The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
Book online «The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) đ». Author J. S. Fletcher
âAny luck?â asked Hetherwick.
âScarcely that. But, as I say, weâre at work. The five-pound note is a difficult matter. Given in change, of course, at Vivianâs Night Clubâ âbut they tell me there that itâs no uncommon thing to change ten, twenty, and even fifty-pound notes for their customersâ âitâs a swell lot who forgather thereâ âand of course theyâve no recollection whatever about that particular note or night. Still, the fact remainsâ âthat note came through Vivianâs, and through one of its frequenters, to Granett, and Iâm in hopes.â
âAnd the medicine bottle?â suggested Hetherwick.
âAh, there is more chance!â responded Matherfield, with a lightening eye. âThatâs only a question of time! Iâve got a man going round all the chemists in the West Central districtâ âstiff job, for there are more of âem than I believed. But heâs bound to hit on the right one eventually. And thenâ âwell, we shall have a pretty good idea, if not positive proof, as to how Granett got hold of the stuff that poisoned him.â
âI suppose thereâs no doubt that there was poison in that bottle?â inquired Hetherwick.
âAccording to the specialists, none,â replied Matherfield. âAnd in the glass too. What sort of poison, I donât knowâ âyou know what these experts areâ âso mysterious about things! But they have told me thisâ âthe stuff that settled Granett was identical with that which finished off Hannaford. Thatâs certain.â
âThen it probably came from the same source,â said Hetherwick.
âOh, my notion is that the man or men who poisoned one man poisoned the other,â exclaimed Matherfield. âAnd at the same time. At least, I think Granett got his dose at the same timeâ âprobably carried it off in his pocket and drank it when he got home. Butâ âwe shall trace that bottle! Let me know what you find out about this man Baseverie, Mr. Hetherwickâ âevery little helps.â
Hetherwick duly coached Mapperley in the part he wanted him to play, and Mapperley, with money in his pockets and a pipe in his mouth, lounged off to Victoria on the following Friday morning. His principal saw nothing and heard nothing of him all that day.
XI Lady RiversreadeAs Hetherwick was breakfasting next morning, Mapperley, outwardly commonplace and phlegmatic as ever, walked into his room.
âBrief outline first, Mapperley,â commanded Hetherwick, instinctively scenting news. âDetails later. Well?â
âSpotted him at once at Victoria,â said Mapperley. âFollowed him down there. He was at Riversreade an hour. Then went back to Dorkingâ âhad lunch at Red Lion. He stopped there till four oâclock, lunching and idling. Went back to town by the 4:29, arriving 6:50. I followed him then to the CafĂ© de Paris. He dined there and hung about till past ten. And then he went to Vivianâs Night Club.â
Hetherwick pricked up his ears at that. Vivianâs Night Club!â âhere, at any rate, seemed to be a link in the chain of which Matherfield believed himself to hold at least one end. The five-pound note found on Granett had been traced to Vivianâs Night Club: now Mapperley had tracked Lady Riversreadeâs mysterious visitor to the same resort.
âTo Vivianâs Night Club, eh, Mapperley?â he said. âLetâs see?â âwhere is that?â
âEntrance is in Candlestick Passage, off St. Martinâs Lane,â replied Mapperley with promptitude. âClubâs on first floorâ âjolly fine suite of rooms, too!â
âYouâve been in it?â suggested Hetherwick.
âTwice! Not last night, though. You didnât give me any further orders than to see where he went finally, after returning to town. So, when Iâd run him to earth at Vivianâs, I went home. I argued that if he was wanted further, Vivianâs would find him.â
âAll right, Mapperley. But before that? You followed him to Riversreade Court?â
Mapperley grinned widely.
âNo!â âI did better than that. I was there before himâ âmuch better that, than following. I spotted him quick enough at Victoria, and made sure he got into the 10:10. Then I got in. As soon as we got to Dorking, I jumped out, got outside the station and chartered a taxi and drove off to Riversreade Court. I made the driver hide his cab up the road: I laid low in the plantation opposite the entrance gates. Presently my lord came along and drove up to the house. He was there the best part of an hour; then he drove off again towards Dorking. I followed at a good distance: kept him in sight, all the same. He got out of his conveyance in the High Street: so did I. He went into the Red Lion: so did I. He had lunch there: so had I. After that he lounged about in the smoking-room: I kept an eye on him.â
âI suppose he didnât meet anybody?â
âNobody!â
âWell, and at the CafĂ© de Paris? Did he meet anybody there?â
âHe exchanged a nod and a word here and there with menâ âand womenâ âthat came in and went out. But as to any arranged meeting, I should say not. I should say, too, that he was well known at the CafĂ© de Paris.â
âDid he seem to be a man of means? You know what I mean?â
âHe did himself very well at lunch and dinner, anyway,â said Mapperley, with another grin. âBottle of claret at Dorking, and a pint of champagne at the CafĂ© de Parisâ âbig cigars, too. That sort of man, you know.â
Hetherwick considered matters a moment.
âHow do you get in to this Vivianâs Night Club?â he asked suddenly.
âPay!â answered Mapperley laconically. âAt the door. Some nonsense about being proposed, but thatâs all bosh! Two of you goâ âsay Brown and Smith. Brown proposes Smith and Smith proposes Brown. All rot! Anybody can get inâ âwith money.â
âAnd what goes on there?â
âDancing! Drinking! Devilry! Quite respectable, though,â replied Mapperley. âBeen no prosecutions, anywayâ âso far.â
âWhat time does it open?â
âNine oâclock,â answered Mapperley, with a suggestive grin. âIn the old days it didnât open till after the theatres. But nowâ âearlier.â
âReally not a nightclub at allâ âin the old acceptation of the term,â suggested Hetherwick. âEvening, really?â
âThatâs about it,â agreed
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