My friends are not playing this
game for candy. They want a big occasion for the taking off, with the eyes of all
Europe on it. He’ll be murdered by an Austrian, and there’ll be plenty of evidence
to show the connivance of the big folk in Vienna and Berlin. It will all be an infernal
lie, of course, but the case will look black enough to the world. I’m not talking
hot air, my friend. I happen to know every detail of the hellish contrivance, and
I can tell you it will be the most finished piece of blackguardism since the Borgias.
But it’s not going to come off if there’s a certain man who knows the wheels of the
business alive right here in London on the 15th day of June. And that man is going
to be your servant, Franklin P. Scudder.’
I was getting to like the little chap. His jaw had shut like a rat-trap, and there
was the fire of battle in his gimlety eyes. If he was spinning me a yarn he could
act up to it.
‘Where did you find out this story?’ I asked.
‘I got the first hint in an inn on the Achensee in Tyrol. That set me inquiring, and
I collected my other clues in a fur-shop in the Galician quarter of Buda, in a Strangers’
Club in Vienna, and in a little bookshop off the Racknitzstrasse in Leipsic. I completed
my evidence ten days ago in Paris. I can’t tell you the details now, for it’s something
of a history. When I was quite sure in my own mind I judged it my business to disappear,
and I reached this city by a mighty queer circuit. I left Paris a dandified young
French-American, and I sailed from Hamburg a Jew diamond merchant. In Norway I was
an English student of Ibsen collecting materials for lectures, but when I left Bergen
I was a cinema-man with special ski films. And I came here from Leith with a lot of
pulp-wood propositions in my pocket to put before the London newspapers. Till yesterday
I thought I had muddied my trail some, and was feeling pretty happy. Then …’
The recollection seemed to upset him, and he gulped down some more whisky.
‘Then I saw a man standing in the street outside this block. I used to stay close
in my room all day, and only slip out after dark for an hour or two. I watched him
for a bit from my window, and I thought I recognized him … He came in and spoke to
the porter … When I came back from my walk last night I found a card in my letter-box.
It bore the name of the man I want least to meet on God’s earth.’
I think that the look in my companion’s eyes, the sheer naked scare on his face, completed
my conviction of his honesty. My own voice sharpened a bit as I asked him what he
did next.
‘I realized that I was bottled as sure as a pickled herring, and that there was only
one way out. I had to die. If my pursuers knew I was dead they would go to sleep again.’
‘How did you manage it?’
‘I told the man that valets me that I was feeling pretty bad, and I got myself up
to look like death. That wasn’t difficult, for I’m no slouch at disguises. Then I
got a corpse—you can always get a body in London if you know where to go for it. I
fetched it back in a trunk on the top of a four-wheeler, and I had to be assisted
upstairs to my room. You see I had to pile up some evidence for the inquest. I went
to bed and got my man to mix me a sleeping-draught, and then told him to clear out.
He wanted to fetch a doctor, but I swore some and said I couldn’t abide leeches. When
I was left alone I started in to fake up that corpse.
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