The Clue of the Silver Key by Edgar Wallace (free biff chip and kipper ebooks .TXT) 📖
- Author: Edgar Wallace
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Surefoot smiled pityingly. ‘There are three ways out, but the easiest is
down the service stairs and through the kitchen. There is a coffee cook
on duty, but it would be easy to avoid him.’ He underlined with his thumb
nail a few lines of the confession. ‘Notice what a good character he
gives to Binny. That was a silly thing to do—a child in arms would know
that only Binny could have written that statement.’
‘Binny—the servant!’
Surefoot nodded.
‘He’s got several other names,’ he said. ‘One of them is Washington
Wirth. There’s the murderer!’
THE POLICE CHIEF looked at Surefoot in amazement.
‘Binny? You mean Lyne’s servant?’ asked the senior.
‘That’s what I mean,’ said Surefoot calmly. He dived into the inside of
his pocket, took out a flat envelope, and produced from this the
transcript of the long cable and a blurred photograph. ‘This came over
the wire,’ he explained. ‘It’s a picture of the man—London Len was one of
his names—who is wanted by the police of New York and Chicago. He worked
with three gangs and was lucky to get away with his life. Listen to
this.’
He put glasses on his broad nose and read from one of the cables.
‘This man speaks with a very common English accent. He is believed to
have been a valet, and his modus operandi is to obtain a situation with a
wealthy family and to use the opportunity for extensive robberies. On the
side he has worked with several booze rackets, is known to be concerned
in the killing of Eddie McGean, and is suspected of other killings.’ He
twisted the photograph round so that the inspectors could see it. ‘It’s
not pretty. It was taken at police headquarters in New York. If you don’t
know Binny, I’ll tell you that is the bird! Even his best friend would
recognize him.’
Chief Inspector Knowles examined the photograph and whistled softly. ‘I
know him. I saw him the day you had him up at the Yard, questioning him.
Why should he kill the old boy?’
‘Because he’s been forging his name. It was Miss Lane who put us on to
the track, though I was a dummy not to see it myself. All these forgeries
were committed on the seventeenth of the month, and she knew, having
lived with the old man, that that was the date he paid all his
tradesmen’s bills. He was in the habit of writing messages on the back of
his cheques, mainly of an insulting nature. The one we deciphered said:
‘“No more Chinese e—.” Miss Lane knew that the old man lived under the
impression that tradesmen spent their lives swindling him. It was his
belief that nothing but Chinese or imported eggs were sent to him. To
keep his egg and butter man up to the scratch, he used to make a note on
the back of the cheque when he paid his bill. That was his practice with
all tradesmen—Miss Lane has seen most of them: shoemakers, tailors,
provision merchants of all kinds. And do you know what they told her?’
Surefoot leaned forward over the table and spoke slowly, tapping his
finger on the desk to emphasize each word.
‘They told her that two or three years ago Lyne stopped paying by
cheque—and paid cash! Binny either used to go round and settle, or send
the money by postal order. Do you know what that means? It means that
Lyne was going blind, and that the cheques he was signing for the
tradesmen were cheques going into Binny’s private account. What made it
easier for Binny—which is his real name, by the way—was that the old man
would never admit that his sight was failing, and in his vanity claimed
that he could read as well as the next man.
It was easy for Binny, on the seventeenth of the month, to put cheques
before his master and pretend they were in settlement of the tradesmen’s
bills, when in reality they were filled in with pencil for the correct
amount. I’ve seen some of them, and under the microscope you can see the
pencil marks and the original amounts for which they were drawn. It was
easy to rub them out after the signature had been obtained, and to fill
them in for the amount Binny happened to require at the time.
‘He must have got wind that these investigations were going on, for he
went after Miss Lane, and she saved herself by pretending she thought it
was Moran. It was that which probably saved her life. When Binny heard
her say on the telephone that Moran was trying to break into her room, he
thought he’d leave well alone, and quitted. If he’d had any intelligence,
he would have known that all her inquiries incriminated not Moran, but
him! But that’s the way of ‘em—if criminals had any sense they’d never be
hanged.’
The Chief Inspector pushed the photograph back across the table. ‘Where
was the murder committed—the murder of Lyne, I mean?’
Surefoot shook his head.
‘That’s the one thing that puzzles me. It’s possible, of course, that he
did the shooting just at the moment Dornford’s car passed. The
“confession” that he prepared to throw the crime on to Moran—he was a mug
to say so many nice things about Binny—almost suggests that this is the
case. All the other crimes in this document were committed by Binny in
the way he described.’
He went back to the hotel to see Moran. There were other aspects of the
case which needed elucidation. Mike Hennessey’s death puzzled him. If the
manager was blackmailing Binny, there was motive enough. But what could
Mike Hennessey know, except that the servant of the day was the
magnificent Washington Wirth by night? And why should he blackmail the
man who was providing him with a generous income?
There was a very special reason for killing Hennessey: of that he was
sure. Before he left the Yard, Surefoot tightened the cords of the net
about the man he wanted. Binny had not been seen since the night Mary
Lane sent him to Newcastle on a fictitious errand so that she could try
the key of the pantry door of Hervey Lyne’s house.
The illuminated key was a mystery no longer. Sometimes Mr Washington
Wirth came back from these little parties of his rather exhilarated. It
was necessary that he should change his clothes in the room above the
garage, and once or twice, in changing them, he had left his key behind.
Possibly he was a methodical man, and was in the habit of putting the key
on the table. Its phosphorescent quality was added so that, even if he
switched off the light, he would not forget this necessary method of
gaining admission to Lyne’s house.
On the night of Tickler’s murder he had forgotten the key and was
compelled to break a window to get into the scullery—this had been Mary’s
theory. She had recognized the key; as a child she had seen it every day.
She had sent Binny to the north to give herself the opportunity of
testing out her theory. She had nearly lost her life in doing so, for
Binny was no fool: he had left the carriage and gone back ahead of her to
his lair.
The detective found Leo Moran conscious, but a very unhappy man, for the
after-effects of gas poisoning are not pleasant. All that he told
Surefoot confirmed what that intelligent officer had already discovered
from a perusal of his private correspondence.
Surefoot showed him the ‘confession’, and read portions of it to the
astonished man.
‘Murder!’ said Moran scornfully. ‘What rubbish! Who has been murdered?’
When Surefoot told him: ‘Hervey Lyne? Good God! How perfectly dreadful!
When did this happen?’
‘The day you went away,’ said Surefoot.
Moran frowned. ‘But I saw him the day I went away, from my window. He was
sitting under the tree in the park—when I say “the tree” I mean the tree
he always used as shade. I’ve seen him there dozens of times. Binny was
reading to him.’
‘What time was this?’ asked Surefoot quickly.
Moran thought for a while, then gave an approximate hour.
‘That must have been ten minutes before he was found dead. It was too far
away for you to see whether he was talking?’
Moran nodded. ‘When I saw him, Binny was reading to him.’
Here was unexpected evidence. Moran was probably the only man who had
watched that little group in Hervey Lyne’s last moments.
‘Where was he sitting—Binny, I mean?’
‘Where he usually sat,’ said Leo Moran instantly. ‘Facing the old man,
practically on a level with his feet. I was watching them for some time.’
‘Did you see Binny walk round to the back of the chair?’
The other hesitated. ‘Yes, he did—I remember now. He walked right round
the chair. I remember being reminded of how gamblers walk round a chair
for luck.’
‘You saw nothing else—heard nothing?’
Moran stared at him. ‘Do you suspect Binny?’
Surefoot nodded.’ It isn’t a case of suspicion, it’s a certainty.’
Again the sick man taxed his memory. ‘I’m sure I’m right in saying that
he went round the chair. I didn’t hear anything—you mean a shot? No, I
didn’t hear that, nor did I see Binny behaving suspiciously.’
Surefoot skimmed through the ‘confession’ again. ‘Do you know Binny?’
‘Slightly. He worked for me; I dismissed him for stealing. I lost a
number of small items.’
Smith put his hand in his pocket and took out the silver cigarette case
that had been found under the cushion of the car in which Mike Hennessey
had ridden to his death. The banker stretched out his hand eagerly. ‘Good
Lord, yes! I wouldn’t have lost that for a fortune. It’s one of the
things that were missing. How did you get it?’
In the man’s present condition Surefoot decided it was not the moment to
tell of the other horror which had been fastened upon him. ‘I thought it
might be,’ he said, pocketing the case. ‘It was obviously an old one and
certainly not the kind you would put where I found it. It had been
polished up for the occasion, too.’
‘What was the occasion?’ asked Moran curiously, but the detective evaded
the question.
Moran spoke quite frankly of his own movements. ‘I was a fool to go off
so hurriedly,’ he confessed,’ but I was rather piqued with my directors,
who had refused me leave. It was very vital I should be in Istanbul
whilst the board of the Cassari Company was being reconstructed. I have
very heavy interests in that company. It is now one of the richest oil
companies in the world. And, by the way, Miss Lane is a rich lady; the
shares I bought from her could not be transferred to me under the Turkish
law without yet another signature. Legally I have the right to that;
morally I haven’t; so the stock she transferred, I am transferring back
at the price I paid. Which means that she has more money than she can
spend in her lifetime. ‘He smiled.’ And so have I, for the matter of
that,’ he added.
There was nothing more to be gained from Moran, and Smith left him to
sleep off his intolerable headache. Scotland Yard had phoned that Dick
Allenby was on his way back from Paris by plane. He reached England at
dawn and found a police car waiting to take him
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