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XIII.
— Lord Pinlow Goes Calling
Lord Pinlow was
engaged in his study until very late that Saturday
night. At eleven o'clock he sent for his valet. "Perks," he said, "I
am not feeling particularly
well." "I am sorry to hear
that, m'lord," replied the man. "I am going to bed
and I shall want you to take a note to Watford
for me — to a Dr Jellis." "Yes, m'lord." "You can have the
car. The doctor will probably be in bed and
asleep. All you have to do is to slip the note in his letter-box and
come away.
I don't care what time you get back, but you are not to disturb me, do
you
understand?" "Quite, m'lord." "I have not been
sleeping too well, and I am taking a sleeping
draught — if you wake me under any circumstances there will be trouble." He dismissed the man
and sat down to write a conventional note to the
doctor. Then he returned to his room, locked the door, and changed
quickly into
an old suit. He waited till he heard the door of the flat click behind
the
valet, then he stepped into the darkened dining-room and watched his
car
departing. No sooner was it out
of sight than he returned to his room, rumpled the
bed to give it the appearance of having been slept in, and taking one
or two
necessary articles from a bureau, he switched of the light and left the
room,
locking the door behind him. In the hall he found
a long dark overcoat and a cap. These he put on,
turned off the light, and stepped out of the flat. He crossed Pall
Mall, passed St. James's Palace into the Mall, then
turned sharp toward the Admiralty Arch. He took a brief
survey of the Mall. Coming slowly in his
direction was a big closed motor-car, remarkable,
if for no other reason, from the fact that one headlight was white and
one was
barred with green stripes of glass. He waited till it
was nearly abreast of him, then he raised his hand
and the car stopped. Without a word to the muffled driver he opened the
door
and jumped in, and the car moved on. There was another
occupant, a man who deferentially squeezed himself
into one corner of the car as Lord Pinlow entered. "Is everything all
right?" asked Pinlow, as the car ran
swiftly along Whitehall. "Got everything,"
replied the voice of Tinker Smith. There was a long
pause. "What happened this
afternoon — you made a mess of it, I
suppose?" demanded Lord Pinlow. The man in the
corner wriggled uncomfortably. "The lads did their
best," he said apologetically, "but
he was wise to it, that Pallard. They followed him to the station and
got him
into the rattler nice and comfortable, an' Timmy Gooler — who's no
mug-started
puttin' it acrost him. An' Tim's been boxing partner of some of the
best men in
the ring." "Well?" "Well, that there
Pallard, he didn't wait for Tim to get busy; he
caught him a hook under the jaw that put him to sleep, 'fore, so to
speak, he
was properly awake. I've been down to his house at Nottin' Dale to see
him. In
bed he is, with a face like a pincushion. That there Pallard can fight!" Pinlow wrinkled his
nose unpleasantly in the darkness. He had some
reason to know that 'that there Pallard' could fight. The car ran through
Chelsea, and took the Kingston road. Through
Kingston, past Sandown Park, it ran swiftly. Guildford was reached
before one,
and the car turned on the Petworth road. Wickham Norton lies
on the downs to the north of Petworth. It is a tiny
village, and the training establishment of Ebenezer Colter
stands a mile and a half from the village. It had been bought
by an African millionaire, improved beyond
recognition, and was chiefly remarkable for the fact that it had six
miles of
high wall round it, rivalling in height and solidarity the famous walls
of
Petworth House. "Does the driver
know who I am?" asked Pinlow, as the car
turned cautiously into a treeshaded by-lane a quarter of a mile from
the training
establishment. "No, he's all right.
He's the chap that drove the Birmingham crowd
when they cleared out the jewellers in Corporation Street — it's a
reg'lar
business with him." The car came to a
standstill and the driver tapped the window. Pinlow's companion
alighted and Pinlow followed. The chauffeur was
engaged in extinguishing the lights of the big lamps. "Tell him to have
the car turned round and waiting at the end of
the lane," instructed Pinlow. He walked briskly
back to the high road followed by the other. Keeping to the side
of the road, they stepped out together. "You are sure
everything is right?" asked Lord Pinlow as they
emerged from the shelter of the high trees that fringed the main road. "Certain, m'lord,"
said the man. "They've got a stableman
straightened, one of your chaps — Coggs, you know Coggs, m'lord? — has
put
everything right." Pinlow nodded. "The last business
Coggs did for me was none too
satisfactory," he said grimly, remembering his losses on Fixture. They walked on in
silence, then the man at his side suddenly put out
his hand and stopped. "Somebody ahead," he
whispered. He had seen two
shadowy forms by the side of the road. He whistled, softly,
a bar from a song which was the rage of the
moment, and instantly and as softly the refrain was taken up. "It's all right,"
said the man in a low voice, "it's
Coggs and Gilly." The two watchers
came forward to meet them. "That you, Mr
Smith?" asked the stouter of the two, and
Pinlow's companion answered. They stood talking
for a little while. "This is Mr
Vantine," introduced Smith. Pinlow had his cap
drawn down over his eyes, and from the lower part of
his face hung a bushy beard. He had fixed it deftly before he had
descended
from the car. "Everything is all
right," said Coggs. "I have got a key
to a wicket gate on the far side of the park, that's this side. There
will be
no difficulty in getting into the stables — I've straightened one of
the lads
all right." "Who is looking
after the colt?" asked Pinlow. "One man," said the
other; "he sleeps up above the horse
in a bunk above the manger." "Let us get on,"
said Pinlow. Led by Coggs they
skirted the wall of the place. It was not a long
walk. Coggs stopped before a little door and Smith flashed a light from
an
electric lamp whilst Coggs fitted a key to the lock. The door opened
creakily, and the party passed through. They were a
hundred yards from a block of buildings, the bulk of which showed
blackly
before them. Again Coggs led the
way. With another key he
opened a small door that took them into a dark
courtyard. "Where is the
trainer's house?" whispered Pinlow. "The other side of
this," said the other in a low voice;
"those are the new boxes Pallard built." There was a deathly
silence broken only by the occasional rattle of a
chain, as some horse moved in his stall. "The first box on
the right is empty," whispered Coggs
hoarsely; "the horse is in the second." As they had entered
the park, the party had drawn rubber goloshes over
their boots, and the men made their way noiselessly to the door of the
second
box. Smith paused and
looked round at his employer. "The dope or the
knife?" he asked. "The knife," said
Pinlow promptly; "the other takes too
long." The man nodded. He tried the stable
door cautiously. It moved to his
touch. This was as had been arranged. He opened it a
couple of inches, then he closed it again, and took a small flat
leather case
from his pocket. From this he extracted a surgeon's scalpel. He opened
it with
a click and smoothed the wicked little blade on the palm of his hand. "You come in with
me," he whispered. Pinlow nodded and
the man opened the door and slipped through, his
master following. The box was in one
corner of the stable. Throwing the beam of his light
on the ground to show the way, Smith made for the box, and gently
lifted the
big latch. He saw the sheeted
figure of the horse standing quietly. Very quickly he
flashed the light on the near hind leg and chose the
spot, a little above the fetlock. The horse stood
remarkably still, and standing on one side to avoid the
kick which would assuredly come, Smith drove the knife home with a
quick
scientific turn of his wrist. The scalpel snapped
off short in his hand and he uttered an oath. As
for the horse, it did not move. "What is wrong?"
asked Pinlow sharply. "Wrong? — why, this
is a wooden horse!" gasped the other. "What?" began
Pinlow, when there was a 'click', and the
stable was suddenly brilliantly illuminated. Three big
incandescent lamps blazed in the roof and Pinlow stepped back
quickly towards the door. "Don't move," said a
quiet voice. Lying full length on
the bunk above the manger, his head resting on his
crooked arm, was a young man. In his other hand was the ugly black
pistol that
looked all barrel. "Don't move," said
Mr Brian Pallard again, "because if
you do I shall shoot, and I have no desire to miss a day's racing to
give
evidence at your inquest." Pinlow hung his head
down. His big black beard hid the lower part of
his face. "Be not so modest,"
taunted the man in the bunk. "I
think I have seen you before — Lord Pinlow, I believe?" "I don't know what
you mean?" said Pinlow gruffly. "You will know — and
everybody will know — if you don't keep
still. For a pistol-shot may miss you, but the sound will arouse a
strong body
of police which is stationed in the park, and then, my dear chap, the
fat will
be in the fire." He sat up in the
bunk and lolled, his legs hanging over the edge easily
and comfortably. "I suppose I've done
wrong," said Pinlow sullenly, removing
his beard, "and I shall be misunderstood; but I only came to have a
look
at this champion of yours." "Came from a
fancy-dress ball, I suppose?" asked the other
innocently. "Well, you can have a look at him. He's made of wood, as
your
truthful lieutenant said. In fact, Pinlow, he's the wooden horse that
my friend
Colter keeps to hang his harness on: the sort of thing you see in a
saddler's
window, you know. Colter picked him up cheaply at a sale." Pinlow said nothing. "We painted his hind
legs white," continued Brian, "in
order to complete the illusion. Colter and I did it; the paint is not
yet
dry." "What are you going
to do?" growled Pinlow. Brian shook his head. "I'm blest if I
know!" confessed his captor; "you're
much too innocent to be locked up. A man who would believe that he
could
straighten — that's the word, isn't it? — a stableman of mine, a man
who has
been with me for ten years, is more to be blamed than pitied!" With a reproving
shake of his head, he stepped down from the bunk,
alighted nimbly upon the broad back of the wooden horse, and walked
along till
he came to the tail, then he jumped lightly into the box. "I hardly know what
to do with you," he repeated,
"except to give you some good advice." "Dash your advice,"
snarled the other, "you can do as
you like: you're brave enough with that pistol, Pallard; put it down
for a bit
and I'll show you who's the better man." "I know who's the
better man," said the other simply, "I
need no further proof: there's the door, you had better skip. You'll
find
Messrs. Coggs and Gilly very sore outside the park, where my stablemen
have put
them — you didn't hear the little scuffle outside, I suppose? Good
morning — stay!" Pinlow was on his
way to the door and turned back. "You've forgotten
your whiskers," said Brian gravely, and
pointed to the tell-tale beard that lay on the floor. He followed the two
men across the park, out through the little wicket
on to the road. None of the three
troubled to speak to two groaning men who lay by the
wall, drenched through — there was a convenient duck-pond near where
the irate
stablemen had found Coggs and Gilly — and they left them sore and
aching. The two walked
quickly in the direction of the lane where the motor-car
had been left. There was no sign of
it and they looked about in bewilderment. Brian came up. "Looking for the
car, I suppose?" he said. "It is
half-way to London by now; the fact is, the driver had the choice of
arrest or
bolt — and he bolted." He gave them time to
realize the situation, then he went on: "A nice ten-mile
walk will do you both good; you don't get enough
exercise, Pinlow; you're getting fat. You're nothing like the lithesome
dapper
conquestador I knew in Melbourne." Blind rage choked
the man he addressed. He half turned. "I'll kill you one
of these days, Pallard!" he hissed. "Then you'll be
hanged by a silken rope," said the
imperturbable man in the centre of the road; "for that, I understand,
is
the privilege of your caste." He stood watching
them till they were swallowed up in the night, then
he walked back thoughtfully to the trainer's house. "We ought to have
had them arrested," said Colter, as they
sat in the long dining-room, hung from ceiling to floor with pictures. "What is the use?"
Brian was sipping a cup of coffee.
"It would only make a scandal, and that sort of thing does not do the
game
much good." "It is curious you
should have come down last night," said
the trainer thoughtfully; "for although this plot has been hatching for
a
week, I knew nothing about it till last evening when I came home from
Hurst
Park." Brian smiled. "I have known all
about it for a week," he said; "it was
to be the last resource." "Do you think it is
their last resource?" asked the trainer. Brian shook his head. "Honestly, I do
not," he said. And he was right. |