<h2 id="c17"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XVI</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE HOUSE IN PIMLICO</span></h2>
<p>At five minutes to eight on the following
evening, Desmond Okewood took his
seat at the table which had been reserved for
Mr. Murchison at the Hexagon. Next to the
door, two tables away, the McKenzie girl
was seated, eating her dinner with the air of
quiet simplicity that Desmond had already
remarked in her. She was again in black,
but the Spanish comb was gone, and she now,
wore a smart little black hat whose curving
brim and sweeping black aigrette emphasized
the rather wistful piquancy of her features.
Desmond fancied he could detect about her
a vague air of excitement, of expectancy.
At any rate, there was a faint glow of colour,
in her pale cheeks.</p>
<p>Desmond Okewood was feeling particularly
pleased with himself. I, who had
known him all his life, came in with a party
and passed him by without recognizing him,
as he told me gleefully afterwards. And yet,
as the Chief had said, very little disguise had
proved necessary. With grease-paint and
powder Desmond had blocked the healthy
tan out of his face, a touch of rouge on the
cheek-bones had altered the set of his features,
and a subtle change had been wrought
in the expression of his eyes by the simple
process of shaving off the outer corner of the
eye-brows and correcting their line with a
black pencil. The sacrifice of his moustache
and the addition of a pair of horn-rimmed
spectacles had sufficed to achieve the Chief’s
object, which was to render Desmond’s
general appearance both nondescript and negligible.</p>
<p>Suddenly the young man felt a little tingle
of excitement. Bessie, the flower-woman,
whom he had noticed offering her wares
among the serried ranks of loungers at the
long bar, was crossing the room. A man
at a table on the edge of the dancing-floor
bought a bunch of violets for the girl with
him. A nasty-looking old woman, Desmond
decided, as Bessie approached, with small
eyes, dull and lifeless, and thin lips set in a
fixed, unmeaning smile.</p>
<p>She passed him by and stopped at the McKenzie
girl’s table. From her basket rested
on the white damask she took a cluster of
deep red carnations and laid them silently,
with her eternal smirk, beside the girl’s plate.
No word was exchanged between them; with
a grateful smile at the woman the girl pinned
the flowers in the front of her dress and
Bessie passed on.</p>
<p>Desmond waited. Excitement had dulled
the edge of his appetite, and he made a pretext
of eating while he narrowly watched
the girl. Once or twice he caught her glancing
archly at him from under her heavy black
lashes, and now, as he looked at her, she let
her dark eyes rest invitingly on his.</p>
<p>He beckoned to the waiter.</p>
<p>“Ask the lady in black by the door whether
I may offer her a glass of champagne,” he
said.</p>
<p>The man nodded understandingly, and the
next moment Desmond was facing Madeleine
McKenzie across the table.</p>
<p>Her complete self-possession was the first
thing that struck him, for she was obviously
quite young. She was not coy about the
informality of their meeting, and she received
his introductory banalities about the crowd
and the band and the food with an air of
amused indifference which piqued him.</p>
<p>She made him talk about himself, parrying
with skill all his efforts to draw her out.
Little by little, so sure and sympathetic was
her touch, Desmond found himself entering
into the spirit of his part, talking of the life
of Munich, the Opera, the little <i>théâtres intimes</i>,
the huge, noisy <i>brasseries</i>.</p>
<p>“You are used to a life of excitement,
then?” she said.</p>
<p>It was Desmond’s cue. Swiftly he took it.</p>
<p>“Indeed I am,” he answered. “I’ve been
only a few hours in London, and I’m sick of
it already. Does any one ever have a good
time here?”</p>
<p>The girl flashed a glance at him from under
her long lashes. “If you know where to
look for it,” she said softly.</p>
<p>“I bet you know your way around,” Desmond
replied.</p>
<p>She shrugged her shoulders prettily. “My
ideas of a good time might not agree with
yours,” she countered.</p>
<p>“What are your ideas of a good time?”
he asked.</p>
<p>She sighed. “Gambling!” she answered,
“if I could afford it.”</p>
<p>Desmond grew alert on the instant. Was
this the secret of Finucane’s disappearance,
cleaned out in a <i>tripot</i> and ashamed to show
his face again?</p>
<p>“Now you’re talking,” he said. He lowered
his voice. “Tell me, do you know where
there’s a game?”</p>
<p>She scrutinized his face, turned up to
hers. “If I thought you were to be
trusted . . .” she began.</p>
<p>He shrugged his shoulders. “If you think
I’m a police spy! However, I dare say I can
find my own way to the roulibouli!”</p>
<p>“Now I’ve offended you,” she said, and
laid her hand on his arm. “Are you really
keen?”</p>
<p>“Keen? Gambling’s the only sort of excitement
worth while, and I’ve tried most
sorts. The shaded lights, the green cloth,
the click of the ball, the scrape of the rakes—the
night should have four and twenty hours
if I had my way!”</p>
<p>“Come closer!” said the girl. “Leave me
here and drive to the clock outside Victoria
Station at the entrance to the Vauxhall
Bridge Road. Wait for me there. I mustn’t
be seen leaving with you. The police watch
the Hexagon!”</p>
<p>The crucial moment had arrived. Desmond
glanced quickly round the room.
There was no sign of Francis or any of the
Chief’s men. Well, his orders were to go
through with the adventure. He paid the bill
and left the girl at her table. Half an hour
later, as he waited in front of the clock-tower
at Victoria, a taxi drew up and a white hand
tapped softly on the glass.</p>
<p class="tb">The girl stopped the cab in front of one of
those tall, gloomy houses that face the river
in Grosvenor Road. Behind them, over an
arch of lights, the trams thumped across
Vauxhall Bridge; before them, beyond a
wilderness of warehouses and wharves, the
glow of South London shone luridly in the
night sky.</p>
<p>The house was dark and, save for the taxi
quietly chugging at the door, the street was
deserted. The girl jumped out first and, a
latchkey in her hand, was already at the
front door as Desmond alighted. For an
instant he hesitated. What had happened
to Francis and the others? Had the Chief
failed him? Should he go on? His orders
left him no choice. He had to play his part
and leave the rest to the Chief. He felt in
his jacket pocket for the reassuring chill of
his automatic as he turned to pay the cab.</p>
<p>“How much?” he asked the driver, an
apple-cheeked greybeard.</p>
<p>“Something’s gone wrong, Des.,” replied
the man in a low voice, the voice of Francis
Okewood. “The Chief’s people were to have
followed us. Back out of this while you
can!”</p>
<p>“Psst!”</p>
<p>From the top of the steps the girl was
signalling to Desmond to make haste.</p>
<p>“Have you change for a ten-shilling
note?” Desmond said aloud to his brother,
and added in an undertone: “I’m going to
see it through. But get help quickly!”</p>
<p>And with that he followed the girl into
the house.</p>
<p>They crossed the hall, a dingy place in
which a gas-jet in a stained-glass lamp
burned dimly. The girl stopped at a door
at the end and, producing another key, unlocked
it. They entered another lobby, very
spick and span with its white paint and red
Wilton pile carpet and brilliantly lighted. The
murmur of voices came from swing-doors
that led off it and the air was heavy with the
fragrant aroma of cigars.</p>
<p>At the end of the lobby, with their backs
to the entrance door, a man and a girl stood.
The man had his arms about the woman
and his face was buried in the aureole of her
golden hair. Desmond heard a sharp exclamation
from Madeleine.</p>
<p>“Paul!” she cried sharply.</p>
<p>The couple sprang apart. Like a fury
Madeleine turned on the woman.</p>
<p>“What are you doing with my husband?”
she demanded, and advanced menacingly
towards her, her eyes blazing with anger
and her thin hands shaking. “He’s mine,
you . . . you painted slut!”</p>
<p>The woman gave a cry of terror and bolted
through the door into the adjacent room.
Madeleine would have followed her, but
the man stepped between them and seized
the girl by the wrists. He was a big, showy
fellow, in the forties, in evening dress, very
well groomed, with sleek dark hair and a
dark moustache.</p>
<p>“Stop that, d’you hear?” he commanded.
He spoke with a marked foreign accent.</p>
<p>Furiously the girl wrenched herself free,
“I’m sick of it all!” she cried. “Sick of
being trifled with. Do you understand?
Haven’t I lowered myself to the dirt for
you? Haven’t I acted the part of a common
prostitute to help you, and this is all the
reward I get? . . .”</p>
<p>The man looked apprehensively at Desmond.</p>
<p>“Come, come,” he said to Madeleine in a
voice that was intended to be persuasive;
“don’t make a scene in front of our friend
here! It was—ha, ha—only a joke of mine—to
make you jealous, little woman . . .”</p>
<p>“Lies, lies, always lies!” the girl burst
in. “But I’m through with you now. Do
you understand? You’re welcome to your
Lotties and your Nancys and your painted
French women! I do no more dirty work
for you after this!”</p>
<p>The man bit his moustache. His eyes
were very evil. He controlled himself with
an effort.</p>
<p>“Dirty work?” he said. “What a horrid
word, Mado! Come, now, take your cloak
off! I’m sure our friend wants a
game . . .”</p>
<p>But the girl would not be pacified. “Horrid
word, is it? Then what became of the
other I brought here for you?”</p>
<p>The man’s face darkened horribly.
“That’s enough. Do you hear?” he cried,
and clapped his hand over the girl’s mouth.
But, with a fierce effort wrenching herself
free: “Go, go!” she cried to Desmond.
“For the love of God, get out of this house!
If you don’t . . .”</p>
<p>But her voice died away on a stifled
scream. Two men in evening dress had suddenly
appeared, and, lifting her bodily up,
bore her struggling away up a stair that
curved upward from the end of the hall.
Desmond, springing instinctively forward to
her aid, found his way blocked by Paul. Behind
him, in the doorway leading off the
vestibule, against a background of dim green
light, sullen and forbidding faces now
scowled. And a burly, thick-set man in a
dinner coat, with a broken nose, had quietly
posted himself between Desmond and the
door.</p>
<p>“Miss McKenzie,” said Paul suavely, “is
subject to these <i>crises de nerfs</i>. I must
apologize for the disturbance, Mr. . . .
Mr. . . .”</p>
<p>“Murchison!” said Desmond abstractedly.</p>
<p>He was wondering whether he had
alarmed himself unnecessarily. It was not
the first time he had been in a London gaming-hell,
and the curious muted hush beneath
the green-shaded lamps of the room off the
lobby was as familiar to him as the dim
figures he could descry about the table
watching with painful intensity the measured
movements of the banker as he drew the
cards from the shoe. Perhaps the scene he
had just witnessed was merely one of the
habitual encounters between a bully and his
victims.</p>
<p>Yet the girl’s warning had obviously been
sincere. Who was “the other” of whom she
had spoken? Finucane? . . .</p>
<p>“My name is Geyer,” the man Paul was
saying. “Felix, take the gentleman’s coat.”</p>
<p>So saying, with a gesture of odious
familiarity, he clapped his arm about the
young man. Before Desmond realized what
he was up to, Paul had drawn from the
other’s jacket pocket the automatic pistol.</p>
<p>“You don’t mind?” he said. “It’s a rule
of the house!” And he handed it to the man
he had called Felix.</p>
<p>With a sinking heart, for now he knew he
had the worst to fear, Desmond silently
followed his mentor through the swing-doors.</p>
<p class="tb">An air of expectancy rested over the card-room.
The atmosphere was warm and so
thick with the fumes of tobacco that at first
Desmond was conscious only of a sea of
white faces turned towards the door. The
throng about the table parted to make way
for him as Paul Geyer led him up to the table.</p>
<p>“A new member of our circle, my
friends,” Geyer’s voice trumpeted triumphantly
through the room; “a desperate gambler
who loves the green cloth!”</p>
<p>He stood between Desmond and the table,
his hands very white in the pool of light shed
by the low-hung, shaded lamps. He stepped
aside.</p>
<p>Desmond found himself facing The Man
with the Clubfoot.</p>
<p>Grundt was holding the bank. His great
hairy hands were spread out on the table,
one resting on the <i>sabot</i>, the other with its
knotted fingers sprawling over swathes of
shining playing-cards. His vast torso was
leant back in his chair and his red and fleshy
lips drew noisily on a glowing cigar held
securely between his strong, yellow teeth.
Beneath their shaggy, tufted brows his dark
eyes flamed defiance, insolence, triumph;
indeed, there was an indescribable air of
arrogance about his whole attitude and demeanour.</p>
<p>Desmond’s first thought was Francis.
How long would he be in procuring assistance?
Help could not arrive yet awhile, for
it was not half an hour since they had parted.
Was not the immediate question rather how
long could Desmond hold Clubfoot off?</p>
<p>And then, with a sudden thrill of hope,
he remembered his disguise. Grundt would,
he knew, murder Desmond Okewood out of
hand. But might not Murchison of Munich
gain a brief respite? Yet would the disguise,
summary as it was, stand the test of those
keen and terrible eyes that even now were
searching his face?</p>
<p>There was no light in the room, Desmond
reflected with satisfaction, other than the
shaded table-lamps; and, for the present,
the features of Murchison, fully described
and circulated through the medium of the
Chief’s “double-cross,” were uppermost in
Clubfoot’s mind. But—and with a pang
the realization came to Desmond—the voice
was the great betrayer. If he must speak—and
he could not remain dumb without
arousing suspicion—disguise his voice as he
would, Grundt must inevitably recognize it.</p>
<p>But now Grundt was addressing him.
“Herr Murchison, hein? Es freut mich
sehr! A gambler, was?”</p>
<p>He grunted and puffed meditatively at
his cigar. “Gambling is a very pleasant
pursuit,” he continued amiably. Then his
voice grew grim: “But it has its drawbacks,
Herr Murchison. The loser pays!”</p>
<p>With an effort he straightened himself up
in his chair, shook the ash from his cigar
into a tray, and leaned across the table.</p>
<p>“Who’s been leaking to you?” he demanded.</p>
<p>Herr Murchison’s hands were shaking
violently. His pallid features seemed to be
distraught with sheer fright. Through his
large goggles he blinked feebly, idiotically,
at his questioner.</p>
<p>“My friend,” said Grundt, placing one
black-thatched hand palm downwards on
the green cloth, “your activities in South
Germany are inconvenient to me. With
your English gold you have been corrupting
my wretched compatriots, plundered and
pillaged by the rapacious French, your
allies . . .” His fingers clawed up a
card. “I shall crush your organization, you
and your helpers and your helpers’ helpers
. . . like that!” The gleaming
millboard wilted in his powerful grasp.
“Where are your headquarters?” he rapped
out, snarling, and added over his shoulder:
“Meinhardt, take a note of his answers!”</p>
<p>Herr Murchison cast a panic-stricken
glance round the silent, forbidding circle of
attentive faces.</p>
<p>“Answer me, you dog!” thundered Clubfoot.
“I’ve plenty of means at my disposal
to banish coyness! Come on! Out with
it! I’m not going to waste my time tearing
it out of you piecemeal! Are you going to
make a clean breast of it? Yes or no!”</p>
<p>Herr Murchison extended two trembling
hands. “Give me time!” he murmured
weakly. “I will tell you what I can!”</p>
<p>A light of sudden vigilance appeared in
Clubfoot’s eyes. The man’s whole manner
changed on the instant. He seemed to
bristle. “Time?” he repeated as though to
himself. “Paul,” he called, “come here!”</p>
<p>Paul Geyer crossed the room and stood
behind Grundt’s chair. Clubfoot whispered
something in his ear. Without leaving his
place, Geyer gave a muttered order to a man
at his side, who noiselessly left the room.</p>
<p>Grundt took out his watch and laid it on
the table before him. “I have exactly five
minutes to spare,” he said. “In that time I
propose to turn you inside out, my friend, or,
by God, we’ll see what the old-fashioned
methods of cross-examination will do!”</p>
<p>He moistened his lips with his tongue, like
some great beast of prey licking its chops.</p>
<p>“I’m waiting!” he said.</p>
<p>Shaking in every limb, Herr Murchison
opened his lips to speak. “My headquarters
are . . . Munich!” he said in a strained
voice.</p>
<p>“Turn your head to the right!” shouted
Grundt suddenly. “Turn your head, I say!
Meinhardt, Felix! Thrust him down under
the lamp!”</p>
<p>Strong arms forced Herr Murchison
brutally forward until his chest rested on the
cloth. His spectacles fell off. The bright
light streamed full in his face.</p>
<p>“Desmond Okewood, bei Gott!” roared
Grundt. “You poor fool, did you think
you could hoodwink me? Don’t you know
that a man can never disguise his ears?
Himmelkreuzsakrament, you and I have a
long account to settle, and this time”—his
voice shook with concentrated fury—“I’m
going to see that it’s paid!”</p>
<p>Then came a hoarse shout from without:
“The police!” and the sounds of a violent
scuffle. Immediately the room was a mass
of scrambling, jostling figures. The light
went out almost simultaneously . . . at
the very moment that Clubfoot clawed a
great automatic from his pocket. In the
clammy, noisy darkness Desmond flung himself
across the table straight at the throat of
that sinister gigantic figure facing him.</p>
<p>His opponent struggled fiercely, but the
chair impeded him. Desmond hung on
grimly, determined that, this time, his old
enemy should not escape him. Then the
light went up and Desmond found himself
looking into the mocking face of Paul Geyer.
Two uniformed constables pounced upon
him, and Desmond relaxed his grip.</p>
<p>“I’ll have the law on you,” gasped Geyer,
tugging at his torn collar. “Though I do
keep a table, that’s no justification for half
murdering me! Take his name and address,
Inspector!”</p>
<p>Touching his cap, the Inspector drew Desmond
Okewood aside. “You’ll be Major
Okewood, I’m thinking,” he said. “Your
brother has been like a wild man about you!”</p>
<p>“Where is he?” asked Desmond.</p>
<p>“There’s a passage under the road to a
wharf beside the river,” the Inspector
answered. “It connects with the house here
by a trap in the back hall. There’s a lame
man escaped that way . . .”</p>
<p>“A lame man?” queried Desmond in dismay.</p>
<p>“Aye! Mr. Okewood went after him with
a couple of my chaps!”</p>
<p>He was interrupted by the appearance of
Francis himself, breathless and dishevelled.
Only his taximan’s uniform remained to
recall his disguise of the night.</p>
<p>“He’s away!” he gasped, answering his
brother’s unspoken question. “Vanished
into the night! The men are beating the
place for him, but those blasted wharves are
a regular rabbit warren, and it’s as dark
as be-damned outside. Who’s your fat
friend?”</p>
<p>He indicated Geyer, who, violently protesting,
was being led away by his captors.</p>
<p>“When the light went out,” said Desmond,
“Clubfoot changed places with him. He
knew this fellow only risked a fine for keeping
a gambling-den. It was my own fault. I
over-acted and put the old man on his guard.
Where’s the girl?”</p>
<p>“Disappeared. We’ll get her at Duchess
Street, I shouldn’t wonder!”</p>
<p>“What’s the bag here? Do you know?”</p>
<p>Francis made a grimace. “Nothing very
great, I’m afraid. Some vague foreigners
and a brace of bruisers. None of Clubfoot’s
gang, at any rate. They must have smelt
a rat, for as we were picking the lock a fellow
unexpectedly opened the front door and gave
the alarm!”</p>
<p>“I know,” said Desmond. “Clubfoot
got suspicious when I asked him to give me
time, and sent this chap out to see if there
were any police around. By the way, what
happened to the Chief’s crowd?”</p>
<p>Francis raised his eyes to heaven. “Somebody
will be sacrificed for this night’s work.
Their car burst a tyre in Victoria Street and
they lost sight of my taxi. The arrangement
was, you see, that they were to follow the
girl and not you. Instead of ringing up
headquarters to report, they went careering
all over Belgravia, and when I rang up the
Chief on leaving you they hadn’t turned up.
So we simply asked the nearest police divisional
headquarters to raid this place as a
gambling-hell. It seemed the quickest way
of getting assistance!”</p>
<p>They were silent for a moment. Then
Desmond said: “I must say I should like to
have known how those flower signals were
worked.”</p>
<p>“We pinched old Bessie to-night,” his
brother replied, “and she spilled the beans.
A confederate, instructed by Grundt, tipped
her off the colour by means of a handkerchief
as he stood at the bar—red, blue and
white, or white. As to the meaning of the
various colours, I think the Chief’s diagnosis
was correct. Clubfoot apparently had found
out that Finucane was an habitué of the
‘Hex.’ in the old days and laid this plot
to trap him. Poor Finucane! The girl got
the signal of red carnations for him, too!”</p>
<p class="tb">A week later a tug off Charing Cross Pier
fished up in its screw the dead body of
Finucane, bound hand and foot, with a bullet
through the head. The Hexagon Buffet
knew the McKenzie girl no more. Nor did
she ever return to Duchess Street. As an old
offender, Paul Geyer was given a month’s
imprisonment for keeping a gaming-house,
and, as an alien—he was Russian-born—recommended
for deportation. In respect of
the death of Finucane no charge was brought
against him, for want of evidence.</p>
<p>Meanwhile The Man with the Clubfoot
remained at large.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />