The Clue of the Silver Key, Edgar Wallace [interesting books to read .TXT] 📗
- Author: Edgar Wallace
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Surefoot’s interest.
He knew the financial position of the average bank manager; could tell to
within a few pounds just what their salaries were; and it was rather a
shock to find even a two thousand, five hundred a year manager living in
an apartment which must have absorbed at least eight hundred, and
displaying evidence of wealth which men in his position have rarely the
opportunity of acquiring.
A Persian carpet covered the floor; the crystal chandelier was certainly
of the more exquisite kind that are not to be duplicated in a department
store. There was a big Knolle couch (‘Cost five hundred,’ Smith noted
mentally); in an illuminated glass case were a number of beautiful
miniatures, and in another, rare ornaments of jade, some of which must
have been worth a considerable sum.
Surefoot knew nothing about pictures, but he was satisfied that more than
one of those on the wall were valuable.
He was examining the cabinet when he heard a step behind him and turned
to meet the owner of the flat. Mr Leo Moran was half-dressed and wore a
silk dressing-gown over his shirt,
‘Hullo, Smith! We don’t often see you. Sit down and have a drink.’ He
rang the bell. ‘Beer, isn’t it?’
‘Beer it is,’ said Surefoot heartily. ‘Nice place you’ve got here, Mr
Moran.’
‘Not bad,’ said the other carelessly. He pointed to a picture. That’s a
Sisley. My father paid three hundred pounds for it, and it’s probably
worth six thousand today.’
‘Your father was well off, was he, Mr Moran?’
Moran looked at him quickly. ‘He had money. Why do you ask? You don’t
imagine I could have furnished a flat like this on two and a half
thousand a year do you?’ His eyes twinkled. ‘Or has it occurred to you
that this is part of my illicit gains—moneys pinched from the bank?’
‘I hope,’ said Surefoot Smith solemnly, ‘that such a thought never
entered into my head.’
‘Beer,’ said Mr Leo Moran, addressing the man who had appeared in the
doorway. ‘You’ve come about something, haven’t you? What is it?’
Surefoot pursed his lips thoughtfully. ‘I’m making inquiries about this
man Tickler—’
‘The fellow who was murdered. Do I know him, you mean? Of course I know
him! The fellow was a pest. I never went from this house without finding
him on the kerb outside, wanting to tell me something or sell me
something—I’ve never discovered which.’
He had a rapid method of speaking. His voice was not what Smith would
have described as a gentleman’s. Indeed, Leo Moran was very much of the
people. His life had been an adventurous one. He had sailed before the
mast, he had worked at a brass founder’s in the Midlands, been in a dozen
kinds of employment before he eventually drifted into banking.
A rough diamond, with now and again a rough voice; more often, however, a
suave one, for he had the poise and presence which authority and wealth
bring. Now and again his voice grew harsh, almost common, and in moments
he became very much a man of the people. It was in that tone he asked:
‘Do you suppose I killed him?’
Surefoot smiled; whether at the absurdity of the question or the
appearance of a large bottle of beer and a tumbler, which were carried in
at that moment, Moran was undecided.
‘You know Miss Lane, don’t you?’
‘Slightly.’ Moran’s tone was cold.
‘Nice girl—here’s luck.’ Surefoot raised his glass and swallowed its
contents at a gulp. ‘Good beer, Lord! I remember the time when you could
get the best ale in the world for fivepence a pint.’
He sighed heavily, and tried to squeeze a little more out of the bottle,
but failed.
Moran touched the bell again. ‘Why do you ask me about Miss Lane?’
‘I knew you were interested in theatricals.’
‘Another bottle of beer for Mr Smith,’ said Moran as the valet answered
his ring. ‘What do you mean by theatricals?’
‘You used to give parties, didn’t you, once upon a time?’
The banker nodded. ‘Years ago, in my salad days. Why?’
‘I was just wondering,’ said Smith vaguely.
His host strode up and down the floor, his hands thrust into the silken
pockets of his gown.
‘What the devil did you come here for, Smith? You’re not the sort of man
to go barging round making stupid inquiries. Are you connecting me with
this absurd murder—the murder of a cheap little gutter rat I scarcely
know by sight?’
Surefoot shook his head. ‘Is it likely?’ he murmured.
Then the beer came, and Moran’s fit of annoyance seemed to pass.
‘Well, the least you can do is to tell me the strength of it—or aren’t
you inquiring about the murder at all? Come along, my dear fellow, don’t
be mysterious!’
Smith wiped his moustache, got up slowly from the chair an adjusted his
horrible pink tie before an old Venetian mirror.
‘I’ll tell you the strength of it, man to man,’ he said. ‘We had an
anonymous letter. That was easy to trace. It was sent by Tickler’s
landlady, and it appeared that when he was very drunk, which was every
day, sometimes twice a day, he used to talk to this good lady about you.’
‘About me?’ said the other quickly. ‘But he didn’t know me!’
‘Lots of people talk about people they don’t know,’ began Smith. ‘It’s
publicity—’
‘Nonsense! I’m not a public man. I’m just a poor little bank manager, who
hates banking, and would gladly pay a fortune, if he had one to pay, for
the privilege of taking all the books of the bank and burning ‘em in
Regent’s Park, making the clerks drunk, throwing open the vault to the
petty thieves of London, and turning the whole damn thing into a night
club!’
Gazing at him with open mouth, genuinely staggered by such a confession,
Smith saw an expression in that sometime genial face that he had never
seen before: a certain harshness; heard in his voice the vibration of a
hidden fury.
‘They nearly kicked me out once because I speculated,’ Moran went on.
‘I’m a gambler; I always have been a gambler. If they’d kicked me out I’d
have been ruined at that time. I had to crawl on my hands and knees to
the directors to let me stay on. I was managing a branch at Chalk Farm at
the time, and I’ve had to pretend that the Northern and Southern Bank’s
something holy, that its directors are gods; and every time I’ve tried to
get a bit of money so that I could clear out, the market has gone—!’ He
snapped his fingers. ‘I don’t really know Tickler. Why he should talk
about me I haven’t the slightest idea.’
Surefoot Smith looked into his hat.
‘Do you know Mr Hervey Lyne?’ he asked.
‘Yes, he’s a client of ours.’
‘Have you seen him lately?’
A pause, and then: ‘No, I haven’t seen him for two years.’
‘Oh!’ said Surefoot Smith.
He said ‘Oh!’ because he could think of nothing else to say. ‘Well, I’ll
be getting along. Sorry to bother you, but you know what we are at the
Yard.’ He offered his huge hand to the banker, but Moran was so absorbed
in his thoughts that he did not see it.
After he had closed the door upon his visitor Moran walked slowly back to
his room and sat down on the edge of the bed.
He sat there for a long time before he got up, walked across the room to
a wall safe behind a picture, opened it and took out a number of
documents, which he examined very carefully. He put them back and,
groping, found a flat leather case which was packed with strangely
coloured documents. They were train and boat tickets; his passport lay
handy and, fastened to his passport by a thick rubber band, a thick
bundle of ten-pound banknotes.
He locked the safe again, replaced the picture, and went on with his
dressing. He was more than a little perturbed. The casual reference to
Hervey Lyne had shaken him.
At 10 O’CLOCK that night quite a number of radios would be shut off at
the item ‘The Economy of our Banking System’, and would be tuned on again
at ten fifteen for a programme of light music relayed from Manchester.
Binny read the programme through and came at last to the 10 o’clock item.
‘Moran. Is that the fellow who saw me yesterday?’ asked the old man.
‘Yes, sir,’ said Binny.
‘Banking systems—bah!’ snarled old Lyne.’ I don’t want to hear it. Do
you understand, Binny?—I don’t want to hear it!’
‘No, sir,’ said Binny.
The white, gnarled hands groped along the table till they reached a
repeater watch, and pressed a knob.
‘Six o’clock. Get me my salad.’
‘I saw that detective today, sir—Mr Smith.’
‘Get me my salad!’
Chicken salad was his invariable meal at the close of day. Binny served
him, but could do nothing right. If he spoke he was told to be quiet; if
he relapsed into silence old Hervey cursed him for his sulkiness.
He had cleared away the meal, put a cup of weak tea before his master,
and was leaving him to doze, when Lyne called him back. ‘What are Cassari
Oils?’ he demanded.
It was so long since Binny had read the fluctuation of the oil market
that he had no information to give.
‘Get a newspaper, you fool!’
Binny went in search of an evening newspaper. It was his habit to read,
morning and night, the movements of industrial shares; a monotonous
proceeding, for Mr Lyne’s money was invested in gilt-edged securities
which were stately and steadfast and seldom moved except by
thirty-seconds.
Cassari Oils had been one of his errors. The shares had been part of a
trust fund—he had hesitated for a long time before he converted them to
a more stable stock. The period of his holding had been two years of
torture to him, for they flamed up and down like a paper fire, and never
stayed in one place for more than a week at a time.
Binny came back with the newspaper and read the quotation, which was
received with a grunt.
‘If they’d gone up I’d have sued the bank. That brute Moran advised me to
sell.’
‘Have they gone up, sir?’ asked Binny, interested.
‘Mind your own business!’ snapped the other.
Hervey Lyne used often to sit and wonder and fret himself over those
Cassaris. They were founder’s shares, not lightly come by, not easy to
dispose of. The thought that he might have thrown away a fortune on the
advice of a conservative bank manager, and that when he came to hand over
his stewardship to Mary Lane he might be liable—which he would not have
been—was a nightmare to him. The unease had been renewed that day by
something which Binny had read to him from the morning newspaper
concerning oil discoveries in Asia.
In the course of the years he had accumulated quite a lot of data
concerning the Cassari Oilfield, most of it very depressing to anybody
who had money in the concern. He directed Binny to unearth the pamphlets
and reports, and promised himself a possibly exasperating evening.
Eight o’clock brought a visitor, a reluctant man, who had rehearsed quite
a number of plausible excuses. He had the
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