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Copyright & Information

Cry For The Baron

 

First published in 1950

© John Creasey Literary Management Ltd.; House of Stratus 1971-2014

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

 

The right of John Creasey to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted.

 

This edition published in 2014 by House of Stratus, an imprint of

Stratus Books Ltd., Lisandra House, Fore Street, Looe,

Cornwall, PL13 1AD, UK.

 

Typeset by House of Stratus.

 

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library and the Library of Congress.

 

ISBN   EAN   Edition
0755142608   9780755142606   Print
0755142616   9780755142613   Kindle
0755142624   9780755142620   Epub

 

This is a fictional work and all characters are drawn from the author's imagination.

Any resemblance or similarities to persons either living or dead are entirely coincidental.

 

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www.houseofstratus.com

 

 

About the Author

Jophn Creasey

 

John Creasey – Master Storyteller - was born in Surrey, England in 1908 into a poor family in which there were nine children, John Creasey grew up to be a true master story teller and international sensation. His more than 600 crime, mystery and thriller titles have now sold 80 million copies in 25 languages. These include many popular series such as Gideon of Scotland Yard, The Toff, Dr Palfrey and The Baron.

Creasey wrote under many pseudonyms, explaining that booksellers had complained he totally dominated the 'C' section in stores. They included:

 

Gordon Ashe, M E Cooke, Norman Deane, Robert Caine Frazer, Patrick Gill, Michael Halliday, Charles Hogarth, Brian Hope, Colin Hughes, Kyle Hunt, Abel Mann, Peter Manton, J J Marric, Richard Martin, Rodney Mattheson, Anthony Morton and Jeremy York.

 

Never one to sit still, Creasey had a strong social conscience, and stood for Parliament several times, along with founding the One Party Alliance which promoted the idea of government by a coalition of the best minds from across the political spectrum.

He also founded the British Crime Writers' Association, which to this day celebrates outstanding crime writing. The Mystery Writers of America bestowed upon him the Edgar Award for best novel and then in 1969 the ultimate Grand Master Award. John Creasey's stories are as compelling today as ever.

 

Chapter One

The Diamond of Tears

 

Jacob Bernstein blinked at the telephone and said: “Dear me, who ith that?” One thin pale hand, the delicate blue veins showing clearly beneath the powerful white light that shone above his head, covered the diamond which lay on the desk in front of him; and darkness fell upon the rest of the room. The bell kept ringing. “An invention of the Devil, that ith what it ith,” lisped Bernstein. He stared at the telephone from his hooded eyes, with their wrinkled lids, as if willing it to stop. Beyond the radius of the light the small, untidy room was shadowy, the corners cluttered with old books and papers, boxes, jewel-cases – junk worth a fortune. But the light was bright on his hooked nose and thin, pale cheeks, his colourless lips and the black skull cap which he loved to wear.

Brrrr-brrrr; brrrr-brrrr; brrrr-brrrr.

Bernstein was alone in the house. Except for the harsh ringing there was quiet – inside as well as in the dark London street outside.

“Dear me, dear me,” sighed Bernstein.

He leaned across the littered desk, making papers rustle as the loose sleeve of his old green velveteen jacket brushed over them, and rested the tips of his fingers on the telephone. The ringing affected his fingers like an electric shock. The instrument was the only new and modern thing here, an offence to the eye and to the ear of the old Jew, but one moved with the times, business was difficult. Bernstein was not greedy but content only when dwelling on the past or on such beauty as was covered by his right hand.

He lifted the receiver and the ringing stopped.

“Yeth, who ith it …?”

“Thank you, yeth, I keep well, these old bones will last a long time yet, but pleath, who are you …?”

“Tho!” Eagerness sounded in the word.

“Yeth … yeth, I quite understand, my friend …”

“You haff not been mithled, I have the Tear …

“Dear me! Pleath, pleath, not on the telephone, we cannot dithcuth how much on the telephone …

“My friend, I am hurt, I am the dithcreet, no one shall know … Yeth. If we agree on terms, yeth …”

“I will be motht happy to see you here …

“Yeth, tonight, if that ith your wish … Yeth, I am alone … I will open the door mythelf, thir … In half an hour, yeth … Goodbye.”

The papers rustled again as he replaced the receiver on its cradle. He sat blinking into the shadows and at the heavy brown velvet curtains. In the street two people walked past briskly, nearby a car-horn broke the quiet. Bernstein slowly withdrew his hand, and scintillating beauty lay there. It was a diamond as large as the nail of his thumb, shaped like a tear, and at the rounded end tinged with red.

He sighed, straightened his back and stood up. His thin shoulders were bowed, and as he walked across the room he dragged his right foot across the threadbare carpet, a little, black-tufted crow of a man. He reached a corner which was almost in darkness, for the bright circle of light behind him shone on the desk. He stooped over a pile of books on a chair, and picked up a heavy, leather-bound volume tooled in gold. The uncut edges were dusty and he turned pages seared with age. He let them flutter through his fingers until he found two pages stuck together. Then he opened the thick book wide.

In the centre a square hole was cut out of the pages, and the hole was lined with cotton wool. He took the Tear between his thumb and forefinger, and tucked it into the cotton wool. He smoothed the leather cover, then laboriously picked up the other books and placed them on top of the hiding-place. He straightened up as if he were in pain and hobbled back to the desk.

Then he opened a large copy of the Talmud and began to read. Although his grey eyes were bleared and tired, he did not need glasses. Silence fell upon the room. The only movement was the quiver of his lips as he read, as if he were reciting to himself some much-loved sacred phrase.

Brrrr-brrrr; brrrr-brrrr; brrrr-brrrr!

He started – and stared at the telephone. “Again I” he cried, and shook his head angrily. “Again, why doth it go on, why doth it go on?” This time he stretched out for it more quickly, impatiently.

“Yeth …?”

“Tho! My friend, again it ith good to hear from you. Even when you speak on this instrument of the Devil … Yeth!” He chuckled and smiled, his expression much happier than when he had spoken before. “My dear Mithter Mannering, always, if I can help you …”

“The Tear? Tho! It ith sad, but already I haff promised, if terms are agreed … I mutht not do that, Mithter Mannering, you underthtand, it ith secret … Not all wish the world to know they haff the Tear, so many are afraid of it … My friend, you dithappoint me, yeth, it ith not nonsense …”

“Mr. Mannering, it ith true, it ith a jewel of fate, but that doth not trouble such men as you … It is so beautiful, Mithter Mannering. It ith worth more than the blood of man and the beauty of woman … You want it for yourself …? Tho! A client, a customer as you say, and also I haff the customer … Tho …! In one hour, one little hour if you will speak to me again. Yeth, if we do not come to terms, I can tell you hith name, why not? He remainth unknown only if he buyth the Tear … Yeth, he ith rich, yeth “

“Goodbye, my friend.”

He put the receiver back on its cradle, placed the tips of his fingers together and peered towards the books on the chair, nodding so that sometimes his face was in shadow, sometimes lit up. With a sigh he closed the Talmud and pushed it away.

Footsteps turned the corner and came towards the shop. They were a man’s, hurried but firm. Bernstein did not move until a bell rang downstairs. Then he stood up, laboriously, and went to the window. He opened it and looked out.

“Who ith there?”

He saw a Homburg hat and a dark clad man, who moved back from the door so as to see him. The light from the window fell upon a familiar face.

“I told you I was coming, Bernstein.”

“Yeth, yeth! One mutht be tho thure.” He closed the window and hobbled to the door, out on to the landing, then down the narrow stairs to the street door. He hurried as best he could along the narrow passage, pulled back the two bolts, unfastened the chain, turned the key in the lock, and opened the door.

“You’ve been a hell of a time!” the visitor grumbled.

“My old bones, they will not move as I would like them to move, but pleath, come in, come in. You are well?”

“I’m all right.”

“Tho.” Bernstein closed the door. “I will not be a moment.” With painstaking care he bolted and locked the door again, while his visitor stood chafing. Then he turned and led the way upstairs. In the study he pointed to a chair by the desk. “Thit down, pleath.”

“Where is it?” asked his visitor sharply.

“I will thow you, thoon. You are in a great hurry, my friend. Are you not well? You look—”

“I’m all right.” The man breathed heavily, as if under some strain. Bernstein’s wise old eyes narrowed, almost covered by the hooded lids. “Let’s see it—or talk business first, whichever you like.”

Bernstein sighed. “Tho. Bithness.”

“What’s your price?”

“It ith a beautiful jewel, my friend, never haff I theen a lovelier. Flawleth, quite flawleth, perfectly cut and the red—the blood on the stone. You know about the blood?”

“I know what I’m buying.”

“You do not belief, perhaps, that it ith a stone of ill-fortune?”

“It’s a diamond, the only one like it in the world. And I want it. What’s your price?”

Bernstein placed the tips of his fingers together again, peered at the man. He was a student of men; rich and poor, good and bad. He knew, none better, that a man who loved precious stones might feel towards the Tear as a man felt towards his beloved; thought of the Tear could make nerves quiver and lips tremble, and sight of it bring ecstasy. But was his visitor affected by the jewel? Or was he torn by some baser emotion?

Bernstein looked everywhere except towards the corner where the diamond was hidden.

“For thuch a jewel the prithe ith high, very high.”

“How much?”

“Now let me thee—yeth, let me thee. I do not think it would be too much to say one hundred thousand pounds. One—hundred—thousand—pounds.’’

“It’s high.”

“It ith not too high.”

The man’s lips seemed to writhe.

“I’ll take it.” He put his hand to his breast pocket and drew out a folded cheque-book. “I’ll draw the cheque, you get the diamond.” He pulled out a fountain pen – and the scared old eyes watched him and saw that he did not take off his gloves as he wrote. The man sensed that Bernstein was still looking at him, and stopped writing.

“What about getting the diamond?”

“In good time, my friend. You thee, there are others who would buy that beautiful jewel. Two, perhaps t’ree, other. Yes. One ith to come, soon, to make the offer. Perhaps he will give more. Then—”

The man said: “You bloodsucking rogue, I’m paying you twice as much as it’s worth!”

Bernstein said softly: “Are you?” He opened a drawer at his right hand and groped inside. “Perhaps that ith tho, indeed. Then I ask a question. Why do you pay twice as much ath it ith worth?”

“What do you mean?”

“I confeth I am worried by you,” said Bernstein softly. “You are in tho great a hurry. There cannot be thuch a hurry.” He looked pointedly at the gloves and the half-written cheque. “I will thee my other friends, and then—”

He drew his hand from the drawer – and into the eyes of his visitor there sprang fear. Bernstein pulled sharply, but the thing in his hand knocked against the drawer, which was only partly open. His visitor jumped up, knocking his chair to the floor. He struck savagely at the old man’s face and sent him staggering sideways. Something dropped noisily back into the drawer. The visitor rounded the desk, while Bernstein thrust out his pale, trembling hands.

“No! No, you will not—”

The visitor thrust his hands aside, caught him round his scraggy throat, and squeezed. Bernstein’s protest became a throaty gurgle. Holding more tightly, the man forced the small head back. The skull-cap fell off and the light shone on the pale, bald pate. Bernstein’s eyes bulged. He struggled feebly, but that gradually ceased.

His body went limp.

The visitor maintained the pressure and held him, the body bent, arms hanging limply, knees sagging, until there was no sign of breathing. The killer took his hands away, and Bernstein fell limp, lifeless.

The man pulled open the drawer and saw the gun inside. He took the gun out and put it on the desk. He rummaged through the drawer and found a bunch of keys. He went to the door and switched on the other light, which fell on to Bernstein’s face. The old eyes were half-closed and glazed, the mouth was slack and open.

The visitor began to search.

He found the safe and opened it with the keys, his hands trembling; they trembled more as he took out jewel-cases and loose stones. Some he tossed aside, others he dropped into his pocket, where they rattled like marbles. He opened case after case, but did not find the Tear.

He emptied the last one, and swung round.

“Where is it, you devil? Where is it?”

The murderer turned from the safe and began to rummage through the boxes, tossing them aside when he found them empty, and thrusting books away. He went to the desk and rummaged through every drawer, but found no sign of the Tear. He turned to Bernstein and stood glaring down; his voice was thick with fury, as if he could make a dead man speak.

Where is it?”

He swung round and peered in every corner. His eyes were glassy, and he kept muttering to himself – swearing at the dead man, calling curses on his head, reviling him and all his race.

He went to the corner where the Tear lay between the pages of the book, lifted the books off the chair and examined it for a hiding-place. Then he pulled back the corners of the carpet; dust rose up, making him sneeze. He peered at the floor-boards, for any sign of a floor-safe, but the boards were old and none had recently been taken up. He went to the side of the room, bent down and ran his fingers along the wainscoting. Perspiration gathered on his forehead and began to trickle down his cheek, stood out in little beads on his upper lip.

Suddenly the quiet was blasted by a bell.

Brrr-brrrr; brrrr-brrrr; brrrr-brrrrl

He swung round towards the telephone.

The ringing went on and on.

 

Chapter Two

Mannering is Puzzled

 

John Mannering put the telephone back on its cradle and looked across at his wife.

“That’s odd, there’s no answer.”

“He hates the telephone,” said Lorna.

“He doesn’t hate it so much that he won’t answer it, and he’s expecting me to call.”

“You could try again, darling.”

“So I could. What should I do without you?” Mannering laughed at her, and she turned back to her book.

She looked contented. Her dark hair was burnished by the light of the standard lamp at her side; this also touched her beauty with softening shadows. Some said that Lorna Mannering’s face had a sullen look when in repose, and beauty only when she was alert; Mannering knew better. He watched the fleeting movement of her dark blue eyes, the occasional frown of concentration which brought her heavy brows together, the quick twist of her fingers turning a page.

She sat in a winged armchair in the study of their Chelsea flat It was always warmer in this room, and the autumn night was cold. The panelled walls and Jacobean furniture, each piece a treasure in itself, made the right background.

She looked up.

“Going to sleep?” she asked.

“Just worshipping.”

“Fool!”

“Oddly enough, I meant it.”

She put the book on her lap, where its bright red cover clashed with the dark red of her dress, and stared at him, a smile softening her full lips. A door downstairs slammed and broke the spell. Mannering stirred from his chair and took out cigarettes.

“I really believe you did mean it,” Lorna said.

“Incredible, isn’t it? A man in love with his wife!” He lit his cigarette and lifted the telephone.

“What do you want from Jacob?” she asked idly.

“One jewel of untold value.”

“Which one?”

“Does it matter? I’m always buying jewels, selling jewels, and wishing I could buy them ail and keep them for myself.”

“I would still like to know which one it is.”

“The Tear.”

Lorna said: “Oh,” and sat up.

“So you really are superstitious,” murmured Mannering. “The tear of blood! Jacob said something of the kind earlier this evening—what was his phrase? I remember I liked it. Oh, yes—‘It is worth more than the blood of man and the beauty of women’—but he didn’t add in a breathless voice that it is a famous jewel with a curse. So he probably believes it’s won its fame because of the avarice of man rather than by the fatal quality in a piece of rock someone dug out of the bigger lump of rock in some hills belonging to the Maharajah of Wherever-it-was, centuries ago.”

The ringing sound continued.

“When you’re as involved as that, you’re trying to hide something,” challenged Lorna.

“I’m trying to kill an illusion—that if you possess the Tear you will probably die of a battered skull. And in any case, you needn’t worry. I shall have it in my hands only for a few hours. Feel better?”

She frowned. “I suppose it is silly to feel jumpy.”

Mannering said: “People who don’t own the Tear have been known to die by violence. Odd—he still doesn’t answer.”

He dialled a third time, with the same result. Next he dialled O, and reported difficulty in getting Mayfair 01432. A pause, then: “The number is ringing, sir, but there’s no reply.”

“Thank you.” Mannering replaced the receiver and stood up.

Standing, he was over six feet tall, handsome, with dark, wavy hair, cut snort, and greying a little at the temples. A man whom many regarded, when they first saw him, as just handsome and dull. Others, who knew him well, still thought of him as a man-about-town, a dilettante, spoiled by too much money and a dash of blue blood. Few knew all the truth about him—either of his past or of what he did today.

“It can’t be anything important,” said Lorna.

“He’s probably fallen asleep. He stays in that place of his alone far too much, for an old man. Care for a drive?”

“I don’t think I’ll come out tonight, darling, I want to be early in the morning, and it’s nearly midnight.”

“I won’t be long,” said Mannering.

Outside, he hurried towards his garage, five minutes’ walk away, and wished that he had put on a coat. He switched on the heater of his Bristol before driving out of the garage – and switched it off before he reached Belham Street, where Jacob Bernstein had his shop. It was a narrow thoroughfare in the West End of London, a quiet place, with a few shops which were patronised by the connoisseur and the discerning. Not far away was Hart Row, where Mannering owned a famous shop called Quinn’s.

Mannering avoided the main roads, and the headlights shone on walking couples, tall, grey houses, across spacious squares where history lived, on solitary women, lurking hopefully; and on policemen, doing their nightly rounds. At last he turned the corner of Belham Street. Then, with a caution which had become almost a sixth sense, he drove past Bernstein’s shop and pulled up some fifty feet away.

While passing, he saw the dim light at the first-floor room where Bernstein spent most of his time. The glow came from a corner, as if the curtain had been lifted and not fallen back into place. Mannering thought no more than that Bernstein had been taken ill – until he saw the light go out.

The sudden dousing of the light filled him with disquiet. He stepped swiftly across the road and stood outside the tall, narrow door. This door led to the upstairs quarters; another led to the shop. He knew that the shop was a model of tidiness but that upstairs the rooms were neglected. He stepped to the window, placed one hand against the glass and peered in – the hand so placed to shade the light from a street lamp, some distance away. He saw the ghostly shapes of furniture; the dull glow of silver; the pale faces of clocks; he even fancied that he heard these ticking.

There was no sign of trouble there.

Then he heard footsteps from the stairs; not loud, not firm, but stealthy. He tried to laugh his fears away. Jacob’s right ankle had been broken and never really mended – a legacy of brutality and Dachau. His shuffling walk would sound stealthy. Mannering stood to one side and waited while the footsteps drew nearer. He thought he knew the moment when the man reached the foot of the stairs. Then the footsteps sounded again.

Nearer; stealthy; nearer.

Mannering heard fingers touch the bolts, and the sharp sound as they were drawn back; he heard the heavy key turn. The door opened – not slowly, as Bernstein would open it, because it was heavy; but swiftly.

He saw a man with a Homburg hat pulled low over his forehead and a handkerchief tied over his nose and mouth. Before he could dodge aside the man kicked him in the pit of the stomach. Pain surged through him, driving thought out of his mind, made him double up and stagger backwards. He fell. He did not hear the man run wildly towards the end of the street, and did not see the killer again.

He lay on the pavement, doubled up, his knees almost touching his chin. He must do better. He staggered to a kneeling position, and the pain was like a gigantic spider with steel legs, clawing at his vitals. Sickness followed pain, but that gradually passed, and soon he could stand upright.

The door was open. A light glowed on the landing, showing the stairs with their strip of threadbare carpet, the plain brown walls and the door which led to the shop. In the distance a car started up; that might be his assailant. He clenched his teeth as he went forward, and had to hold on to the door for support, listening for other sounds, but hearing only the distant hum of traffic, as much part of London as the air. There were no plodding footsteps of a watchful policeman—

He left the door open and went to the foot of the stairs, leaning against the wall for support, feeling better as each second passed yet not trusting himself to walk naturally. He clutched the banister post, and called: “Jacob!”

There was no answer; of course there would be no answer. He went upstairs, and by the time he reached the top he did not need to hold the banister rail.

“Jacob!”

The door of the front room stood wide open and he saw the corner of the littered desk, the shape of the angle-lamp beneath which Bernstein read, or worshipped his possessions. He also saw what might have been a dark shadow on the floor between the desk and the wall. He put on the other light and went forward. It was not shadow but a body.

He felt as if a bucket of icy water had been thrown over him as he stepped to the angle-lamp, stretched out his hand to switch it on – and drew his hand back sharply. The assailant had touched the lamp to put it out; he might have left prints. Mannering took out a handkerchief and through it pressed the switch carefully. The white light shone out on the desk and the closed black book. He moved it a little, so that it showed the old man’s glazed, half-open eyes and the slack mouth; and he did not think that Jacob was alive.

There was little point in feeling for the pulse in the bony wrist.

First telephone Scotland Yard; then look at Jacob. He crossed to the far side of the desk, lifted the telephone, still using his handkerchief, but heard nothing when he put it to his ear. Then he saw that the cable had been torn from the tiny black box fastened to the side of the desk.

That explained why there had been no answer.

It didn’t; the ringing sound had come, so this cable had been damaged since he had telephoned. He had probably been trying to get through while Jacob was being murdered, and in a fit of nervous rage the killer had silenced the telephone.

There was a kiosk five minutes walk away, and it would take more than five minutes to rouse neighbours and use their telephone. He turned back, bent down and straightened the frail body. He laid Jacob on his stomach, knelt astride him and pressed his hands into his ribs, gently at first, then harder.

After five minutes, he stopped, and tried the kiss of life, but there wasn’t a spark of life.

Mannering hurried to the landing, swung round to face the stairs then stopped abruptly. A girl stood half-way up. She wore a dark fur coat and had wavy, bright fair hair. Startled blue eyes peered into his, bright red lips were parted.

 

Chapter Three

Girl In Distress

 

She was young; not beautiful, but vivid and attractive. The coat was slung over her shoulders like a cloak. She wore a black evening gown, the bodice glittering with sequins shimmering over her firm breasts from her agitated breathing. Her eyes, so blue and startled, were rounded. Her right hand moved and clutched the edges of the coat, drawing them together. Mannering asked: “Who are you?”

She didn’t speak, but held on to the banister rail with her left hand. She didn’t move, and was obviously in great distress, and a false move would frighten her away. “Can I help you?” Mannering asked.

She moistened her lips again. “I want to see Mr. Bernstein.”

“I’m afraid he’s out.”

“I must see him.”

“Then you’ll have to wait.” Mannering backed a pace. “Come and wait upstairs.”

She didn’t move. “Who are you?”

“A friend of his.” Mannering took out his cigarette-case, opened it and held it out; she would have to climb at least six steps to reach them. “He shouldn’t be long.” The words nearly choked him.

“I—I think I’ll come back,” she said, and turned. Mannering hurried after her, was just behind her when she reached the passage. He put his hand on her shoulder, but she slipped out of the coat, made for the front door, and turned right, clutching her skirt to run. She didn’t look round again. Mannering flung the coat aside and raced after her, caught her up twenty yards from the shop, took her arm and gripped tightly. She struggled to get away, turned, and struck at him with her free hand; her small handbag caught his cheek.

They stood together in the darkened street, but the lamp-light was behind him, shining on to her face. He no longer thought of her as agitated but as terrified.

“Let—me—go. Please—let—me—go.”

“Why did you come?”

“I’ve—told—you.” She gasped each word out, as if it were an effort, and struggled to free herself again. She hadn’t a chance. After a moment she realised it and went limp. “Please let me go. It isn’t important, I—I can see him in the morning.”

He wanted to let her go, as he would want to let a rabbit go from a trap. But soon the police would come and they would need to know everything about the night’s events and certainly why this girl had come to see Jacob Bernstein and why she was so nervous. He ought to keep her here; yet something in him rebelled. Already he wanted to find the murderer himself; to pay a last tribute, and to do a final service for the man.

A temptation, born out of his secret past, came and whispered to him, while the girl’s breathing quietened a little though the terror still lurked in her eyes.

He asked suddenly: “Do you know what’s happened?”

“Happened?”

“Here. Tonight?”

“Has—has anything happened?”

“Give me this.” He released her and took the bag away. She realised what he was going to do too late, and snatched at it, but he backed away and opened the bag. She came at him, but he fended her off with one hand and looked into the bag. There were letters, a lipstick, compact and a purse.

“Give that to me!”

“What is your name?”

“I won’t tell you.” She snatched at the bag again and he took her wrist, pulled her suddenly so that she was in front of him and facing the direction of Bernstein’s shop, then pushed her along and back into the doorway. He closed the door with his elbow – while outside, in the distance, heavy footsteps sounded, drawing nearer.

“You’ve no right—” She could hardly get the words out, but didn’t try to take the bag away again.

He took out the letters but didn’t look at them.

“If you want to get away, you will have to tell me your name and address. Otherwise you stay, and answer all the questions the police want to ask.” His voice was harder, and his words shocked her.

“Has there been—a burglary?”

“Yes. And the police will soon be here. Who are you? Where do you live?”

“If I tell you will you let me go?”

She was young and strong enough to have killed Jacob; almost anyone would have been. She might have been here before, left something behind and come back.

She stretched out a trembling hand, the red nails glistening as she touched his arm.

“Will you?”

“Yes. But I shall want to see you again.”

“I’ll see you, I’ll meet you anywhere you like, but—please let me go now. I’m—Fay Goulden. You can find me at 21, Clay Court, in Shepherd Street, near Park Lane.”

He glanced at the letters. One was addressed to her at the Majestic Hotel, the others at 21, Clay Court, and each said “Miss Fay Goulden.”

Outside, the plodding footsteps of the beat policeman sounded much nearer. Mannering turned the key in the lock and the girl exclaimed: “You promised—”

“Be quiet!”

The handle of the door rattled and the door shook as the policeman tried it. The girl pressed her hand against her mouth. The rattling stopped and the constable passed by. Mannering said: “Don’t raise your voice.” He opened her bag again, took out the purse and looked inside; there were some pound notes, folded tightly, some loose silver, and a Yale key.

“You can have these later.”

“Please—”

“If you want that policeman back, shout.”

She said: “I know nothing about it, nothing.”

“About what?” Mannering asked.

“You said there’d been a burglary.”

“Have you been here before tonight?”

“No, I wanted to see Mr. Bernstein. It—it doesn’t matter now, I must go. Don’t keep me here any longer.”

“Why? Don’t you want me to keep these letters?”

“Oh, I don’t care! Just let me go.”

He gave her back the bag and its contents.

She turned to the door and stretched out her hand towards the key, but he took her arm.

“I’ll do that.” He opened the door, using his handkerchief. She muttered thanks, and when he pulled the door wide, slipped out and hurried along the street.

 

Detective-Inspector Gordon was ginger-haired and freckled, with a big red mouth and a Roman nose. He was a tall, spindly man to whom police work was a mission. He looked at Mannering sourly and said: “So you’re here, are you?” Mannering didn’t answer. Gordon, at the top of the stairs, looked into the now brightly lighted room where Bernstein lay dead, and where two of his men were taking photographs. He pushed past Mannering, who followed him.

Gordon’s pale grey eyes looked searchingly round the room – everywhere, it seemed, except at Bernstein. Then he turned his head and glared at Mannering. “Did you move him?”

“Yes.”

“Why will you always stick your nose in? It oughtn’t to have been moved. Let’s have an answer—why?”

“I thought I might bring him round.”

“You thought! You’ll think yourself into jail one of these days. Did you kill him?”

Mannering said: “Isn’t it obvious? There’s one dead jewel-merchant, and I’m another with a reputation that’s dynamite. Of course I killed him.” He couldn’t hold his temper in check.

Gordon growled: “You’re too smart.”

“That’s an improvement on not being smart enough.”

“You can wait outside.”

Mannering went to a chair, beside which was a pile of books, and sat down. Gordon tightened his lips, looked as if he were going to order him out, then turned to his men. There were four in the room. Two were measuring the distance between Bernstein’s body and the wall and the desk, using an ordinary household tape measure. The photographers were folding their camera. They stood it against the wall and began to search. Mannering toyed with the books at his side, letting the leaves flutter through his fingers. The routine was boring; the police took it as a matter of course. Men kept breathing on shiny surfaces to see if prints showed up, smothering places where they did with black graphite which they applied with a small camel-hair brush, then leaving it and searching for other prints. Gordon himself sat at the desk and opened drawer after drawer.

When he pulled the top right-hand drawer open Mannering said: “He usually kept a gun in there.”

“If I want information I’ll ask for it.”

“What’s got under your skin, Gordon?”

“You always get under my skin. You amateurs who think you’re smart are a pain in the neck. And you’re the biggest pain. How long after you found the body did you send for us?”

“About twenty minutes.”

“That was nineteen too long.”

“If I’d thought I could bring Bernstein round it would have been a couple of hours.” Mannering let the pages flutter, then shifted the book and picked up another. He knew Bernstein had secret hiding-places in some of those.

“Know what the killer was after?”

“If you want me to guess, I will.”

“All right, guess.”

“Jacob had the Diamond of Tears—known as the Tear. Even you may have heard of it. I telephoned him about it tonight and promised to call him later. He didn’t answer the second call and I came round to see if he was all right.”

“Why shouldn’t he have been?”

“Because he didn’t answer an expected telephone call.”

“How did you get in?”

“The murderer had opened the door for me.”

Gordon stopped taking oddments out of the desk and piling them up in front of him, leaned back in his chair, stuck a thumb in the armhole of his waist-coat, and said: “Listen, Mannering, you were found on enclosed premises with the body of a murdered man. You had a chance to slip out and hide anything you lifted. We can hold you for that.”

“I can tell you twenty other ways you can make a fool of yourself,” said Mannering. The pages of the second book fluttered smoothly through his fingers as he watched the Yard man. “But go ahead, hold me. That will teach me to send for the police when a friend of mine has been murdered.”

“Friend.” Gordon sneered the word.

“Yes. And I choose my own.”

Gordon lit a cigarette and flicked the match across the room; it fell at Mannering’s feet.

“I asked you how you got in here.”

“And I told you. The murderer opened the door for me. If he wasn’t the murderer I’ll eat my words.”

“You saw him?” Gordon jumped up from the desk. “Why didn’t you say so?”

“Because his face was masked and his hat pulled low over his eyes. And he kicked me before I knew what was coming. All I can tell you is that he was on the tall side, five ten or eleven, well-built, wearing dark clothes and a black Homburg. I gave the details to the constable two minutes after I spoke to him, and presumably they’re going the rounds. Do you want me here any longer?”

Gordon growled: “Yes.” He went out of the room, and Mannering picked up the third book and put it on his lap; the pages turned smoothly.

The police were working quietly, no one else took any notice of him. Downstairs, Gordon’s voice was raised, hectoring the constable.

Mannering picked up the fourth book. There were a hundred books in this room and he had no reason to think he would find a hiding-place in any of the first few which came to hand.

The pages stuck.

Gordon came back, scowling. Mannering slid his forefinger between the pages, and touched the soft texture of cotton wool.

“Are you keeping anything back?” Gordon demanded.

“What should I keep back?”

“We can never tell, with you,” Gordon said. “Are you sure Bernstein had the Tear on the premises?”

“Yes.” Through the cotton wool Mannering felt something hard. The Tear? Or another jewel? He let the pages fall flat again, and kept the book on his knees while Gordon went to the safe; the keys were in the lock.

“Did Bernstein keep a record of what he had here?”

“I think so. In a little black loose-leaf book.”

“See if you can see it on the desk, will you?” asked Gordon, and began to take the jewel-cases out of the safe. Mannering left the book on the chair and went to the desk, but he wasn’t interested in the little black book. What should he do if he found the Tear? Hand it over? It would be held until Jacob’s will was proved. Eventually the Tear would be sold, presumably at a public auction.

A man – or woman – wanted it badly.

Bernstein had told him that he was to have a visitor about the diamond; little doubt that the visitor had come and killed him but – had he found the Tear? If not – could it be used to trap the murderer?

He found the little black book and took it to Gordon, who gripped Mannering’s arm without warning, looked straight into his eyes, and demanded: “Who was the girl? Out with it—who was the girl?”