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Chapter XXIII The Night Visitor Tarling was less in a dilemma than in
that condition of uncertainty which is produced by having no definite
plans one
way or the other. There was no immediate necessity for his return to
town and
his annoyance at finding the last train gone was due rather to a
natural desire
to sleep in his own bed, than to any other cause. He might have got a
car from
a local garage, and motored to London, if there had been any particular
urgency,
but, he told himself, he might as well spend the night in Hertford as
in Bond
Street. If he had any leanings towards staying at
Hertford it was because he was anxious to examine the contents of the
wallet at
his leisure. If he had any call to town it might be discovered in his
anxiety
as to what had happened to Odette Rider; whether she had returned to
her hotel
or was still marked "missing" by the police. He could, at any rate,
get into communication with Scotland Yard and satisfy his mind on that
point.
He turned back from the station in search of lodgings. He was to find
that it
was not so easy to get rooms as he had imagined. The best hotel in the
place
was crowded out as a result of an agricultural convention which was
being held
in the town. He was sent on to another hotel, only to find that the
same state
of congestion existed, and finally after half an hour's search he found
accommodation at a small commercial hotel which was surprisingly empty. His first step was to get into
communication with London and this was established without delay.
Nothing had
been heard of Odette Rider, and the only news of importance was that
the
ex-convict, Sam Stay, had escaped from the county lunatic asylum to
which he
had been removed. Tarling went up to the commodious
sitting-room. He was mildly interested in the news about Stay, for the
man had
been a disappointment. This criminal, whose love for Thornton Lyne had,
as
Tarling suspected rightly, been responsible for his mental collapse,
might have
supplied a great deal of information as to the events which led up to
the day
of the murder, and his dramatic breakdown had removed a witness who
might have offered
material assistance to the police. Tarling closed the door of his
sitting-room behind him, pulled the wallet from his pocket and laid it
on the
table. He tried first with his own keys to unfasten the flap but the
locks
defied him. The heaviness of the wallet surprised and piqued him, but
he was
soon to find an explanation for its extraordinary weight. He opened his
pocket-knife and began to cut away the leather about the locks, and
uttered an
exclamation. So that was the reason for the heaviness
of the pouch — it was only leather-covered! Beneath this cover was a
lining of
fine steel mail. The wallet was really a steel chain bag, the locks
being
welded to the chain and absolutely immovable. He threw the wallet back
on the
table with a laugh. He must restrain his curiosity until he got back to
the
Yard, where the experts would make short work of the best locks which
were ever
invented. Whilst he sat watching the thing upon the table and turning
over in
his mind the possibility of its contents, he heard footsteps pass his
door and
mount the stairway opposite which his sitting-room was situated.
Visitors in
the same plight as himself, he thought. Somehow, being in a strange room amidst
unfamiliar surroundings, gave the case a new aspect. It was an aspect
of
unreality. They were all so unreal, the characters in this strange
drama. Thornton Lyne seemed fantastic, and
fantastic indeed was his end. Milburgh, with his perpetual smirk, his
little
stoop, his broad, fat face and half-bald head; Mrs. Rider, a pale ghost
of a
woman who flitted in and out of the story, or rather hovered about it,
never
seeming to intrude, yet never wholly separated from its tragic process;
Ling
Chu, imperturbable, bringing with him the atmosphere of that land of
intrigue and
mystery and motive, China. Odette Rider alone was real. She was life;
warm,
palpitating, wonderful. Tarling frowned and rose stiffly from his
chair. He despised himself a little for this weakness of his. Odette
Rider! A
woman still under suspicion of murder, a woman whom it was his duty, if
she
were guilty, to bring to the scaffold, and the thought of her turned
him hot
and cold! He passed through to his bedroom which
adjoined the sitting-room, put the wallet on a table by the side of his
bed,
locked the bedroom door, opened the windows and prepared himself, as
best he
could, for the night. There was a train leaving Hertford at
five in the morning and he had arranged to be called in time to catch
it. He
took off his boots, coat, vest, collar and tie, unbuckled his belt — he
was one
of those eccentrics to whom the braces of civilisation were anathema —
and lay
down on the outside of the bed, pulling the eiderdown over him. Sleep
did not
come to him readily. He turned from side to side, thinking, thinking,
thinking. Suppose there had been some mistake in
the time of the accident at Ashford? Suppose the doctors were wrong and
Thornton Lyne was murdered at an earlier hour? Suppose Odette Rider was
in
reality a cold-blooded ——. He growled away the thought. He heard the church clock strike the hour
of two and waited impatiently for the quarter to chime — he had heard
every
quarter since he had retired to bed. But he did not hear that quarter.
He must
have fallen into an uneasy sleep for he began to dream. He dreamt he
was in
China again and had fallen into the hands of that baneful society, the
"Cheerful Hearts." He was in a temple, lying on a great black slab of
stone, bound hand and foot, and above him he saw the leader of the
gang, knife
in hand, peering down into his face with a malicious grin — and it was
the face
of Odette Rider! He saw the knife raised and woke sweating. The church clock was booming three and a
deep silence lay on the world. But there was somebody in his room. He
knew that
and lay motionless, peering out of half-closed eyes from one corner to
the
other. There was nobody to be seen, nothing to be heard, but his sixth
sense
told him that somebody was present. He reached out his hand carefully
and
silently to the table and searched for the wallet. It was gone! Then he heard the creak of a board and it
came from the direction of the door leading to the sitting-room. With
one bound
he was out of bed in time to see the door flung open and a figure slip
through.
He was after it in a second. The burglar might have escaped, but
unexpectedly
there was a crash and a cry. He had fallen over a chair and before he
could rise
Tarling was on him and had flung him back. He leapt to the door, it was
open.
He banged it close and turned the key. "Now, let's have a look at
you," said Tarling grimly and switched on the light. He fell back against the door, his mouth
open in amazement, for the intruder was Odette Rider, and in her hand
she held
the stolen wallet. |