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
âGo on!â said Hetherwick.
âThe stationer, Calkin, didnât know the name of the man who ordered this paper and gave this address,â continued Mapperley. âHe knew him well enough as a customer, though, and described him. Baseverie, without a doubt! Calkin says that Baseverie, during the last few months, bought various items of stationery from himâ ânotebooks, duplicating paper, office requisites, and so on. He never knew his name, but as he always carried away his own purchases, and paid spot cash for them, that didnât matter. Calkin supplied him with ten quires of this paper and envelopes to match, a couple of months ago. Soâ âthere you are! And there I wasâ âsure at last that Baseverieâs mysterious hiding-place was 56, Little Smith Street!â
âGoodâ âgood!â said Hetherwick. âWhat next?â
âWell, I thought we could do with a bit of help,â replied Mapperley, smiling. âSo I left Calkinâ âbound to secrecy, of courseâ âand telephoned to Issy Goldmark. Issy is just the sort of chap for games of this sort! Issy cameâ âand he and I took a stroll round. Do you know Little Smith Street?â
âNot I!â answered Hetherwick. âNever heard of it!â
âOh, well, but it is a street,â said Mapperley. âIt lies between Great Smith Street and Tufton Street, back oâ the Church Houseâ ânot so far from the Abbey. Bit slummy down those quarters, round aboutâ âsort of district thatâs seen decidedly better days. Still, thereâs good, solid houses here and thereâ â56 is one of âem. From outside, it looks the sort of house you canât get intoâ âdark, silent, heavily-curtained windowsâ âsort of place in which you could murder anybody on the quiet. Very substantial front door, painted dark green, with an old-fashioned brass knockerâ âthat sort of house. We took a good look at it.â
âSee anything?â asked Hetherwick.
âNothing but what Iâve told youâ âlifeless sort oâ place,â answered Mapperley. âHowever, having once seen it, I wasnât going to leave it unwatched, so I posted Issy there, in the window of a convenient public-house, and came away to telegraph to you. And there Issy isâ âeither in his pub, or loafing round. And now we ought to go and hear if heâs anything to report. And if he hasnâtâ âwhat then?â
âJust so,â said Hetherwick. âThatâs itâ âwhat then? But before we do anything at all, Mapperley, Iâd better post you up as to whatâs happened elsewhere this morning. You see,â he continued, when he had finished his story, âif Matherfieldâs theory is correct, and Baseverie has already gone to Southampton to collect that parcel on its arrival, and if Ambrose has gone with him, we shanât find Baseverie at this address. Butâ âwe might inquire if heâs known there.â
Mapperley reflected a while. Then an idea seemed to suggest itself.
âPay your bill, sir, and letâs get out to a Post Office Directory somewhere,â he said. âWeâll get the name of the occupier of 56, Little Smith Street.â
Ten minutes later they were looking down the long columns of names in a directory; Mapperley suddenly pointed to what they wanted.
âThere we are!â he said. âMrs. Hannah Mallettâ âboardinghouse proprietor.â
âCome along!â said Hetherwick. âWeâll see Mrs. Mallett, anyhow.â
But on arrival at Little Smith Street, Mapperley looked round first, for his friend, Mr. Goldmark. Mr. Goldmark materialised suddenlyâ âapparently from nowhereâ âand smiled.
âAfternoon, mithter!â he said politely to Hetherwick. âLovely weather, ithnât it? Ainât theen nothing, Mapperley, old bean! Ainât been a thoul in or out oâ that houth, thinth you hopped it! Theemth to me itâth locked up.â
âWeâll see about that,â remarked Hetherwick. âCome with me, Mapperley. You stay here. Goldmark, and keep your eyes as open as before.â
He advanced boldly, with the clerk at his heels, to the door of number 56, and knocked loudly on the stout panel, supplementing this with a ring at the bell. This dual summons was twice repeatedâ âwith no result.
âSomebody coming!â whispered Mapperley, suddenly. âBoltedâ âinsideâ âas well as locked!â
Hetherwick distinctly heard the sound of a stout bolt being withdrawn, then of a key being turned. The door was openedâ âonly a little, but sufficiently to show them the face and figure of an unusually big woman, an Amazon in appearance, hard of eye and lip, who glared at them suspiciously, and as soon as she saw that there were two of them, narrowed the space through which she inspected her callers. But Hetherwick got a hand on the door and a foot across the threshold.
âMrs. Mallett?â he inquired in a purposely loud voice. âJust so! Is Doctor Baseverie in?â
Both men were watching the woman keenly, and they saw that she started a little, involuntarily. But her head shook a ready negative.
âNobody of that name here!â she answered.
She would have shut the door, but for Hetherwickâs footâ âhe advanced it further, giving Mrs. Mallett a keen, searching glance.
âPerhaps you know Dr. Baseverie by another name?â he suggested. âSoâ âis Mr. Basing in?â
But the ready shake of the head came again, and the hard eyes grew harder and more suspicious.
âNobody of that name here, either!â she said. âDonât know anybody of those names.â
âI think you do,â persisted Hetherwick sternly. He turned to Mapperley, purposely. âWe shall have to get the policeâ ââ
âLook out, sir!â exclaimed Mapperley, snatching at Hetherwickâs arm. âYour fingers!â
The woman suddenly banged the door to, narrowly missing Hetherwickâs hand, which he had closed on the edge; a second later they heard the bolt slipped and the key turned. And Hetherwick, as with a swift illumination, comprehended things, and turned sharply on his clerk.
âMapperley!â he exclaimed. âSure as fate! Those ladies are in there! Trapped!â
âShouldnât wonder, sir,â agreed Mapperley. âAnd as you sayâ âthe policeâ ââ
âCome back to Goldmark,â said Hetherwick.
Going lower down the street and retreating into the shelter of a doorway, the three men held a rapid consultation, suddenly interrupted by an exclamation from the Jew, who still kept his eyes on the house:
âThâelp me if the woman ainât leavinâ that
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