<h2 id="c9"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER VIII</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE TOP FLAT</span></h2>
<p>At eight o’clock, not many hours after
they had gone to bed, Desmond appeared
in his brother’s room.</p>
<p>“You’ve got to get dressed at once,” he
announced. “We’re off to London!”</p>
<p>“Oh, I say!” protested Francis, rubbing
sleepy eyes.</p>
<p>“One of the confidential typists at the Air
Ministry has been murdered . . .”</p>
<p>“But what . . . why . . .?”</p>
<p>“I know nothing about it except that Alec
Bannington, the Chief of the Air Staff, has
been on to me on the telephone in the most
fearful state. I promised to go up and see
him at once. You’re coming, too. Don’t
stop to bathe or shave, but come!”</p>
<p>There was no twenty miles an hour about
Desmond Okewood’s driving that morning.
The rain had stopped, the wind had dried
the sandy Surrey roads, and well within the
hour they had reached Onslow Square, where
the private house of Air-Marshal Sir Alexander
Bannington was situated.</p>
<p>He received them in a small book-lined
room on the ground floor, a florid, well-fed
dapper man, whose shining, good-natured
face was ill-suited to the look of care it now
wore.</p>
<p>“Ah, Okewood!” he cried. “Thank God,
you’re here. This your brother? How de
do, how de do?” Then he clasped his red
hands together in a gesture of anguish,
which at another time would have been grotesque.
“The most shockin’ affair! Miss
Bardale, my confidential typist, was found
dead—murdered—in her flat this morning.
It’s a ghastly business, ghastly, and, what is
more, unless you can do something it means
ruin for me!”</p>
<p>“Perhaps you wouldn’t mind telling us the
whole story from the beginning, sir,” said
Desmond. “It would help,” he added, “if
you would omit nothing!”</p>
<p>Francis cocked a shrewdly admiring eye at
his brother.</p>
<p>The large man sighed heavily. “I see you
have already grasped that it is a confidential
matter,” he remarked. “A State secret of the
utmost importance is, in fact, at stake. As
Chief of the Air Staff it has recently been my
duty to draw up for submission to the Cabinet
a comprehensive scheme for the aerial
defence of the Empire. For this purpose
I have attended many meetings with the
First Sea Lord and the Chief of the Imperial
General Staff, as well as more than one sitting
of the Cabinet. Upon the notes I made
on these discussions I based my report. I
finished it in the rough yesterday afternoon
. . .”</p>
<p>“And gave it to your typist to make a fair
copy? Is that it?” Desmond interposed.</p>
<p>“Exactly.”</p>
<p>“At the office?”</p>
<p>“I gave it to her at the Ministry at six
o’clock yesterday evening. She was to take
it home, type it out after dinner, and let me
have it back this morning. You will say,
gentlemen, that I was criminally careless in
thus letting a vitally important document
out of the office. But I thought . . . I
never imagined . . .”</p>
<p>“It might be better, sir,” Desmond remarked
soothingly, “if we got at the facts
first . . .”</p>
<p>“Quite so, quite so,” agreed Bannington.
“Well, first thing this morning the resident
clerk at the Ministry rang me up to say he
had heard from the police that Miss Bardale
had been murdered and her flat ransacked
. . .”</p>
<p>“And your report?”</p>
<p>“Gone!”</p>
<p>Desmond nodded. Then he asked: “How
was the murder discovered?”</p>
<p>“By Miss Bardale’s daily servant when she
arrived at the apartment about half-past six
this morning. Miss Bardale occupies a small
flat consisting of a sitting-room, bedroom,
bathroom, and kitchen on the top floor of a
house in Crewdwell Street, off Baker Street.
It appears that last night she went out to
dinner with a young man, a certain Captain
Reginald Hollingway, who brought her back
to the flat shortly after eight o’clock. When
Miss Bardale’s servant, a certain Mrs.
Crump, entered the flat this morning, she
found Miss Bardale lying dead in the sitting-room
and all the rooms in the wildest confusion . . .”</p>
<p>“How had she been killed?”</p>
<p>“Strangled. There are deep finger-marks
on her throat. There had obviously been a
desperate struggle, for the carpet is disarranged,
the remains of a vase lie scattered
about the floor, and a clock had been knocked
off the table. This clock, by the way, furnishes
an important clue, for it had stopped
at sixteen minutes past eight, showing at
what time the murder was committed.”</p>
<p>“And your report, you say, is not to be
found?”</p>
<p>Bannington shook his head dismally.</p>
<p>“From what the police tell me, Miss Bardale
was actually engaged in typing it out
when she was attacked. The body was discovered
lying beside her typewriter in the
sitting-room. She had apparently reached
the third page, for a sheet of paper bearing
that number—just that and nothing else—was
still in the typewriter. But the rest was
gone.”</p>
<p>“You mean”—Francis Okewood spoke for
the first time—“that the assassin simply
snatched your manuscript and as much of it
as Miss Bardale had copied out from where
it lay beside the typewriter?”</p>
<p>“I suppose so, yes!” sighed the large man.</p>
<p>“Then why was the flat ransacked?”</p>
<p>It was Desmond’s turn to glance his appreciation
at his brother.</p>
<p>“By George!” the Air Marshal exclaimed,
“I never thought of that. Then Hollingway
must have made hay in the rooms just to
mislead us . . .”</p>
<p>“Hollingway?” ejaculated the two brothers
simultaneously.</p>
<p>“I was coming to him. Captain Hollingway,
gentlemen, is undoubtedly the murderer.
He is a young man of good family with an
excellent war record, but since demobilization
has done no work. He is an exhibition
dancer at night-clubs, and is in grave money
difficulties, so the police inform me.”</p>
<p>“Is he under arrest?” asked Desmond.</p>
<p>Bannington nodded. “The porter at
Crewdwell Street saw him leave the building
in a state of profound agitation about twenty-five
minutes past eight or shortly after the
murder was committed. The police arrested
him at his rooms this morning. The report,
of course, had disappeared. With a clear
start of twelve hours he had naturally passed
it on. Ah!”</p>
<p>With a despairing exclamation the fat man
dashed his fist into the palm of his hand and
began to pace the room.</p>
<p>“There was some party, then, who had an
interest in obtaining possession of this report?”
asked Desmond.</p>
<p>Sir Alexander Bannington stopped in his
stride and turned round. “Yes,” he said.
“But in the present state of international
politics it is hardly safe even to mention the
name of the Power in question.” He leant
forward and whispered something in Desmond’s
ear.</p>
<p>“Ah! . . . yes!” was that young man’s
brief comment.</p>
<p>The large man extended two shaking hands
towards his visitors. “You must get this
report back for me. If it’s a question of
money you can draw on me up to any reasonable
amount. Hollingway must be made to
talk. The police will give you every facility:
I have arranged that. I shall be here all day.
I am not going to the Ministry. I can’t
face them. Let me know to-day . . .
soon . . . how you get on . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond and his brother had risen to their
feet.</p>
<p>“One question before we leave you, sir,”
said Desmond. “Are you quite satisfied that
Miss Bardale was trustworthy?”</p>
<p>“Enid Bardale,” the Air Marshal replied
in a voice that shook with emotion, “gave
her life for her trust. She was a splendid
girl and absolutely invaluable to me in my
work. I trusted her as I would trust my own
daughter. As a matter of fact, she was a
relative of my dead wife. She may have
been indiscreet in the matter of her friendship
with this scoundrel Hollingway; but
there was no question of collusion between
them in this affair.”</p>
<p>They left him bowed over his desk, his face
sunk in his plump, red hands.</p>
<p class="tb">The girl’s body lay on its side on the black
carpet of the little sitting-room, the face an
agonized mask in a frame of clustering
brown hair. The sight was not pleasant, and
they did not let their glance dwell on it, for,
after all, their immediate business was not
with the murdered woman. They looked
long enough, however, to notice the deep
bluish-black marks on the throat, indicative
of a ferocious grip.</p>
<p>The flat, skyed at the top of a big mansion
which had been converted into apartments,
was tiny. The hall led into the small sitting-room,
very gay with its primrose-yellow distempered
walls and orange lamp-shades, with
bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen beyond.
Detective-Inspector Farandol, of Scotland
Yard, who opened the door in answer to their
ring, showed them the rooms. One of the
most reliable and experienced officers of the
older school of detectives, both Desmond and
Francis had come across him more than once
in the course of their work in the Secret
Service. He was a self-opinionated person
with a profound contempt for amateurs.</p>
<p>“Fourth floor,” remarked the Inspector.
“Nothing above and nothing below, for this
is the only flat in the building. The other
floors are let off as offices, and after 6 <span class="sc">P.M.</span>
the rest of the house is empty except for the
porter who lives in the basement. No wonder
no sounds of the struggle were heard.”</p>
<p>That a most violent and desperate struggle
had gone forward was abundantly evident
from the state of the sitting-room, which, as
Farandol was careful to point out, was exactly
as the police had discovered it. The
black carpet was rucked up, and athwart it,
in a mess of crushed petals and broken glass,
the remains of a vase of daffodils was scattered.
A string of crystal beads which the
dead girl had been wearing had broken, and
the beads, together with a number of hairpins,
strewed the floor. The telltale clock, of
which Bannington had spoken, had been retrieved
and now stood upon the table beside
the typewriter—a small French travelling-clock
in a leather case. The glass was
broken. They noticed that, as Bannington
had said, the hands pointed at sixteen minutes
past eight.</p>
<p>Farandol tapped the clock. “This is what
is going to hang Master Hollingway,” he
remarked.</p>
<p>“Humph,” commented Desmond. “That
won’t bring us what we’re looking for, Inspector.
I suppose you know what I mean?”</p>
<p>Farandol nodded impressively. “Aye. But
he’s got rid of it by now, mark my words.
He’s one of your deep ones is Master Hollingway.
He thought he’d draw a red herring
across the scent. Look at this room and the
bedroom beyond! He’s even upset the flour-bins
in the kitchen!”</p>
<p>The rooms were, indeed, in a state of remarkable
confusion. In the sitting-room the
sloping top of a little mahogany escritoire
had been burst open and every drawer pulled
out. The doors of the oaken buffet stood
wide, and its contents, crockery and table
linen, were in part spilled out on the carpet.
In the bedroom a high-boy had been rifled
and garments of all kinds flung about the
room. The very bed had been pulled out
from the wall, the bedclothes rolled up in a
ball and the mattress dragged on one side.</p>
<p>“And all the time,” Farandol resumed,
“this precious document was lying there beside
the typewriter! All this”—he waved a
contemptuous hand at the disordered room—“play-acting
is meant to bolster up his
story about the footstep on the back
stair . . .”</p>
<p>“He’s made a statement, then?” queried
Desmond. “I suppose he denies everything?”</p>
<p>“He’s the innocent babe all right, same
as they all are at the first go-off,” observed
Farandol, fingering his waxed moustache.
“Briefly, his story is that he met Miss Bardale
in Soho for dinner at a quarter to seven.
They had arranged to dine early because of
this work that the lady had to do. Hollingway
brought her back shortly after eight,
and, he says, escorted her upstairs as far as
the door of her flat because she was feeling
nervous. On the previous evening—according
to what this Hollingway says she told
him—she had heard a heavy step outside her
kitchen on the back stairs . . .”</p>
<p>“Half a minute,” Desmond interrupted;
“is there a back entrance? I didn’t notice
it . . .”</p>
<p>Without replying, the detective walked
through the bathroom into the kitchen and
there lifted a chintz curtain, disclosing a
door. He turned the handle and showed a
series of iron staircases leading down.</p>
<p>“It’s really a fire-escape,” he remarked,
“but apparently Miss Bardale used it as a
tradesman’s entrance to the flat.”</p>
<p>It was chilly outside and they soon re-entered
the flat where Farandol resumed his
story.</p>
<p>“Hollingway left her at the door of the
flat, he says. He declares he did not go in.
He remained talking to the girl for about
ten minutes at the top of the staircase outside
her flat, and then went down while she
went indoors. Webb, the porter, who is on
duty all day long in the hall below—he’s an
old man with a game leg and can’t get about
much—saw them come in soon after eight
and saw Hollingway leave alone about
twenty minutes later. He knows Hollingway
well, and states that he was struck by the
change in the young man’s manner. He was
pale and upset-like and made no reply when
Webb bade him good-night. As far as the
police is concerned, Major Okewood, the case
is as clear as daylight; but it doesn’t bring
you any nearer what you’re after; I quite
realize that.”</p>
<p>With an abstracted air Desmond, who was
poking about amid the confusion of the
sitting-room, nodded.</p>
<p>“Does Hollingway attempt to account for
his agitation?” Francis said to Farandol.</p>
<p>“Oh, rather!” The detective replied.
“He’s got it all pat. Says he was in love
with the girl, has been for years, and last
night, when he again asked her to marry him,
she turned him down good and hard, told
him that a professional dancer was no good
to her as a husband and all the rest of it.
He tells it all very well,” the Inspector
added, musingly. He picked up his hat and
gloves. “They’ll be coming along presently
to take the body to the mortuary,” he said.
“I’m leaving one of my men to stand by.
I shall be at the Yard all the morning if I can
be of any assistance, gentlemen . . .”</p>
<p>“Right!” Desmond replied. “I’ll probably
be telephoning you, Inspector. I should
rather like to have a word with this porter
fellow, what’s his name—ah, yes, Webb.
Send him up, would you?”</p>
<p>Farandol laughed. “He’s a proper thickhead,”
he observed. “That dense, you
couldn’t hammer a tenpenny nail into his
skull without blunting it. I’ll send him up!”</p>
<p>“Pompous ass!” commented Francis as the
Inspector shut the front door behind him.</p>
<p>Then he swung round sharply. Desmond
had called to him in a tense voice. His
brother stood behind him holding a torn envelope
in his hand. He thrust it, and with
it a folded letter, at Francis.</p>
<p>“Look at that!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>The envelope was addressed, in what
seemed to be a woman’s hand, to Miss Enid
Bardale, Flat 7, 31, Crewdwell Street, W.<span class="sc">I.</span>
The letter, written from an address at Saint
John’s Wood, and signed “Your affectionate
Mother, M. Bardale,” was to remind “Dearest
E.” that she was expected to dinner on the
following Saturday at seven-thirty.</p>
<p>“I don’t see . . .” Francis began.</p>
<p>“The postmark, man, the postmark!” cried
Desmond.</p>
<p>Francis turned to the envelope again. The
postmark was unusually clear. It read:</p>
<div class="fig">> <ANTIMG src="images/p16.jpg" alt="ST JOHN’S WOOD NW8, 6 PM 23 MAR 1923" width-obs="400" height-obs="396" /></div>
<p>“Yesterday’s date!” said Francis.</p>
<p>“I found that letter in the drawer of the
typewriting table. It was posted at Saint
John’s Wood before six o’clock yesterday
evening,” Desmond exclaimed emphatically.</p>
<p>“It was, therefore, delivered here by the
last post. Now what time is the last delivery
in London?”</p>
<p>“Nine o’clock . . .” began Francis.
Then broke off. “By George, Des.,” he said
slowly. “I take my hat off to you. You can
give us all points. Of course, this letter
knocks the bottom out of old Farandol’s
theory. The girl was alone in the flat, therefore
to take this letter from the postman she
must have been alive at 9 <span class="sc">P.M.</span>, therefore the
murder did not take place while Hollingway
was here, that is to say, before eight-twenty.
Unless Hollingway came back . . .”</p>
<p>“That,” said his brother, “Webb, the porter,
must tell us. Here he is, I think!”</p>
<p>Webb was a forlorn-looking old man with
a shining bald pate and a haggard face intersected
with blue veins.</p>
<p>“Come in, Webb,” said Desmond, advancing
to the front hall to meet him. “I want
you to answer one or two questions. What
time did Captain Hollingway leave here last
night?”</p>
<p>“Captain ’Ollingway?” queried the old
man.</p>
<p>“Yes, the gentleman that brought Miss
Bardale home.”</p>
<p>The old man appeared to think. “It wor
about twenty-five minutes past h’eight,
Mister!”</p>
<p>“How do you know the time so exactly?”
demanded Desmond.</p>
<p>Old Webb cast him a sly look. “’Cos for
why from where I sets in the front ’all I kin
’ear the clock on Saint Jude’s strike. The
quarter ’adn’t long gorn and the ’arf ’adn’t
struck w’en the Capting come out. ‘Wish
you good-night, Capting,’ I sez . . .”</p>
<p>“But why should you have noted the time
so carefully?” Desmond broke in impatiently.</p>
<p>Old Webb’s rheumy eyes puckered up as
a cunning grin slowly broke out over his face.</p>
<p>“I was a-waitin’ for my supper-beer,” he
replied. “The gal brings it every night at
’arf-past h’eight!”</p>
<p>Desmond smiled. “I see!” he said.</p>
<p>“Were you on duty in the hall all the
evening?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I wor, sir, till midnight, w’en I locks up,
same as allus!”</p>
<p>“And you never left the hall?”</p>
<p>“No, sir!”</p>
<p>“Did Captain Hollingway come back?”</p>
<p>“No, sir!”</p>
<p>“You’re sure?”</p>
<p>“There worn’t nobody come the whole
dratted evenin’ arter ’im, only the pos’man!”</p>
<p>“Oh, the postman came eh? At what
time?”</p>
<p>“Round about nine o’clock or a bit arter!”</p>
<p>“Do you take the letters up or does he?”</p>
<p>“’E do! I can’t get around much along
o’ my bad leg!”</p>
<p>“Do you know if there were any letters for
Miss Bardale?”</p>
<p>“I dunno nothink about that!”</p>
<p>“Did the postman say anything?”</p>
<p>“’E wor put out ’cos, ’e said, there wor but
the one letter and ’e ’ad to carry it to the
very top!”</p>
<p>“To Miss Bardale’s, you mean?”</p>
<p>The old man shot his questioner a crafty
glance. “’E didn’t say nuthin’ about <i>’er</i>!”</p>
<p>“How long was he up there?”</p>
<p>“Not above a minute or so, Mister. ’E’s
a spry one for the stairs, is our postman!”</p>
<p>Desmond made a movement of impatience.</p>
<p>“Did you tell Inspector Farandol about the
postman calling?”</p>
<p>“No!”</p>
<p>“Why not?”</p>
<p>“’Cos ’e never arst me!”</p>
<p>“And now, old boy,” said Desmond to his
brother when, with some difficulty, they had
got rid of the ancient janitor, “let’s look at
the facts. We’ve advanced things by half
an hour. Hollingway is eliminated; the postman
is eliminated, for we know that he was
in the building only for a minute or two
altogether. No one crossed the front hall
downstairs after the postman’s departure,
and at midnight the front door was shut.
We therefore come back to our only other
indication . . .”</p>
<p>“The heavy footstep that Miss Bardale
heard on the back stairs on the previous
evening?”</p>
<p>“Just so. I was wondering whether that
point had struck you. We cannot assume
that the murderer was hidden in the flat
waiting for Miss Bardale’s arrival. He evidently
followed the couple back from dinner,
for he was sufficiently acquainted with their
movements to make this rather able attempt
to fix the guilt on Hollingway. You have
seen the front staircase: there is nowhere
to hide even a cat. And the floors below are
untenanted after six o’clock. We return,
therefore, to the back stairs.</p>
<p>“Back doors are usually kept locked. Not
only is the back door in this flat, tenanted by
a girl living alone, open, but the key is missing.
There are no marks of violence on the
lock outside: consequently, if the murderer
entered by that way, he must have used a
key; therefore he must be familiar with his
surroundings.</p>
<p>“Did Miss Bardale open in person the last
letter she was destined to receive in this life,
or did the murderer, his ghastly job accomplished,
do so? I think that Miss Bardale
opened it, for I found it placed on the top
of a neat pile of correspondence in the drawer
of her typewriting table, where she was obviously
accustomed to keep her letters.
Therefore, at nine o’clock, or thereabouts, she
was alive. When was she murdered? I will
tell you . . .”</p>
<p>So saying, he lifted from the table the
little travelling-clock in its case of morocco
leather, lifted it out of the case, a dainty
thing of glass and gilding, and handed it to
Francis.</p>
<p>In the panel at the top was a small metal
knob.</p>
<p>“This is not the original case of the clock,”
said Desmond. “You see, it is a little too
large for it. The new case does not contain
the spring usually found to actuate the knob
of the repeater . . .”</p>
<p>“The repeater?” exclaimed Francis. “The
repeater, Des.?”</p>
<p>And he pressed the knob. There was a
little whirr and a clear bell chimed nine times,
then, on another note, the clock struck thrice.</p>
<p>“Nine-forty-five,” said Desmond, “showing
conclusively that Miss Bardale was
murdered, not between eight and eight
twenty, but between nine-forty-five and ten
o’clock. That case, concealing the repeater
mechanism, escaped the notice of the murderer
who set the hands back, as it escaped
Farandol’s. Neither, of course, was looking
for anything of the kind. What we have
got to do now is to find out who was on the
back stairs outside Miss Bardale’s flat between
nine-thirty and ten last night, and,
maybe, the night before as well. Whoever
it was, he came from this or one of the neighbouring
houses . . .”</p>
<p>“How do you know that?”</p>
<p>“If you will look out from the back door
you will see that this house and the houses
on either side are all furnished with these
fire-staircases descending to a common well
or court. Since we know that the murderer
did not enter from the front, he must have
come in from the back, either from this
house or from one of the adjacent houses.
Will you go off and explore the possibilities
of this house and its neighbours? I’m staying
on here for a bit. I’ll take a small bet
that the murderer can’t be far off . . .”</p>
<p>“I’ll go,” said Francis, grabbing his hat;
“but you’ll lose your money. He’s over the
hills and far away with Bannington’s report
by this time, whoever he is!”</p>
<p>“I wonder!” said Desmond enigmatically.</p>
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