The Dark Eyes of London

 

The Dark Eyes of London

 

by

 

Edgar Wallace

 

 

 

 

 

Contents

 

 

    I - Larry Holt in Paris

    II - Sir John Hason

    III - The Secretary

    IV - Flash Fred Sees a Client

    V - The Will

    VI - The Writing in Braille

    VII - A Telegram from Calgary

    VIII - The Memorial Stone

    IX - The Man Who Lost a Finger

    X - Mr Strauss "Drops"

    XI - Burglars at the Yard

    XII - Fanny Weldon Tells the Truth

    XIII - Todd's Home

    XIV - Fanny has a Visitor

    XV - The Fight in the Dark

    XVI - Grogan Meets a Lady

    XVII - The Insurance Money

    XVIII - At the Pawnbroker's

    XIX - In Flash Fred's Flat

    XX - The Woman who Drew the Insurance Money

    XXI - When Diana Fainted

    XXII - The Man who was Deaf

    XXIII - The Disappearance of Diana Ward

    XXIV - The Laundry Yard

    XXV - What Happened to Diana

    XXVI - Back Again

    XXVII - "John Dearborn is not Blind"

    XXVIII - Who Runs Dearborn?

    XXIX - Flash Fred's Story

    XXX - In the Tubular Room

    XXXI - Fred Lends his Keys

    XXXII - A Breakfast Proposal

    XXXIII - Lew

    XXXIV - Larry Inspects a House

    XXXV - The Death Room

    XXXVI - The Woman in the Garage

    XXXVII - The Heiress

    XXXVIII - The End of Jake

    XXXIX - The Get-away

    XL - A Letter from Larry

    XLI - Diana Pulls a Lever

    XLII - In the Trap

    XLIII - The Passing of David

    XLIV - The End of the Chase

    XLV - Three Cigarettes

        

 

        

I - Larry Holt in Paris

 

 

    Larry Holt sat before the Cafe de la Paix, watching the stream of life flow east and west along the Boulevard des ltaliens. The breath of spring was in the air; the trees were bursting into buds of vivid green; the cloud-flecked skies were blue; and a flood of golden sunshine brought out the colours of the kiosks, and gave an artistic value even to the flaring advertisements. Crowded motor-buses rumbled by, little taxis dashed wildly in and out of the traffic, to the mortal peril of unsuspecting pedestrians.

    A gendarme, with cloak over his shoulder, stood in a conventional attitude on the kerb, his hand behind him, staring at nothing, and along the sidewalk there were hurrying bareheaded girls, slow-moving old men, and marching poilus. Itinerant vendors of wares loafed past the tables of the cafe, dusky-faced Arabs with their carpets on their arms, seedy-looking men who hawked bundles of picture post cards and would produce, at the slightest encouragement, cards which were not for the public gaze. All these things and people were a delight to Larry Holt, who had just returned from Berlin after four years' strenuous work in France and Germany, and felt in that holiday spirit to which even the mind of a detective will ascend.

    The position occupied by Larry Holt was something of a mystery to the officials of Scotland Yard. His rank was Inspector, his work was the administrative work of a Commissioner; and it was generally understood that he was in the line for the first vacant assistant commissionership that came along. The question of his rank, of his prospects, did not trouble Larry at that particular moment. He sat there, absorbing the sweetness of spring with every breath he drew. His good-looking face was lit up with the sheer joy of living, and there was in his heart a relief, a sense of rest, which he had not experienced for many a long day.

    He revealed himself a fairly tall man when he rose, after paying the waiter, and strolled round the corner to his hotel. It was a slow progress he made, his hands in his pockets, his soft felt hat at the back of his head, a half-smile on his parted lips as he gripped a long black cigarette holder between his white teeth.

    He came into the busy vestibule of the hotel, the one spot in Paris where people hustle and rush, where bell-boys really run, and even the phlegmatic Briton seems in a frantic hurry, and he was walking towards the elevator when, through the glass door leading to the palm court, he saw a man in an attitude of elegant repose, leaning back in a big chair and puffing at a cigar.

    Larry grinned and hesitated. He knew this lean-faced man, so radiantly attired, his fingers and cravat flashing with diamonds, and in a spirit of mischief he passed through the swing doors and came up to the lounger.

    "If it isn't my dear old friend Fred!" he said softly.

    Flash Fred, Continental crook and gambler, leapt to his feet with a look of alarm at the sight of this unexpected visitation.

    "Hullo, Mr Holt!" he stammered. "You're the last person in the world I expected to see—"

    "Or wanted to see," said Larry, shaking his head reproachfully. "What prosperity! Why, Fred, you're all dressed up like a Christmas tree."

    Flash Fred grinned uncomfortably, but made a brave show of indifference. "I'm going straight now, Mr Holt," he said.

    "Liar you are, and liar you will always be," said Larry without heat.

    "I swear to you on the Book—" began Fred vigorously.

    "If," said Larry without resentment, "you stood between your dead aunt and your failing uncle, and took an oath on Foxe's Book of Martyrs, I wouldn't believe you." He gazed admiringly at Fred's many adornments, at the big pin in his tie, at the triple chain of gold across his neatly tailored waistcoat, at his white spats and patent shoes, and then brought his eyes back to the perfectly brushed hair.

    "You look sweet," he said. "What is the game? Not," he added, "that I expect you to tell me, but it must be a pretty prosperous game, Fred." The man licked his dry lips.

    "I'm in business," he said.

    "Whose business are you in now?" asked Larry, interested. "And how did you get in? With a jemmy or a stick of dynamite? That's a new line for you, Fred. As a rule, you confine yourself strictly to picking crumbs of gold off the unwary youth of the land—and," he added significantly, "in picking the pockets of the recently deceased." The man's face went red.

    "You don't think I had anything to do with that murder in Montpellier?" he protested heatedly.

    "I don't think you shot the unfortunate young man," admitted Larry, "but you were certainly seen bending over his body and searching his clothes."

    "For identification," said Fred virtuously. "I wanted to find out who did it."

    "You were also seen talking to the man who did it," said Larry remorsefully. "An old lady, a Madame Prideaux, looking out of her bedroom window, saw you holding him and then saw you let him go. I presume he 'dropped'."

    Fred said nothing at first. He hated a pretended gentleman who descended to the vulgarity of employing the word "drop" for "bribe".

    "That's two years ago, Mr Holt," he said. "I don't see why you should rake that thing up against me. The examining magistrate gave me a clean bill."

    Larry laughed and dropped his hand on the man's shoulder. "Anyway, I'm off duty now, Fred. I'm going away to enjoy myself."

    "You ain't coming to London, I suppose?" asked the man, looking at him quickly.

    "No," said Larry, and thought he saw signs of relief.

    "I'm going over today," said Fred, in a conversational tone. "I was hoping we'd be fellow-passengers."

    "I'm grieved to shatter your hopes," said Larry, "but I'm going in the other direction. So long."

    "Good luck!" said Fred, and looked after him with a face which did not indicate any desire for Larry Holt's fortune.

    Larry went up to his room and found his man brushing his clothes and laying them out on his bed. Patrick Sunny, the valet he had endured for two years, was a serious young man with staring eyes and a round face, and he grew suddenly energetic on Larry's appearance. He brushed and he hissed, for he had been in a cavalry regiment.

    Larry strolled to the window and looked down on the Place de L'Opera at the busy scene.

    "Sunny," he said, "you needn't brush those dress things of mine. Pack 'em."

    "Yes, sir," said Sunny.

    "I'm going to Monte Carlo by the night train."

    "Indeed, sir?" said Sunny, who would have said exactly the same if Larry had expressed his intention of going to the Sahara or the North Pole.

    "To Monte Carlo, Sunny!" chortled Larry.