<h2 id="c11"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER X</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">IN WHICH DESMOND OKEWOOD FINDS CLUBFOOT IN STRANGE COMPANY</span></h2>
<p>“You’ve got this spy, Okewood, under
lock and key, Herr Doktor?”</p>
<p>The room was sparely lighted by a single
reading-lamp with a green shade, and its
sickly rays seemed to heighten the pallor of
the speaker’s face. He was a round-shouldered
man whose high cheek-bones and
slanting eyes betrayed his Mongol blood even
as his snuffling German jargon revealed his
race. He had a rabbit mouth, the upper lip
drawn up over long yellow teeth, and the
weakness of his chin was in part hidden by
a ragged fringe of reddish beard. He sat at
the desk, his whole body atwitch with some
nervous tic as he gnawed restlessly at his
fingers. In the burly apelike figure that
confronted him, with the relentless eyes beneath
their tufted brows, the cruel, savage
mouth and the heavy jowl, any one closely
acquainted with the dark ways of international
espionage would have recognized
the redoubtable Dr. Grundt, better known as
The Man with the Clubfoot.</p>
<p>Slowly Grundt opened and shut his great
hairy hand.</p>
<p>“I’ve got him—<i>there</i>, Mandelstamm!” he
said in a voice that purred with exultation.
“We are old, we are exiled; but we are not
a back number yet. In this last affair of
Sir Alexander Bannington’s report in which,
I confess, my customary good fortune failed
me, this cursed Okewood had odds of three to
one on his side. He thought he had me
cornered; but now he, not old Clubfoot, sits
in the trap.”</p>
<p>He chuckled savagely with a sound that
was almost a snarl.</p>
<p>“I think,” he added, “that our young
friend will not altogether relish his prospects
when he awakes from his long sleep!”</p>
<p>“You drugged him, hein?” asked the Jew.
There was something vulpine in the way he
lifted his long aquiline nose.</p>
<p>Clubfoot guffawed. “The neatest trick!
Max, whose performance as a Scotland Yard
detective was erstklassig—kolossal!—gave
him a whiff of chloroform just to keep him
quiet! And this poor Okewood believed he
was taking me off to Scotland Yard! Donnerwetter!”</p>
<p>He slapped his great thigh and laughed
uproariously. His companion’s mouth
twitched upwards at the corners displaying
another inch or two of dripping, yellow
fangs. It was like a fox’s grin if such a
phenomenon of natural history can be imagined.</p>
<p>“The Soviets find that spies, like meat,
don’t keep!” he softly lisped. “Why didn’t
you kill him, Herr Doktor?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” Grundt answered slowly, “because
I have other uses in view for our
enterprising young friend!”</p>
<p>Mandelstamm leant forward swiftly.
“Also doch!” he ejaculated.</p>
<p>“What Clubfoot promises he accomplishes,”
said Grundt, raising his voice menacingly.</p>
<p>“Of course, of course,” hastily agreed
<i>Tavarish</i> Mandelstamm, and slyly added:
“Only you didn’t secure the Bannington report,
did you, Herr Doktor?”</p>
<p>The blood slowly mounted in the other’s
swarthy face. “A mere miscalculation, my
friend! It was a trifling matter, anyhow,
and I have never been able to interest myself
in bagatelles. But this commission
of yours . . .” He glanced over
his shoulder and lowered his voice. “Do
you realize the task you’ve set me? Nein,
nicht wahr? Would it surprise you to learn
that within the past week the Foreign Office
has changed its codes? While the new ones
are being revised they are employing, for
Most Secret despatches, code 3A of the
Secret Service. You didn’t know that, did
you? Come closer! Hitherto, the working
of code 3A has been known to three persons
only—to the Chief of the British Secret Service,
to his confidential ciphering clerk, and”—he
dropped his voice to a whisper—“to
Major Desmond Okewood! . . .”</p>
<p>“Ach nein!” exclaimed the Russian admiringly,
cracking his knuckles. “With that
draft treaty in our hands . . .”</p>
<p>“<i>P-sst!</i>” warned Grundt, pointing at the
door.</p>
<p>A broad-shouldered man with a heavy
dark moustache stood on the threshold of
the room.</p>
<p>“What is it, Max?” asked Grundt.</p>
<p>“The Englishman is coming round, Herr
Doktor!”</p>
<p>Clubfoot looked at his watch. “Midnight!”
he said. “You did your work thoroughly,
Max!”</p>
<p>“One does what one can, Herr Doktor!”</p>
<p>“You and Heinrich will take it in turns to
guard the Englishman throughout the night.
You can give him food. But watch him, he’s
slippery. If he escapes . . .” He broke
off and glared at the other. “Go now and remember
what I say!”</p>
<p>Grundt turned to the Russian. “The Constantinople
courier is expected to leave
Calais for Dover by the afternoon boat.
Everything is prepared. If all goes well he
should be here soon after dark. Sleep well,
Mandelstamm! The draft treaty will be in
your hands by to-night!”</p>
<p>Limping heavily with his huge misshapen
foot, he hobbled briskly from the room.</p>
<p class="tb">Desmond Okewood was emerging painfully
from a long, incoherent dream. He
found his eyes fixed on an electric bulb caged
in steel bars, and set in the ceiling high above
his head. As he gazed, the light seemed to
come and go, to appear and vanish
again . . .</p>
<p>And then, with a jerk, he was fully conscious.
With a pang the memory of the
night came rushing back. The shame of his
position almost overwhelmed him. To think
that he, Desmond Okewood, had been deceived
by the common crooks’ trick of dressing
up confederates as detectives!</p>
<p>He looked about him. He was lying on a
couch in a bare and lofty room. Heavy
oaken shutters, secured with bars of iron
solidly padlocked, excluded every vestige of
daylight. He had no idea where he was or
what the time of day might be. When he
looked for his watch, he found that his
pockets had been emptied.</p>
<p>The house was wrapped in silence. Not a
sound came to him from without. He tried
to review the situation. His position was
desperate. Clubfoot would not spare him.
This time he was doomed beyond hope of
escape. A train of odd incidents from his
long battle of wits with the master spy came
crowding into his aching head . . .</p>
<p>Still drowsy from the drug, he must have
dropped off to sleep, for when next he opened
his eyes it was to find some one shaking his
arm. A fair-haired youth stood beside the
couch, his rather crafty face barred by a
long white scar. Desmond recognized Heinrich,
Clubfoot’s acolyte in many an exploit.</p>
<p>On the table stood a tray decked for a
meal.</p>
<p>“Anything you want you can have,” said
Heinrich, “as long as it doesn’t require cutting
with a knife. I’ve brought you some
minced chicken and a whiskey-and-soda
. . .”</p>
<p>“Where am I?” asked Desmond.</p>
<p>“My instructions,” retorted the youth
with military precision, “are to feed you.
Nothing more. I shall return in half an hour
for the tray . . .”</p>
<p>“Can’t I have a wash?” demanded Desmond.</p>
<p>The youth pointed to an oaken cabinet in
the corner. “You will find all you require
there!” he said. Then he left the room.</p>
<p>Hot water stood ready in a brass jug.
After he had washed and eaten, Desmond
felt his strength returning. When Heinrich
came to fetch the tray, he brought a cup of
coffee and a box of cigarettes.</p>
<p>“Quite a prison de luxe!” remarked Desmond
brightly.</p>
<p>“My orders are to make you comfortable!”
was the non-committal reply.</p>
<p>Each time the door opened, Desmond
noticed that a light burnt in the corridor.
He assumed, therefore, that it must be
evening. Consequently he must have slept
almost the round of the clock. The hours
dragged interminably on. He paced up and
down the room, smoking cigarettes, busy
with his thoughts. What had become of
Clubfoot? What was he waiting for? Why
didn’t he come in and finish it?</p>
<p>Slowly the numbing silence of the house,
the absence of any indication of time, the
artificial light, began to get on Desmond
Okewood’s nerves. This restriction on his
liberty was intolerable. He looked about for
a bell. There was none. He went to the
door—it was solid oak with no lock apparent
on the inside—and began to hammer it with
his fists and feet. He pounded until he was
tired. No one came.</p>
<p>He had fallen to striding up and down the
room again when suddenly the door opened.
Heinrich came in.</p>
<p>“Dr. Grundt is asking for you. Will you
come with me?” he said.</p>
<p>“Gladly,” retorted Desmond. “I’m particularly
anxious to have a word with the
Herr Doktor!”</p>
<p>“Don’t trouble to try to escape,” observed
the young man blandly as he held the
door for his prisoner. “Doors and windows
are barred and the house is closely guarded.
You’d only get hurt!”</p>
<p>The warning was spoken sincerely and
carried conviction. Desmond felt his heart
sink.</p>
<p>It could not yet be morning, Desmond
decided, as he followed his escort down a
broad corridor with windows shuttered and
barred like that of his room. They descended
a flight of steps to a small tiled hall,
lighted, like corridor and staircase, by artificial
light. From a door that stood ajar
came the murmur of voices. Heinrich ushered
his prisoner into a long low-ceilinged
room.</p>
<p>Four men were seated at the end of an
oval table, their faces indistinctly seen
through a thin haze of blue tobacco smoke
that drifted in the close air.</p>
<p>Grundt presided at the head of the board,
a round-shouldered, red-bearded Jew on his
right, a grossly plebeian-looking man with a
face the colour of suet, thin greyish hair
plastered across a shining bald pate, and a
great paunch, sprawling in the chair on his
left. Next to him was a middle-aged man
with a stiff grey beard and a stiff face who
sat bolt upright, his hands folded in his lap.</p>
<p>“Be seated, Major,” said Clubfoot cordially,
and pointed to a chair next to the Jew.
“Mr. Blund, the cigars are with you!”</p>
<p>The full, deep voice was courteous, even
genial, and a jovial smile played about the
full lips. Desmond took the proffered chair,
but waved aside the box of Partagas which
the fat man pushed in his direction. He
felt his hands growing cold. By bitter experience
he knew that Clubfoot was never
so dangerous as in these moments of expansion.</p>
<p>“The fortune of war!” Grundt resumed.
“You played your cards admirably . . .
up to a point, lieber Okewood! I have always
said you were an opponent worthy of my
steel. Perhaps, in this instance, you were
just a trifle . . . shall we say over-confident? . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond, who had been taking stock of
his surroundings, pulled himself resolutely
together. The bland self-assurance of
Grundt, he noticed, was far from being
shared by his companions. The Jew was a
mass of nerves, rapaciously tearing at his
yellow, deeply bitten finger-nails, the little
pig eyes of the fat man were restless with
apprehension, and there was an air of tension
about the very rigidity of the enigmatical
greybeard across the table.</p>
<p>“You and your rather unsavoury accomplices
are playing a dangerous game, Herr
Doktor,” he said as bravely as he might.
“The riff-raff of international espionage”—he
paused and gazed with cool deliberation
first at the Jew at his side and then at Greybeard—“live
from hand to mouth, as we
all know, and cannot be over-scrupulous.
But I must say I wonder what an Englishman”—he
stared pointedly at the fat man as
he spoke—“is doing in your ill-favoured
company!”</p>
<p>The fat man struggled up in his chair
with malice depicted in every feature of his
leaden-hued face.</p>
<p>“You keep a civil tongue in your ’ead,
d’jeer?” he spluttered.</p>
<p>But Clubfoot laid a hairy paw on his
sleeve. “Let us make allowances for Major
Okewood’s natural chagrin,” he counselled.
“Believe me, he is full of common sense.
He will presently recognize the value of
being polite and . . . and obliging with
us . . . otherwise”—he paused and
looked amiably round the board—“otherwise
we shall have to teach him manners, eh,
Tarock?”</p>
<p>“A gord round the head, with some hardt
knots, tvisted vith a baionette vould be a
good lesson to him,” muttered the grey-bearded
man.</p>
<p>“Don’t be hasty, Tarock,” said Grundt
gently.</p>
<p>“<i>Not</i> Tarock, of Cracow?” exclaimed
Desmond. “Why, now, isn’t that interesting?
I’ve heard of you so often, and we’ve
never met. Let’s see, you commanded a
company once in the Deutschmeister Regiment
in Vienna, didn’t you? And were
cashiered for stealing the company
money . . .?”</p>
<p>Greybeard moved uneasily in his seat.</p>
<p>“What a pity that the white-slave traffic
laws interfered with your new career at
Cracow!” Desmond resumed impassively.
“So many of your colleagues regard them
as the most unfair restriction of trade!
Dear, dear! Was it five or seven years
Zuchthaus they gave you?”</p>
<p>“Herr!” thundered Tarock, springing to
his feet.</p>
<p>The fox-grin had again appeared about
the thin lips of Mr. Mandelstamm. Clubfoot,
too, appeared to be enjoying the scene.</p>
<p>“Personally, I always admired your versatility
as a spy,” Desmond went on, leaning
back out of reach of Tarock’s threatening
fist, “though the Austrians didn’t. They
sacked you for double-crossing, didn’t they,
Tarock? And the Russians followed suit a
year later. You were too dirty even for the
Okhrana to touch . . .”</p>
<p>“Kreuzsakrament!” roared Greybeard,
“I’ll have your life for that!”</p>
<p>His chair overturned with a crash.
Everybody had sprung to his feet, talking at
the same time. Suddenly the door of the
room burst open and three men came tumbling
in. Two of them were grappling with
a third, who, though gagged and bound and
bleeding, was plunging wildly and uttering
stifled shouts of rage.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />