<h2 id="c12"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XI</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE CONSTANTINOPLE COURIER</span></h2>
<p>An ear-splitting report sent them all
reeling back. The air stank with
the fumes of burnt cordite. Then Clubfoot’s
voice went booming through the room. A
great automatic was smoking in his hand.</p>
<p>“The next shot will go through your head,
Bewlay,” he roared at the prisoner who,
on the report of the pistol, had momentarily
ceased struggling. “Stand back there,
Tarock,” he thundered. “I’ll have no brawling
here. Sit down, all of you! Heinrich!”</p>
<p>The young German appeared in the doorway.</p>
<p>“Take Major Okewood on one side, and,
if he attempts to escape, shoot him! Max,
you look after Bewlay! Have you got the
bags? Bring them in!”</p>
<p>The dominating personality of the man
was extraordinary. Complete silence fell
upon the room. The men at the table resumed
their seats. Heinrich led Desmond
into a corner while Max unceremoniously
pitched the other prisoner on to a window-seat,
where he lay motionless. He looked
like an Englishman, young and of athletic
build, with close-cropped fair hair, now stiff
with matted blood from a great cut across
the head.</p>
<p>A man staggered into the room, his arms
piled high with white and green canvas bags
sealed with red wax. With a sickening heart
Desmond recognized them. They were the
valises of the King’s Messenger. “Bewlay,”
Grundt had called this fresh prisoner. Desmond
remembered the name now. Paul
Bewlay was the Constantinople courier.</p>
<p>The bags were tumbled in a heap on the
table. With scissors and knives Grundt and
his companions busied themselves with cutting
the strings that bound them. Soon
the table was heaped high with a litter of
letters, documents, newspapers, and packages.</p>
<p>Presently Clubfoot looked up from the
work. “You’ve searched him, Max?”</p>
<p>“Jawohl, Herr Doktor!”</p>
<p>The man took from his pocket a red bandana
handkerchief, heavily weighted down,
and handed it to Tarock. The Austrian
spilled out a mixed assortment of objects,
a watch and chain, a gold cigarette-case, a
pencil, and a little silver brooch—the Silver
Greyhound, the messenger’s badge.</p>
<p>“You’ve looked in the lining of his clothes,
Max?”</p>
<p>“Ja, Herr Doktor. There is nothing
there!”</p>
<p>The opening of the packages revealed
some curious things. There was an old brass
lamp, a pair of Jodhpore breeches, a couple
of Samarcand rugs, and some boxes of Turkish
Delight, enjoying, in strange promiscuity,
the hospitality of the diplomatic valise.
In the way of odd commissions, a King’s
Messenger is as useful as the village carrier.</p>
<p>The rummaging went on. Then Desmond
heard Mandelstamm’s reedy lisp.</p>
<p>“Your customary good fortune has failed
you again, Herr Doktor!”</p>
<p>“Unsinn!” came the angry retort. “It
must be here. He has been under observation
every step of the way. Patience, my
friend! We shall find it!”</p>
<p>The work was resumed in silence until
at length Mandelstamm left the table.</p>
<p>“It’s useless!” he cried, his voice shrill
with vexation. “You’re wasting our time,
Herr Doktor!”</p>
<p>Tarock, too, had left his seat and was
whispering to Blund, the fat Englishman,
in a corner. Grundt remained alone at the
table. His bulging brows were furrowed in
thought. Then, as though struck by a sudden
idea, he picked up one of the round
boxes of Turkish Delight, raised the lid and
shook the contents out upon the table. A
second, a third, and a fourth box he treated
in the same manner, and then, with a whoop
of joy, he plunged his hand into the sticky
pile of sweetmeats before him. When he
withdrew his hand he held a number of
sheets of white flimsy paper between finger
and thumb. Dusting the fine sugar off them,
he held them up for all to see.</p>
<p>“Herr Mandelstamm,” he said cuttingly,
“perhaps this will teach you that Dr. Grundt
does not promise what he cannot fulfil!”</p>
<p>But a ringing voice from the window-seat
broke in upon his words. “You damned
scoundrel!”</p>
<p>The King’s Messenger was standing erect.
The soiled scarf that had gagged him had
slipped aside. He was bound round with
rope like a mummy in its wrappings, and
his face was almost irrecognizable with the
smother of dried blood that had welled from
the wound in his head. But he stood up
and shouted his defiance into the room as
though he, and not Clubfoot, were the master
there.</p>
<p>Grundt looked up slowly. “Max,” he said,
without raising his voice, “take him away
and get rid of him. He is of no further use
to us,” he explained to the men at the table,
while Max fell upon his victim.</p>
<p>With alacrity Tarock scrambled to his
feet, drawing something from his hip pocket.</p>
<p>“I’ll attend to him!” he said in a voice
hoarse with pleasurable excitement. And he
hurried from the room behind Max and his
prisoner.</p>
<p>As he passed, Desmond, covered by Heinrich’s
automatic, saw that the Austrian carried
in his hand a long Norwegian knife.</p>
<p>Mandelstamm extended talon-like fingers
towards the paper in Clubfoot’s hand.</p>
<p>“L-l-let me s-s-see.” He stuttered with
excitement.</p>
<p>“It’s in code,” said Grundt.</p>
<p>And all eyes turned to Desmond.</p>
<p>Grundt heaved himself up and, grasping
his rubber-shod stick, hobbled awkwardly
across the room to where Heinrich guarded
the prisoner. The cripple waved the guard
back.</p>
<p>“Okewood,” he said, “you are clever
enough to know when you are beaten. I
am well aware that your motto has ever
been, ‘While there’s life there’s hope!’ but
let me assure you that in this instance you
can derive very little solace from that saying.
The position of this house is so remote, its
precincts are so well guarded, that, even if
your friends were to discover your hiding-place—which
is most unlikely—and were in
hot cry hither, I should have ample leisure
to devise and carry out even the most
lingering form of death for you.” He
paused and scrutinized the young man’s face.
“I offer you your life on one condition.”</p>
<p>Desmond remained silent.</p>
<p>“Does it interest you?”</p>
<p>A long-drawn-out, gurgling scream, high-pitched
and shrill with the extremity of
agony, suddenly broke the brooding stillness
of the house. It was followed by a little
muffled cry from the room. From behind a
typewriter placed on a desk in the corner a
young girl had risen hesitatingly, one hand
clutching her cheek, terror in her eyes. Desmond
had not noticed her before.</p>
<p>“Xenia!” Mandelstamm cried harshly.</p>
<p>Listlessly the girl sank back into her seat.</p>
<p>Desmond looked straight into Clubfoot’s
eyes. “What was that? Who screamed?”
he asked, knowing full well the answer to his
question.</p>
<p>“I think it must have been Bewlay,”
calmly replied Grundt; and asked again:
“Does my proposition interest you?”</p>
<p>Desmond shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>“Believe me, lieber Okewood,” Clubfoot
resumed persuasively, “murder in cold blood
is not one of my hobbies. One has to kill
at times, but it is always a messy business
unless one has the resources of a well-stocked
laboratory at one’s back. Listen to me. I
have here a message in your Secret Service
code number 3A. If you will decipher it
for us, you shall go free. We are willing to
give you any reasonable guarantee of your
life . . .”</p>
<p>“And if I tell you that I know nothing
of this code?”</p>
<p>“That would not be true, my friend!
Besides yourself, there are only two persons
who, before the Foreign Office adopted it,
were acquainted with its cipher . . .
your revered Chief (a remarkable man, my
dear Okewood, and a credit to our profession!)
and his confidential clerk, by name
Collins, I believe, who lives at Hatfield. Am
I correct? No, no, my friend, you won’t try
to deceive me. Old Clubfoot knows too
much!”</p>
<p>“And if I reject your offer?”</p>
<p>Again that terrible scream rang out, suddenly
checked this time and dying away in
a strangling gurgle.</p>
<p>With an expressive movement of eyes and
head Grundt indicated the upper regions of
the house, now plunged once more into silence,
as much as to say: “You wouldn’t
drive us to <i>that</i>?”</p>
<p>Desmond Okewood put out his hand.
“Let’s see the despatch!” he said brusquely.</p>
<p>But Clubfoot held up a deprecating paw.
“No, no, my friend, not so fast,” he laughed.
“You might tear it or . . . or drop it in
the fire. I’ve been at a deal of trouble to
get it.” He raised his voice. “Fräulein
Xenia!”</p>
<p>The girl came slowly over from her corner.
She was a slender, graceful creature, with
slim hands and feet, glossy hair of jet-black
brushed smoothly down to conceal her ears,
and the clear, wide-open eyes of a child.
As she stood before the big cripple waiting
to hear his bidding, she let her black eyes
rest for a moment on Desmond’s face. They
were honest eyes, dark and appealing. Somehow
he drew comfort from them.</p>
<p>Grundt handed her the despatch. “Sit
down over there at the machine and make me
one copy of this. Be very careful and check
the ciphers carefully! Verstehen Sie?”</p>
<p>“Ich verstehe, Herr Doktor!” she answered
in a low voice, pleasant of timbre, but
lifeless and toneless.</p>
<p>As she crossed the room the door opened.
Tarock had returned. He was red in the
face and out of breath, and there was an air
of stealthy guilt about him that chilled Desmond
to the very marrow. He could not
save now, but only avenge poor Bewlay. If
his own hour were near, as he had a shrewd
suspicion it was, he meant, so he promised
himself, to risk all, if needs be, to send the
Cracow <i>souteneur</i> to precede him at the
Judgment Seat.</p>
<p>The brisk rattle of the typewriter fell upon
the quietness of the room. How matter-of-fact
it sounded! They might have been in
a lawyer’s office, not in this house of twilight
death, whence time and the daylight were
excluded.</p>
<p>The girl had finished her typing. Her
black head was bowed over her table. She
was revising the long list of numbers. In a
minute, Desmond told himself, he must make
up his mind how to act.</p>
<p>Now she had crossed the room: now she
was giving the despatch and the copy to
Clubfoot. Was Bewlay really dead? Or
would he scream again? . . .</p>
<p>Clubfoot was speaking: “. . . Which
is it to be?”</p>
<p>Desmond cleared his throat. All his
senses were alert now. Those dreadful cries
had stung him into action. He must gain
time—time. By this the Chief and Francis,
his brother, than whom there were no
greater masters of their craft alive, would
be busy with plans for his rescue. But they
must have time to get on his track, unless he
were too securely hidden away for them ever
to find him . . . time, time . . .</p>
<p>“Give me the despatch!” Desmond exclaimed
suddenly. Silently, his suspicious
eyes searching the other’s face, Clubfoot
handed over the typewritten sheets. Desmond
studied them. Then, with a shake of
the head: “I can’t decipher it like this,” he
said. “Have you any dictionaries here?”</p>
<p>A glimmer of triumph shot into Grundt’s
face. “What dictionary do you want?” he
asked.</p>
<p>“Peereboom’s English-Dutch Dictionary,
the edition of 1898,” Desmond answered
promptly.</p>
<p>“I’ll send for it. It’ll be in your hands
within the hour!” Clubfoot retorted and
clapped him, almost affectionately, on the
shoulder.</p>
<p>Then they took Desmond back to his room.
In the corridor on the first floor they passed
the body of the courier, lying, still swathed in
his bonds, lifeless, in a welter of blood.</p>
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