Could she â fool him?
“If you give me any trouble,” the man said, “I'll shoot you in the back.”
She closed her eyes for a second, then led the way to the door of Wilfred's study. She thrust it open and stepped forward into pitch darkness.
“Stop!”
She stopped dead.
“Put on the light,” the man ordered.
She put on the light.
“Now go into the middle of the room, and don't turn round until I say so.”
She took a long time to reach the middle of the small room, a study-cum-library â Wilfred's âlittle den'. Books lined the wall, a big desk was in the window, there were two armchairs, light oak panelling.
“Go to the safe,” the man ordered.
It was in a corner, encased in an oak cabinet. She drew within a yard of it.
“It'sâlocked,” she said.
“Open it,” he ordered, and something dropped on the floor just in front of her; Wilfred's key case. She raised her hands, and half turned, in sudden realisation.
“You've got hisâ”
The man stepped forward and struck her on the side of the head with his gun. Her head whirled, she staggered back, and he struck her again.
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The telephone bell rang in Roger West's Chelsea home, and he stretched out his hand for it. His wife, sitting on a pouffe in front of the dying fire, shook her head slowly and deliberately, moved forward, and put her hand on the instrument before he could lift it.
“No,” she said.
“Yes,” said West.
“Emphatically, no. You aren't in, darling.” Her eyes were filled with laughter. “Try it, this once.”
“Impossible. It's half-past twelve.”
“Darling,
you're
impossible.” She pulled the receiver away and put it to her ear, and her eyes mocked West; she was gay and happy. “Hallo, who is that?”
“Scotland Yard speaking. Is Chief Inspector West there, please?”
“I'm afraid he isn't,” said Janet in a sweet voice. “He's out with his wife, and I think they'll be
very
late.”
“Do you know where they are, please?”
“I'm afraid not,” said Janet.
“I see, Miss. Will you ask Mr. West to call the Yard as soon as he comes in?”
“Oh, I
will!'
said Janet, and put the receiver back. “I don't think! See how easy it is, darling? You're too soft. They always ring you first because they know you'll turn out at all hours; now they'll have to find someone else.”
She leaned forward, looking up into his face. She was slightly flushed from the fire, her dark hair tumbled to her shoulders in unruly waves, she wore a dressing-gown, waisted and with padded shoulders â a gay flowered creation, open at the neck. She also wore a pale blue night-dress. The mischief was still in her eyes.
“Won't they?” she insisted.
“And I shall be reported in the morning for not being on call,” said Roger lazily.
“As if that matters. Take me to bed, darling.”
“Later.” West leaned forward and kissed the tip of her nose. He was a handsome man in the late thirties, fair-haired, grey-eyed, and looking younger than his years, absurdly young to be a Chief Inspector. “For this, you will dial Whitehall 1212 and tell them that I've just come in, andâ”
“Never,” said Janet.
“Now,” insisted Roger.
“
I'm
going to bed,” said Janet, stifled a yawn, and stood up. “Iâ”
Roger jumped up, caught her in a bear hug that left her breathless, then took her right wrist and placed her hand on the telephone. He stood with his arm round her, and their cheeks were close together. She laughed, and picked up the telephone. He let her go.
“Monster,” she said. “Darling, how many years is it before you can retire?”
“About fifteen.”
“Can't you resign and get a
real
job?”
“I'm not fitted for real jobs.”
“Once a policeman always a policeman,” said Janet, and suddenly frowned. “All right, sweet, I'll be good.” She dialled the Yard. “Hallo? ⦠Someone called Mr. West just now; he's come back.”
Roger took the telephone.
“West here.”
“Inspector Sloan would like a word with you, sir,” said the operator, “if you'll please hold on.”
“Who is it?” asked Janet.
“Bill Sloan.”
“He
ought
to know better,” said Janet. “Darling, do you honestly like being called out at midnight?”
“I love it,” said Roger. “Life's long dream ⦠Hallo, Bill?”
He listened.
Janet watched him, saw his faint smile disappear, a frown replace it. He was absurdly handsome and absurdly precious to her, and of late he had seldom been called out at night. She couldn't complain. And Sloan wouldn't call him unless it were urgent.
He said: “Yes, I'll go round.”
He put down the receiver, and Janet made a face, but stopped when she saw his expression.
“Is it bad?”
“Nasty. A woman attacked and knocked about, her small son found her. Not far from here, eitherâMerrick Street. I'll be back as soon as I can.”
When he'd gone Janet locked and bolted all the doors and made a tour of the windows.
Â
A policeman on duty outside Number 7 Merrick Street saluted Roger West. The front door was open, light shone out, several people were near the gate. Another constable was in the porch. Men were talking upstairs. Roger hurried up, and saw the tall, bulky form of Detective Inspector Bill Sloan, the portly figure of Malby, a police-surgeon, at the foot of a bed. He went into the big, well-furnished bedroom with twin beds. A woman lay on one, with her head bandaged, her eyes open and very bright.
“Don't question her again tonight,” the police-surgeon said. He was an ugly man, with broad features and full lips, bushy grey eyebrows and a habit of closing one eye. “I've sent for a nurse.”
Roger grunted.
“She's given me chapter and verse,” Sloan said.
“Description?”
“Not much good. A tallish, lean man.”
“Listen,” said Malby. “You can talk about this in the other room.”
The woman lay staring blankly at Roger, but did not seem to be interested in him. She was easy on the eye. Her face wasn't injured, and Malby wouldn't allow her to stay here if she were seriously hurt.
Roger turned and went out, and Malby said: “There's one thing about you, Roger; you will take a hint. The woman's worried out of her witsâwas before this happened. And she might collapse under pressure. I must be off, I need some sleep.”
He bustled down the stairs, and Sloan led the way into the study.
Here, three men were working, two looking for finger-prints, one sitting at a desk with some rough drawings in front of him; drawings of the position in which the woman had been found. Sloan talked briskly. The child, Peter, who was now with neighbours, had been restless, woken up and called for his mother and, not hearing her reply, had gone to find her. He'd seen her lying unconscious in front of the safe, bleeding from a wound in the head. He'd run, screaming, and neighbours had heard him.
“What time?” asked Roger.
“Just after twelveâI didn't lose any, calling you.”
“It's nearly one,” Roger said. “What's the family's name?”
“Arlen.”
“Husband?”
“It's a funny business,” Sloan said. “She says he is usually home by eight; she was going to call us at midnight, but the burglar arrived just before. He had Arlen's keys, and threw them at her, told her to open the safe. Then he hit her. I've a call out for the husband and his carâa new Austin Sheer line. Arlen is the Southern sales representative for the Spark Engineering Companyâdoing very well, obviously. He covers London and the South, never stays away at night without giving her warning, and seldom stays away anywhere. He was so regular that she began to feel worried when he was an hour late, but didn't care to call us. She says he must have been held up on the road and his keys stolen.”
“Could be.” Roger fingered his chin. “Where was he today?”
“Brighton, Horsham and Guildford.”
“Sheerlines aren't two a penny,” Roger said.
“Oh, we're checking.”
“Anything found here?”
“No dabs,” said Sloan. “The man wore gloves. He couldn't have been here more than twenty minutes, but cleared the safe out.”
“Much there?”
“Several thousand pounds' worth of her jewels, and some moneyâshe doesn't know how much, but not a great deal.”
“And Malby says she was worried out of her wits,” said Roger thoughtfully.
“About her husband, of course.”
“Because he was an hour or two late?”
“Well, if he was usually promptâ”
“Forget it,” said Roger. “Did she tell anyone else about Arlen being late?”
“She hasn't said so. I started to ask her, and Malby broke in.”
“There's time,” said Roger, heavily.
The telephone bell rang. There was an instrument on the desk, and as Roger went to it, Sloan said: “There's an extension downstairs.”
Roger picked this one up. “Hallo.”
There was a pause, and then a man said: “Is thatâis Mrs. Arlen there?”
“Who is that, please?”
There was another pause, before the man asked abruptly:
“Are you the police?”
“Yes.”
“Oh, lord!” The man rang off.
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The fact that the burglar had Arlen's keys was the one unusual factor. Roger refused to jump to the obvious conclusion, but arranged for a special watch to be kept on the roads. He had finished at Merrick Street by half-past two, and by then Mrs. Arlen was sleeping under a drug given her by her own doctor, who had arrived soon after Roger. The nurse â a policewoman â was with her. Neighbours volunteered the information that the servants were seldom in on Wednesday nights; confirmed that it was exceptional for Arlen to be home late.
By three o'clock Roger was back at Bell Street.
Janet was asleep; she didn't stir until he got into bed beside her, then gave a little satisfied grunt and went straight off to sleep again. He didn't go off quickly. He hadn't seen the child Peter, but whenever a child was involved, he was on edge. His own two boys, Scoopy and Richard, were sleeping in their small rooms; when children were affected, the man as well as the policeman was touched. Arlen might have been attacked and robbed, or might simply have been careless with his keys. Nothing he yet knew suggested that Arlen was careless by nature.
Everything was in hand; he went over the routine in his mind.
By the morning details of the stolen jewels would be circulated. All the Home Counties police were alerted for Arlen and the car. He would get a report on Arlen's movements on the previous day as soon as he reached the office; a visit to his employers would be one of the early jobs. The discovering of apparently unrelated facts, the vast mass of information which was mostly unimportant but would conceal a few things that mattered â oh, it was well in hand. There was nothing to keep him awake, but he couldn't sleep.
It wasn't often a case began to prey on his mind so early.
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The telephone, at his bedside, woke raucously to life and also roused him. He blinked. Janet wasn't by his side. The boys were talking gaily, and it was broad daylight. He heard the door open and Janet come in, saying: “Why
must
they call now?” He stretched out his hand for the telephone, and she took it first, but wasn't playing this time.
“Mrs. West speaking.”
Roger watched her. She hadn't been up long, and still looked sleepy and untidy. Her face was pale, because she had on no make-up. The massive figure of Martin, called Scoopy, then nearly seven, stood in the doorway, watching her, a thumb at his mouth; the habit was almost incurable. Richard, more than a head shorter and much slighter, was trailing behind Scoopy, blue eyes looking huge. They were both of an age when they were realising the significance of the fact that their father was a detective.
Janet said: “Yes, he's here.”
She gave Roger the receiver, and turned to shoo the boys out. They scurried off, staring over their shoulders, and she closed the door and went across to the kettle, now singing on the gas-ring in the fireplace.
It was Detective Inspector Evans, of the Yard.
“They've found Arlen's body,” he said.
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Roger reached Merrick Street a little after twelve, was admitted by a policeman, and approached by a small, wiry man â an anxious man, who came from the back of the house.
He stopped when he saw Roger.
“I hoped it was Mr. Arlen,” he said. “Whoâ”
“Chief Inspector West,” said Roger. “You're one of the staff here, are you?”
“George Rickett, sir. Me and my wife look after Mr. and Mrs. Arlen. Is there any news?”
Roger said: “Not yet.” The door was still open, and a tall man wearing a raincoat and a dilapidated trilby stood near the porch; a man with remarkable ears and a vivid imagination, the star crime reporter of the
Daily Echo.
“Close the door, will you?”
The constable began to close it.
“Anything for me, Handsome?” called out the newspaperman.
“Later,” Roger waved, and the door closed.
“It's a terrible thing to have happened,” said Rickett. He had a pale face, a thin neck with prominent veins, and a long, pointed nose. “My wife's very upset by it, Mr. West. To think it happened when we were out.
She says it's my fault, we oughtn't to have slept out; but
we
didn't know Mr. Arlen wasn't coming home, did we?”
“No,” said Roger. “Tell her not to worry.” He turned to the policeman as Rickett moved off. “Who else is here, officer?”
“Nurse Deacon, sir, still with Mrs. Arlen.”
“Go and tell her I want a word with her, will you?”
Roger followed the constable upstairs, and waited in the doorway of the study. The desk chair was facing the door, behind the desk. Instead of seeing it empty, he saw it as it would have been had Arlen been sitting there. A rather plump, biggish man with a round face, curly hair well brushed, dressed in dark grey. Roger knew what he looked like because of the photographs he'd seen here, not because he had been able to get a clear picture of the face. There had been two shots, fired at close quarters.
The nurse, tall and bony, came out quickly.
“Is Mrs. Arlen all right to leave for a few minutes?”
“Oh, yes, sir.”
“No relatives turned up yet?”
“The nearest are at Newbury and St. Albans. They're not here yet.”
“Friends?”
“Several have inquired, but I said the doctor had ordered complete rest.”
“Good. Has she said anything?”
“
Very
little,” said Nurse Deacon. “It's a bit funny, sir.”
“How?”
“It's not easy to explain,” said the nurse, whose face was tanned, as if she had just come off holiday. She had keen, intelligent grey eyes; her dark hair was pushed rigidly beneath her nurse's cap. “She's very worried.”
“How?”
“I'd say that she
fears
the worst, sir. Almost as if she knew. I don't want to make too much of it, but she isn't ill; she should be much more herself by now, butâwell, her doctor says it's shock.”
“You've seen plenty of shock cases,” said Roger.
“It
could
be shock.”
“I see,” said Roger. “When do you go off duty?”
“Any time now, sir; my relief's due; but I waited to have a word with you.”
“Thanks. Make a detailed report and let me have it as quickly as you can, will you?”
He went towards the bedroom, opened the door and stepped quickly inside.
Mrs. Arlen glanced at him, and there was more interest in her expression than he'd seen last night. She was very pale, and her eyes were shadowed now. He closed the door firmly and walked towards her. She watched him closely.
“You're the Chief Inspector, aren't you?” Her voice was faint.
“Yesâmy name's West.”
“Is there any news?”
It wasn't the first time he'd had to tell a woman he didn't know that her husband was dead; and it wasn't the first time he had wondered, before telling her, whether she already knew, or guessed.
“Some news, Mrs. Arlen. Did you tell anyone else that your husband was late last night?”
“Iâ”
“Did you?”
“No!”
He thought she was lying. She was frightened, and the nurse had been quick to see it; was she frightened of what might be discovered?
“We shall deal with everything in strict confidence, Mrs. Arlen, but we must know the truth.” Roger drew nearer the bed. She sat up a little straighter, staring at him; he thought that she already had an intimation of the news he brought. Did she know? “I'm really sorry. I've bad news for you.”
Her hands clutched the sheet; she didn't speak.
“We've found your husband,” he said.
She closed her eyes, and he thought that she was going to faint; yet he hadn't said that they'd found the body. His manner was enough to unnerve her, but hers wasn't a normal reaction, but that of someone who was frightened.
“Murdered.” He flung the word out.
It sounded brutal; he was being brutal. He watched her closely, and saw the way she sat rigid, as if she had been prepared for the blow. She didn't open her eyes for a long time. After a while, the tense way in which she clutched the sheet eased, and she leaned back.
“The murderer obviously stole his keys,” Roger said. “Do you know of anyone who would want to kill your husband, Mrs. Arlen?”
She opened her eyes. “No!” She spoke too abruptly, too emphatically, and there was no easing in her fear. It had not been fear of the news she would get, but of something else. “No, of course not! He'd no enemies.” When Roger didn't speak, she went on hoarsely: “Why should anyone want to kill him?
Why?
Unless that manâ”
“Did Mr. Arlen keep anything except jewels and money and his securities in the safe?”
“I don't know.”
“Did you know everything about his business life?”
“Ifâ”
“Did you?”
“No!”
“Didn't he talk much about it?”
“No, he said it ought to be kept out of the home, heâ”
“So you don't really know if he had any enemies,” said Roger.
“No! No, that's it.” She was suddenly and wildly anxious to make that point. “I was thinking of his friendsâsocial friends; I don't know his business friends!” She was clutching at a straw, to save herself from the deep waters of fear; the fear that still remained. “It'sâdreadful,” she said.
“I'm more than sorry to have to tell you about it.”
“Was heâin pain?”
“No, it happened very quickly.”
“Thank God for that,” she said. “Heâbut
who did
it? Who killed him?”
“That's what we have to find out,” Roger said quietly. “Have you friends or relatives to come and help you? Children? I know about Peter, that's all. You'll need company, Mrs. Arlen.”
“IâI've a sister, in Manchester,” said Muriel Arlen. “She'll come. IâI'll telephone her. My daughters are at school; theyâ” She broke off, and caught her breath.
“Tell me the name of the school, and I'll talk to the head mistress,” said Roger, now all friendly. “That will save them from discovering it from the newspapers. I'd advise you to let them stay where they are for today, anyhow, and probably until it's all over.”
“You'reâvery kind. They're at Saldean, near Brighton.” She closed her eyes again. “Will youâask my sister to come? She's at ⦔
Roger made notes.
“You're very kind,” Mrs. Arlen repeated in a husky voice. “It's so hard toâto understand. I
can't
understand it.” She was being too emphatic again. He judged that she was an intelligent woman; and judged, also, that Nurse Deacon had been wrong: she was suffering from shock. It prevented her from being herself; she was showing her fear too easily. And he'd increased the shock; it was a part of his job he didn't much like. He watched her dispassionately, and wondered what secrets she was hiding. “
Will
youâspeak to my sister?”
“Yes, of course. And until she arrives, I'll have a nurseâ”
“I don't need a nurse!”
“I think you'd better have one for the next few hours,” said Roger. “You don't want to overdo it. There's your son to tell.”
That went through her, as a knife; he could see the pain in her eyes.
“He must have some suspicion that there's plenty wrong already,” Roger said, and the tone of his voice was deceptively mild. “Heâ”
“You mustn't tell him!”
Roger said: “Oh.”
“I'm not being silly; you mustn't, he mustn't be told! He's not strong, his heartâand he was passionately fondâof his father. If it hadn't been forâ”
She broke off abruptly, and then turned her face away and began to cry. She sobbed wildly, trying to stifle the sound by burying her face in the pillow.
Roger watched her, still dispassionately, then went to the door. Another police nurse was standing on the landing. “Come in, and bring your note-book,” he whispered, and went back to the bedside. There was no slackening in that burst of crying for several minutes, but at last she was quiet.
Roger said: “I'm sorry, Mrs. Arlen, but you can't keep news of this kind away from Peter.”
“You must!” she cried.
“The investigation might go on for weeks, we may even have to question him.”
“No!” She sat up, and glared at him. Her eyes were red and the lids puffy, her cheeks wet, her lips quivered and her body shook. “No, you wouldn't be so cruel; not Peter. There's no need to talk to Peter.”
“We won't, if we can avoid it. It all depends on how much we find out without talking to him. Did you tell anyone else that your husband wasn't home last night?”
She didn't answer.
Roger shrugged. “I'm sorry, but we must know.”
He wondered if the job were going to be easy. There were indications here of a carefully planned murder, followed by a burglary to cover it up. It wouldn't be the first time that such plans went awry because one of the parties to it hadn't the nerve to go on. She was distraught. Malby was sure she had been worried the night before, the nurse was sure there was something exceptional on her mind. He could see that she was trying to think, was bitterly angry with herself for her collapse, was trying to retain her self-control. Yes, she showed all the signs of guilt.
He said abruptly: “Were you and Mr. Arlen happily married, Mrs. Arlen?”
She almost screamed: “Yes!” and couldn't have said “No” more clearly.
“I see. Mr. Arlen had no friends, close personal friends, whom you didn't know, I suppose?”
“Of course he didn't!” She should have said: “If I didn't know them, how can I tell you?” but she wasn't in a mood for logical thinking, and yet he sensed that once she had command of herself, she would be much more difficult to break down.
“Sure?”
“He wouldn't, heâhe had everything he wanted. Everything!”
“That's good,” said Roger. “If you've nothing with which to reproach yourself, you'll feel much better. I don't think he had any idea what was going to happen. Wellânot a great deal. I should say he was pretty badly scared for a while; he'd stopped to give someone a liftâthat's clearâand it happened soon afterwards. Was he the kind of man to give a lift to a stranger?”
“Heâno. Yes! Yes, he was very kind, heâ”
“Did he usually give lifts to strangers on the road?” Roger barked the question.
She didn't answer.
“He'd be much more likely to give a lift to someone he knew, wouldn't he?”
She kept silent.
Roger said: “Whom did you tell last night, Mrs. Arlen? It isn't any use pretending there was no one, I know there was. The sooner I know his name, the sooner everything will be cleared up. Who was it?”
She gasped: “Ralph wouldn't
kill;
he wouldn't
kill.
”
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