<h2 id="c18"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XVII</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE MEETING</span></h2>
<p>If, as the textbooks tell us, a successful
retirement be the greatest test of
strategy, then, indeed, Clubfoot can lay
claim to be one of the most skilful of generals
in the never-ending guerilla warfare that is
the daily life of the Secret Service. No man
can ensure himself against the surprises of
fate; but in one respect Dr. Grundt’s foresight
was never found wanting, and that was
in the provision of a safe and inconspicuous
line of retreat. Nothing is more devastating
to the <i>moral</i> of troops of pursuit than the
knowledge that their enemy, after each successful
raid, is able to retire in safety into
ambush to select his own time for the next
sortie.</p>
<p>My two friends frankly recognized the
affair at the house in Pimlico as a serious
reverse. Not only had Clubfoot made away
with one of the Chief’s most expert and
trusted agents, but he had also eluded the
trap laid for him and arranged matters so as
to leave in the hands of his pursuers not a
single accomplice against whom anything
more serious than a simple misdemeanour
could be proved. In itself the check was bad
enough, but its results were even more grave.
The long list of unexplained crimes was
beginning to sap at the <i>moral</i> of the Service:
there were resignations among the weaker
vessels whom crises of this nature invariably
expose; and even the Chief, most dogged
and equable of mortals, who had his own
private reasons for anxiety, began to look
worried.</p>
<p>It therefore redounds the more to his
credit that at this juncture, some three
weeks after Clubfoot’s escape by river from
the house of Pimlico, the Chief should have
taken a decision that, it is safe to predict,
in any walk of life other than the Secret
Service, would have been denounced as sheer
lunatic foolhardiness.</p>
<p>Once more Grundt had vanished away into
the Ewigkeit. It was as though the vast
bulk of the master spy had dissolved into
thin air. One clue, and one clue only—and
that nothing better than a report based
on more than doubtful authority—was
forthcoming pointing to his presence in Germany.
A “double-cross”—one of those
versatile gentlemen who carry on espionage
for both sides—sent word that a friend of
his had seen a burly lame man whose appearance
answered the description of Clubfoot
lunching at a small café on one of the islands
in the Havel, the river outside Berlin. No
corroboration was obtainable and nothing
more was heard directly of the redoubtable
German until one morning the Chief found
in his mail a letter from Dr. Grundt, posted
in the West Central postal district of London,
asking for an interview.</p>
<p>This the Chief decided immediately to
grant. By the rules of the game he knew
that the meeting would be privileged. In
according it he was aware that he undertook
to allow his visitor to come and go unmolested.
Such encounters are not uncommon
in the Secret Service. The “double-crosses”
form, as it were, an invisible bridge between
the most inveterate adversaries and, within
the limit of strange unwritten moral laws in
this most immoral of avocations, there are
pacts and understandings that not infrequently
are laid down at meetings no whit
less bizarre than the memorable interview
between Clubfoot and the Chief.</p>
<p>With characteristic consideration the big
man sent for my two friends and informed
them of Dr. Grundt’s request.</p>
<p>“It’s . . . it’s incredible, sir,” said
Desmond Okewood.</p>
<p>“He wouldn’t have the nerve,” his brother
Francis put in.</p>
<p>“Clubfoot would,” grimly observed the
Chief, and pitched a letter on the desk in
front of them. “Read it for yourself!”</p>
<p>Strange and devious are the ways of the
Secret Service. Old hands at the game,
neither Desmond nor Francis Okewood had
been astonished on being bidden, severally
and secretly, to report at the office of Jacob
Melchizedech, commission agent, Shaftsbury
Avenue, to find the Chief installed in one
of the three modest rooms which Mr.
Melchizedech’s place of business comprised.</p>
<p>Bizarre folk often have the pressing need
to unbosom themselves to those who pull
the strings behind the façade of public affairs.
But the social record of some of these
mysterious gentlemen and ladies is not always
one to inspire unquestioning confidence.
So, in the first instance, a non-committal
identity and a non-committal address are but
an elementary safeguard against blackmail
and the kindred practices of the “double-cross.”
Seldom did the Chief, known to few
only by sight and to fewer still by name, face
the casual visitor save under the cloak of an
unrevealing identity and an accommodation
address.</p>
<p>Desmond picked up the letter and read it,
while his brother looked over his shoulder.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Dr. Grundt [the bold, upright handwriting set
forth] presents his compliments to his colleague,
the Director of the British Secret Service, and
requests the favour of a personal interview at a
time and place most convenient to the latter. A
reply by return in the Agony Column of <i>The
Times</i> would oblige.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Well, I’m damned!” Desmond exploded
violently. “You’re surely not going to receive
the fellow, sir?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Melchizedech on my behalf,” the
Chief retorted with a twinkle in his eye,
“will be pleased to hear anything our friend
wishes to lay before me!”</p>
<p>“We’ll be three to one, anyhow!” muttered
Francis Okewood.</p>
<p>The Chief shook his head. “No, we
shan’t,” he announced decisively. “You two
will be in the farther room . . .”</p>
<p>“But, Chief,” Desmond broke in vehemently,
“the man will be armed. He’s dangerous:
he stops at nothing . . .”</p>
<p>The big man shrugged his broad shoulders.</p>
<p>“I always meet an adversary halfway,”
he said. “And I would remind you that
Grundt and I have never yet come face to
face. I am inordinately interested, I must
confess, in this cripple who, when he directed
the ex-Kaiser’s personal secret service, exercised
such power over his Imperial master
that he was the most dreaded man in Germany.
You and your brother have told me
so much about his dominating personality. I
like encountering dominating personalities!”
he added reflectively.</p>
<p>Desmond and Francis Okewood exchanged
a glance full of meaning. For
months the figure of the gigantic cripple had
haunted their thoughts. So deeply had
their long duel with The Man with the Clubfoot
impressed his figure on their brain that
in their mind’s eye they could see him now, a
simian silhouette with his vast girth, his immensely
long arms, his leering, savage eyes
beneath the shaggy brows—above all, his inevitable
undisguisable trade-mark, the monstrous deformed foot.</p>
<p>“I know you would meet anything or anybody
with your bare fists, sir,” Desmond
pleaded, “but Clubfoot is beyond the pale.
He has the profoundest contempt for our
English notions of fair play and, though you
may agree to this idea of his of an armistice
meeting, on <i>his</i> side you can bet your bottom
dollar it’s a plant! He’s a treacherous devil,
and the only way to treat him is to fall on
him the moment he appears, tie him up, and
lodge him as quickly and as securely as
possible in the nearest jail.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said the Chief slowly, “there may
be something in what you say. But in all
my career I’ve never yet refused to meet an
enemy who wrote and asked, fair and square,
for an interview. I shall see Grundt!”</p>
<p>“But, sir,” urged Desmond, “look at the
list of his victims since he started his campaign
of vengeance against the Service—Branxe,
Wetherby Soukes, Fawcett Wilbur,
Törnedahl, Miss Bardale, Bewlay, Finucane!
The man’s a wolf, a mad dog! He ought to
be shot at sight!”</p>
<p>The Chief’s strong face had grown very
stern. “I agree. But I want <i>my</i> sight of
him. Don’t worry, Okewood. I’ve got my
tally against our clubfooted friend. He’ll
get no change out of me . . .”</p>
<p>He looked at his watch. “Half-past six.
He’ll be here any moment now! Away with
the pair of you into the back room. If you’ll
remove the map of the tube railways hanging
on the partition wall you’ll find a trap which,
provided you don’t turn up the light, will—ahem!—facilitate
both seeing and hearing!”</p>
<p>“Sir, once more . . .” said Desmond.</p>
<p>The Chief shook his head.</p>
<p>“And I haven’t even got a gun!” muttered
the young man forlornly as he accompanied
his brother from the room.</p>
<p>A “buzzer” whizzed raspingly through
Mr. Melchizedech’s office. Composedly the
Chief rose from his chair and, crossing the
outer room, opened the front door. An
enormous man in a black wide-awake hat
with a heavy caped ulster faced him. The
visitor leaned heavily upon a crutch-handled
stick.</p>
<p>“Mr. Melchizedech?” he wheezed, for the
stairs had temporarily robbed him of his
breath.</p>
<p>“That’s my name,” replied the Chief.
“Please come in.”</p>
<p>He stood back to let the stranger pass,
then led the way into the inner office.</p>
<p>“Won’t you take off your things?” he said,
and, pointing to a chair, remained standing.</p>
<p>With slow, deliberate movements the
visitor slid the ulster from his shoulders and
cast it with his hat on a couch. Then he
turned and faced the other, and, for a full
minute, the two men measured each other
in silence. They were something of the
same type, both of big build, both masterly
and virile, with iron determination shown
in the proud jut of the nose, the massive
cast of the jaw.</p>
<p>There was, however, a marked difference
in their regard. The Englishman was suave,
self-possessed, restrained, and his manner,
though watchful and even suspicious, was
placid and polite. But in his every trait the
other, his visitor, was restless and provocative.
The baleful glare in his dark and
burning eyes was in itself a challenge, and
his movements had something of the menacing
deliberation of a wild beast. There was
an indescribable air of primeval savagery
about him with his bulging tufted brows, his
enormous deep chest, his long and powerful
arms, his short thick legs, as he confronted
the other across the desk.</p>
<p>Presently his eyes left the Chief’s face as,
with insolent deliberation, he let his gaze
sweep slowly round the room. It took in
the desk with its dusty bundles of papers,
the safe in the wall behind, the office calendar,
the clock, the hat-stand, and the filing-cabinet,
before coming to rest again upon the
impassive mask confronting him.</p>
<p>With a comprehensive wave of his stick
he indicated their surroundings.</p>
<p>“Na,” he croaked, “as between colleagues
was there really any necessity for this
elaborate setting?” Shrewdly he watched
the other’s face.</p>
<p>“My instructions from the gentleman to
whom you wrote,” replied the Chief evenly,
“are to hear what you wish to say. I was
to add that, in according you this interview,
my Chief in no way binds his liberty of
future action, notably with regard to the
punishment he proposes to inflict upon you.”</p>
<p>Anger flashed swiftly into the hard, dark
eyes. “Punishment?” he exclaimed; then
dropped chuckling into a chair. “Bold
words!” he added. “So ist’s aber recht!
As between man and man!”</p>
<p>Impressively he laid one hairy palm downwards
upon the desk.</p>
<p>“You have had ample warning of my
power,” he said. “I have decimated your
Service, Herr Kollege; its <i>moral</i> is profoundly
shaken; and, after the series of sanguinary
reverses you have sustained at my
hands, I can only suppose that a form of
puerile <i>amour-propre</i> prevents you from
recognizing the futility of continuing the
struggle. So I have come to you, frankly
and openly, as is our German way, to lay my
cards upon the table.”</p>
<p>Not by so much as the flutter of an eyelid
did the Chief interrupt the flow of this
harangue. He listened quietly, composedly,
his keen grey eyes fixed on his visitor’s face.</p>
<p>“My work here is almost done,” the other
resumed. “For many years I have lived my
life intensely, working early and late, contriving,
combining, braving danger and defeating
intrigues, for the greater glory of
my people. But the world is changing—was
ich sage! has changed, Herr Kollege, and
the hour has almost struck for old Clubfoot,
as they call me, to take his retirement. One
last mission remains to be fulfilled and then
old Clubfoot retires to his vineyard in
Suabia, and politics will know no more the
greatest man in our profession since
Fouché!”</p>
<p>He seemed to swell up as he uttered his
boast and his deep voice thrilled warmly to
the fire of his egotism. Then his mood
changed. With a crash he brought his fist
down upon the desk.</p>
<p>“This Bliss mission must not go through,
Herr Kollege,” he commanded.</p>
<p>For the first time a new light crept into the
steady grey eyes that watched him so closely
from across the table. The expression was
involuntary and vanished almost as soon as
it appeared. But, mere flicker though it was,
it did not escape Grundt.</p>
<p>“I surprise you, I see,” the cripple
remarked softly. “Nothing is withheld from
me, lieber Herr. Shall I tell you about Mr.
Alexander Bliss, senior partner of Haversack
and Mayer, brokers to the British Government,
and his mission to . . .”</p>
<p>An instinctive gesture from the other interrupted
him.</p>
<p>“Discretion above all things,” Grundt
acquiesced. “To the capital of a certain State
contiguous to Russia, shall we say? You
are doubtless aware that its new-found liberty
has brought this ambitious Staatchen to the
verge of financial disaster. A brand-new,
spick-and-span army, costly missions abroad,
banquets to fête the promise of to-morrow
(but never the achievement of to-day), injudicious
speculation in the exchanges of its
neighbours have, as you undoubtedly know,
played such havoc with the national resources
that bankruptcy is the inevitable corollary.
The British Government, with the altruism
that has always distinguished its foreign
policy (I would not suggest for a moment
that the heavy commitments of British
capital in this quarter influence its actions in
the least!), has come to the rescue of . . .
of this State. Your Mr. Bliss, after a number
of most secret interviews with the
Finance Minister, has concluded a satisfactory
arrangement for the secret pledging in
London of the State jewels, the glories of the
nation’s past. I think I have summed up
the situation correctly.”</p>
<p>He leant forward across the desk, tapping
the blotter with stub forefinger.</p>
<p>“You will recall Mr. Bliss,” he said, “and
cancel the arrangement he has made. A
group of German financiers is prepared to
take such action as will avert the disaster that
threatens . . . this State. You will
recall Bliss!”</p>
<p>Very quietly the Chief shook his head.</p>
<p>“If the British Government declines assistance,”
Grundt resumed, “this Government
will be bound to fall back upon the offer
of the German group. The withdrawal of
the Bliss mission will enable the German
syndicate to arrange a loan on its own terms.
I observe that you are already familiar with
the existence of this German consortium.
You see I am perfectly candid with you. I
will push my frankness a step farther. This
Bliss affair will be my last case. The matter
satisfactorily adjusted, I retire, Herr Kollege,
and enable you to reorganize your shattered
and nerve-destroyed Service!”</p>
<p>Reflectively the Chief stabbed at his blotter
with his reading-glass.</p>
<p>“Don’t be too hard on us, Herr Doktor,”
he remarked. “The two Okewoods are in
excellent health!”</p>
<p>A warm flush crimsoned the pallid cheeks
of the cripple. Hot anger suddenly gleamed
in his dark and restless eyes. But he controlled
himself. He ran one hand over the
close iron-grey stubble that thatched the bony
head and his fleshy lips bared his yellow
teeth in a forced smile.</p>
<p>“Clever, clever young men, Herr Kollege!”
he murmured. “I congratulate you
upon your Okewoods. May they live long to
enjoy the fruits of their cleverness!”</p>
<p>In his mouth the wish became an imprecation,
with such glowing vehemence did he
utter it. He spoke with a snarl that for a
moment lent his features a positively tigerish
expression.</p>
<p>But the Chief had stood up. “Is that all?”
he demanded, and came round the desk.</p>
<p>Clubfoot, his hairy hands crossed above
the crutch of his stick, leaned back in his
chair and looked up at his interrogator.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he replied. “And now you know
what you’ve got to do!”</p>
<p>The Chief plucked open the door. “Get
out of here and go to hell!” he said without
raising his voice, with the same dogged composure
he had maintained throughout the
interview.</p>
<p>Like some great animal heaving itself
erect, Grundt struggled cumbrously to his
feet.</p>
<p>“You . . . you refuse?” he blustered.</p>
<p>The Chief ignored the question. “If
you’re not out of here in one minute,” he retorted
with deadly calm, “cripple though you
are, I . . . shall . . . kick . . . you
. . . downstairs!”</p>
<p>Leaning heavily on his stick, The Man
with the Clubfoot hobbled slowly to the door.
On the threshold he stopped and, in a gesture
of sudden ferocity, thrust his face into the
other’s.</p>
<p>“You have passed sentence of death on
Bliss,” he said in a voice that fury rendered
hoarse and almost inarticulate, “and sentence
of death on yourself as well!”</p>
<p>Then he passed out and they heard his
heavy footstep pounding down the stairs.</p>
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