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Chapter X The Woman at Ashford Tarling went back to his lodgings that
afternoon, a puzzled and baffled man. Ling Chu, his impassive Chinese
servant,
had observed those symptoms of perplexity before, but now there was
something
new in his master's demeanour — a kind of curt irritation, an anxiety
which in
the Hunter of Men had not been observed before. The Chinaman went silently about the
business of preparing his chief's tea and made no reference to the
tragedy or
to any of its details. He had set the table by the side of the bed, and
was
gliding from the room in that cat-like way of his when Tarling stopped
him. "Ling Chu," he said, speaking
in the vernacular, "you remember in Shanghai when the 'Cheerful Hearts'
committed a crime, how they used to leave behind their hong?" "Yes, master, I remember it very
well," said Ling Chu calmly. "They were certain words on red paper, and
afterwards you could buy them from the shops, because people desired to
have
these signs to show to their friends." "Many people carried these
things," said Tarling slowly, "and the sign of the 'Cheerful Hearts'
was found in the pocket of the murdered man." Ling Chu met the other's eyes with
imperturbable calmness. "Master," he said, "may
not the white-faced man who is now dead have brought such a thing from
Shanghai? He was a tourist, and tourists buy these foolish souvenirs." Tarling nodded again. "That is possible," he said.
"I have already thought that such might have been the case. Yet, why
should he have this sign of the 'Cheerful Hearts' in his pocket on the
night he
was murdered?" "Master," said the Chinaman,
"why should he have been murdered?" Tarling's lips curled in a half smile. "By which I suppose you mean that
one question is as difficult to answer as the other," he said. "All
right, Ling Chu, that will do." His principal anxiety for the moment was
not this, or any other clue which had been offered, but the discovery
of Odette
Rider's present hiding-place. Again and again he turned the problem
over in his
mind. At every point he was baffled by the wild improbability of the
facts that
he had discovered. Why should Odette Rider be content to accept a
servile position
in Lyne's Stores when her mother was living in luxury at Hertford? Who
was her
father — that mysterious father who appeared and disappeared at
Hertford, and
what part did he play in the crime? And if she was innocent, why had
she disappeared
so completely and in circumstances so suspicious? And what did Sam Stay
know?
The man's hatred of the girl was uncanny. At the mention of her name a
veritable fountain of venom had bubbled up, and Tarling had sensed the
abysmal
depths of this man's hate and something of his boundless love for the
dead man. He turned impatiently on the couch and
reached out his hand for his tea, when there came a soft tap at the
door and
Ling Chu slipped into the room. "The Bright Man is here," he
said, and in these words announced Whiteside, who brought into the room
something of his alert, fresh personality which had earned him the
pseudonym
which Ling Chu had affixed. "Well, Mr. Tarling," said the
Inspector, taking out a little notebook, "I'm afraid I haven't done
very
much in the way of discovering the movements of Miss Rider, but so far
as I can
find out by inquiries made at Charing Cross booking office, several
young
ladies unattended have left for the Continent in the past few days." "You cannot identify any of these
with Miss Rider?" asked Tarling in a tone of disappointment. The detective shook his head. Despite his
apparent unsuccess, he had evidently made some discovery which pleased
him, for
there was nothing gloomy in his admission of failure. "You have found out something,
though?" suggested Tarling quickly, and Whiteside nodded. "Yes," he said, "by the
greatest of luck I've got hold of a very curious story. I was chatting
with
some of the ticket collectors and trying to discover a man who might
have seen
the girl — I have a photograph of her taken in a group of Stores
employees, and
this I have had enlarged, as it may be very useful." Tarling nodded. "Whilst I was talking with the man
on the gate," Whiteside proceeded, "a travelling ticket inspector
came up and he brought rather an extraordinary story from Ashford. On
the night
of the murder there was an accident to the Continental Express." "I remember seeing something about
it," said Tarling, "but my mind has been occupied by this other
matter. What happened?" "A luggage truck which was standing
on the platform fell between two of the carriages and derailed one of
them," explained Whiteside. "The only passenger who was hurt was a
Miss Stevens. Apparently it was a case of simple concussion, and when
the train
was brought to a standstill she was removed to the Cottage Hospital,
where she
is to-day. Apparently the daughter of the travelling ticket inspector
is a
nurse at the hospital, and she told her father that this Miss Stevens,
before
she recovered consciousness, made several references to a 'Mr. Lyne'
and a 'Mr.
Milburgh'!" Tarling was sitting erect now, watching
the other through narrowed lids. "Go on," he said quietly. "I could get very little from the
travelling inspector, except that his daughter was under the impression
that
the lady had a grudge against Mr. Lyne, and that she spoke even more
disparagingly of Mr. Milburgh." Tarling had risen and slipped off his
silk dressing-gown before the other could put away his notebook. He
struck a
gong with his knuckles, and when Ling Chu appeared, gave him an order
in
Chinese, which Whiteside could not follow. "You're going to Ashford? I thought
you would," said Whiteside. "Would you like me to come along?" "No, thank you," said the
other. "I'll go myself. I have an idea that Miss Stevens may be the
missing witness in the case and may throw greater light upon the
happenings of
the night before last than any other witness we have yet interviewed." He found he had to wait an hour before he
could get a train for Ashford, and he passed that hour impatiently
walking up
and down the broad platform. Here was a new complication in the case.
Who was
Miss Stevens, and why should she be journeying to Dover on the night of
the
murder? He reached Ashford, and with difficulty
found
a cab, for it was raining heavily, and he had come provided with
neither
mackintosh nor umbrella. The matron of the Cottage Hospital
reassured him on one point. "Oh, yes, Miss Stevens is still in
the hospital," she said, and he breathed a sigh of relief. There was
just
a chance that she might have been discharged, and again the possibility
that
she would be difficult to trace. The matron showed him the way through a
long corridor, terminating in a big ward. Before reaching the door of
the ward
there was a smaller door on the right. "We put her in this private ward,
because we thought it might be necessary to operate," said the matron
and
opened the door. Tarling walked in. Facing him was the
foot of the bed, and in that bed lay a girl whose eyes met his. He
stopped dead
as though he were shot For "Miss Stevens" was Odette Rider! |