HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1933-07-13, Page 6ni
THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1933
IIIIIJII
BY SAPPER
THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE
;*
seemed merely an aimless buzz. Atndi lExpipr QJtmeti-A&UUCStr *
1 ’ ~ "...... " Established 1873 and 1887
Published every Thursday mornini
at Exeter, Ontario
out a nursemaid
right, and a
left, he con-
sitting at the
as being the
{Tiny Carteret was a free easy going
young man extremely popular
with both men and women and
and with his income of five thous
and a year enabled him to live in
an up-todate apartment in the city
of London. He received a letter
one morning from a friend, Ron
ald Standish, which bore a post
mark Grand Hotel, at Territet.
on the Lake of Geneva. Standish
appealed to him to meet him at
once as he needed someone who
had steady nerve, could use a re
volver and could use their fists
if necessary. Gillson from the
Home Office calls Tiny and he
goes there before leaving. Here he
is instructed by Gillson to appear
at a certain restaurant in Paris
and after receiving instructions
there to proceed to Switzerland,
Just as Tiny was about to leave
word came that Jebson, a mem
ber of the force had been mur
dered, he being the fourth officer
to be done away with in the same
manner. Dexter came in and des
cribed the facts. Tiny finds that
his friend Lady Mary is connected
with the case.
Felton Blake
gether.
gets no satisfaction
terview. He takes
[Lausanne and has
birth with a queer
eigner who dies through the night
Lady Mary and
are working to-
Tiny calls on Mary but
from the in-
the train for
to share his
looking for-
CHAPTER IV
station officials spoke fluent En
glish, and helped by the doctor’s
professional opinion, they merely
asked his name and destination and
then allowed him to proceed. But
one thing of interest did come to
light. The dead man was a Russian
namer Demeroff. And as Tiny got
back into the train he wondered if
he was the man referred to as D.
in the letter he had received at Phil
ippes. If so, the shadowing was
pretty effecient.
There was no- sign of Ronald
Standish on the platform at Lau
sanne, so he chartered a car and
drove to the Ouchy Palace Hotel
And there, as Gillson had said, he
found a room had been reserved for
him.
“There is a letter for you ,sir,”
said the clerk. “Delivered by hand.”
It was from Ronald and was as
terse as the one he had received in
Paris.
“Do not let Demeroff out of your
sight. Midday—the bar.”
‘Tiny smiled grimly: it struck him
that the writer would require more
than one cocktail when he heard the
news.
“There was anotner gentleman
coming, sir, I believe,” said the
clerk inquiringly. “A Russian.”
“I fear that he has been unavoid
ably detained,” answered Tiny
quietly.
The morning passed slowly:
as he would he couldn’t get
ghastly distorted face out of
mind. And try as he would
couldn’t get any nearer to solving
the problem of how it had been done
Ronald’s note knocked the bottom
out of his theory that the thing was
accidently self-administered, because
it seemed to' show that the
man had been on their side.
At twelve o’clock precisely
aid Standish came into the bar. His
face was expressionless but, Tiny
try
the
his
he
that
Tiny
poor
dan-
get at him, Ron-
done?”
you that, Tiny, 1
one problem
members, it sounds fan:
I can assure you that
I have been tempted to
they holo the secret of
but they got
through our
uncanny.”
you no idea
awray—
fingers
ol the
>>
dead
Ron-
Tiny shut the door, and the atten
dant locked it at once. Then, he fol
lowed the doctor along the train, his
brain buzzing with the problem.
What had happened? What could
have happened? Had it not been for
the mark on the dead man's hand, he
would have been inclined to think
that the doctor was right, and that
death had been due to'natural causes.’ knew by the way he walked that his
But now the coincidence was too ex- nerves were a little on edge.
“What’s this, Tiny, I hear at the
office? Demeroff not come.
“And I’m afraid he never will,
Ronald. He died in the train last
nght: his body is at Dijon.”
For a moment of two Standish
■very
traordinary. And yet how in ,Heav-|
en’s name had the poor devil been
got at? |
A possibility struck him. Had he
got up and gone along the corridor
for some reason? That would pre-!
suppose that the murderer was1 lurk-, said nothing: then he spoker
ing outside on the bare chance that; deliberately,
such a thing would happen. Unlikely j
—but at any rate it did present a
solution.
Another idea. Was it concelv-
that this man had been one of the
users of the poison hijnself, and had
been carrying with him whatever it
was that they employed to commit
their murders. Then, accidentally
while he was asleep, he had run it
into his own hand, and being half
drunk had not awakened when he
did so? If so, the implement would
still be in the dead man’s' berth, or
in one of his pockets.
For awhile he debated whether he
should say anything to the doctor,
And then it occurred to him that to
suggest the possibility of foul play
could do no good, and ,mlght involve
him in extremely awkward compli
cations. For on the face of it to the
ordinary outsider the only person
Who could have murdered the
was himself.
No: it was. impossible to say
thing. All he could do was to
that the French authorities would
come to the same conclusion as the
doctor, and attribute
death to natural causes,
h’t, and detained him
mortem, he would have
bear it. As he reflected
Ically, it would only be in keeping
With the whole state of affairs at
the moment.
But luck proved to be in at Dijon,
Fortunately for Tiny one of the
man
any-
hope
the man’s
If they did-
for a post-
to grin and
a little cyn-
“If,” he remarked, “I ever did
lose my temper, I would swear with
out repeating myself for five
utes. How did they get him?
me exactly what happened.”
He listened in silence while
ran through everything from the re
ceipt of the note in Paris .o the
examination at D'ijon.
“You assume they got him, Ron
ald,” he said in conclusion. “So do
I, because of the mark in his hand.
But if you can tell me how the dev
il they did it I’ll be much obliged,”
“What time -did you say it was
when you looked at your watch?”
asked the other.
“Ten to twelve,’ said Tiny. “But
what’s that got to do with it?”
“Everything,” answered Standish
quietly. “Oh! Tiny, Tiny, If only we
as a human race, didn’t like
air so much! Still, it can’t be
ed.”
“What can’t be helped?”
Tiny peevishly. “You’re not going to
tell me that he was murdered
through the open window of a train
travelling at sixty miles an hour.”
“No, old lad, I’m not. He was
murdered through the open window
of a train standing stationary by a
platform. All the fast expresses on
that line sto,p at Laroche half-way
between Paris and Dijon,to change
engines. It was then they got him
You were asleep and so was he. Amd
that’s when the poison was inserted
He was a bit drunk so the prick
min-
TeK
Tiny
fresh
help
said
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never woke him. And it wasn’t un
til after the train had started
the poison began to work.”
“Good God!” muttered
“Then I’m responsible for the
devil’s death. He said it was
gerous to open the window, but I
never dreapit he meant that.”
“How should y«u?” answered
Standish. “You needn’t worry, 'Tiny;
he was a nasty piece of work, and
it was only a question of time be
fore they got him. But, if only I
could have seen him for five min
utes! You see, to put the matter in
a nutshell he was biowmg the gaff
I don’t know how much Gillson has
told you; anyway I’ll fill in the gaps
later, the man who was murdered
last night was a member of the
gang we are after. And our people
had got at him in Paris. His jour
ney here was simply anc solely to
split on his former pals. From the
note you got at Phillippes our
people realized the danger. But nat
urally no one thought of the damn
ed window.”
“How did they
aid? How was it
“If I could tell
should have solved
that is worrying us all. Obviously
the man who did it was out of his
carriage at Laroche, saw his oppor
tunity and seized it. If the window
had been shut, of course he could
n’t have done it.”
He lit the cigarette thoughtfully
“Bazana. I wonder if there’s any
significance. Was he trying to tell
you something?”
“Quite possibly,” said Tiny. “And
don’t forget that’s only what it |
sounded like to me. The poor blight--j
er’s teeth were clenched, and with
the noise of the train it may not
have been that at all.”
“Let’s have another spot, Tiny.
Because we’ve got to decide tha't we
're going to do. I hear incidently
that you agree with Gillson and me
that Lady Mary is acting as go-be-'
tween.” j
“How do you know that?” said
Tiny with some surprise. |
“I got a cable in code from Gill
son yesterday.” '|
“Well, if we wanted any further
confirmation I got it in the Golden
Arrow yesterday,” said Tiny. “De
you by any chance know a Countess
Mazarin?”
“I know who you mean, though
I don’t know the lady personally.”
“Well, she admitted it to' me. By
God! Ronald,” he went on savagely
“something has got to be done to
get Mary out of the clutches of that
exresence Felton Blake. The Count
ess actually told me that she
thought he was in love with her.”
Standish raised his eyebrows.
“He aims high,” ne remarked.
‘‘Still I wouldn’t be surprised if you
aren’t right.”
“Berendosi was on
said Tiny. “I heard
England. Lord! Tiny,
end.” He got up and
up and down, his hands dee,p in his
trouser pockets. “If only Lady Mary
or the Mazarin woman would tell
us what the mystery was! Though
to be perfectly frank, I don’t know
that it would do us much good
They’ve got some form of proof—
faked or otherwise, It matters not
—which they are going to spring at
the last moment.’”
“And Mary thinks Blake can get
back for her?”
“Presumably. Otherwise why
should she be mixed up in it at all
That’s where the devil of it comes in
Of course he is double-crossing her.
“Why should you think that?”
said Tiny slowly,
“My dear fellow, it’s obvious. If
this pfoof lies out here in the hands
of Berendosi’s crows, you don’t
Suppose they are going to give it Up
to help Blake’s lovo affair. But as
a matter of fact, I don’t think for a
moment it is out here, st’s locked up
in- FOiton’s safe. Otherwise why
should he have come into it at all?
He- was no good to them:they didn’t
■want him if they held it themselves ■
No
He
Is probably
Mary that he
earth to help
“tfd like to Wring the blighter’s
neck,” grunted Tiny,
it to
us a
r>eenhad
as follows:
Royal Dalz-
found nothing
to explain the
in any way
nothing to do
wait
would
the train too,”
he’d been in
I’m at a dead
started pacing
it
he started the hate himself
holds the trump card, though he
pretending to Lady
is moving heaven and
her.”
' “So would a good many other
people,” said Standish with a short
laugh. “But it’s hardly worth while
being hanged for exterminating ver
min. No; it’s the other one that I
want, Tiny: througu vemeroff. You
see, one of the most extraordinary
things about this gang is the elusiv-
ess of its
tastic, but
sometimes
think that
becoming invisible. Not once, but a
dozen times have people we wanted
vanished from practically under our
noses. It is incredible.”
“Disguise of some sort, I suppose
“You can take it from me that It’s
got to be a pretty useful disguise
to deceive our fellows. And yet—
they’ve done it. Why only a week
ago in Paris, we hunted two of them
to ground in a smallish hotel in the
Rue Tivoli. Men were posted at ev
ery entrance,
slipped clean
It’s positively
“And have
whereabouts of their headquarters?
“I believe it to be somewhere in
this country. In fact I’m almost sure
it is.”
“Well, old lad, you’re the com
manding officer for this expedition,
said Tiny. “What does A do, beyond
lighting an Abdullah?”
And at that moment a page boy
entered the bar with a telegram.
“Monsieur Carteret?”
“That’s me,” said Tiny taking the
envelope.
He glanced through the message:
then with a laugh he handed
Standish.
“That would seem to give
pointer, Ronald.”
For the wire which
handed in in Paris ran
“Can you go to Hotel
burg at once. Mazarin.
“As you say, Tiny.” said Standish,
“It seems to give us a pointer. Well
—the capital of Bessonra is a de
lightful spot. And since Demeroff’s
removal prevents us getting direct
at their headquarters, perhaps we’ll
do it through the side track of Ber
endosi’s little scheme. But I wonder
what the lady can nave discovered
in Paris to cause her to send that.”
CHAPTER V
Dalzburg, as Ronald Standish had
said was a delightful place, and
when they arrived there the next
day it was looking its loveliest. The
picturesque old town, dominated by
the Palace standing on the wooded
heights behind it, was bathed in the
early morning sunshine, as they rat
tled over the cobbled bridge which
spans the river. But at the moment
their thoughts were centered on. the
mnudane questions of bath and food
and it was not until eleven o’clock
that they sauntered forth from the
hotel for a. stroll round.
It was Tiny’s first visit to the
place, though Standish knew it well
And since they had
further at the hotel
Countess’s telegram
there seemed to be
except kick their heels and
Presumably in time its reason i
became clear.
“I seem to remember,”
Standish after a while, “that
make a not indifferent brand of beer
What about it Tiny?”
“Lead me to it, old boy. These
damned continental sleepers give
me a mouth like a lime kiln.”
They found a vacant table at a
shady cafe on the main boulevard
and sat down. The place was full of
people bent .on the same errand and
as luck would have it, their
iate neighbours were not
but natives of the place.
“You’ll often get morn
information from the / apparently
idle chatter in a place/ like this,’’
said .Standish, “than from a score of
agents. But you must be able to
speak the lingo.”
“How many can^you speak, Ron
ald?” asked Tiny curiously.
“About fifteen, old boy/ laughed
the oth6r. “They seem to come to
me naturally.”
He half closed his eyes, and lean
ing back in his chair he relapsOd in
to silence. To the .casual observer
he seemed almost asleep: ih. reality
every sense was alert. Times out of
dumber had he played this same
game, and even if it was only once
in twenty that anything tangible re
warded his efforts, it whs at ariy
rate good practice in, the language.
The first essential was to shut
out as far as possible the pedpie
Who Were obviously useless to him
and long pratice had enabled him to
do this in the most hmasing way
Ke could deliberately as it were
shut down parts ot nis brain, till
only one particular conversation
came through, while the rest it
said
they
immed-
tourists
reliable
now, having cut
with children on 1ns
loving couple on his
centrated on two men
table just behind him
only source of possible interest.
At first he drew blank: they were
discussing some recent reconstruc
tion scheme in the business belong
ing on one of them. The other he
gathered was interested financially:
the matter of mortgage cropped up
Influential men evidently: ffien of
substance. And he was just prepar
ing to relax and get on with his
beer when a name caught his atten
tion. One of them mentioned Ber
endosi.
But luck was out: both at onc.e
lowered their voices, and strain his
ears as much as he could he was un
able to catch more than an odd
word here and there. Suddenly,
however, one of them .made a re
mark which he heard perfectly and
which riveted his attention.
“There. That man the other side
of the street. The tall Englishman
I tell you it’s obvious.”
He opened his eyes and looked
across the road. 'There was no mis
taking whom they were alluding to:
there was only one man who could
possibly
even as
to w*hat
sudden
him. He
teret had half risen from his seat
and was staring
himself.
Now Sitandislf
thought quickly,
completely in the dark himself as to
why two prominent Bessonians and
Tiny should both be interested in
the same man, his brain reacted in-
tinctively.
“Sit down, Tiny,” he said curtly
“Don’t pay any attention to that
men across the road. I’ll explain
later.”
A little, bewildered, Tiny obeyed
and once again Standish leaned back
in his chair. Had the two men be
hind hina noticed Tiny’s movement?
If so, good-bye
hearing any more,
had not, and stray
conversation came
“Undoubted. . ,
him. . .Hotel Royal. . ./Must be the
same man. .
trouble . .'.
him . .
And then
mere whispers,
word could he hear, during
maining ten minutes they
their table.
“I will now ha’ve another beer?”
said Standish, as he watched their
retreating ■ backs.
“What was the great idea, Ronald?’
“Well, old boy, it was obvious
that you knew or thougnt you knew
the Englishman on the other side of
the street. It was equally obvious
that the two men who have just
left were interested in him. too, as
they were talking about him. And I
thought I might hear a good deal
more if your mu.tual interest wasn’t
paraded too obviously.”
“What did you hear?”
“Only snatches of conversation.
He is^stopping at the Royal', and he
Is obviously the same man. Same
as what I can’t tell you. They also
are anxious for Berencosi to see him
Not much, I admit, but one often
finds that little clues like that help
one later. Now—your turn. Who did
you think he was?”
“Three years ago when Princess
Olga, as she then was, was over in
London, there were four of us who
used to get about a good bit togeth
er. She Mary, myself anc a fellow
called Joe Denver and unless I am
very much mistaken that was Joe
Denver himself. A bit more tanned
but I’m almost certain it was himi—
same walk and everything. And if it
was him, it is the most extraordin
ary coincidence, because Mary and
I were only talking about [him the
other afternoon and wondering
where he was. And here he is a<p-
parantely stopping at the same
hotel?”
(To be continued)
i
be an Englishman. And
he was idly speculating as
was obvious, he heard a
exclamation from beside
glanced round; Tiny Car
at the Englishman
was a man whc
and though he was
to any chance of
Apparently
snatches of
to him.
. Greger off
they
their
saw
. There won't be much
Berendosi must see
their voices
and not
became
another
the r»-
sat at
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