Richardson Scores Again (22 page)

Read Richardson Scores Again Online

Authors: Basil Thomson

“Indeed, sir?” There was a note of deep concern in the tone.

“I have the telegram here to show you. Hadn't you better come along to my flat right now?” He gave the address.

“I'll start right away, sir.”

Ten minutes later the two men were seated in Milsom's luxuriously furnished sitting-room with the telegram before them. Richardson had declined any liquid refreshment, but had accepted one of Milsom's excellent cigarettes.

“You see where the telegram was sent from—Charing Cross?”

“Yes, sir, I do.”

“I guess that you know who sent it, but you wouldn't tell me if I asked you. But why Stuttgart?”

“I understand that Mr. Vance, the gentleman who interests himself in prisons, is now in Stuttgart, and that Mr. Ralph Lewis intended to join him there.”

“Oh, then the blighter who sent that wire must have known that. Look here, sergeant. Something must be done about this at once or we shall be having paragraphs in the papers headed, ‘Shooting of an English M.P. by an American in Germany.' I suppose that if you were to go out to Stuttgart and put the German police wise about Poker Moore, you could get them to put him over the frontier.”

“Perhaps, sir; but if I may suggest it, I think that it would be better if you went. This man, Moore, knows you and would be more inclined to listen to you than he would to a police officer. He might tell you how he came to be at Thornhill Farm and who sent that telegram. It would help us a great deal.”

“Oh, well, I don't know that I mind going. I should have to cut one or two engagements, but nothing that really matters. I'll have to go round to Cooks' and find out about the ticket and the trains, and all that.”

“I can do all that for you, sir, this evening, and ring you up. Would you be ready to start to-morrow morning?”

“To-night if you like.”

“Very good, sir. I'll let you know the best evening and morning boat-trains in less than an hour. May I take this telegram away with me?”

“Yes. I don't want it.”

‘And if you are in time, and you find Moore at the hotel, will you send a telegram to Superintendent Foster at the Yard? Good night, sir.”

Richardson found the tourist office in the process of putting on its curl-papers for the night, but on explaining to one of the seniors who he was and what he wanted, a clerk was kept back to attend to him. He used the firm's telephone to communicate the time-table to Jim Milsom. It was then too late to trace the sender of the telegram to Moore: that part of the inquiry had to stand over until the morning. He returned to the office to make his report to Foster and to write up his diary.

Superintendent Foster was not alone: a gentleman was sitting in a chair with its back to the door a gentleman whose back looked familiar.

“Oh, there you are, Richardson! I've been trying to get hold of you for the last half-hour.”

“I'm sorry, sir. I had to leave the office on an urgent call.”

“You can tell me about that presently. You know this gentleman—Mr. Meredith, who defended Lieutenant Eccles in that case in Somersetshire.” The occupant of the chair turned round and greeted Richardson.

Foster continued, “Mr. Meredith has received information to the effect that Mr. Ralph Lewis is not in Stuttgart and has very kindly come down to tell us so, though I must confess that personally I don't know that the information concerns us at all.”

“Yes, sir, it does. The man they call Poker Moore has just gone to Stuttgart to meet him there.”

“The deuce he has!” exclaimed Meredith.

“Yes, sir, and your friend, Mr. Milsom, is starting this evening to try to bring him back.”

“You take my breath away. I saw Mr. Milsom yesterday morning and he said nothing about it.”

“It all happened rather suddenly, sir. May I ask how you know that Mr. Lewis is not in Stuttgart?”

“Mr. Vance's lady secretary—I think you know her—told me that she had had a telegram from Mr. Vance to that effect. It seems that letters addressed to Lewis had been sent to his care—I suppose on Mr. Lewis's own instructions—and Mr. Vance was put to the trouble of having them sent back. He telegraphed to her to stop it if she could.”

“Does she know where he is, sir?”

“No; that is her difficulty. He seems to have told the servant at his flat that he was going straight out to Mr. Vance. He had his luggage labelled to Stuttgart. He must have changed his plans on the way.”

“All the better, sir, as things have turned out. Mr. Milsom has promised to telegraph to my super-intendent when he gets out there.”

“Well, Mr. Foster, I must be going. Let me know at once if I can be of any use to you.”

When the two police officers were alone Foster stared at his subordinate in mock severity. “Well, young man, you seem to have been making the pace.”

“I couldn't help it, sir. You were out of the office when Mr. Milsom telephoned to me to come to his flat. He was just back from Portsmouth. He had been down there, but his friend, Poker Moore, had already left for Stuttgart in response to a telegram, his landlady said. Fortunately he found the telegram in his room, crumpled up on the floor. This is it.”

Foster looked first at the date and the office of issue before reading the text. “We'll have to get to the bottom of this. I suppose you didn't have time to trace the telegram in the Central Office?”

“No, sir; it was too late. I thought of doing it the first thing to-morrow morning.

“Yes, the sooner the better. And now, I've a bit of news for you. Our registry have had a reply from the Paris police. They say that if an officer will go over and point out the man we want they will send an officer with him to the place frequented by Englishmen of the criminal class, and they will take the usual steps for pushing him out of the country. I've never known them so obliging.”

Chapter Fifteen

S
UPERINTENDENT
F
OSTER'S
first concern was to secure Lieutenant Eccles as a travelling companion to Paris, for he alone was in a position to identify the man who had posed as a detective and carried him away in a stolen car. He called early at the house in Hampstead, and was relieved to hear that the gentleman had not yet gone out. “He has to rejoin his ship to-morrow, sir,” whispered the maid as she showed him into the library.

This threatened to be a complication if it was true, but Foster knew ways of bringing gentle pressure to bear on the naval authorities in such cases.

“Hullo, superintendent, good morning,” said Eccles, bursting into the room. “Come to say goodbye to me before my leave is up?”

“No, Mr. Eccles. I've called to ask you how you would like a trip to Paris at the public expense.”

“To Paris? You're too late. My leave is up to-morrow.”

“We might get it extended if you'd like to come to Paris.”

“Now you're talking. What do you want me to do there?”

“Identify that bogus detective who carried you off in a stolen car.”

“I'd cross the world at my own expense to do that, provided that I was left alone with him for five minutes.”

“I can't promise you that satisfaction, I'm afraid, but wouldn't it be worth your while to know that he had been laid by the heels through your identification? In any case, you would have time to look round Paris a bit while I'm arranging things with the Paris police.”

“Right! You may count me in. When do we go?”

“By the boat-train to-morrow if I can arrange for the extension of your leave in time.”

Like most of his colleagues, Foster knew how to proceed with the Admiralty. Armed with a letter addressed to the Secretary by Sir William Lorimer, the head of his department, he called on the Director of Personal Services and explained that the matter was urgent in the interests of justice; that Lieutenant Eccles, who was due to rejoin his ship, the
Dauntless
, at Portsmouth on the following day, was wanted in Paris as a witness for the Crown to identify a prisoner who was to be arrested by the French police, and that no other witness was available. He asked for an extension of his leave for four days, and that he might be permitted to leave for Paris by the boat-train on the following morning. The Director kept the letter to be fed into the big machine, and gave covering authority.

Ronald Eccles proved to be a lively travelling companion. He had never been in France before, but he spoke a schoolboy French which fell somewhat short of Foster's. Everything he saw on the rather dreary journey to Rouen amused him, but he was eager to know exactly what they were to do on reaching Paris.

“We will take rooms at the Hotel Terminus, St. Lazare,” said Foster. “Then, having deposited our luggage, I shall take you to the Prefecture de Police on the Quai where we will get hold of our man, and then we'll be guided by him. He knows the haunts of the man we are looking for. You'll see some of the seamy side of night-life in Paris.”

“Where shall we dine? I'm getting hungry.”

“At a little restaurant I know of in the Boulevard. I shall have to ask the French Commissaire to dine with us.”

“That's all right, but I don't suppose that your little pub goes in for decent cooking. Why shouldn't we do ourselves well for once—at my expense, of course? Where can we go where they do you well?”

“There are hundreds of places to suit every pocket. I think that our best plan would be to let our Commissaire choose for us.”

In the gloomy old building attached to the Palais de Justice, where Fouché founded the organization which became famous in serving many masters—Royal, Imperial and Republican—Foster presented his letter addressed to the Police Judiciaire to the
huissier
in dress-clothes, and they were shown into a waiting-room.

“They'll keep us waiting for half an hour, Mr. Eccles, if I know them,” said Foster gloomily. “They seem to have no method of filing papers; the wonder is that they ever get anything done, but they do. Of course you've never seen a French law court. I'll speak to the
huissier
.”

That official seemed quite indifferent to what they chose to do, and Foster led Ronald Eccles through a swing door into a lofty corridor where briefless barristers of both sexes were wandering up and down in conversation. Both sexes wore the black biretta and gown of the French Bar. The Englishmen peeped into one of the assize courts where a criminal case was in progress, and three judges were sitting in a row on a high dais, wearing much the same head-dress as the counsel who sat in rows below them. Ronny Eccles pronounced the effect as far gloomier than the British courts, where the wigs and the judges' robes imparted a touch of colour.

They returned to their waiting-room in the Police Judiciaire and found the
huissier
impatiently awaiting them.

“The second door on the left, messieurs. Ask for Commissaire Bigot.” And he returned to his perusal of
Paris Soir
.

“Are these blighters always like this?” inquired Eccles, thinking of the contrast to the manners of officers from Scotland Yard.

“Generally. It depends on what public office you go to, but the French functionary is poorly paid, and he gives as little for his pay as he can.”

Peter knocked at the door indicated and pushed it open. Three or four plain-clothes officers were sitting at a long, bare table, with files of papers stacked on the dirty floor beside their chairs.

“Commissaire Bigot?” inquired Foster.

A burly, good-natured-looking ruffian rose from his seat and came forward smiling. “Bigot, monsieur, at your service.”

They shook hands.

“You are perhaps the Commissaire charged with the supervision of foreigners in Paris, monsieur?”

“Yes, monsieur. I have had the pleasure of seeing Monsieur before, but not this gentleman. Is he too a police officer from your famous Scotland Yard?”

“No, monsieur. He is a naval officer who has come over to identify the man we are seeking, in case we find him. We do not even know his name, or indeed that he is in Paris at all, but we have reason to think that he may be.”

M. Bigot seemed a little surprised at this announcement, but he said, “Messieurs, this evening I shall take you to a certain bar which is the meeting-place of all the doubtful foreigners in Paris—particularly the English. It is an amusing place, but one in which it is wise to button up one's pockets.”

“At what hour ought we to visit it?”

“At any hour after nine. We shall not visit it twice, for after they have seen me the bar empties itself.”

“Good! Then there is time for us to dine together before our visit. My friend here desires to offer us his hospitality for dinner, and desires to taste the cooking for which Paris is so famous. What restaurant do you recommend?”

“There are restaurants and restaurants, monsieur. I do not recommend the most expensive. In them your money goes in paying for the uniforms of the staff, but I know one where the charges are moderate, but the chef is an artist. In days gone by he was chef to the Cardinal Rampolla, and cardinals are good judges of what is good for the stomach. Shall I take you there?”

Foster translated the proposal to Eccles, who voted for the cardinal's ex-artist. It being nearly seven o'clock, they took a taxi, which landed them on an ill-lighted
quai
scarce a stone's-throw from Notre Dame.

They were received by a man with pontifical manners, who led them to a table at the farthest corner of the little dining-room after relieving them of their hats and coats. He put a long menu before them.

“Look here,” said Eccles, “this is quite beyond me. Tell Monsieur Bigot to do the ordering, and to do it well. All I draw a line at is snails.”

Bigot did the ordering, and they sat down to wait over their
apéritifs
until the cook had had time to do himself justice. Foster did not waste his time. He was drawing out his confrere on the subject of foreign criminals and their habits.

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