<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.<br/> MR. EUGENE THRUSH</h2>
<p>The remarkable Mr. Thrush was a duly qualified solicitor, who had never been
the man for that orderly and circumscribed profession. The tide of events which
had turned his talents into their present channel, was known to but few of his
many boon companions, and much nonsense was talked about him and his first
career. It was not the case (as anybody might have ascertained) that he had
been struck off the rolls in connection with the first great scandal in which
he was professionally concerned. Nor was there much more truth in the report
that he drank, in the ordinary interpretation of the term.</p>
<p>It is true, however, that Mr. Thrush had a tall tumbler on his dressing-table,
to help him shave for the evening of that fateful Friday. He was dressing for
an early dinner before a first night. His dressing-room, in which he also slept
in Spartan simplicity, was the original powder-closet of the panelled library
out of which it led. There was a third room in which his man Mullins prepared
breakfast and spent the day. But the whole was a glorified garret, at the top
of such stairs as might have sent a nervous client back for an escort.</p>
<p>Mullins, with the expression of an undertaker’s mute (a calling he had
followed in his day), was laying out his master’s clothes as mournfully
as though his master were in them, instead of chatting genially as he shaved.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry to have missed your evidence, Mullins, but if we go into
this case it’s no use letting the police smell the competitive rat too
soon. Inquests are not in my line, and they’d have wondered what the
devil I was doing there, especially as you refrained from saying you were in my
service.”</p>
<p>“I had no call, sir.”</p>
<p>“Quite right, Mullins! An ideal witness, I can see you were. So
you’d only to describe the finding of the body?”</p>
<p>“That was all, sir.”</p>
<p>“And your description was really largely founded on fact?”</p>
<p>Mullins stood like a funereal grenadier at his gentleman’s shaving elbow.
“I told the truth, sir, and nothing but the truth,” said he, with
sombre dignity.</p>
<p>“But not the whole truth, eh, Mullins! What about the little souvenirs
you showed me yesterday?”</p>
<p>“There was no call to name them either, sir. The cheroot-end I must have
picked up a hundred yards away, and even the medicine-cork wasn’t on the
actual scene of the murder.”</p>
<p>“That’s all right, Mullins. I don’t see what they could
possibly have to do with it, myself; and really, but for the fluke of your
being the one to find the body, and picking the first-fruits for what
they’re worth, it’s the last kind of case that I should dream of
touching with a ten-foot pole. By the way, I suppose they won’t require
you at the adjourned inquest?”</p>
<p>“They may not require me, sir, but I should like to attend, if quite
convenient,” replied Mullins deferentially. “The police were very
stingy with their evidence to-day; they’ve still to produce the fatal
bullet, and I should like a sight of that, sir.”</p>
<p>Mr. Thrush did not continue the conversation, possibly because he took as
little real interest as he professed in the case which was being thrust upon
him, but more obviously owing to the necessary care in shaving the corners of a
delightfuly long and mobile mouth. Indeed, the whole face emerging from the
lather, as a cast from its clay, would have delighted any eye but its own. It
was fat and flabby as the rest of Eugene Thrush; there was quite a collection
of chins to shave; and yet anybody but himself must have recognised the
invincible freshness of complexion, the happy penetration of every glance, as
an earnest of inexhaustible possibilities beneath the burden of the flesh.
Great round spectacles, through which he stared like a wise fish in an
aquarium, were caught precariously on a button of a nose which in itself might
have prevented the superficial observer from taking him any more seriously than
he took himself.</p>
<p>Mr. Upton, who arrived before Thrush was visible, was an essentially
superficial and antipathetic observer of unfamiliar types; and being badly
impressed by the forbidding staircase, he had determined on the landing to
sound his man before trusting him. In the rank undergrowth of his prejudices
there was no more luxuriant weed than an innate abhorrence of London and all
Londoners, which neither the cause of his visit nor the murky mien of Mullins
was calculated to abate. The library of books in solid bindings, many of them
legal tomes, was the first reassuring feature; another was the large desk, made
business-like with pigeon-holes and a telephone; but Mr. Upton was only
beginning to recover confidence when Eugene Thrush shook it sadly at his first
entry.</p>
<p>It might have been by his face, or his fat, or his evening clothes seen from
the motorist’s dusty tweeds, almost as much as by the misplaced joviality
with which Thrush exclaimed: “I’m sorry to have kept you waiting,
sir, and the worst of it is that I can’t let you keep me!”</p>
<p>This touched a raw nerve in the ironmaster, as the kind of reception one had to
come up to London to incur. “Then I’ll clear out!” said he,
and would have been as good as his word but for its instantaneous effect.</p>
<p>Thrush had pulled out a gold watch after a stare of kindly consternation.</p>
<p>“I really am rather rushed,” said he; “but I can give you
four minutes, if that’s any good to you.”</p>
<p>Now, at first sight, before a word was spoken, Mr. Upton would have said four
hours or four days of that boiled salmon in spectacles would have been no good
to him; but the precise term of minutes, together with a seemlier but not less
decisive manner, had already quickened the business man’s respect for
another whose time was valuable. This is by no means to say that Thrush had won
him over in a breath. But the following interchange took place rapidly.</p>
<p>“I understand you’re a detective, Mr. Thrush?”</p>
<p>“Hardly that, Mr.——I’ve left your card in the other
room.”</p>
<p>“Upton is my name, sir.”</p>
<p>“I don’t aspire to the official designation, Mr. Upton, an inquiry
agent is all I presume to call myself.”</p>
<p>“But you do inquire into mysteries?”</p>
<p>“I’ve dabbled in them.”</p>
<p>“As an amateur?”</p>
<p>“A paid amateur, I fear.”</p>
<p>“I come on a serious matter, Mr. Thrush—a very serious matter to
me!”</p>
<p>“Pardon me if I seem anything else for a moment; as it happens, you catch
me dabbling, or rather meddling, in a serious case which is none of my
business, but strictly a matter for the police, only it happens to have come my
way by a fluke. I am not a policeman, but a private inquisitor. If you want
anything or anybody ferreted out, that’s my job and I should put it
first.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Thrush, that’s exactly what I do want, if only you can do it
for me! I had reason to fear, from what I heard this morning, that my youngest
child, a boy of sixteen, had disappeared up here in London, or been decoyed
away. And now there can be no doubt about it!”</p>
<p>So, in about one of the allotted minutes, Thrush was trusted on grounds which
Mr. Upton could not easily have explained; but the time was up before he had
concluded a briefly circumstantial report of the facts within his knowledge.</p>
<p>“When can I see you again?” he asked abruptly of Thrush.</p>
<p>“When? What do you mean, Mr. Upton?”</p>
<p>“The four minutes must be more than up.”</p>
<p>“Go on, my dear sir, and don’t throw good time after bad. I’m
only dining with a man at his club. He can wait.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, Mr. Thrush.”</p>
<p>“More good time! How do you know the boy hasn’t turned up at school
or at home while you’ve been fizzing in a cloud of dust?”</p>
<p>“I was to have a wire at the hotel I always stop at; there’s
nothing there; but the first thing they told me was that my boy had been for a
bed which they couldn’t give him the night before last. I did let them
have it! But it seems the manager was out, and his understrappers had
recommended other hotels; they’ve just been telephoning to them all in
turn, but at every one the poor boy seems to have fared the same. Then
I’ve been in communication with these infernal people in St. John’s
Wood, and with the doctor, but none of them have heard anything. I thought
I’d like to do what I could before coming to you, Mr. Thrush, but
that’s all I’ve done or know how to do. Something must have
happened!”</p>
<p>“It begins to sound like it,” said Thrush gravely.</p>
<p>“But there are happenings and happenings; it may be only a minor
accident. One moment!”</p>
<p>And he returned to the powder-closet of its modish day, where Mullins was still
pursuing his ostensibly menial avocation. What the master said was inaudible in
the library, but the man hurried out in front of him, and was heard clattering
down the evil stairs next minute.</p>
<p>“In less than an hour,” explained Thrush, “he will be back
with a list of the admissions at the principal hospitals for the last
forty-eight hours. I don’t say there’s much in it; your boy had
probably some letter or other means of easier indentification about him; but
it’s worth trying.”</p>
<p>“It is, indeed!” murmured Mr. Upton, much impressed.</p>
<p>“And while he is trying it,” exclaimed Eugene Thrush, lighting up
as with a really great idea, “you’ll greatly oblige me by having a
whisky-and-soda in the first place.”</p>
<p>“No, thank you! I haven’t had a bite all day. It would fly to my
head.”</p>
<p>“But that’s its job; that’s where it’s meant to
fly,” explained the convivial Mr. Thrush, preparing the potion with
practised hand. Baited with a biscuit it was eventually swallowed, and a
flagging giant refreshed by his surrender. It made him like his new
acquaintance too well to bear the thought of detaining him any more.</p>
<p>“Go to your dinner, man, and let me waylay you later!”</p>
<p>“Thank you, I prefer to keep you now I’ve got you, Mr. Upton! My
man begins his round by going to tell my pal I can’t dine with him at
all. Not a word, I beg! I’ll have a bite with you instead when Mullins
gets back, and in a taxi that won’t be long.”</p>
<p>“But do you think you can do anything?”</p>
<p>The question floated in pathetic evidence on a flood of inarticulate thanks.</p>
<p>“If you give me time, I hope so,” was the measured answer.
“But the needle in the hay is nothing to the lost unit in London, and it
will take time. I’m not a magazine detective, Mr. Upton; if you want a
sixpenny solution for soft problems, don’t come to me!”</p>
<p>At an earlier stage the ironmaster would have raised his voice and repeated
that this was a serious matter; even now he looked rather reproachfully at
Eugene Thrush, who came back to business on the spot.</p>
<p>“I haven’t asked you for a description of the boy, Mr. Upton,
because it’s not much good if we’ve got to keep the matter to
ourselves. But is there anything distinctive about him besides the
asthma?”</p>
<p>“Nothing; he was never an athlete, like my other boys.”</p>
<p>“Come! I call that a distinction in itself,” said Mr. Thrush,
smiling down his own unathletic waistcoat. “But as a matter of fact,
nothing could be better than the very complaint which no doubt unfits him for
games.”</p>
<p>“Nothing better, do you say?”</p>
<p>“Emphatically, from my point of view. It’s harder to hide a
man’s asthma than to hide the man himself.”</p>
<p>“I never thought of that.”</p>
<p>It was impossible to tell whether Thrush had thought of it before that moment.
The round glasses were levelled at Mr. Upton with an inscrutable stare of the
marine eyes behind them.</p>
<p>“I suppose it has never affected his heart?” he inquired
nonchalantly; but the nonchalance was a thought too deliberate for paternal
perceptions quickened as were those of Mr. Upton.</p>
<p>“Is that why you sent round the hospitals, Mr. Thrush?”</p>
<p>“It was one reason, but honestly not the chief.”</p>
<p>“I certainly never thought of his heart!”</p>
<p>“Nor do I think you need now, in the case of so young a boy,” said
Thrush earnestly. “On the other hand, I shouldn’t be surprised if
his asthma were to prove his best friend.”</p>
<p>“It owes him something!”</p>
<p>“Do you know what he does for it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I do,” said Mr. Upton, remembering the annoying letter he
seemed to have received some weeks before. “He smokes, against his
doctor’s orders.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean tobacco?”</p>
<p>“No—some stuff for asthma.”</p>
<p>“In cigarettes?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Do you know the name?”</p>
<p>“I have it here.”</p>
<p>The offensive letter was not only produced, but offered for inspection after a
precautionary glance. Thrush was on his feet to receive it in outstretched
hand. Already he looked extraordinarily keen for his bulk, but the reading of
the letter left him alive and alert to the last superfluous ounce.</p>
<p>“But this is magnificent!” he cried, with eyes as round as their
glasses.</p>
<p>“I confess I don’t see why.”</p>
<p>“Cigarettes d’Auvergne!”</p>
<p>“Some French rubbish.”</p>
<p>“The boy has evidently been dependent on them?”</p>
<p>“It looks like it.”</p>
<p>“And this man Bompas made him give them all up?”</p>
<p>“So he has the impudence to say.”</p>
<p>“Is it possible you don’t see the importance of all this?”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton confessed incompetence unashamed.</p>
<p>“I never heard of these cigarettes before; they’re an imported
article; you can’t get them everywhere, I’ll swear! Your boy has
got to rely on them; he’s out of reach of the doctor who’s
forbidden them; he’ll try to get them somewhere! If he’s been
trying in London, I’ll find out where before I’m twenty-four hours
older!”</p>
<p>“But how can you?” asked Mr. Upton, less impressed with the
possibility than by this rapid if obvious piece of reasoning.</p>
<p>“A. V. M.!” replied Eugene Thrush, with cryptic smile.</p>
<p>“Who on earth is he?”</p>
<p>“Nobody; it’s the principle on which I work.”</p>
<p>“A. V. M.?”</p>
<p>“Otherwise the old nursery game of Animal, Vegetable, or Mineral.”</p>
<p>Again Mr. Upton had to prevent himself by main force from declaring it all no
laughing matter; but his silence was almost bellicose.</p>
<p>“You divide things into two,” explained Thrush, “and go on so
dividing them until you come down to the indivisible unit which is the answer
to the riddle. Animal or Vegetable? Vegetable or Mineral? Northern or Southern
Hemisphere? Ah! I thought your childhood was not so very much longer ago than
mine.”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton had shrugged an impatient recognition of the game.</p>
<p>“In this case it’s Chemists Who Do Sell D’Auvergne Cigarettes
and Chemists Who Don’t. Then—Chemists Who Do and Did Yesterday, and
Chemists Who Do but Didn’t! But we can probably improve on the old game
by playing both rounds at once.”</p>
<p>“I confess I don’t quite follow,” said Mr. Upton,
“though there seems some method in the madness.”</p>
<p>“It’s all the method I’ve got,” rejoined Thrush
frankly. “But you shall see it working, for unless I’m much
mistaken this is Mullins back sooner than I expected.”</p>
<p>Mullins it was, and with the negative information expected and desired, though
the professional melancholy of his countenance might have been the precursor of
the worst possible news. The hospitals on his rapid round had included Charing
Cross, St. Thomas’s, St. George’s, and the Royal Free; but he had
telephoned besides to St. Mary’s and St. Bartholomew’s. At none of
these institutions had a young gentleman of the name of Upton, or of unknown
name, been admitted in the last forty-eight hours. Mullins, however, looked as
sympathetically depressed as though no news had lost its proverbial value; and
he had one of those blue-black faces that lend themselves to the look, his chin
being in perpetual mourning for the day before.</p>
<p>“Don’t go, Mullins! I’ve another job for you,” said
Eugene Thrush. “Take the telephone directory and the London directory,
and sit you down at my desk. Look up ‘chemists’ under
‘trades’; there are pages of them. Work through the list with the
telephone directory, and ring up every chemist who’s on the telephone,
beginning with the ones nearest in, to ask if he keeps d’Auvergne
Cigarettes for asthma. Make a note of the first few who do; go round to them
all in turn, and be back here at nine with a box from each. Complain to each of
the difficulty of getting ’em elsewhere—say you wonder
there’s so little demand—and with any luck you should find out
whether and to whom they’ve sold any since Wednesday evening.”</p>
<p>“But surely that’s the whole point?” suggested the
ironmaster.</p>
<p>“It’s the next point,” said Thrush. “The first is to
divide the chemists of London into the Animals who keep the cigarettes and the
Vegetables who don’t. I should really like to play the next round myself,
but Mullins must do something while we’re out.”</p>
<p>“While we’re out, Mr. Thrush?”</p>
<p>“My dear Mr. Upton, you’re going to step across into the Café Royal
with me, and have a square meal before you crack up!”</p>
<p>“And what about your theatre?” asked Mr. Upton, to whom resistance
was a physical impossibility, when they had left the sombre Mullins entrenched
behind telephone and directories.</p>
<p>“The theatre! I was only going out of curiosity to see the sort of tripe
that any manager has the nerve to serve up on a Friday in June; but I’m
not going to chuck the drama that’s come to me!”</p>
<p>The ironmaster dined with his head in a whirl. It was a remarkably good dinner
that Thrush ordered, if as inappropriate to the occasion as to his own weight.
His guest, however, knew no more what he was eating or drinking than he knew
the names of the people in diamonds and white waistcoats who stared at the
distraught figure in the country clothes. It even escaped his observation that
the obese Thrush was an unblushing gourmet with a cynical lust for Burgundy.
The conscious repast of Mr. Upton consisted entirely of the conversation of
Eugene Thrush, and of that conversation only such portions as exploited his
professional theories, and those theories only as bearing on the case in hand.
He was merely bored when Thrush tried to distract him with some account of the
murder in which he himself was only interested because his myrmidon happened to
have discovered the body. What was the murder of some ragamuffin in Hyde Park
to a man from the country who had lost his son?</p>
<p>“I don’t see how your theory can work there,” he sighed, out
of pure politeness, when Thrush paused to punish the wine.</p>
<p>“It should work all right,” returned Thrush. “You take an
absolutely worthless life; what do you do it for? It must be one of two
motives: either you have a grudge against the fellow or his existence is a
menace to you. Revenge or fear; he wants your money, or he’s taken your
wife! But what revenge can there be upon a poor devil without the price of a
bed on his indescribable person? He hasn’t anything to bless himself
with, and he makes it a bit too hot for somebody who has, eh? So you whittle it
down. And then perhaps by sheer luck you run your blade into the root of the
matter.”</p>
<p>Thrush gave up trying to take the other out of himself, since his boldest
statements were allowed to pass unchallenged, unless they dealt with the one
subject on the poor man’s mind. The cessation of his voice, however,
caused a twinge of conscience in the bad listener; he made a mental grab at the
last phrase, and was astonished to find it germane to his own thoughts.</p>
<p>“That’s the second time you’ve mentioned luck, Mr.
Thrush!”</p>
<p>“When was the first?”</p>
<p>“You spoke of Friday as an unlucky day, as God knows this one is to me!
Are you of a superstitious turn of mind?”</p>
<p>“Not seriously.”</p>
<p>“You don’t believe in dreams, for example?”</p>
<p>“That’s another question,” said Thrush, his spectacles
twinkling to colossal rubies as he sipped his Santenay. “Why do you
ask?”</p>
<p>“If you’re a disbeliever it’s no use my telling you.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps I’m neither one thing nor the other.”</p>
<p>“Have you ever known a mystery solved through a dream?”</p>
<p>“I’ve heard of one,” said Thrush, with a significant stress
upon the verb; “that’s the famous old murder in the Red Barn a
hundred years ago. The victim’s mother dreamed three nights running that
her missing daughter was buried in the Red Barn, and there she was all the
time. There <i>may</i> have been other cases.”</p>
<p>“Cases in which a parent has dreamt of an absent child, at the very time
at which something terrible has happened to that child?”</p>
<p>“Any amount of those.”</p>
<p>The father’s voice had trembled with the question. Thrush put down his
glass as he gave his answer, and his spectacled eyes fixed themselves in a
more attentive stare.</p>
<p>“Do you think they’re all coincidences?” demanded Mr. Upton
hoarsely.</p>
<p>“Some of them may be, but certainly not all,” was the reply.
“That would be the greatest coincidence of the lot!”</p>
<p>“I hardly like to tell you why I ask,” said Mr. Upton, much
agitated; for he could be as emotional as most irascible men.</p>
<p>“You’ve been dreaming about the boy?”</p>
<p>“Not I; but my poor wife has; that was one reason why I daren’t
tell her he had disappeared.”</p>
<p>“Why? What was the dream?”</p>
<p>“That she saw him—and heard a shot.”</p>
<p>“A shot!”</p>
<p>Thrush looked as though he had heard one himself, but only until he had time to
think.</p>
<p>“She says she did hear one,” added Mr. Upton, “and that she
wasn’t dreaming at all.”</p>
<p>“But when was this?”</p>
<p>“Between six and seven yesterday morning.” This time Thrush did not
move a muscle of his face; it only lit up like a Chinese lantern, and again he
was quick to quench the inner flame; but now the coincidence was complete.
Coincidences, however, had nothing to say to the A. V. M. system, neither was
Eugene Thrush the man to jump to wild conclusions on the strength of one. He
asked whether the boy was very fond of shooting in the holidays, as though that
might have accounted for the dream, but his father was not aware that he had
ever smelt powder in his life. He little dreamt what Thrush was driving at! The
tone of subsequent inquiries concerning Mrs. Upton’s health (already
mentioned as the great reason for keeping the affair as long as possible a
secret) sounded purely compassionate to an ear unconsciously aching for
compassion.</p>
<p>“Then that accounts for it,” said Thrush, when he had heard the
whole sad story. There was the faintest ring of disappointment in his tone.
“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“That anybody as ill as that, more particularly a lady, is naturally
fanciful, I’m afraid.”</p>
<p>“Then you think it a mere delusion, after all?”</p>
<p>“My dear Mr. Upton, it would be presumption to express an opinion either
way. I only say, don’t think too much about that dream. And since you
won’t keep me company in my cups, we may as well rejoin the faithful
Mullins.”</p>
<p>They ran into Mullins, as it happened, in Glasshouse Street, and Mr. Upton for
one would not have recognised him as the same being. His sepulchral face was
alight with news—it was the transformation of the undertaker’s mute
into the wedding guest. And yet he had only one box of the d’Auvergne
Cigarettes to show for his evening’s work, and that chemist had declared
it was the first he had sold for weeks.</p>
<p>Thrush ordered his man upstairs, and took his late guest’s hand as soon
as ever he dared.</p>
<p>“You need a good night’s rest, my dear sir, and it’s no use
climbing to my masthead for nothing. Mullins and I will do best if you
don’t mind leaving us to ourselves for the night; but first thing
tomorrow morning I shall be at your service again, and I hope there will be
some progress to report.”</p>
<p>Mullins was waiting for him with all the lights on, his solemn face still more
strikingly illuminated.</p>
<p>“Look at this, sir, look at this! These are the d’Auvergne
Cigarettes!”</p>
<p>“So I perceive.”</p>
<p>“This stump is the stump of a d’Auvergne Cigarette.”</p>
<p>“I hope you enjoyed it, Mullins.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t smoke it, sir!”</p>
<p>“Who did?”</p>
<p>“That’s for you to say, sir; but it’s one of the little
things I collected near the scene of the murder, but took for a common cheroot,
yesterday morning in Hyde Park.”</p>
<p>“Near the actual place?”</p>
<p>Thrush had pounced upon the stump, and was holding it under the strongest of
the electric lamps.</p>
<p>“Under a seat, sir, not above a hundred yards away!”</p>
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