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"I?" exclaimed B. with a startled look. "Oh, I always drive with the blinds down now."
"Are any extra military coming in before Friday?" asked A.
"Yes, the Lancers from Hounslow. They come into the empty Albany Street Barracks to-night. Then I think that there are to be some extra infantry in Whitehall, from Aldershot. Cadman is seeing to all that."
"But you know that the Lancers are being drawn from Hounslow?" asked C.
with a meaning laugh.
"Yes, I know that," admitted B. "Why do you laugh, C.?"
C.'s only reply was to laugh again.
"I will tell you why he laughs," volunteered D. "He laughs, B., because the Lancers withdrawn from Hounslow to Regent's Park, Salt under arrest at Stafford, and the Monmouth colliers coming along the Bath road and pa.s.sing within a mile or two of Hanwood, represent the three angles of a very acute triangle."
"There is still Hampden," muttered B.
"Yes; what is going to happen to Hampden?" asked C., with a trace of his mordant amus.e.m.e.nt.
A., who was walking about the room aimlessly, stopped and faced the others.
"I'll tell you what," he exclaimed emphatically. "I said just now that I didn't like the idea of smuggling Salt away like this, and, although it may be advisable, I don't. But I wish to G.o.d that we had openly arrested the pair of them as traitors, and burned their diabolical store before every one's eyes three months ago."
"Ah," said D. thoughtfully, "it was too early then. Now it's too late."
"It may be too late to have its full effect," flashed out B., "but it won't be too late to make them suffer a bit along with our own people."
"Provided that the oil is burned," said D.
"Provided that no protection can be sent," remarked C.
"Provided that Salt is arrested," added A.
There was a knock at the door. It explained the att.i.tude of the four men in the room and their scattered conversation. They had been awaiting some one.
He came into the room and saluted, a powerfully-built man with "uniform"
branded on every limb, although he wore plain clothes then.
"Detective-Inspector Moeletter?" said B.
"Yes, sir," said the inspector, and stood at attention.
"You have the warrant?" continued B.
Moeletter produced it, and pa.s.sed it in for inspection. It was made out on the preceding day, signed by the Stipendiary Magistrate of Stafford, and it connected George Salt with Leslie Garnet by the link of Murder.
"When you applied for this warrant," said B., looking hard at the inspector, "you considered that you had sufficient evidence to support it?"
Moeletter looked puzzled for a moment, as though the question was one that he did not quite follow in that form. For a moment he seemed to be on the verge of making an explanation; then he thought better of it, and simply replied: "Yes, sir."
"At all events," continued B. hastily, "you have enough evidence to justify a remand? What are the points?"
"We have abundant evidence that Salt was in the neighbourhood about the time of the tragedy; that fact can scarcely be contested. Coming nearer, an old man, who had been hedging until the storm drove him under a high bank, saw a gentleman enter Garnet's cottage about half-past five.
Without any leading he described this man accurately as Salt, and picked out his photograph from among a dozen others. About an hour later, two boys, who were bird-nesting near Stourton Hill church, heard a shot.
They looked through the hedge into the graveyard and saw one man lying apparently dead on the ground, and another bending over him as though he might be going through his pockets. Being frightened, they ran away and told no one of it for some time, as boys would. Of course, sir, that's more than six months ago now, but the description they give tallies, and I think that we may claim a strong presumption of ident.i.ty taking into consideration the established time of Salt's arrival at Thornley."
"That is all?" said B.
"As regards ident.i.ty," replied the inspector. "On general grounds we shall show that for some time before his death Garnet had been selling shares and securities which he held, and that although he lived frugally no money was found in the remains of his house or on his person, and no trace of a banking account or other investment can be discovered. Then we allege that 'George Salt' is not the man's right name, although we have not been able to follow that up yet. He is generally understood to have been a sailor recently, and the revolver found beside the body was of a naval pattern. I should add that the medical evidence at the inquest was to the effect that the wound might have been self-inflicted, but that the angle was unusual."
B. returned the warrant to the inspector.
"That will at least ensure a remand for a week for you to continue your investigations?"
"I think so, sir."
"Without bail?"
"If it is opposed."
"We oppose it, then. Did you bring any one down with you?"
Inspector Moeletter had not done so. He had not been able to antic.i.p.ate what amended instructions he might receive in London, so he had thought it as well to come alone.
"For political reasons it is desirable that nothing should be known publicly of the arrest until you have your prisoner safely at Stafford,"
said B. "At present he is motoring in the southern counties. I have information that he will leave Farnham this afternoon between three and half-past and proceed direct to Guildford. Is there any reason why you should not arrest him between the two places?"
Inspector Moeletter knew of none.
"It will be preferable to doing so in either town from our point of view," continued B., "and it is not known whether he intends leaving Guildford to-night."
The inspector took out an innocent-looking pocket-book, whose elastic band was a veritable hangman's noose, and noted the facts.
"Is a description of the motor-car available?" he enquired.
B. picked up a sheet of paper. "It is a large car, a 30 H.P. Daimler, with a covered body, and painted in two shades of green," he read from the paper. "The number is L.N. 7246."
"I would suggest bringing him straight on in the car," said Moeletter.
"It would obviate the publicity of railway travelling."
B. nodded. "There is another thing," he said. "It is absolutely necessary to avoid the London termini. They are all watched systematically by agents of the League--spies who call themselves patriots. You will take the 7.30 train with your prisoner, but you will join it at Willesden. I will have it stopped for you."
"I shall need a man who can drive the motor to go down with me," the detective reminded him.
B. struck a bell. "Send Sergeant Tolkeith in," he said to the attendant.
Sergeant Tolkeith was apparently being kept ready in the next room, to be slipped at the fall of the flag, so to speak. He came in very smartly.
"You will remain with Inspector Moeletter while he is in London, and make all the necessary arrangements for him," instructed B. "I suppose that there are men at Scotland Yard available now who can drive every kind of motor?"