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Chapter IX Where the Flowers Came From Where was Odette Rider? That was a
problem which had to be solved. She had disappeared as though the earth
had
opened and swallowed her up. Every police station in the country had
been
warned; all outgoing ships were being watched; tactful inquiries had
been made
in every direction where it was likely she might be found; and the
house at Hertford
was under observation day and night. Tarling had procured an adjournment of
the inquest; for, whatever might be his sentiments towards Odette
Rider, he
was, it seemed, more anxious to perform his duty to the State, and it
was very
necessary that no prurient-minded coroner should investigate too deeply
into
the cause and the circumstances leading up to Thornton Lyne's death,
lest the
suspected criminal be warned. Accompanied by Inspector Whiteside, he
reexamined the flat to which the bloodstained carpet pointed
unmistakably as
being the scene of the murder. The red thumb prints on the bureau had
been
photographed and were awaiting comparison with the girl's the moment
she was
apprehended. Carrymore Mansions, where Odette Rider
lived, were, as has been described, a block of good-class flats, the
ground
floor being given over to shops. The entrance to the flats was between
two of
these, and a flight of stairs led down to the basement. Here were six
sets of apartments,
with windows giving out to the narrow areas which ran parallel to the
side
streets on either side of the block. The centre of the basement consisted of a
large concrete store-room, about which were set little cubicles or
cellars in
which the tenants stored such of their baggage, furniture, etc., as
they did
not need. It was possible, he discovered, to pass from the corridor of
the
basement flat, into the store room, and out through a door at the back
of the building
into a small courtyard. Access to the street was secured through a
fairly large
door, placed there for the convenience of tenants who wished to get
their coal
and heavy stores delivered. In the street behind the block of flats was
a mews,
consisting of about a dozen shut-up stables, all of which were rented
by a
taxicab company, and now used as a garage. If the murder was committed in the flat,
it was by this way the body would have been carried to the mews, and
here, too,
a car would attract little attention. Inquiries made amongst employees
of the
cab company, some of whom occupied little rooms above their garages,
elicited
the important information that the car had been seen in the mews on the
night of
the murder — a fact, it seemed, which had been overlooked in the
preliminary
police investigations. The car was a two-seater Daimler with a
yellow body and a hood. This was an exact description of Thornton
Lyne's
machine which had been found near the place where his body was
discovered. The
hood of the car was up when it was seen in the mews and the time
apparently was
between ten and eleven on the night of the murder. But though he
pursued the
most diligent inquiries, Tarling failed to discover any human being who
had either
recognised Lyne or observed the car arrive or depart. The hall porter of the flats, on being
interviewed, was very emphatic that nobody had come into the building
by the
main entrance between the hours of ten and half-past. It was possible,
he
admitted, that they could have come between half-past ten and a quarter
to
eleven because he had gone to his "office," which proved to be a
stuffy little place under the stairs, to change from his uniform into
his
private clothes before going home. He was in the habit of locking the
front
door at eleven o'clock. Tenants of the mansions had pass-keys to the
main door,
and of all that happened after eleven he would be ignorant. He admitted
that he
may have gone a little before eleven that night, but even as to this he
was not
prepared to swear. "In fact," said Whiteside
afterwards, "his evidence would lead nowhere. At the very hour when
somebody might have come into the flat — that is to say, between
half-past ten
and a quarter to eleven — he admits he was not on duty." Tarling nodded. He had made a diligent
search of the floor of the basement corridor through the store-room
into the
courtyard, but had found no trace of blood. Nor did he expect to find
any such
trace, since it was clear that, if the murder had been committed in the
flat
and the night-dress which was wound about the dead man's body was
Odette
Rider's, there would be no bleeding. "Of one thing I am satisfied,"
he said; "if Odette Rider committed this murder she had an accomplice.
It
was impossible that she could have carried or dragged this man into the
open
and put him into the car, carried him again from the car and laid him
on the
grass." "The daffodils puzzle me," said
Whiteside. "Why should he be found with daffodils on his chest? And
why,
if he was murdered here, should she trouble to pay that tribute of her
respect?" Tarling shook his head. He was nearer a
solution to the latter mystery than either of them knew. His search of the flat completed, he
drove to Hyde Park and, guided by Whiteside, made his way to the spot
where the
body was found. It was on a gravelled sidewalk, nearer to the grass
than to the
road, and Whiteside described the position of the body. Tarling looked
round,
and suddenly uttered an exclamation. "I wonder," he said, pointing
to a flower-bed. Whiteside stared, then laughed. "That curious," he said.
"We seem to see nothing but daffodils in this murder!" The big bed to which Tarling walked was
smothered with great feathery bells that danced and swayed in the light
spring
breezes. "Humph!" said Tarling. "Do
you know anything about daffodils, Whiteside?" Whiteside shook his head with a laugh. "All daffodils are daffodils to me.
Is there any difference in them? I suppose there must be." Tarling nodded. "These are known as Golden
Spurs," he said, "a kind which is very common in England. The
daffodils in Miss Rider's flat are the variety known as the Emperor." "Well?" said Whiteside. "Well," said the other slowly,
"the daffodils I saw this morning which were found on Lyne's chest were
Golden Spurs." He knelt down by the side of the bed and
began pushing aside the stems, examining the ground carefully. "Here you are," he said. He pointed to a dozen jagged stems. "That is where the daffodils were
plucked, I'd like to swear to that. Look, they were all pulled together
by one
hand. Somebody leaned over and pulled a handful." Whiteside looked dubious. "Mischievous boys sometimes do these
things." "Only in single stalks," said
Tarling, "and the regular flower thieves are careful to steal from
various
parts of the bed so that the loss should not be reported by the Park
gardeners." "Then you suggest — " "I suggest that whoever killed
Thornton Lyne found it convenient, for some reason best known to
himself or
herself, to ornament the body as it was found, and the flowers were got
from
here." "Not from the girl's flat at
all?" "I'm sure of that," replied
Tarling emphatically. "In fact, I knew that this morning when I'd seen
the
daffodils which you had taken to Scotland Yard." Whiteside scratched his nose in
perplexity. "The further this case goes, the
more puzzled I am," he said. "Here is a man, a wealthy man, who has
apparently no bitter enemies, discovered dead in Hyde Park, with a
woman's silk
night-dress wound round his chest, with list slippers on his feet, and
a
Chinese inscription in his pocket — and further, to puzzle the police,
a bunch
of daffodils on the chest. That was a woman's act, Mr. Tarling," he
said
suddenly. Tarling started. "How do you
mean?" he asked. "It was a woman's act to put flowers
on the man," said Whiteside quietly. "Those daffodils tell me of pity
and compassion, and perhaps repentance." A slow smile dawned on Tarling's face. "My dear Whiteside," he said,
"you are getting sentimental! And here," he added, looking up,
"attracted to the spot, is a gentleman I seem to be always meeting —
Mr.
Milburgh, I think." Milburgh had stopped at the sight of the
detective, and looked as if he would have been glad to have faded away
unobserved. But Tarling had seen him, and Milburgh came forward with
his
curious little shuffling walk, a set smile on his face, the same
worried look
in his eyes, which Tarling had seen once before. "Good morning, gentlemen," he
said, with a flourish of his top hat. "I suppose, Mr. Tarling, nothing
has
been discovered?" "At any rate, I didn't expect to
discover you here this morning!"
smiled Tarling. "I thought you were busy at the Stores." Milburgh shifted uneasily. "The place has a fascination for
me," he said huskily, "I — I can't keep away from it." He dropped his eyes before Tarling's keen
gaze and repeated the question. "Is there any fresh news?" "I ought to ask you that," said
Tarling quietly. The other looked up. "You mean Miss Rider?" he
asked. "No, sir, nothing has been found to her detriment and I cannot
trace her present address, although I have pursued the most diligent
inquiries.
It is very upsetting." There was a new emphasis in his voice.
Tarling remembered that when Lyne had spoken to Milburgh before, and
had
suggested that the girl had been guilty of some act of predation,
Milburgh had
been quick to deny the possibility. Now his manner was hostile to the
girl — indefinitely
so, but sufficiently marked for Tarling to notice it. "Do you think that Miss Rider had
any reason for running away?" asked the detective. Milburgh shrugged his shoulders. "In this world," he said
unctuously, "one is constantly being deceived by people in whom one has
put one's trust." "In other words, you suspect Miss
Rider of robbing the firm?" Up went Mr. Milburgh's plump hands. "I would not say that," he
said. "I would not accuse a young woman of such an act of treachery to
her
employers, and I distinctly refuse to make any charges until the
auditors have
completed their work. There is no doubt," he added carefully, "that
Miss Rider had the handling of large sums of money, and she of all
people in
the business, and particularly in the cashier's department would have
been able
to rob the firm without the knowledge of either myself or poor Mr.
Lyne. This,
of course, is confidential." He laid one hand appealingly on Tarling's
arm, and that worthy nodded. "Have you any idea where she would
be?" Again Milburgh shook his head. "The only thing — " he
hesitated and looked into Tarling's eyes. "Well?" asked the detective
impatiently. "There is a suggestion, of course,
that she may have gone abroad. I do not offer that suggestion, only I
know that
she spoke French very well and that she had been to the Continent
before." Tarling stroked his chin thoughtfully. "To the Continent, eh?" he said
softly. "Well, in that case I shall search the Continent; for on one
thing
I am determined, and that is to find Odette Rider," and, beckoning to
his
companion, he turned on his heel and left the obsequious Mr. Milburgh
staring
after him. |