Read i 16b0d473103b6aa5 Online
Authors: Adena
evenings of Wednesday the 25th or Thursday the 26th, notice anything or anyone unusual?”
The charwoman shook her head. “Nothin’, bar Frau Kronk speaking civil for once, which
is a nine days’ wonder I’m sure, never having known it happen—”
“Who is Frau Kronk?”
“The woman who does the rooms at the end of this passage.”
“Does she come in here?”
“What? Into my rooms? To see if I done ’em properly like? Not-something-likely. Know
what I’d do to her if she did?”
Before Klaus could stop her, she told him. He shuddered, mopped his brow, and tried
again.
“What I want to know is this. Did you, or did you not, see anything or anyone unusual in
this room on the two nights I have mentioned?”
She paused for thought. “No, bar the electricians makin’ even more mess than usual.”
“Electricians?”
“Putting in wires for a ‘lectric fire in ‘ere for fear Lord High What’s-’is-name gets cold
toes, pore dear.”
“Speak civilly of your superiors or you will regret it. Anything else?”
“Ho, speak civil—”
“Anything else?”
“No.”
“Go. Get out. Hop it. Buzz off, and don’t come back. Merciful heavens,” said poor
Lehmann, wiping his forehead, “I didn’t know there were such women. What a—well, never
mind. Now, about those electricians.”
Upon inquiry it transpired that Herr Schwegmann had successfully applied to have an
electric fire installed in his office, and the work was being done by two electricians. One was a
permanent employee of the War Office who looked after the lighting and was absolutely above
suspicion, the other had been sent by the firm supplying the electric fire in question. It was the
duty of the War Office employee not only to assist the other man technically as might be
required, but also to keep watch on him to see that he did not do anything irregular or pry into
what did not concern him. The stranger was not to be left alone for a moment within the sacred
precincts.
“Oh,” said Lehmann. “Sounds all right, doesn’t it? Can I see these two fellows?”
“Certainly. Heller is on the premises, I’ll send him in to you. The other shall be sent for.”
“No,” said Lehmann thoughtfully, “don’t send for him yet, I’d like to talk to Heller first.
Does he know there’s anything missing?”
“I shouldn’t think so, but I should hate to swear to it. The whole affair has been treated as
very secret and confidential, but you’ve no idea how news flies round in a big office like this. No
one, of course, ever talks, but you’d think the walls ooze it out. Most extraordinary.”
“I expect so. Let me have the other fellow’s name and address, will you? Thanks, now if I
might see Heller?”
Heller came in, a capable-looking workman with an honest face. “Tell me,” said
Lehmann, “you were working in Herr Schwegmann’s room on the second floor on Wednesday
and Thursday nights this week, were you not?”
“Yes, sir. We was puttin’ in an electric fire, and as there was no points near the floor we
was takin’ out the skirtin’-boards and runnin’ the wire behind them. We’ve done now, sir.”
“So I see, and a very neat job too. Are there any more jobs like that to be done just now?”
“Yes, sir, Herr Britz, on the floor above, wanted another put in his room, so it seemed
best to do both jobs at once while Hauser was still with us. We start up there to-night.”
“Who’s Hauser?”
“The man the Elektrische Gesellschaft sent with their fittin’s. They won’t guarantee ‘less
their own people fit them.”
“I see. Now tell me, was there any trouble of any sort on either Wednesday or Thursday
night? Anything unusual?”
“No, sir. Excuse me, might I ask if there’s anythin’ gone wrong?”
“There is a little trouble, but it is in no way connected with you. I have to question
everyone who was in these rooms then, but there is nothing for you to fear.”
“Thank you, sir. No, nothing went wrong bar the fuse blowing. That’s the second time
that fuse has gone in three days, there’s a short somewheres on this floor. Devil of a job—beg
pardon, sir—awkward job to find a short sometimes. Might be anywhere in the circuit.”
“What happened then?”
“I reported it, sir, and the firm who did the wirin’ must come and look for it. I haven’t the
instruments; besides, it comes under their guarantee.”
“Yes, exactly. What happened on Thursday night—was it Thursday night? The night
before, then, when the fuse went?”
“All these lights went out and we was left in the dark. I says—well, I won’t tell you what
I says, but I told Hauser it was that fuse again and he’d better hang on while I went and replaced
it. So he said all right and off I went.”
“Leaving him alone in the dark?”
“Yes, sir. I had a torch, he hadn’t.”
“How long were you away?”
“Quarter of an hour, sir, quite. You see, there was no fuse wire in the box on this floor,
I’d used it up when it blew before. So I had to go down to my store in the basement to get it and
then fit it in. Took some time, all that.”
“Of course. What was Hauser doing when you came back?”
“Nothin”. Just sittin’ where I’d left him. Strictly speakin’, I shouldn’t have left him
accordin’ to the rules. I ought to have took him all round with me trailin’ about after fuse wire,
but who would?”
“Exactly, who would? Especially as he was all in the dark. How did you know he hadn’t
a torch?”
“He said so, sir.”
“I see. Thank you, Heller, that’ll do.”
Otto Hauser, the Elektrische Gesellschaft’s fitter, had a room in a small house in the
poorer quarter of Berlin, and while he was out that night putting in the second electric fire for the
chilly Herr Britz, there came two callers to his lodgings. A woman opened the door, asking who
was there, but shrank back into the passage when she got the answer, “Police.”
“Which is Hauser’s room?” asked Lehmann.
“First back.”
“Stay there till I come down again. Come with me, Muller.”
They went upstairs and Lehmann turned the door-handle.
“Locked,” he said. “Open this door, Muller.”
Muller bent over the keyhole, there came a few clicking sounds, and the door opened.
Inside the room the only locked receptacle was a suitcase under the bed. “Muller!” and the suit-
case also opened.
“Stand outside the door, will you, to make sure no one comes near,’” said Lehmann, and
started on the suit-case as soon as he was alone. There was a flat parcel at the bottom.
“This is too easy,” murmured Lehmann, untying the string. “Either this fellow’s a
complete novice, or this is only a photo of his best girl, or some poisonous reptile will leap out
and bite me and I shall have only time to utter a hoarse, strangled cry before I—ah!”
He drew out a War Office folder containing some correspondence, two or three pages of
close typescript and half a dozen engineer’s drawings of a globular object. Under these there was
a neatly written copy of the typing and four unfinished tracings of the drawings. There was also
some spare tracing-paper, enough to finish the job.
“I see,” said Lehmann. “We make a copy and then replace the original after having, as I
suspect, arranged another short in the War Office electric wiring. Quite good so far, Otto, but
you do want some hints about putting your work tidily away. Since there isn’t a chimney I
should have looked for a loose board under the carpet, Otto, and I think somehow I should have
found one. By this means, Otto, my boy, I should continue to live longer than you look like
doing.”
He replaced the papers precisely as they were in the packet, tied the string with the same
knots and repacked the suit-case.
“I hate to interrupt an artist in the middle of a master-piece, and really, Otto, you do copy
quite nicely. So I think you shall be permitted to finish it before I gather you in. I should think
you’d do the other drawings to-morrow.”
Lehmann opened the door and told Muller to relock the case. “There’s nothing here yet,”
he said, “but I might want to have another look tomorrow. I’m not quite satisfied somehow. Lock
the door while I go and speak to the lady of the house.”
He went downstairs to find the woman still standing exactly where he had left her.
“What’s your name?” and she told him.
“You know who we are, don’t you?”
“Police,” she whispered.
“That’s right. Why are you frightened by the police?”
“I’m not.”
“I think you are. Now, listen. No one has been here to-night, not even the police, and no
one has been anywhere near your lodger’s room. Do you understand?”
“Y-yes.”
“If you forget all about the police I will forget about you, but if your lodger hears one
word, one hint, about this, I shall remember you at once and come back to see why you are so
frightened of the police. Then I shall find that out too, and you wouldn’t like that, would you?”
She did not answer, but Lehmann appeared to be satisfied, for he nodded at her and went
out with Muller, shutting the door behind them. On the following night Otto Hauser was arrested
as he reached home after finishing the second job at the War Office. The missing papers were
found intact in his suit-case, but the Chief of Police made no mention of any copies although he
had searched the premises himself. It is hardly necessary to add that Hauser didn’t mention them,
either.
The Chief of Police went home that night with the uplifted heart which rewards a duty
well done; before he went to his office in the morning he wrote out a brief message and took it
along to Reck’s room.
“Wake up and take notice,” he said. “Half-past eight of a lovely summer’s morning and
you’re still snoring? Wake up.” He threw the curtains back, pulled up the blinds and flung both
windows wide open. “My hat, what a fug. I don’t wonder you’re always thirsty.”
“Oh, go away,” said Reck indistinctly, because he was burying his face in the pillow.
“Can’t a man have a little peace without your bursting in at dawn with your horrible League of
Youth ideas about air and sun and all that rot? You’ll be expecting me to take cold baths next.”
“Couldn’t be done,” said Hambledon unkindly. “When you hopped in there’d be a loud
fizz and the water would boil. Now then, Reck, that’s enough joking. I want this message coded
and sent off to-night.”
“One of these nights,” said Reck defiantly, “one of those extra superchromium-plated
American cars with a wireless set in them will come cruising down this street at 3 a.m. full of
bright young things on their way home from a party, and when they find they’re completely
deafened by a spark transmitter at close range somebody will tell somebody about it. Then
somebody will begin to think, and one day somebody will come—”
“ ‘My heart is sair,’” hummed Tommy Hambledon, “ ‘I daurna tell, my heart is sair for
somebody.’”
“Yes,” said Reck bitterly, “and the last somebody will probably be me. But you’d better
be careful of me, you know.”
“Why?”
“Because the code isn’t written down and I’ve no intention of writing it. You won’t kill
the goose that lays the golden—”
“Pips. Cheer up, old goose, I’ll look after you.”
The message ran: “Agent carrying current number La Vie Parisienne and examining
death of Charlemagne Kaisersaal Aachen Town Hall Monday Sept. 1st at 3 p.m. will exchange
copy with friendly tourist to advantage.”
Ginsberg, ex-trunk-maker’s assistant, was justly proud of the fact that he was sometimes
selected to do a little job for German Intelligence, though he was only an undistinguished
member of the S.A. Usually the work consisted only of secreting papers in travellers’ luggage for
transmission to our clever agents in foreign countries, but this time it was different and rather
more exciting. He was actually to go and meet someone, and give him a copy of a highly
coloured French comic paper in exchange for a similar one which the stranger would be carrying.
There was something a little unusual about Ginsberg’s copy because the pages wouldn’t open,
but he was told he could read the one he would receive in exchange. Aachen Town Hall; though
he lived in Aachen he had never entered that building. A big room called the Kaisersaal with
pictures on the walls, one of a king dying.
Ginsberg stared at the frescoes with round eyes, very fine pictures no doubt, but hardly in
his line, and a stranger with a colorful periodical under his arm seemed entertained by the
German’s puzzled stare.
“Wonderful works, aren’t they?” said the stranger.
“I suppose so,” said Ginsberg. “I was told they was worth seein’, so I came.”
“Do you like them now you’ve seen them?”
“Very fine, no doubt, but I must say I like somethin’ a bit more lively, myself.”
“Something more like this,” said the stranger with a laugh, indicating his paper. “I see
you’ve got one too.”
“Yes,” said Ginsberg, “but mine’s an old one, I had it given me. I expect you’ve seen it.”
“Let’s look. No, I haven’t. I’ve done with this, would you care to have it?”
“Let’s swap, then, if you’d care to?”
So the affair was neatly arranged, and Ginsberg walked out of the Town Hall naturally
pleased with himself. He was, therefore, proportionately horrified when on returning to barracks