<h2 id="c10"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER IX</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE FOOTSTEP IN THE DARK</span></h2>
<p>At ten minutes to eight that evening
there came the rattle of nails on the
glass panels of the door of Flat 7. Desmond
opened and Francis darted in. He caught
his brother’s arm.</p>
<p>“Clubfoot!” he gasped.</p>
<p>Swiftly Desmond laid his finger on his
lips. He turned and closed the door leading
from the hall into the little sitting-room.</p>
<p>“One of Farandol’s men is inside,” he explained.
“I’ve been staving him off all the
afternoon, as I’m particularly anxious, for
the moment, to keep the police out of this—at
any rate, until I’ve heard your story!”</p>
<p>Francis nodded understandingly. “For a
week,” he said, “a lame man, a foreigner with
a misshapen foot, has been a patient in the
nursing-home which occupies the second,
third, and fourth floors of the house next
door to this. He calls himself Dr. Deinwitz,
a Czecho-Slovak lawyer, and was brought
here by his son, a fair young man with a scar
on his face. The son represented that his
father was suffering from acute neurasthenia
and was in need of absolute rest and quiet.
He made it a stipulation that his father’s
presence should be kept a secret, otherwise, he
said, he would be pestered to death by
visitors. In order to be quiet, the son insisted
that his father should have a room at
the back on the top floor.”</p>
<p>Desmond opened and clenched his hand.
“Is he still there?” he asked tensely.</p>
<p>Francis shook his head despondently. “He
went out for the first time to-day to go to
the City on business. He has kept his room
on, but I doubt—”</p>
<p>“He’s kept his room on?” Desmond almost
shouted. “Then all is not lost. Wait here
a second!”</p>
<p>He darted away, and presently Francis
heard him telephoning in one of the inner
rooms.</p>
<p>“You’ve no idea what a day I’ve had,”
said Francis when his brother came back.
“Professional secrecy is a tremendously effective
cover against indiscreet inquiries.
Young Deinwitz, in whom, of course, I recognized
Clubfoot’s aide, Heinrich, seems
to have subtly conveyed to the fellow who
runs this nursing-home that his father was
on the verge of lunacy. Naturally the matron
and all of them shut up like oysters
when I came barging in with direct questions
at the front door. I had to get a letter of
introduction from a pal of mine in Harley
Street before I finally got into the place.
I flatter myself I was rather good as a nerve
specialist from Sheffield with a rich patient
to ‘place’ . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond laughed happily. “Disguise,
eh?”</p>
<p>“Only cheek pads and a toupet! But what
are you looking so cheerful about? Old Clubfoot
has given us the slip properly this
time . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond slipped his arm in his brother’s.
“Come inside and meet Sergeant Rushbrooke,”
he said.</p>
<p>Francis found that the girl’s body had been
taken away, but otherwise no attempt had
been made to repair the disorder of the
rooms. In an armchair in the sitting-room
was a fresh-faced, blue-eyed young man
whom Desmond introduced as Sergeant
Rushbrooke.</p>
<p>A bell pealed through the flat.</p>
<p>“Bannington!” announced Desmond, and
hurried to the front door.</p>
<p>“I got your telephone message,” said the
Air Marshal, coming into the sitting-room.
“Have you any news for me, Okewood?
My God, this suspense is awful!”</p>
<p>He held out two trembling hands towards
the young man. Desmond was fumbling in
the inside pocket of his coat. He drew forth
a thick wad of blue foolscap, folded twice
across, which he handed to his visitor.</p>
<p>Bannington snatched at it and, with an
eagerness that was almost painful to behold,
unfolded it, scrutinized it.</p>
<p>“By the Lord! You’ve saved me!” he
gasped and dropped limply into a chair.
“How can I ever thank you, Okewood?
Man alive, it’s a miracle! Tell me all about
it!”</p>
<p>“Des.!” exclaimed Francis.</p>
<p>Sergeant Rushbrooke opened wide his blue
eyes. “You didn’t say anything about this
to me, sir,” he observed in rather a ruffled
tone.</p>
<p>“You won’t be kept in suspense much
longer, Sergeant,” said Desmond, and
glanced at his watch.</p>
<p>He turned to the Air Marshal. “This was
the way of it, sir,” he said. “Last night
Miss Bardale was seated there at her typewriter
typing out your report with her back
to the bedroom door. The time was somewhere
about ten o’clock. Suddenly from behind
her she hears a noise in the kitchen.
Her first thought is not for herself, but for
her duty to you. She snatches up her papers—your
original and the two pages of the
fair copy she had made—and puts them in
a place of safety before she turns to meet
her murderer. When she sees his face, she
attempts to flee back into the sitting-room.
But, before she can escape, he is on her,
choking out her life with his great hairy
hands.</p>
<p>“Then follows the frantic search to find
what he had committed murder to discover, a
search frantic, yet methodical in its way,
room by room, as you may see. It was the
circumstance that he had prolonged the
search to the very kitchen that made me
think he had possibly not achieved his object.
So I took up the hunt where he had left off
and . . .”</p>
<p>He produced from a drawer in the table a
filmy mass of pink edged with lace.</p>
<p>“She had rolled your papers up in her
nightdress and put it back under the pillow.
I found it wedged between the bed and the
wall!”</p>
<p>Sir Alexander Bannington blew his nose
violently. “But who was the murderer?” he
asked.</p>
<p>Again Desmond consulted his watch. “I
may be able to answer that question later,”
he said. “For the moment the sooner you
get that report in a place of safety the better,
sir.”</p>
<p>“I’m inclined to agree with you,” replied
Bannington. “Are you and your brother
coming along?”</p>
<p>Desmond shook his head. “My work isn’t
finished yet! But Francis will escort you
back to the Air Ministry . . .”</p>
<p>“No need, I assure you,” said Bannington.
“I have my car outside.”</p>
<p>“Believe me,” Desmond urged, “it would
be better for you to have an escort!”</p>
<p>Francis drew his brother aside. “It’s no
use trying to get me out of the way, Des.,”
he told him. “You’ve got something up your
sleeve. Now, haven’t you?”</p>
<p>He was smiling, but his brother remained
serious.</p>
<p>“The important thing,” Desmond said, “is
to get that report away quickly. Bannington
has no idea of the danger he runs.
When you’ve seen his memorandum into the
safe, come back here by all means. If I’m
not here I’ll be at the Yard. I may have
some news for you . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond leaned forward and whispered in
his brother’s ear.</p>
<p>Francis started. Then he said: “But I
can’t leave you to face it alone!”</p>
<p>“I shan’t be alone,” Desmond answered.
“Sergeant Rushbrooke is here to keep me
company, and I have asked the Yard to send
me down half a dozen men. Farandol was
not there when I telephoned just now, but
his substitute promised to send at once.
They should be here by this. If you should
meet them below, send the man in charge
up to me, will you?”</p>
<p>“Well, Okewood, are you ready?” Bannington
came out of the hall with his hat on
his head. He held out his hand to Desmond.</p>
<p>“If ever I can show my gratitude for what
you have done for me this night,” he said
with deep feeling, “believe me I will!”</p>
<p>“It’s all in the day’s work,” said Desmond
as he accompanied them to the door. “Good-bye.”</p>
<p>“<i>Au revoir!</i>” corrected Francis smilingly
as he followed the Air Marshal out.</p>
<p>For full five minutes after they had gone,
Desmond remained standing in the hall, sunk
in his thoughts. He was interrupted by
Sergeant Rushbrooke.</p>
<p>“Beg pardon, sir!” said the plain-clothes
man, “but I believe there’s some one on the
stairs outside!”</p>
<p>Like a flash Desmond’s hand shot out at
the electric-light switch at the door of the
sitting-room. There was a click and the
room was plunged in darkness. Desmond
pulled out an automatic.</p>
<p>“Have your gun ready!” he whispered to
the detective. “Keep very quiet, but be prepared
to shoot!”</p>
<p class="tb">The flat was in complete darkness. Before
them, as they crouched behind the table,
they saw the dim outline of the bedroom
door. Beyond, where the kitchen lay, was
blackness.</p>
<p>Very faintly, from the obscurity before
them, a key rattled. Presently the cold night
air softly brushed their faces. At the end
of the flat against a background of silver
moonlight a huge figure bulked immensely.
A door closed softly and darkness fell again.</p>
<p>A heavy limping sound approached them;
a step and a stump, a step and a stump,
muted but audible. They could hear the
floor boards straining as beneath some immense
weight.</p>
<p>And now that uncouth shape loomed gigantic
in the doorway of the sitting-room.
Its breadth seemed to stretch from jamb to
jamb. Some movement must have betrayed
their presence, for there came the rasp of
a harsh ejaculation. Then the room was
flooded with light and Desmond’s voice rang
out: “If you move I’ll shoot!”</p>
<p>It was Grundt, bareheaded, in the clothes
of rusty black he always affected, his right
hand, plumed with black hair on the back,
grasping his rubber-shod crutch-stick. He
had made a half-turn in the doorway, and
now twisted his head round to stare at his
challenger, his burning eyes blazing defiance,
his cruel, fleshy lips pursed up in a contemptuous
sneer.</p>
<p>“You can put your hands up, Herr Doktor!”
said Desmond. “Quickly, please, or
there might be an accident! And you can
drop your stick!”</p>
<p>The giant cripple faced his aggressors
squarely. He hesitated for an instant, then,
with an almost imperceptible shrug of his
shoulders, he slowly raised his hands, his
stick rattling to the floor.</p>
<p>“Sergeant, would you mind . . .?” Desmond
remarked in a colloquial tone.</p>
<p>Sergeant Rushbrooke crossed to the doorway
and, with a dexterity born of long experience,
ran his fingers lightly over the
big man’s pockets, not forgetting, you may
be sure, the inside breast pocket, where your
professional gunman mostly carries his
weapon, or the armholes of the waistcoat,
very handy for concealing a knife.</p>
<p>“He’s not armed, sir,” he reported.</p>
<p>Desmond smiled sardonically. “You’re
getting careless, Grundt! A few years ago
you would not have been taken off your
guard like this!”</p>
<p>But Grundt said no word.</p>
<p>“Your psychological powers are failing,
too, my dear Doctor,” Desmond continued.
“A woman’s wit defeated you. Celibacy has
its drawbacks. If you had been a married
man, now, you would have known that
women have as great a predilection for curious
hiding-places as a magpie!”</p>
<p>For the first time Clubfoot spoke. “You
again!” he said in a voice thick with anger.
“Always you!” His dark eyes were hot with
passion and they saw the veins swell knot-like
at his temples. “You are beginning to
incommode me, Okewood. I must advise
you to be careful!”</p>
<p>Desmond laughed. “If I hadn’t been careful
during the last few weeks, I shouldn’t
be here to-day,” he said. “You know that
well enough, Grundt. However, you’re not
going to do any more harm. Sergeant Rushbrooke!”</p>
<p>“Sir?”</p>
<p>“Go down and see if those police I asked
for are there. Explain to the man in charge
that it is essential that no one should leave
this house or the houses on either side for the
present, and ask him to be good enough to
step up here to me. When you have done
that, take a man with you and go to the
nursing-home next door and inquire whether
young Mr. Deinwitz is there. If he is, invite
him to accompany you to Scotland Yard. If
he won’t come, kidnap him! Understand?”</p>
<p>“Sir!” said the Sergeant who had learnt
discipline in the Brigade of Guards. He
seemed to hesitate. “Will <i>you</i> be all right,
sir?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Don’t you worry about me,” Desmond
smiled. “Dr. Grundt and I are old friends!
We shall enjoy a tête-à-tête!”</p>
<p>On that Rushbrooke clattered off and Desmond
turned to Clubfoot again. Grundt
seemed to have regained all his saturnine
good-humour.</p>
<p>“You’ll hang for this job, my friend!”
Desmond observed pleasantly.</p>
<p>Grundt bared his strong yellow teeth in a
smile and made a little bow. “You have, of
course, all necessary evidence against me.
Your English justice, if I remember rightly,
is exacting on this point.”</p>
<p>Unwittingly Desmond flashed an inquiring
glance at him.</p>
<p>The cripple was quick to notice it and
chuckled. “My dear Okewood,” he remarked
suavely, “you are too deliciously
naïve. Lieber Freund, do you really imagine
you will ever secure the conviction of a poor
neurastheniac for murder simply because,
on the night after the tragedy, attracted by
the light and the sound of voices, he penetrated
the scene of the crime?”</p>
<p>“The key, man, the key!” Desmond broke
in.</p>
<p>“The key of my back door opens the back
door of this flat,” was the rejoinder. A
large key dropped on the carpet at Desmond’s
feet. “Try it and see!”</p>
<p>But now an interruption came. There
was a ring at the front door. Three men in
plain clothes appeared.</p>
<p>“From Mr. Farandol, sir,” said the foremost
of the trio, a short, thick-set fellow
with a dark moustache. “The Inspector was
called away to a big case at Colchester. Our
orders are to take the party to the Yard.
We’ve a car below if you’d care to come with
us.”</p>
<p>Desmond gave a sigh of relief. “By
George!” he said, “I certainly will!” The
perspiration glittered on his forehead. “I
shan’t feel happy till you’ve got him safe
under lock and key. Will you handcuff our
friend? I’m taking no chances!”</p>
<p>The spokesman of the plain-clothes men,
who gave his name as Sergeant Mackay, produced
a pair of handcuffs and clasped them
about Grundt’s hairy wrists. Clubfoot’s
face was an impassive mask; but his eyes
glinted dangerously.</p>
<p>They took him out of the flat and descended
the stairs in a little procession.</p>
<p>A closed limousine stood at the door.
They made Grundt get inside, and the sergeant
shared the back seat with him; Desmond
and one plain-clothes man sat opposite
and the other man got up beside the driver.</p>
<p class="tb">It was a raw wet night. Baker Street was
a nocturne of black and yellow. The car
drove very fast, so fast, indeed, that Desmond
drew the sergeant’s attention to it.</p>
<p>“Tap on the glass, sir,” said Mackay,
“and tell the driver to slow down a bit.”</p>
<p>Desmond turned half round. At that
moment a damp cloth was clapped on to his
face. He sprang up in a desperate effort to
evade it, for on the instant his nostrils had
detected the sickly odour of chloroform.
His head struck the roof of the car a violent
blow; the pressure on his nose and mouth
increased: he strove to breathe and felt that
sickening, cloying sweetness drawn up into
his lungs. He tried to cry out as his senses
slipped away; he sought to struggle as a
numbing warmth stole over his limbs. The
car seemed full of faces and eyes that stared
. . . especially one face, grey and
bloated with cruel, fleshy lips that grinned
and grinned . . .</p>
<p>There was a click as Grundt’s handcuffs
fell apart. The big cripple chuckled and
tapped Sergeant Mackay on the knee.</p>
<p>“And the other?” he asked softly.</p>
<p>“The one that came down just now?
Heinrich settled him. The key of the office
below came in very useful, Herr Doktor!
The body is lying there now!”</p>
<p>Clubfoot purred his appreciation.</p>
<p>“Gut gemacht, Max, mein Junger!” he
said.</p>
<p>The car sped on through the dripping
night.</p>
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