The Pit Prop Syndicate - BestLightNovel.com
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"Looks like it, sir. The man was shot."
"Shot? Anything known of the murderer?"
"Not much, I'm afraid, sir. He got clear away in Tottenham Court Road, as far as I can understand it. But you'll hear what the driver has to say."
Again the Inspector nodded, as he stepped up to the vehicle.
"Here's Dr. Newman," the sergeant continued, indicating an exceedingly dapper and well-groomed little man with medico written all over him. "He was the nearest medical man we could get."
Willis turned courteously to the other.
"An unpleasant evening to be called out, doctor," he remarked. "The man's dead, I understand? Was he dead when you arrived?"
"Yes, but only a very little time. The body was quite warm."
"And the cause of death?"
"Seeing that I could do nothing, I did not move the body until you Scotland Yard gentlemen had seen it, and therefore I cannot say professionally. But there is a small hole in the side of the coat over the heart." The doctor spoke with a slightly consequential air.
"A bullet wound?"
"A bullet wound unquestionably."
Inspector Willis picked up an acetylene bicycle lamp which one of the men had procured and directed its beam into the cab.
The corpse lay in the back corner seat on the driver's side, the head lolling back sideways against the cus.h.i.+ons and crus.h.i.+ng into a shapeless ma.s.s the gray Homburg hat. The mouth and eyes were open and the features twisted as if from sudden pain. The face was long and oval, the hair and eyes dark, and there was a tiny black mustache with waxed ends. A khaki colored waterproof, open in front, revealed a gray tweed suit, across the waistcoat of which shone a gold watch chain. Tan shoes covered the feet. On the left side of the body just over the heart was a little round hole in the waterproof coat Willis stooped and smelled the cloth.
"No blackening and no smell of burned powder," he thought. "He must have been shot from outside the cab." But he found it hard to understand how such a shot could have been fired from the populous streets of London.
The hole also seemed too far round towards the back of the body to suggest that the bullet had come in through the open window. The point was puzzling, but Willis pulled himself up sharply with the reminder that he must not begin theorizing until he had learned all the facts.
Having gazed at the gruesome sight until he had impressed its every detail on his memory, he turned to his a.s.sistant. "Get ahead with your flashlight, Kirby," he ordered. "Take views from all the angles you can.
The constable will give you a hand. Meantime, sergeant, give me an idea of the case. What does the driver say?"
"He's here, sir," the officer returned, pointing to a small, slight individual in a leather coat and cap, with a sallow, frightened face and pathetic, dog-like eyes which fixed themselves questioningly on Willis's face as the sergeant led their owner forward.
"You might tell me what you know, driver."
The man s.h.i.+fted nervously from one foot to the other.
"It was this way, sir," he began. He spoke earnestly, and to Willis, who was accustomed to sizing up rapidly those with whom he dealt, he seemed a sincere and honest man. "I was driving down Piccadilly from Hyde Park Corner looking out for a fare, and when I gets just by the end of Bond Street two men hails me. One was this here man what's dead, the other was a big, tall gent. I pulls in to the curb, and they gets in, and the tall gent he says 'King's Cross.' I starts off by Piccadilly Circus and Shaftesbury Avenue, but when I gets into Tottenham Court Road about the corner of Great Russell Street, one of them says through the tube, 'Let me down here at the corner of Great Russell Street,' he sez. I pulls over to the curb, and the tall gent he gets out and stands on the curb and speaks in to the other one. Then I shall follow by the three o'clock tomorrow,' he sez, and he shuts the door and gives me a bob and sez, 'That's for yourself,' he sez, 'and my friend will square up at the station,' he sez. I came on here, and when this here man opens the door," he indicated a porter standing by, "why, the man's dead. And that's all I knows about it."
The statement was made directly and convincingly, and Willis frowned as he thought that such apparently simple cases proved frequently to be the most baffling in the end. In his slow, careful way he went over in his mind what he had heard, and then began to try for further details.
"At what time did you pick up the men?" he inquired.
"About half past seven, or maybe twenty to eight"
"Did you see where they were coming from?"
"No, sir. They were standing on the curb, and the tall one he holds up his hand for me to pull over."
"Would you know the tall man again?"
The driver shook his head.
"I don't know as I should, sir. You see, it was raining, and he had his collar up round his neck and his hat pulled down over his eyes, so as I couldn't right see his face."
"Describe him as best you can."
"He was a tall man, longer than what you are, and broad too. A big man, I should call him."
"How was he dressed?"
"He had a waterproof, khaki color--about the color of your own--with the collar up round his neck."
"His hat?"
"His hat was a soft felt, dark, either brown or green, I couldn't rightly say, with the brim turned down in front."
"And his face? Man alive, you must have seen his face when he gave you the s.h.i.+lling."
The driver stared helplessly. Then he answered:
"I couldn't be sure about his face, not with the way he had his collar up and his hat pulled down. It was raining and blowing something crool."
"Did the other man reply when the tall one spoke into the cab?"
"Didn't hear no reply at all, sir."
Inspector Willis thought for a moment and then started on another tack.
"Did you hear a shot?" he asked sharply.
"I heard it, sir, right enough, but I didn't think it was a shot at the time, and I didn't think it was in my cab. It was just when we were pa.s.sing the Apollo Theater, and there was a big block of cars setting people down, and I thought it was a burst tire. 'There's somebody's tire gone to glory,' I sez to myself, but I give it no more thought, for it takes you to be awake to drive up Shaftesbury Avenue when the theaters are starting."
"You said you didn't think the shot was in your cab; why do you think so now?"
"It was the only sound like a shot, sir, and if the man has been shot, it would have been then."
Willis nodded shortly. There was something puzzling here. If the shot had been fired by the other occupant of the cab, as the man's evidence seemed to indicate, there would certainly have been powder blackening on the coat. If not, and if the bullet had entered from without, the other pa.s.senger would surely have stopped the car and called a policeman.
Presently he saw that some corroborative evidence might exist. If the bullet came from without the left-hand window must have been down, as there was no hole in the gla.s.s. In this case the wind, which was blowing from the north-west, would infallibly have driven in the rain, and drops would still show on the cus.h.i.+ons. He must look for them without delay.
He paused to ask the driver one more question, whether he could identify the voice which told him through the speaking tube to stop with that of the man who had given him the s.h.i.+lling. The man answering affirmatively, Willis turned to one of the plain clothes men.
"You have heard this driver's statement, Jones," he said. "You might get away at once and see the men who were on point duty both at the corner of Great Russell Street where the tall man got out, and in Piccadilly, where both got in. Try the hotels thereabouts, the Albemarle and any others you can think of. If you can get any information follow it up and keep me advised at the Yard of your movements."
The man hurried away and Willis moved over once more to the taxi. The a.s.sistant had by this time finished his flashlight photographs, and the inspector, picking up the bicycle lamp, looked again into the interior.
A moment's examination showed him there were no raindrops on the cus.h.i.+ons, but his search nevertheless was not unproductive. Looking more carefully this time than previously, he noticed on the floor of the cab a dark object almost hidden beneath the seat. He drew it out. It was a piece of thick black cloth about a yard square.