<h2><SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI.<br/> AFTER THE FAIR</h2>
<p>Mr. Upton was dumfoundered when the top-floor door in Glasshouse Street was
opened before Eugene Thrush could insert his key; for it was the sombre Mullins
who admitted the gentleman as though nothing had happened to him except a
fairly recent shave.</p>
<p>“I thought he was in prison?” exclaimed the ironmaster when the two
were closeted.</p>
<p>“Do you ever read your paper?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t looked at one since Plymouth.”</p>
<p>“Well, I howked him out first thing yesterday morning.”</p>
<p>“<i>You</i> did, Thrush?”</p>
<p>“Why not? I had need of the fellow, and that part of the game was
up.”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton showed symptoms of his old irritability under the Thrush mannerism.</p>
<p>“My good fellow, I wish to goodness you’d explain yourself!”</p>
<p>“If I cared to be profane,” returned Thrush, mixing drinks in the
corner, “I should refer you to the first chapter of the Book of Job. I
provided the prisoner, and I’d a perfect right to take him away again.
Blessed be the song of the Thrush!”</p>
<p>“You say you provided him?”</p>
<p>“In other words, I laid the information against my own man, but only with
his own consent.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, you must have your joke, I suppose. I can afford to put up
with it now.”</p>
<p>“It wasn’t meant as a joke,” returned Thrush, and drank deep
while his client sipped. “If it had come off it would have been the coup
of my career; as it didn’t—quite—one must laugh it off at
one’s own expense. Your son has told you what that poor old sinner made
him think he’d done?”</p>
<p>“Of course.”</p>
<p>“Would it surprise you to hear that one or two others thought the same
thing?”</p>
<p>“Not you, Thrush?”</p>
<p>“Not I to quite the same positive extent as my rascal Mullins. He jumped
to it from scratch!”</p>
<p>“He connected Tony with the Park murder?”</p>
<p>“From the word ‘go.’ ”</p>
<p>“On the strength of an asthma cigarette and my poor wife’s
dream?”</p>
<p>“No; he didn’t know about the dream. But he refused to believe in
two independent mysteries at one time and on one spot. The eternal unities was
too many measles for Mullins, though he never heard tell of ’em in his
life.”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton was no longer irritated by the other’s flippancy. He looked at
Thrush with a shining face.</p>
<p>“And you never told me what was in your minds!”</p>
<p>“It was poison even in mine; it would have been deadly poison to you, in
the state you were in. I say! I’ll wear batting-gloves the next time we
shake hands!” and Thrush blew softly on his mangled fingers.</p>
<p>“You believed he’d done it, and you kept it to yourself,”
murmured Mr. Upton, still much impressed. “Tell me, my dear
fellow—did you believe it after that interview with Baumgartner in his
house?”</p>
<p>Thrush emptied his glass at once.</p>
<p>“Don’t remind me of that interview, Mr. Upton; there was the lad on
the other side of so much lath-and-plaster, and I couldn’t scent him
through it! But he never made a sound, confound him!”</p>
<p>“Tony’s told me about that; they were whispering, for reasons of
their own.”</p>
<p>“I ought to have seen that old man listening! His ears must have grown
before my purblind eyes! But his story was an extraordinarily interesting and
circumstantial effort. And to come back to your question, it did fit in with
the theory of a fatal accident on your boy’s part; he was frightened to
show his face at school after sleeping in the Park, let alone what he was
supposed to have done there; and that, he believed, would break his
mother’s heart in any case.”</p>
<p>“By Jove, and so it might! It wouldn’t take much just now,”
said Mr. Upton, sadly.</p>
<p>“So he thought of the ship you wouldn’t let him go out in—and
the whole thing fitted in! Of course he had told the old ruffian—saving
his presence elsewhere—all about the forbidden voyage; and that gentleman
of genius had it ready for immediate use. I’m bound to say he used it on
me with excellent effect.”</p>
<p>“Same here,” said the ironmaster—“though I’d no
idea what you suspected. I thought it a conceivable way out of any bad scrape,
for that particular boy.”</p>
<p>“It imposed upon us all,” said Thrush, “but one. I was
prepared to believe it if you did, and you believed it because you didn’t
know your boy as well as you do now. But Miss Upton, who seems to know him
better than anybody else—do you remember how she wouldn’t hear of
it for a moment?”</p>
<p>“I do <i>so</i>, God bless her!”</p>
<p>“That shook me, or rather it prevented me from accepting what I never had
quite accepted in my heart. That’s another story, and you’re only
in the mood for one at present; but after seeing Baumgartner on Saturday, I
thought I’d like to know a little more about him, not from outsiders but
from the inside of his own skull. So I went to the British Museum to have a
look at his books. It was after hours for getting books, but I made such
representations that they cut their red tape for once; and I soon read enough
to wonder whether my grave and reverend seignior was quite all there.
Spiritualism one knows, but here was spiritualism with a difference; psychic
photography one had heard about, but here was a psychical photographer gone mad
or bad! When a gifted creature puts into admirable English his longing to
snap-shoot the souls of murderers coming up through the drop, like the clown at
Drury Lane, you begin to want him elected to a fauteuil in Broadmoor. Will you
believe me when I tell you that I stumbled mentally on the very thing I shall
presently prove to have been the truth, and that I dismissed it from my mind as
the wildest impossibility?”</p>
<p>“I don’t see how you’re going to prove it now,”
remarked Mr. Upton, who hoped there would be no such proof, for the sake of the
girl who had been good to his boy; but that was a private consideration which
there was no necessity to express.</p>
<p>“I shall want another chat with your lad when he’s had his sleep
out,” replied Thrush, significantly; “he’s told me quite
enough to make me eager for more. But you haven’t told me anything about
your own adventures?”</p>
<p>And he got another drink to help him listen; for as a rule the ironmaster was
only succinct when thoroughly irate. But now for once he was both brief and
amiable.</p>
<p>“What have I to tell compared with you?” he asked. “Those
damned old wooden walls only cleared the Thames on Sunday morning, and they
weren’t near Plymouth when I left last night; but my little aluminium lot
broke all her records before I broke one of her wheels. What I want to know is
what you did from the time I left on Sunday night to that great moment this
morning.”</p>
<p>“I sat down to watch Baumgartner, his house,” replied Thrush.
“The merit of those quiet little streets is that there are always
apartments of sorts, though not always the most admirable sort, to be had in
half the houses. There was quite a choice bang opposite Baumgartner’s,
and I’d taken a front room before you were through Hammersmith. Of course
I explained that I had lost a last train, and the landlady’s son
embarrassed me with pyjamas of inadequate dimensions. Well, I sat at the front
window all night, for no better reasons than my strong feeling about the
doctor’s writings, and your daughter’s disbelief in his yarn about
her brother. Soon after five in the morning the old bird came out, and I was
after him like knife. I tracked him to Knightsbridge without much difficulty,
excepting the one of avoiding being spotted, but there that happened by the
merest accident. He was passing under the scaffolding outside the church
they’re pulling down there, and he’s so tall he knocked his hat
off. I admit I was too close. He saw, and must have recognised me; but I
shouldn’t have recognised him if I hadn’t seen him start out. He
was wearing a false beard and spectacles!”</p>
<p>“That’s proof positive,” said ingenuous Mr. Upton, under his
breath.</p>
<p>“Well, I confess it’s something like it in this case; but it was a
very awkward moment for me. I hadn’t to let him see I knew him, nor yet
that I was following him, and the only way was to abandon the chase as openly
as possible. It was then I decided that it was no use leaving poor old Mullins
in pawn to the police. I redeemed him without delay. We went back to my new
rooms together, which I needn’t tell you I liked so much that I brought a
suit-case and took them for a week. Of course, as we had lost the run of
Baumgartner, the next best thing was to watch for his return. Mullins took that
on while I got some sleep; when I awoke the Park Lane murder was the latest,
and I won’t say I didn’t suspect who’d done it. Perhaps I
didn’t tell you he had his camera with him as well as beard and goggles,
and all three figured in the first reports.”</p>
<p>“But all this time you had no idea my boy was in the house?”</p>
<p>“None whatever; we saw the girl once or twice, but that was all until I
wired last night. What I never saw myself was Baumgartner’s return; but
in the afternoon I sent Mullins round to another road to try and get a room
overlooking the place from the back. Well, the houses were too much class for
that; but one was empty, and he got the key and risked going back to prison for
the cause! Suffice it that he set eyes on both man and boy before I sent that
wire.”</p>
<p>“And you left my son in that murderer’s clutches a minute longer
than you could help?” It was a previous incarnation of Pocket’s
father that broke in with this.</p>
<p>“You must remember in the first place that I couldn’t be in the
least sure it was your son; in the second, if murder had been intended, murder
would have been done with as little delay in his case as in the others;
thirdly, that we’ve nothing to show that Dr. Baumgartner is an actual
murderer at all, but, fourthly, that to raid his place was the way to make him
one. Poor Mullins, too, as the original Sherlock of the show, was desperately
against calling in the police under any circumstances. He assured me there was
no sign of bad blood about the house, until the small hours, and then he saw
your son make his escape. I told him he should have collared the lad, but he
lost sight of him in the night and preferred to keep an eye on that poor
desperate doctor.”</p>
<p>Thrush treated this part of his narrative with the peculiar confidence which
most counsel reserve for the less satisfactory aspects of their case. But Mr.
Upton was not in a mood to press a point of grievance against anybody. And the
name of Mullins reminded him that his curiosity on a very different point had
not been gratified.</p>
<p>“Why on earth did you have Mullins run in?” he inquired, with
characteristic absence of finesse.</p>
<p>“I’m not very proud of it,” replied Thrush. “It
didn’t come off, you see.”</p>
<p>“But whatever could the object have been?”</p>
<p>“I must have a damn-it if I’m to tell you that,” said Thrush;
and the ironmaster concluded that he meant a final drink, from the action which
he suited to the oath. “It was one way that occurred to me of putting
salt on the lad.”</p>
<p>“Tony?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“You puzzle me more and more.”</p>
<p>“Well, you see, I gathered that he was a particularly honourable boy, of
fine sensibilities, and yet Mullins thought he had shot this man by accident
and was lying low. I only thought that, if that were so, the news of an
innocent man’s arrest would bring him into the open as quick as anything.
Mullins proving amenable to terms, and having really been within a hundred
miles of both murders at the time they were committed, the rest was elementary.
But what’s the good of talking about it? It didn’t come off.”</p>
<p>“It very nearly did! I can tell you that straight from Tony; he was going
to give himself up yesterday morning, if he hadn’t accidentally satisfied
himself of his own innocence.”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton said more than this, but it was the explicit statement of fact that
alone afforded Thrush real consolation. His spectacled eyes blinked keenly
behind their flashing lenses; the button of a nose underneath twitched as
though it scented battle once again; and the drink with the opprobrious name
was suddenly put down unfinished.</p>
<p>“If only I could find that camera!” he cried. “It’s the
touchstone of the whole thing, mark my words. If it’s an accomplice who
did this thing, he’s got it; even if not——”</p>
<p>He stood silenced by a sudden thought, a gleam of light that illumined his
whole flushed face.</p>
<p>“Mullins!” he roared. Mullins was on the spot with somewhat
suspicious alacrity. “Get the almanac, Mullins, and look up Time of High
Water at London Bridge to-day!”</p>
<p>He himself flopped down behind the telephone to ring up the cab-office in
Bolton Street. But it takes time even for a Eugene Thrush to consume all but
three large whiskies and sodas; and the afternoon was already far advanced.</p>
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