<h2 id="c16"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XV</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE DECOY</span></h2>
<p>“My dear Okewood,” opened the Chief
when, half an hour later, he faced
Desmond across the fireside in his library,
“you find me grappling with what is probably
the most perplexing problem I have ever
tackled. For the past four weeks, since your
very ugly adventure with our old friend Clubfoot
in the affair of the Constantinople
courier, I have kept you and your brother
deliberately away from the Service . . .
against your own wish, I know . . .
frankly because you are too valuable to be
sacrificed to Dr. Grundt’s personal spite!”</p>
<p>At the mention of the name of his old
enemy, Desmond Okewood sat up eagerly in
his chair.</p>
<p>“Is Clubfoot up to his tricks again?” he
asked quickly.</p>
<p>The Chief shrugged his shoulders. “I used
to have the reputation of being a man who
knew his own mind,” he replied.</p>
<p>Desmond looked at the beaklike nose and
the massive jaw appraisingly. The Chief was
worshipped in the Service for his quickness
of decision.</p>
<p>“But when I tell you, in answer to your
question, that one day I think he is and the
next day I think he isn’t, you will realize how
badly they’ve got me bothered. It’s not a
long story, Okewood, and you may as well
hear it because, I tell you honestly, the thing’s
got too big for one man to handle alone;
I ought to give the whole of my attention to
it, but I can’t; I’m too busy. If I did, I
should have to neglect other more important
affairs, and that is precisely what this campaign
of deviltry is meant to achieve.” The
Chief drew meditatively on his cigar. “You
knew Finucane, I think?”</p>
<p>“Who was lately in Brussels for you?”</p>
<p>The Chief nodded.</p>
<p>“Rather. But why ‘knew’?”</p>
<p>“He’s vanished, Okewood!”</p>
<p>“Kidnapped or . . .?”</p>
<p>“Murdered, almost certainly. It’s more
than a week since it happened. He knew too
much!”</p>
<p>Desmond nodded his assent. Brussels, the
half-way house to everywhere in Europe, is
the report centre for the espionage services
of every great European Power. The Secret
Service agent who can make good in Brussels
has little left to learn about the game.</p>
<p>“Yesterday a week ago Finucane crossed
over from Brussels to see me,” the Chief
resumed. “Between ourselves, Finucane has
been tightening up our report centres in
industrial Germany. You know Finucane,
Okewood: no Vere de Vere about him, but a
devilish clever fellow and a damned judgmatical
briber. His reports on the German
situation have been admirable, and the Prime
Minister was delighted. Finucane came over
to get his head patted and also to submit
certain plans for the development of our
arrangements in Germany.</p>
<p>“Finucane got in from Brussels on Friday
evening by the train that reaches Victoria
at nine-twenty-five. He was to see me on
the following morning. He engaged a room
at the Nineveh, changed into evening dress,
and went off to get a bite to eat and see
life at the Hexagon. At five minutes to
midnight he left the Hexagon alone and apparently
perfectly sober. He never reached
his hotel and has neither been seen nor heard
of since!”</p>
<p>Desmond whistled. “Did he have the
goods on him?”</p>
<p>The Chief laughed dryly. “Not Finucane!
He carried it all under his hat!”</p>
<p>“And you’ve got no trace of him, no clue?”</p>
<p>Somewhere in the house an electric bell
trilled. The Chief looked at his watch.</p>
<p>“As far as we know the last person to
speak to Finucane before he disappeared was
Madeleine McKenzie,” he said. “By a fortunate
coincidence there happened to be present
at the Hexagon that night a young detective
from Vine Street named Rimmer, who was
keeping observation on a gang of West-End
crooks. This bright young man remembers
Finucane perfectly. Apparently Finucane
spoke to the girl and, sitting down at her
table, ordered a bottle of champagne. The
McKenzie girl left first and Finucane remained
to finish the bottle. Just before midnight
he paid the bill and went away. The
curious thing is that, while Finucane and the
girl were drinking together at the table, the
flower-woman approached, just as she did to-night,
and gave the girl a bunch of flowers.
And, again, just as we saw this evening, on
receiving the nosegay the girl promptly left
the place . . .”</p>
<p>“A signal, eh?” queried Desmond.</p>
<p>“Obviously,” said the Chief. “But what
does it portend?”</p>
<p>The door opened. Watkyn, the Chief’s
butler, a massively built ex-petty officer,
with a pair of shoulders like an ox, was there.</p>
<p>“Captain Elliott!” he announced.</p>
<p>“Perhaps Elliott can tell us!” remarked
the great man as the butler ushered into the
library that selfsame youth whom, slightly
merry with wine, they had seen but half an
hour ago at Madeleine McKenzie’s table at
the Hexagon.</p>
<p>The Chief wasted no time on introductions.</p>
<p>“Well?” was his greeting.</p>
<p>“We carried out your instructions to the
letter, sir,” said the youth. “She’s a very
ladylike, attractive girl, not a bit the sort
of skirt you meet knockin’ about places like
the ‘old Hex.’ I pressed her very hard to
let me drive her home, and I really thought
I was getting on with her pretty well. But
all of a sudden she kind of dried up and said
she had to go . . .”</p>
<p>“When was that?” snapped the Chief.</p>
<p>“How do you mean, ‘when’?”</p>
<p>“At what stage of your conversation, with
the lady did this change come over her?”
said the Chief testily.</p>
<p>“Oh! after she was given some flowers by
old Bessie!”</p>
<p>The Chief nodded grimly. “Well, and
then?”</p>
<p>“We followed her taxi. She went home
to Duchess Street. I left Robin to keep
watch and follow her if she should leave the
house.”</p>
<p>Again the Chief nodded. “Thank you,
Peter,” he remarked, more gently this time.
“That’ll be all for to-night. You can pick
Robin up on your way home and send him to
bed. And hark’ee, the pair of you steer clear
of the Hexagon until further orders, do you
understand?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” replied the young man. “Good-night,
sir.”</p>
<p>“Good-night, Peter.”</p>
<p>After the door had closed on him the Chief
turned to Desmond.</p>
<p>“We took a statement from the girl. Her
story absolutely tallies with Rimmer’s. She
had a touch of neuralgia, she says, and went
home early that night. She lives in furnished
rooms in a most respectable house
near the Langham Hotel, and if she is what
she seems to be, she certainly does not ply
her trade there. And yet what is the mystery
of these flowers?”</p>
<p>“Was she asked about them?”</p>
<p>The Chief shook his head. “I was afraid
of raising her suspicions. If it is a code a
question like that would make them change
it. But three times this week I’ve despatched
some of my people to the Hexagon to get into
conversation with the girl, different types
each time, and I’ve got only negative results.
The first man I sent posed as a rich Colonial
newly landed in London, exactly the sort of
fish that the West-End crooks and their decoys
are always trying to land. She let him
buy her a drink; Bessie, the flower-woman,
came across in due course and gave her a
bunch of white carnations, and presently she
made an excuse to join a party at another
table. But—note this well!—she did not
leave the place until closing time, when she
took a taxi home alone.</p>
<p>“Two nights later I sent another fellow
along. His orders were to sit in the girl’s
line of vision, but on no account to address
her first. Nothing happened. She made
no advances to him; nobody else spoke to her,
and she received no flowers. She stayed
until closing time and again drove away to
Duchess Street by herself.</p>
<p>“To-night, by my instructions, young Elliott
took her on. As when Finucane was
with her, she received, as you saw, a nosegay,
not of white flowers only as my Colonial got,
but of white flowers mingled with blue.
Forthwith she drops young Peter and his
friend and goes home. Strange, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“It is, indeed,” observed his companion.
“It would help us enormously if we knew
what flowers she was given the night that
Finucane disappeared!”</p>
<p>“I agree. But Rimmer didn’t notice. We
could have cross-examined old Bessie; but
if this is a code, she’s certainly in it too; and
I will <i>not</i> scare them off it until I see more
clearly . . .” He paused and, ticking each
point off on his fingers, resumed presently:
“If it’s a code, this is what I make of it.
General instructions to the girl: sit around
at the ‘Hex.’ every night, make no advances,
but only receive them. A white flower
means, ‘Drop the fellow; he does not interest
us, but stand by’; a white and a blue say:
‘The fellow does not interest us; you can
go home.’”</p>
<p>“By Jove!” commented Desmond, enthusiasm
in his voice, “this is getting jolly
interesting, sir!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” agreed the Chief. “But where
does it take us? Up against a blank wall.
And meanwhile Finucane’s disappearance remains
a mystery, and the <i>morale</i> of my staff
is being ruined! This negative result business
leads nowhere. I want something positive
to show whether Madeleine McKenzie is or
is not at the bottom of this baffling affair.”</p>
<p>“What about old Bessie? Who gives <i>her</i>
her orders?”</p>
<p>“We’ve drawn blank there, too! My men
are in the crowd at the ‘Hex.’ every night
to watch the old strap. Fellows often buy
flowers from her for ladies at the ‘Hex.,’
but, as far as my young men have been able
to see, no one has sent any flowers to Madeleine!”</p>
<p>Desmond was silent for a moment. “In
that case,” he said presently, “there is only
one way of finding out whether the young
woman is being used as a decoy; that is, to
send her some one prominent, a really big
fish, and let her employers know, if possible,
that he’s coming. We shadow our decoy
and see where he leads us!”</p>
<p>The Chief chuckled delightedly. “What I
like about you, Okewood,” he said, “is that
your instincts are so unerring. You have
hit precisely upon my plan. Listen! There
is at present working for me in Germany a
gentleman who is commonly known in this
office as Murchison of Munich, you have
never met him, for he is a recent acquisition,
a banker by profession and a first-rate economist
with a natural ability for Intelligence
work. For the last eight weeks he has been
in southern Germany carrying out an investigation
into the transfer of German wealth
abroad. I flatter myself that we have been
able to cover up his tracks so successfully
that, in his capacity as secret agent, he is
actually known by sight to myself alone. Do
you follow me?”</p>
<p>Desmond nodded.</p>
<p>“Now,” the Chief continued, “the important thing
about his mission, from the standpoint
of our present dilemma, is that the big
German industrialists have lately become
aware of the presence of one of my fellows
in the inner ring of their councils without,
however, being able to identify him. I am
virtually certain that the kidnapping of Finucane
(to whom Murchison—did I tell you?—has
been reporting) was intended as a
warning to me that they are on the alert. A
word to a certain ‘double-cross’ of my acquaintance
giving away the identity of Murchison
of Munich, and a hint dropped in the
same quarter that, on a certain evening, the
party in question is to be found at the Hexagon,
will infallibly bring Clubfoot into the
open again . . .”</p>
<p>“Clubfoot? Why Clubfoot?”</p>
<p>“Because,” said the Chief gravely, “our
crippled friend, Dr. Grundt, the redoubtable
master spy of Imperial Germany, has transferred
his allegiance to the German industrialist
ring, which, as you know, is the heart
and soul of the great conspiracy to restore
the fortunes of Germany as a militarist monarchy.
Grundt to-day is the instrument of
the coal and steel bosses, the real masters of
modern Germany . . .”</p>
<p>“He has been working for them ever since
his reappearance, do you think?”</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly. Now, see here again. If,
when Murchison appears at the Hexagon,
Madeleine McKenzie is used as the decoy, we
shall have acquired the certainty that it was
she who lured Finucane away. And if subsequent
developments don’t lead us back to
old Clubfoot, damn it, I’ll eat my hat!”</p>
<p>“But supposing your surmise does not
prove correct,” Desmond objected, “you’ll
have given away one of your best men!”</p>
<p>The Chief smiled and shook his head.
“No, I shan’t! Murchison of Munich is
going to stay quietly where he is in South
Germany . . .”</p>
<p>The eyes of the two men met.</p>
<p>“Bear in mind,” added the Chief, “that
nobody has ever seen Murchison of Munich
except myself!”</p>
<p>There was a significant pause.</p>
<p>“And I do so hate painting my face!” remarked
Desmond irrelevantly.</p>
<p>The Chief laughed. “I knew I could count
on you, Okewood. Very little disguise will
be necessary if you will consent to sacrifice
your moustache. All I ask you to do is to
dine at the Hexagon at eight o’clock to-morrow
evening in the guise of Mr. Murchison
of Munich. You can leave the rest to me.
And if, in the course of the evening, you
should recognize that brother of yours—well,
don’t! Now as to this question of your
make-up . . .”</p>
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