast goods trains go right through. They would not be much use for fruit trains if they didn’t. But, on this particular occasion, the train was side-tracked on more than one occasion. We have to thank that Barnstaple reporter for that bit of information. Unless my deductions are entirely wrong, the dead man knew pretty well what was going to happen to that particular train. He knew that it could not be relied upon to get through during the Whitsun holiday traffic and that it would be shunted into a siding. And now I will come to an entirely opposite theory to the one I advanced just now. Let us suppose for a moment that somebody else knew all about this. Let us suppose that the other person knew pretty well what was going on and had discovered from the dead man exactly how he was going to escape. He knew, moreover, a particular siding where that train would be shunted. He wanted to get rid of the murdered man–”

“But you said just now–” Norcliff interrupted.

“Oh, never mind what I said just now. There were two of them in some big criminal business. The second man wanted to get rid of the first, and, knowing what his colleague knew about those trains, laid a little scheme to that end. In other words murdered him somewhere in the neighborhood of one of those stopping places and contrived to get the body hidden in the waggon, where it was found. Moreover, by so doing, he would make it almost impossible for you to lay your hand upon the exact spot where the crime was committed. It might have been no further west than Abbotsbury, or, on the other hand, it might have been as far as Bristol. You see, these sidings are some times in very lonely places, so that under cover of darkness it would not have been a difficult matter to handle a body. Of course, the details would have to be carefully planned beforehand and the victim lured to a certain spot, but a really clever criminal could manage that easily. However, we cannot get any further until we find out exactly where that waggon lay each night during the delayed journey between the Midlands and the West.”

“Most ingenious,” Norcliff said. “You have certainly given me something to think about doctor. Upon my word I shall be almost disappointed if we discover that that man died a natural death.”

“Well, it would certainly be like Hamlet with the Prince left out,” the doctor agreed. “Still, as King George said about the dumpling ‘how the deuce did the apple get inside?’ You’ve got to find out how a well-dressed, apparently prosperous man was discovered dead, hiding himself on the top of a railway truck. And, unless I am greatly mistaken, when you do discover that, you will find yourself on the track of a great criminal conspiracy.”

They were still discussing the case from more points of view than one, when, finally, they stepped out of the train at Westport late in the afternoon to find Inspector Grierson on the platform awaiting them. Norcliff wasted no time in making the necessary introductions and then they moved off in the direction of the mortuary.

“I want to see that body, Mr. Superintendent,” Trumble said. “I understand that your police doctor is a little uncertain.”

“Well, he doesn’t like to speak too positively, sir,” the superintendent replied. “Perhaps you would like to see him too.”

“Later on, certainly,” Trumble said. “Meanwhile, I should like to have a chance of examining the body alone.”

It was a long time before Trumble, busy in that gloomy little room, began to speak. He had examined the body of the dead man with a meticulous care that left nothing to chance. Then, at length, he turned to the others and proceeded to enlighten them.

“Of course, no one can be quite certain until after the post-mortem,” he said. “I may be entirely wrong, but I have come to the conclusion that the deceased was murdered.”

“Poison?” the superintendent suggested.

“Well, in a way. Not exactly poison, perhaps, but certainly some very powerful drug. I know the symptoms of most of the great poisoning results, that is, poisoning pure and simple. And yet I can detect no signs on the body of any poison of which I am cognisant. No congestion of the eyes, no contraction of the muscles, but every sign that the victim was at one time under the influence of a drug that rendered him absolutely unconscious.”

“And then?” Norcliff asked. “And then?”

“Oh, I am not suggesting that he was placed in the waggon when he was insensible,” the doctor said. “I am fully under the impression that he was dead at the time. He was murdered when the drug was at its height, quite simply and in a way that would show no signs of violence. It would only be necessary for his murderer to hold a folded towel over his mouth and nostrils when vitality was at its lowest ebb, and then he would have just faded out of life without the slightest appearance of a struggle. And that, in my considered opinion, is the way he was killed.”

“The post-mortem should confirm that,” Grierson said. “Then when the facts are disclosed at the inquest–”

Trumble turned on him like a terrier on a rat.

“There must be no such disclosure at the inquest,” he snapped. “It would be fatal to our investigations. My idea is to do not more than give simple facts at the inquest and then ask for an adjournment for two or three weeks. And I am quite sure that in this my friend Norcliff will agree with me.”

CHAPTER III

The local superintendent regarded Trumble with a puzzled expression. It was quite evident that he did not know what the latter had in the back of his mind.

“I am afraid I don’t follow you, sir,” he said.

“Well, it’s this way,” Trumble explained. “Let us take it for granted, for the moment, that this is a case of murder. Mind you, I am not going so far as to say definitely that it is, but permit me to assume it. If I am right, then the murderer, whoever he is, has committed something quite novel in the way of a crime. He has drugged his victim first and suffocated him afterwards with a view to deceiving the doctor who handles the case. It is hardly probable that the criminal knows anything about medical jurisprudence; indeed, it would be a very strange coincidence if he did. He is probably miles away now, hugging himself with the delusion that the verdict will be one of ‘found dead.’ He will naturally jump to the conclusion that he has deceived the doctors, and that though the case is mysterious enough there is no evidence of first-hand crime about it. But if it comes out at the inquest that the man was drugged and then suffocated and that my evidence proved such a contention up to the hilt, then the man for whom we are looking will be put upon his guard. But why should we go out of our way to do so?”

“Meaning that the inquest is to be a sort of blind?” the superintendent asked. “Deceiving the public.”

“Well, you can call it that if you like. But I don’t think we can work this little scheme without the aid of the coroner. You see, what I want at the first hearing is that there should be nothing but formal evidence tendered. Then you, Mr. Superintendent, can formally apply for a fortnight’s adjournment in the interests of justice. Perhaps you will be good enough to attend to that.”

“Yes, that’s the idea,” Norcliff interpolated. “You see the coroner and tell him all that we have discovered. Explain to him exactly what Mr. Trumble has in the back of his mind, and ask him to see that nothing beyond the mere formalities crops up. You never know what questions some fool of a juryman is likely to ask. Nothing more for the moment, is there, Trumble?”

Dr. Trumble, having said his say, intimated that he was perfectly satisfied with the position of affairs as far as it had gone, and with that the conference broke up. The two men from London went back to their hotel to dine, leaving local matters in the hands of the superintendent. There was nothing to do now but wait for the inquest, which was held, in due course, two days later in the Town Hall, and, as Norcliff predicted, caused a great sensation. Long before the proceedings commenced the building was packed and the press table full to overflowing.

“What did I tell you?” Norcliff muttered, as he and his companion made their way to the place allotted to them. “I told you we should have all the reporters in the country down here, and you can see for yourself that I am correct.”

It was even as Norcliff had said. The railway mystery had gripped the public imagination and the cheap press was making the most of it. There was not much to go upon so far, but it was wonderful what they had done with the small amount of material at their disposal. They had gathered here now, from all over England, looking forward eagerly to sensational details in which they were going to be disappointed. It was not for any of them to know that Superintendent Grierson had seen the coroner and explained to him the exact position of affairs. And he, of course, had been only too willing to fall in with the suggestion that had emanated from Scotland Yard.

He took his seat, after the jury was sworn, and immediately got to business. First came the two railwaymen who had found the body, who had very little to say that was not already public property, and after them came the police surgeon, who had officially made a post-mortem. Even he had very little to disclose.

“I was called in, in the course of my duty,” he said glibly, “to examine the body of deceased. So far as I can ascertain, the dead man came to a natural end. I am not saying I am right, sir, because the case presents peculiar features. I should say the dead man was about 50 years of age and there was nothing about the organs of the body to point to any particular cause of death.”

“They were normal and healthy?” the coroner asked,

“Exactly, sir. The heart was sound and so were the arteries. In fact, quite a healthy subject, and, moreover, a man who has taken great care of himself, which was proved by the state in which I found both kidneys and liver.”

‘“Then you think it is a case of natural death?” the coroner asked.

“On the face of things, I should say yes, sir. But there are peculiar features of the case which I should prefer not to go into for the moment. If you will allow me to say so–”

“Oh, quite, quite,” the coroner said a little anxiously. “You found no symptoms of poisoning, for instance?”

“Not the slightest trace. I may say that I had assistance in making my post-mortem from a distinguished colleague who happens to be here at the present moment, but whose name I need not mention, because he has nothing whatever to do with the case. Neither of us could find the slightest trace of poison, but, at the same time, we came to the conclusion that though the deceased seemed to be normal in every way he was not unacquainted with drugs.”

“Which suggests an overdose,” the coroner put in.

“It may be that,” the witness said. “The deceased might have taken more than he was accustomed to, and if he had turned over on his face, as indeed he was discovered, with his head half buried in a basket of produce, then he might have suffocated. But, of course, all this is mere surmise on my part.”

“Then you don’t think it is a case of murder?” a juryman asked.

“I decline to express a definite opinion at the moment,” the witness said cautiously. “But it is just possible that deceased was alive when he found his way into the railway waggon. I have had no time to apply certain tests which were suggested to me by my colleague, but perhaps, as the inquest is pretty sure to be adjourned, I shall be in a position to speak more freely at the next hearing.”

The last few words were a plain hint to the coroner, and he promptly took them as such.

“Thank you, doctor,” he said. “I don’t think we shall want to trouble you any further. Call the superintendent.”

The superintendent stepped up to the table and gabbled off his evidence in a professional manner. But nothing that he could say served to throw further light on the mystery.

“It is all very strange,” the coroner murmured. “There has been a good deal of publicity given to this case; in fact, it seems to have attracted attention all over the country. This being so, it is remarkable that nobody has come forward to identify deceased. Here is a man who is apparently of the professional or prosperous business type, well dressed and bearing on his body certain valuables, who, apparently, seems to have no one who knows him and is without relatives. Of course, a good many people don’t read the papers, but still, considering that the man had evidently travelled by the train between Brendham and Westport–”

“Interrupting you for the moment, sir,” Norcliff said, “I would respectfully remind you that that has yet to be proved. To begin with, I have ascertained that the fruit train, or, at any fate, that particular fruit waggon, was made up at Brendham in the broad daylight. Therefore, the subject of this inquiry could not have started from that town. Moreover, those particular waggons were shunted on more than one occasion between Brendham and Westport, and twice, if not more, they were side-tracked during the hours of the night. That being the case–”

“Yes, yes, I quite see your point,” the coroner said. “The mistake is mine. But still I cannot understand why it is that no one has come forward to identify the body. Am I to understand that no papers were found on it?”

“So the superintendent tells me,” Norcliff said. “There was not a single scrap of writing of any sort. Moreover, there was no name or initial on the man’s handkerchief or on any of his underclothing. I have looked in vain for the tab at the back of the coat collar, where the tailor usually has his name and place of business. That may have been carefully removed, but again I am speaking entirely without book.”

“But the buttons on the clothing?” the coroner hinted.

“They were all plain buttons. And so were the buttons on the dead man’s trousers, which very often bear the tailor’s imprint.”

“From all of which it would appear that deceased was taking special steps to preserve his anonymity.”

“Possible,” Norcliff agreed, “But so far I have seen nothing to lead me to believe so. What we have to do now is to trace the various stopping places of the train, so as to narrow down the two or three spots in which the dead man could have entered the train, or his body was carried there. You have had the medical evidence, sir, which does not throw much light upon the mystery, and, if I may say so, I fail to see the object of carrying this inquiry any further until I have had an opportunity for closer investigation.”

“Which means that you apply for an adjournment?”

“That is right, sir,” Norcliff said. “Would you be good enough to put it off till, say, this day fortnight?”

The coroner rose from his seat with alacrity.

“Very well,” he said. “I quite agree with you, Inspector Norcliff. The case is adjourned till this day fortnight, at half-past ten in the morning, when all witnesses will be present.”

With that, the disappointed audience filed out and the small army of press reporters turned disconsolately away. For a minute or two Norcliff and the rest of them lingered behind after the coroner had gone, and talked the situation over together, though there was very little in what had happened to take hold of.

“I suppose it’s up to you now, sir,” Superintendent Grierson said. “I don’t see how I can do anything more for the present.”

CHAPTER IV

“I am inclined to agree with you,” Norcliff said. “Of course, you will keep your eyes open in case anything should turn up, though I am not in the least sanguine. Out there are one or two little points to which I want to call your attention before we go any further. Now we have got rid of the possibility of inquisitive jurymen, I want to point out to you certain peculiarities in the clothing of the deceased. Of course, it is a common thing for a man, especially if he happens to be a single man, as the deceased might have been, to have his underclothing and linen unmarked. Your average bachelor buys just what he wants from time to time and sends it to his laundry without any means of identification, because he does not know any better. Whereas, if he were a married man, with women about him, then the articles I speak of would be branded with his name, or at least his initials. And this, I conclude, tends to prove that deceased was single. Quite a minor point, but it may turn out to be important later on. And, another thing. Did you notice anything peculiar about the clothing?”

“I can’t say I did,” the superintendent admitted.

“Well, first of all, he was wearing American shoes. No mistake about them. You know those brown shoes with knobby toes that the well-dressed Yankee always affects.”

“Perfectly right,” the superintendent admitted. “I ought to have noticed that, but I am afraid I didn’t.”

“Very well, then. Let us go a step further. The cut of the coat, very broad across the shoulder, and loose fitting. American again. Both the shoes and the suit of clothes were made in the United States. So probably, was the underclothing. Let us suppose, for a moment, that this man was a tourist, travelling about England, as so many Americans do, and getting into bad hands. He might have had thousands of pounds on him. This being the case, it would be an artful move on the part of the murderer or murderers to leave him his watch and chain and note-case, to say nothing of the diamond pin in his tie. If I am right in this surmise, then that accounts for the fact that nobody has come forward to claim the body. The man might have been in England a week, he might have been here six months. But somebody must have known him. I mean such people as hotel-keepers and bank cashiers. We can’t get any sort of move on until we can lay hands upon somebody who can say who the man was or, at any rate, what he called himself. And yet, there is nothing by which we could identify him.”

“Oh, yes, there is,” a little squeaky voice broke in from the background. “I have an idea.”

Norcliff turned somewhat angrily in the direction of the speaker. Then he saw, to his great annoyance, that he was face to face with the little lame journalist who had been responsible for the flaring article in the ‘Daily Bulletin.’

“What the deuce are you doing here?” he demanded. “Now, tell me exactly what you came back for.”

“I didn’t come back at all,” the little man smiled. “I haven’t been away yet. I sat in a corner there, writing my report, and I suppose you didn’t notice me. All the same, I shouldn’t have butted in like this if I hadn’t heard what you said and if I hadn’t had something in the nature of a brain wave.”

“Well, what is it?” Norcliff said more good-naturedly.

“Well, it’s just this, Inspector. I am interested in this case. I was the first to get on to it, and the first to publish the facts. It was a bit of a scoop for me, and it ought to do me a spot of good. I am a bit ambitious, I am, and I think I am a cut above the country reporting job that keeps me down here. Now, I have been over that man’s wardrobe as carefully as you have. And, if I am not greatly mistaken, I have discovered something like a clue.”

“Out with it, then,” Norcliff said encouragingly.

“Oh, half a mo’,” the little man grinned. “Not quite so fast as all that. I’ve got to get a bit out of this, as well as you, and the ‘Daily Bulletin’ is going to know it. All I want is that my paper should come first. There is a job going in Fleet-street, and if I make good over this business, I stand a thundering good chance of getting it. You help me and I will help you.”

“Quite fair,” Norcliff said. “It wouldn’t be the first time I got a tip from the press, and I am always ready to acknowledge it. I shall know where to put in a good word for you.”

“O.K.,” the little man smiled serenely. “Now, perhaps you will send somebody round to the police station and ask them to look among the dead man’s effects and bring his collar back.”

A few minutes later, and the little man stood before what he felt to be an interested group, with the double linen collar in his hand. He pointed to the inside of the neck-band.

“There you are,” he said. “No maker’s name on that collar, and, no sort of trade mark, I mean, it isn’t called anything, like the ‘Burlington’ or the ‘Acme,’ or anything of that sort. But there is a mark on it, as you can see for yourself.”

He handed over the strip of linen to Norcliff, who saw, in blurred marking-ink by the side of the button-hole, the letters XX.L. roughly scrawled and somewhat faint from constant washings.

“There you are,” Jagger went on. “That’s a laundry mark, that is. Wonder you didn’t tumble to it before, Inspector.”

“Well, I didn’t,” the Inspector said shortly. “Go on.”

“Why, certainly. It’s a laundry mark all right, and, moreover, a laundry of which the deceased was in the habit of making regular use, or the letters wouldn’t have run and faded as they have.”

“I don’t quite see it,” the Inspector said.

“Oh, can’t you?” the little man jeered. “Must have been the same laundry, because if he had been in the habit of changing from one washing establishment to another, then there would be other marks. Now do you see what I mean?”