The Clue of the Silver Key, Edgar Wallace [interesting books to read .TXT] 📗
- Author: Edgar Wallace
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shock. The gun fell from his hand on to the floor.
The room was now a mass of flames; the fire had licked through the thin
plaster of the wall and the laths were burning like paper. The atmosphere
was thick with acrid smoke, the heat already intolerable.
Again Surefoot struck and again Binny dodged. Surefoot had kicked the
pistol out of reach—kicked it into the mass of flames that were spurting
from the bottom of the canvas-covered trunk. The door was open and Binny
darted out of the room, trying to close it after him, but Smith’s
shoulders were in the way. Jerking the door wider, he stumbled into the
passage and hurled himself at the murderer.
The only hope was to keep at close quarters. Binny had another pistol,
had it half out of his pocket, when Surefoot pinned him against the hot
wall and, bracing his feet, exerted all his strength to crush him there.
In this position it was impossible to hit the man. In the half-light he
saw Binny reaching out towards the front door and edged him nearer to
facilitate his task. As the door was flung open and the air came rushing
in, the hum of the fire became a roar; flames were flung out like red and
yellow banners whipped by the wind.
Binny was trying to pull himself clear of the hands that held him by the
singlet; striving desperately to pull out his second gun. His breath was
coming in shrill whistles; he was frightened, had lost all his old
reserve of courage. He wriggled desperately to escape the pressure of the
heavy figure that was jammed against him, and at last, by a superhuman
effort, he succeeded, and darted through the door, Surefoot behind him.
His gun was out now and he fired. The detective hurled himself on his man
and brought him down. He was up in a second and was running towards the
back of the house.
The flames were coming from the roof. The countryside for a hundred yards
was almost as light as day. Surefoot, handcuffed as he was, flew in
pursuit; and then suddenly Binny turned, and this time his aim was
deliberate. Surefoot Smith knew that there was no hope now. The man who
covered him was a dead shot, and was within half a dozen paces of him.
In desperation he sprang forward. His feet touched air, and he was
falling, falling…
He heard the shot, wondered dimly if this was death, and was brought to
the realization that he was still alive by the impact of his body at the
bottom of the hole into which he had fallen. He realized at once what had
happened: Binny had been busy all that night preparing this hiding place
for his crime, but had missed falling into the hole.
He struggled to his feet, bruised and aching, heard a second shot and
looked up. There was a third and fourth. An authoritative voice was
challenging somebody. Then he heard his own name called, and shouted. A
man’s face loomed over the edge of the pit. It was his own sergeant. They
brought him up to the top.
‘He won’t get away,’ said the detective to whom Surefoot addressed a
gasping inquiry.
‘Which way did he go, and where’s his car?’
He was weary, aching from head to foot, bruised and scratched, but for
the moment he had no thought of comfort.
‘Feel in my hip pocket; I think he left the key of these handcuffs.’ They
unlocked the irons and took them off, and he rubbed his bruised wrists.
‘Have you found his car?’
Binny’s saloon had not been located. The last time Surefoot had seen it,
it was at the door of the cottage, but evidently, during one of his
absences, the man had taken it to a hiding place. There was a small
garage attached to the cottage—a tiny shed—but this was unoccupied.
By the light of the burning house they picked up the tracks. They crossed
the grassland to the left of the cottage and must have passed over the
very place where Binny had dug the grave.
Thereafter they were difficult to trace, but obviously they went straight
across the field in the same direction as the man had taken. A quarter of
an hour later they picked up unmistakable evidence that the car had been
left standing near a small secondary road. The gate was wide open and the
tracks of the vehicle were visible on the soft, wet earth. He had not
made for the main road again, but had turned up to the road to Cookham,
where traffic would be practically non-existent at this hour of the night
and the chances of observation nil.
The solitary police officer on duty at Cookham had seen the car pass, but
had not observed the driver. He had turned on to the toll bridge, but at
this hour of the night the toll gate is left open. The Bourne End police
had seen several cars without taking particular notice of them. He could
have taken the Oxford Road across the railway crossing, or he could have
followed the river to Marlow.
Surefoot Smith rejected the suggestion that he should go home and rest,
leaving the chase to the Flying Squad and the Buckinghamshire police; he
rejected it violently and with oaths.
‘This fellow can’t go far, dressed as he is,’ he said, ‘in a singlet and
trousers—I pulled most of his shirt off. He’s going to hold up somebody,
or burgle a house and get a new outfit. You realize what this man is,
don’t you? He’s trained in the gang methods. He will not stop at
murder—you are not dealing with an ordinary English criminal.’
They were not kept waiting long for proof of this. Deciding upon the
Marlow road as being more likely to offer opportunities for this
desperado, they came upon a policeman pushing a bicycle. It was raining
heavily, and his helmet and cape were dripping wet.
‘A blue car passed here five minutes ago,’ he said.
The police car sped on. Just outside of Marlow they found the vehicle
they were seeking; it was empty.
At three o’clock in the morning a car passing along the Oxford Road was
stopped by a policeman, who stood in the middle of the roadway with
outstretched arms. Driving the car was a well-to-do farmer from Oxford.
He was inclined to be truculent at this stop.
‘I am sorry to bother you,’ said the police officer,’ but we are
searching for an escaped murderer, and I want a lift to the other side of
High Wycombe.’
The farmer, rather intrigued, was not at all displeased, probably a
little excited, to find himself a participant in a man hunt, and the
policeman got into the uncomfortable rear seat of the car. It sped on
through the Wycombes.
‘I’ll tell you where to drop me,’ said the officer.
On the other side of High Wycombe there is a fork road which leads to
Princes Risborough.
‘Turn here,’ said the officer.
The driver expostulated—he had to get back to Oxford. ‘Turn here,’ said
the police officer, and something cold touched the nape of the farmer’s
neck. ‘Do as you’re told.’
The policeman’s voice was peremptory. The gun in his grimy hand was
eloquent. The farmer almost jumped out of his seat with astonishment. He
was not wanting in courage, but he was unarmed.
‘What’s your game?’ he asked. He was still unsuspicious that the man
behind him was anything but a policeman.’ You’re not allowed to do that
sort of thing.’
‘Get it out your nut that I’m a copper,’ said Binny. ‘The man whose
clothes I’m wearing is lying in a ditch with a break in his bean. Drive
where I tell you and save a lot of argument.’ The driver turned the car
in the direction indicated. They went along a new road, a portion of
which was under construction. There were red lamps and a watchman’s fire.
Dimly the farmer realized that the man behind him was the wanted
murderer, and the realization chilled him.
They were in a country which even at high noon is a little deserted. It
was a silent desert now. All the time Binny was watching left and right
for a suitable place for his purpose.
Presently they passed by the side of the road a wooden building that had
the appearance of a barn, and he ordered the driver to stop and turn
back. There was an open gate by the side of the barn, and through this
they drove.
‘Stop here,’ said Binny. He pushed open the door of the saloon. ‘Now get
down.’
He took the torch which had been part of the unfortunate policeman’s
equipment, and flashed it on to the door of the barn. It was unsecured by
lock or hasp. He pulled open the door with one hand, covering his
prisoner with the other.
‘Go inside,’ he said, and followed.
Half an hour later he came out again, wearing the farmer’s tweed suit and
his high-collared waterproof jacket. He listened for a second at the door
before closing it, got into the car and backed on to the road. There was
still a considerable danger of his being stopped. A solitary man driving
a car would be suspect, no matter whose clothes he was wearing, and the
present solution to his difficulty was merely a temporary measure.
If he could find one of those night trucks that run between London and
the provinces it would serve him better. These express lorries carried
two and often three men. He had to trust to luck.
Detection was certain if he took a direction which led him away from
London. In the few hours that remained before the dawn he must work his
way back to London. He had three bolt-holes; had the police found them
all?
He drove through Aylesbury and worked right. He had an extraordinary
knowledge of topography, and was aiming to reach the Great North Road and
approach London from that direction.
As he passed through a village, a policeman came out of the shadows and
held up his hand. For a second Binny hesitated; his first impulse was to
drive on, but he was none too certain of the immediate locality, and the
chances were that if he did not stop now he would find a ‘barrage’ a few
miles farther on.
Binny had studied the police situation very carefully. He knew that the
police would close London in a ring by the establishment of these barrage
posts, and that he would be liable at any moment to come upon a place
where a lorry was drawn up across the road. He knew too of the canvas
belts, heavily spiked, which are thrown across the roadway, with
disastrous consequences to the non-stop motorist.
He took his foot off the accelerator and brought his car to a standstill.
‘Let me see your driving licence,’ said the police officer.
Binny stiffened. He had relieved his victim of all his portable goods,
but a driving licence was not amongst them. Motorists have a trick of
carrying this important document in the glove compartment of their car.
If it were not there…
He slipped his gun out of his pocket and laid it on the seat by his side
before he opened up the flap of the compartment and began a search. His
heart jumped as his fingers touched the familiar shape of the licence. He
handed it out and the
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