Collected works of j s f.., p.407

Collected Works of J S Fletcher, page 407

 

Collected Works of J S Fletcher
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  They had come to the end of the platform, by that time, and Lauriston looked left and right in search of the man described. Suddenly he twisted Zillah round.

  “Is that he — that fellow talking to another man?” he asked. “See him — there?”

  “Yes!” said Zillah. She saw the man of the platinum stud again, and on seeing him, stopped dead where she was, holding Lauriston back. The man, leisurely smoking his cigar, was chatting to another man, who, from the fact that he was carrying a small suit-case in one hand and a rug over the other arm, had evidently come in by the just-arrived express. “Yes!” she continued. “That’s the man! And — we’ve just got to follow him wherever he goes!”

  “What on earth for?” asked Lauriston. “What mystery’s this? Who is he?”

  At that moment the two men parted, with a cordial handshake; the man of the suit-case and the rug turned towards the stairs which led to the underground railway; the other man walked slowly away through the front of the station in the direction of the Great Northern Hotel. And Zillah immediately dragged Lauriston after him, keeping a few yards’ distance, but going persistently forward. The man in front crossed the road, and strode towards the portico of the hotel — and Zillah suddenly made up her mind.

  “We’ve got to speak to that man!” she said. “Don’t ask why, now — you’ll know in a few minutes. Ask him if he’ll speak to me?”

  Lauriston caught up the stranger as he set foot on the steps leading to the hotel door. He felt uncomfortable and foolish — but Zillah’s tone left him no option but to obey.

  “I beg your pardon,” said Lauriston, as politely as possible, “but — this lady is very anxious to speak to you.”

  The man turned, glanced at Zillah, who had hurried up, and lifted his slouched hat with a touch of old-fashioned courtesy. There was a strong light burning just above them: in its glare all three looked at each other. The stranger smiled — a little wonderingly.

  “Why, sure!” he said in accents that left no doubt of his American origin. “I’d be most happy. You’re not mistaking me for somebody else?”

  Zillah was already flushed with embarrassment. Now that she had run her quarry to earth, and so easily, she scarcely knew what to do with it.

  “You’ll think this very strange,” she said, stammeringly, “but if you don’t mind telling me something? — you see, I saw you just now in the station, when you were feeling for your match-box, and I noticed that you wore a platinum stud — with an unusual device on it.”

  The American laughed — a good-natured, genial laugh — and threw open his coat. At the same moment he thrust his wrists forward.

  “This stud!” he said. “That’s so! — it is platinum, and the device is curious. And the device is right there, too, see — on those solitaire cuff-studs! But—”

  He paused looking at Zillah, whose eyes were now fastened on the cuff-studs, and who was obviously so astonished as to have lost her tongue.

  “You seemed mighty amazed at my studs!” said the stranger, with another laugh. “Now, you’ll just excuse me if I ask — why?”

  Zillah regained her wits with an effort, and became as business-like as usual.

  “Don’t, please, think I’m asking idle and purposeless questions,” she said. “Have you been long in London?”

  “A few days only,” answered the stranger, readily enough.

  “Have you read of what’s already called the Praed Street Murder in the papers?” continued Zillah.

  “Yes — I read that,” the stranger said, his face growing serious. “The affair of the old man — the pawnbroker with the odd name. Yes!”

  “I’m the old man’s granddaughter,” said Zillah, brusquely. “Now, I’ll tell you why I was upset by seeing your platinum stud. A solitaire stud, made of platinum, and ornamented with exactly the same device as yours, was found in our parlour after my grandfather’s death — and another, evidently the fellow to it, was found in an eating-house, close by. Now, do you understand why I wished to speak to you?”

  While Zillah spoke, the American’s face had been growing graver and graver, and when she made an end, he glanced at Lauriston and shook his head.

  “Say!” he said. “That’s a very serious matter! You’re sure the device was the same, and the material platinum?”

  “I’ve been reared in the jewellery trade,” replied Zillah. “The things I’m talking of are of platinum — and the device is precisely the same as that on your stud.”

  “Well! — that’s mighty queer!” remarked the American. “I can’t tell you why it’s queer, all in a minute, but I do assure you it’s just about the queerest thing I ever heard of in my life — and I’ve known a lot of queerness. Look here! — I’m stopping at this hotel — will you come in with me, and we’ll just get a quiet corner and talk some? Come right in, then.”

  He led the way into the hotel, through the hall, and down a corridor from which several reception rooms opened. Looking into one, a small smoking lounge, and finding it empty, he ushered them aside. But on the threshold Zillah paused. Her business instincts were by this time fully aroused. She felt certain that whoever this stranger might he, he had nothing to do with the affair in Praed Street, and yet might be able to throw extraordinary light on it, and she wanted to take a great step towards clearing it up. She turned to the American.

  “Look here!” she said. “I’ve told you what I’m after, and who I am. This gentleman is Mr. Andrew Lauriston. Did you read his name in the paper’s account of that inquest?”

  The American glanced at Lauriston with some curiosity.

  “Sure!” he answered. “The man that found the old gentleman dead.”

  “Just so,” said Zillah. “There are two friends of ours making enquiries on Mr. Lauriston’s behalf at this moment. One of them’s my cousin, Mr. Rubinstein; the other’s Mr. Purdie, an old friend of Mr. Lauriston’s. I’ve an idea where’ll they’ll be, just now — do you mind if I telephone them to come here, at once, so that they can hear what you have to tell us?”

  “Not in the least!” assented the American heartily. “I’ll be glad to help in any way I can — I’m interested. Here! — there’s a telephone box right there — you go in now, and call those fellows up and tell ’em to come right along, quick!”

  He and Lauriston waited while Zillah went into the telephone box: she felt sure that Melky and Purdie would have returned to Praed Street by that time, and she rang up Mrs. Goldmark at the Pawnshop to enquire. Within a minute or two she had rejoined Lauriston and the American — during her absence the stranger had been speaking to a waiter, and he now led his two guests to a private sitting-room.

  “We’ll be more private in this apartment,” he observed. “No fear of interruption or being overheard. I’ve told the waiter man there’s two gentlemen coming along, and they’re to be brought in here as soon as they land. Will they be long?”

  “They’ll be here within twenty minutes,” answered Zillah. “It’s very kind of you to take so much trouble!”

  The American drew an easy chair to the fire, and pointed Zillah to it.

  “Well,” he remarked, “I guess that in a fix of this sort, you can’t take too much trouble! I’m interested in this case — and a good deal more than interested now that you tell me about these platinum studs. I reckon I can throw some light on that, anyway! But we’ll keep it till your friends come. And I haven’t introduced myself — my name’s Stuyvesant Guyler. I’m a New York man — but I’ve knocked around some — pretty considerable, in fact. Say! — have you got any idea that this mystery of yours is at all connected with South Africa? And — incidentally — with diamonds?”

  Zillah started and glanced at Lauriston.

  “What makes you think of South Africa — and of diamonds?” she asked.

  “Oh, well — but that comes into my tale,” answered Guyler. “You’ll see in due course. But — had it?”

  “I hadn’t thought of diamonds, but I certainly had of South Africa,” admitted Zillah.

  “Seems to be working in both directions,” said Guyler, meditatively. “But you’ll see that when I tell you what I know.”

  Purdie and Melky Rubinstein entered the room within the twenty minutes which Zillah had predicted — full of wonder to find her and Lauriston in company with a total stranger. But Zillah explained matters in a few words, and forbade any questioning until Mr. Stuyvesant Guyler had told his story.

  “And before I get on to that,” said Guyler, who had been quietly scrutinizing his two new visitors while Zillah explained the situation, “I’d just like to see that platinum solitaire that Mr. Rubinstein picked up — if he’s got it about him?”

  Melky thrust a hand into a pocket.

  “It ain’t never been off me, mister, since I found it!” he said, producing a little packet wrapped in tissue paper. “There you are!”

  Guyler took the stud which Melky handed to him and laid it on the table around which they were all sitting. After glancing at it for a moment, he withdrew the studs from his own wrist-bands and laid them by its side.

  “Yes, that’s sure one of the lot!” he observed musingly. “I guess there’s no possible doubt at all on that point. Well! — this is indeed mighty queer! Now, I’ll tell you straight out. These studs — all of ’em — are parts of six sets of similar things, all made of that very expensive metal, platinum, in precisely the same fashion, and ornamented with the same specially invented device, and given to six men who had been of assistance to him in a big deal, as a little mark of his appreciation, by a man that some few years ago made a fortune in South Africa. That’s so!”

  Zillah turned on the American with a sharp look of enquiry.

  “Who was he?” she demanded. “Tell us his name!”

  “His name,” replied Guyler, “was Spencer Levendale — dealer in diamonds.”

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  PURDIE STANDS FIRM

  THE EFFECT PRODUCED by this announcement was evidently exactly that which the American expected, and he smiled, a little grimly, as he looked from one face to another. As for his hearers, they first looked at each other and then at him, and Guyler laughed and went on.

  “That makes you jump!” he said. “Well, now, at the end of that inquest business in the papers the other day I noticed Spencer Levendale’s name mentioned in connection with some old book that was left, or found in Mr. Daniel Multenius’s back-parlour. Of course, I concluded that he was the same Spencer Levendale I’d known out there in South Africa, five years ago. And to tell you the truth, I’ve been watching your papers, morning and evening, since, to see if there was any more news of him. But so far I haven’t seen any.”

  Purdie and Melky exchanged glances, and in response to an obvious hint from Melky, Purdie spoke.

  “We can give you some news, then,” he said. “It’ll be common property tomorrow morning. Levendale has mysteriously disappeared from his house, and from his usual haunts! — and nobody knows where he is. And it’s considered that this disappearance has something to do with the Praed Street affair.”

  “Sure!” assented Guyler. “That’s just about a dead certainty. And in the Praed Street affair, these platinum stud things are going to play a good part, and when you and your police have got to the bottom of it, you’ll sure find that something else has a big part, too!”

  “What?” asked Purdie.

  “Why, diamonds!” answered the American, with a quiet smile. “Just diamonds! Diamonds’ll be at the bottom of the bag — sure!”

  There was a moment of surprised silence, and then Melky turned eagerly to the American.

  “Mister!” he said. “Let’s be getting at something! What do you know, now, about this here Levendale?”

  “Not much,” replied Guyler. “But I’m open to tell what I do know. I’ve been a bit of a rolling stone, do you see — knocked about the world, pretty considerable, doing one thing and another, and I’ve falsified the old saying, for I’ve contrived to gather a good bit of moss in my rollings. Well, now, I was located in Cape Town for a while, some five years ago, and I met Spencer Levendale there. He was then a dealer in diamonds — can’t say in what way exactly — for I never exactly knew — but it was well known that he’d made a big pile, buying and selling these goods, and he was a very rich man. Now I and five other men — all of different nationalities — were very useful to Levendale in a big deal that he was anxious to carry through — never mind what it was — and he felt pretty grateful to us, I reckon. And as we were all warmish men so far as money was concerned, it wasn’t the sort of thing that he could hand out cheques for, so he hit on the notion of having sets of studs made of platinum — which is, as you’re aware, the most valuable metal known, and on every stud he had a device of his own invention carefully engraved. Here’s my set! — and what Mr. Rubinstein’s got there is part of another. Now, then, who’s the man who’s been dropping his cuff-links about?”

  Purdie, who had listened with deep attention to the American’s statement, immediately put a question.

  “That’s but answered by asking you something,” he said. “You no doubt know the names of the men to whom those sets of studs were given?”

  But to Purdie’s disappointment, the American shook his head.

  “Well, now, I just don’t!” he replied. “The fact is — as you would understand if you knew the circumstances — this was a queer sort of a secret deal, in which the assistance of various men of different nationality was wanted, and none of us knew any of the rest. However, I did come across the Englishman who was in it — afterwards. Recognized him, as a matter of fact, by his being in possession of those studs.”

  “And who was he?” asked Purdie.

  “A man named Purvis — Stephen Purvis,” answered Guyler. “Sort of man like myself — knocked around, taking up this and that, as long as there was money in it. I came across him in Johannesburg, maybe a year after that deal I was telling of. He didn’t know who the other fellows were, neither.”

  “You’ve never seen him since?” suggested Purdie. “You don’t know where he is?”

  “Not a ghost of a notion!” said Guyler. “Didn’t talk with him more than once, and then only for an hour or so.”

  “Mister!” exclaimed Melky, eagerly. “Could you describe this here Purvis, now? Just a bit of a description, like?”

  “Sure!” answered the American. “That is — as I remember him. Biggish, raw-boned, hard-bitten sort of a man — about my age — clean-shaven — looked more of a Colonial than an Englishman — he’d been out in South Africa, doing one thing and another, since he was a boy.”

  “S’elp me if that doesn’t sound like the man who was in Mrs. Goldmark’s restaurant!” said Melky. “Just what she describes, anyhow!”

  “Why, certainly — I reckon that is the man,” remarked Guyler. “That’s what I’ve been figuring on, all through. I tell you all this mystery is around some diamond affair in which this lady’s grandfather, and Mr. Spencer Levendale, and this man Purvis have been mixed up — sure! And the thing — in my humble opinion — is to find both of them! Now, then, what’s been done, and what’s being done, in that way?”

  Melky nodded at Purdie, as much as to invite him to speak.

  “The authorities at New Scotland Yard have the Levendale affair in hand,” said Purdie. “We’ve been in and out there, with Mr. Multenius’s solicitor, all the afternoon and evening. But, of course, we couldn’t tell anything about this other man because we didn’t know anything, till now. You’ll have no objection to going there tomorrow?”

  “Not at all!” replied Guyler, cheerfully. “I’m located at this hotel for a week or two. I struck it when I came here from the North, a few days back, and it suits me very well, and I guess I’ll just stop here while I’m in London this journey. No, I’ve no objection to take a hand. But — it seems to me — there’s still a lot of difficulty about this young gentleman here — Mr. Lauriston. I read all the papers carefully, and sized up his predicament. Those rings, now?”

  Zillah suddenly remembered all that Ayscough had told her that evening. She had forgotten the real motive of her visit to King’s Cross in her excitement in listening to the American’s story. She now turned to Purdie and the other two.

  “I’d forgotten!” she exclaimed. “The danger’s still there. Ayscough’s been at the shop tonight. The police have had an expert examining those rings, and the rings in the tray. He says there are marks — private, jewellers’ marks in the two rings which correspond with marks in our rings. In fact, there’s no doubt of it. And now, the police are certain that the two rings did belong to our tray — and — and they’re bent on arresting — Andie!”

  Lauriston flushed hotly with sheer indignation.

  “That’s all nonsense — what the police say!” he exclaimed. “I’ve found out who gave those two rings to my mother! I can prove it! I don’t care a hang for the police and their marks — those rings are mine!”

  Purdie laid a quiet hand on Lauriston’s arm.

  “None of us know yet what you’ve done or found out at Peebles about the rings,” he said. “Tell us! Just give us the brief facts.”

  “I’m going to,” answered Lauriston, still indignant. “I thought the whole thing over as I went down in the train. I remembered that if there was one person living in Peebles who would be likely to know about my mother and those rings, it would be an old friend of hers, Mrs. Taggart — you know her, John.”

  “I know Mrs. Taggart — go on,” said Purdie.

  “I didn’t know if Mrs. Taggart was still living,” continued Lauriston. “But I was out early this morning and I found her. She remembers the rings well enough: she described them accurately — what’s more she told me what I didn’t know — how they came into my mother’s possession. You know as well as I do, John, that my father and mother weren’t over well off — and my mother used to make a bit of extra money by letting her rooms to summer visitors. One summer she had a London solicitor, a Mr. Killick, staying there for a month — at least he came for a month, but he was taken ill, and he was there more than two months. My mother nursed him through his illness — and after he’d returned to London, he sent her those rings. And — if there are marks on them,” concluded Lauriston, “that correspond with marks on the rings in that tray, all I have to say is that those marks must have been there when Mr. Killick bought them! — for they’ve never been out of our possession — my mother’s and mine — until I took them to pawn.”

 

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