get?”
“Well, sir, we get Mr Craig, and – once we had that Reeder. He came here alone, booked a table and came alone! Can you beat it? Came and had his dinner, saw nobody and went away again. I don’t think he’s right up there” – he tapped his forehead significantly. “Anything less like a ‘busy’ I’ve never seen.”
“I don’t know whether he is a detective,” said Johnny carelessly. “From all I’ve heard, he has nothing whatever to do with the police.”
“Private, is he?” said the other in a tone of disappointment.
“Not exactly private. Anyway,” with a smile, “he’s not going to bother your or our honourable members. Anybody here?”
The porter looked to left and right, and lowered his voice.
“A certain person you know is here,” he said meaningly.
Johnny laughed.
“It would be a funny club if there wasn’t somebody I knew,” he said. “Don’t worry about me; I’ll find a little corner for myself…”
Jeff looked at his watch; it was a quarter to ten, and he glanced up at the light; catching a glimpse of himself in the mirror of the buffet, was satisfied.
Room 13! And Marney was his wife! The blood surged up into his face, gorging the thick veins in his temples at the thought. She should pay! He had helped the old man, as he would help him in any graft, but he had never identified himself so completely with the plan as he did at that moment.
“Put her down to the earth,” had said Emanuel, and by God he would do it. As for Johnny Gray…
The door opened stealthily, and a hand came in, holding a Browning. He heard the creak of the door but did not look round, and then:
“Bang!’’
Once the pistol fired, Jeff felt a sharp twitch of pain, exquisite, unbearable, and fell forward on his knees.
Twice he endeavoured to rise, then with a groan fell in a huddled heap, his head in the empty fireplace.
14
The doors and the walls of the private dining-rooms were almost sound-proof. No stir followed the shot. In the hall outside, the porter lifted his head and listened.
“What was that?” he asked the waiting elevator-man.
“Didn’t hear anything,” said the other laconically. “Somebody slammed a door.”
“Maybe,” said the porter, and went back to his book. He was filling in the names of that night’s visitors, an indispensable record in such a club, and he was filling them in with pencil, an equally necessary act of caution, for sometimes the club members desired a quick expungement of this evidence.
In Room 13 silence reigned. A thin blue cloud floated to the ceiling; the door opened a little farther, and Johnny Gray came in, his right hand in his overcoat pocket.
Slowly he crossed the room to where the huddled figure lay, and, stooping, turned it upon its back. Then, after a brief scrutiny, his quick hands went through the man’s pockets. He found something, carried it to the light, read with a frown and pushed the paper into his own pocket. Going out, he closed the door carefully behind him and strolled back to the hall.
“Not staying, Captain?” asked the porter in surprise.
“No, nobody I know here. Queer how the membership changes.”
The man on duty was too well trained to ask inconvenient questions.
“Excuse me, Captain.” He went over to Johnny and bent down. “You’ve got some blood on your cuff.”
He took out his handkerchief and wiped the stain clean. Then his frowning eyes met the young man’s.
“Anything wrong, Captain?”
“Nothing that I can tell you about,” said Johnny. “Good night.”
“Good night, sir,” said the porter.
He stood by his desk, looking hard at the glass doors of the elevator, heard the rattle of the gate as it opened, and the whine of the lift as it rose again.
“Just stay here, and don’t answer any rings till I come back,” he said.
He hurried along the corridor into the side passage and, coming to No. 13, knocked. There was no answer. He turned the handle. One glance told him all he
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