<h2 id="c14"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XIII</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">IN WHICH CHECK PROVES TO BE CHECKMATE</span></h2>
<p>When Desmond came to his senses
he was propped up in a limousine
that was slowly threading a broad street
crowded with trams and other traffic. The
Chief was at his side and, on the opposite
seat, Francis with the girl whose pale face,
dark eyes, and glossy black hair were vaguely
familiar.</p>
<p>With a bewildered expression the young
man looked from one face to the other.</p>
<p>“Where am I?”</p>
<p>“You’re in the Mile End Road, old man,
going home,” said his brother, patting him
on the knee.</p>
<p>“And Clubfoot?”</p>
<p>“Escaped down the river by launch!”</p>
<p>Desmond took the girl’s hand. “I remember
it all now,” he said. “It was this brave
girl that saved us. She gave me the automatic
with which I was able to keep them
off until you came. Without that gun . . .”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t talk any more now if I were
you,” the Chief counselled.</p>
<p>“I’m all right,” said Desmond, “except
that my head is buzzing like a beehive.
What happened to me exactly?”</p>
<p>“You were hit by a ricochet off your precious
barricade,” his brother replied. “Actually
it only grazed your temple, but it put
you down for the count . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond was silent for a moment. “Escaped
by launch, did he?” he remarked presently.
“Francis, where <i>was</i> this house to
which they took me?”</p>
<p>“Down on the Thames flats, between
Rainham and Purfleet,” said his brother;
“about as lonely a spot as they could find.”</p>
<p>“But how on earth did you locate me?”</p>
<p>“Okewood,” interposed the Chief with
finality, “you are talking too much. That
story, like yours, will have to keep!”</p>
<p class="tb">Actually it only kept until the following
day, when Desmond, his head romantically
bound up in a bandage, entertained the Chief
and Francis to lunch at his chambers.</p>
<p>“For our providential arrival,” remarked
the Chief, neatly spearing the cherry in his
cocktail as they stood round the fire, “you
can thank this brother of yours! Two nights
ago you vanished off the face of the earth.
We had no description of the man who kidnapped
you beyond that of old Clubfoot;
we had no particulars at all of the car, no
inkling of the route you took. And how do
you think Francis here grappled with <i>that</i>
situation? Tell him yourself, man!” The
Chief chuckled and drained his glass.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Francis slowly, “it was a
long shot, for I reckoned the odds at about
a hundred to one on Clubfoot murdering you
right off. But I thought there was a chance
he might hold you to ransom or something
of the sort; in that case he would have to
have a secure retreat to which he could convey
you. That retreat, I figured to myself,
must be within a reasonable distance of London,
for Clubfoot’s business is here. So,
within an hour of your disappearance, I arranged
for an inquiry to be sent by telephone
or telegram to every house and estate agent
within a radius of fifty miles of London as
to whether a house had recently been let to
any one answering Clubfoot’s description. I
offered a reward of five hundred pounds for
the information.</p>
<p>“By noon I had my answer. They rang
up from Marlow and Wadding’s, the big
West-End agents, to say that one of their
clerks had an important statement to make.
In due course the man arrived. He had gone
down one day last week to inspect on behalf
of a client a property close to the river some
miles from Purfleet, a place called Rushdene
Grange. When he reached the house, he
found that it showed evident signs of occupation,
for smoke was rising from the
chimneys, though all the windows were shuttered.</p>
<p>“He supposed that the house had been
placed in the hands of more than one agent
for disposal and had been let without the
knowledge of his firm. He was standing at
the front door when a car came up the drive.
A big lame man, answering in every particular
to the description of our friend
Grundt, got out. He told the clerk very
gruffly that the place was let and vanished
into the house.</p>
<p>“From inquiries my informant made locally
he ascertained that the house had been
let furnished to a man named Fitzroy, which,
the police tell me, is one of the various aliases
of Schmetterding, alias Blund, an old friend
of ours, Des., for, if you remember, it was
he who took that place at Harlesden for
Grundt in the affair of the purple cabriolet.
When we picked up the poor gentleman with
his neck so picturesquely broken at the foot
of the staircase at Rushdene Grange, Manderton
recognized him at once. He’s an
Englishman of German extraction, with a
fine list of convictions against him at the
Yard.”</p>
<p>Francis looked at his brother and smiled.
“A little rough with him, weren’t you, Des.?”</p>
<p>“He came butting in when I was trying to
escape,” replied Desmond, “so I landed him
a punch, and he went backwards over the
stairs.”</p>
<p>“And there was Tarock on his face in the
hall with a bullet in his temple . . .”</p>
<p>“Dead?”</p>
<p>“As dead as a door-nail!” Francis replied.</p>
<p>“I’m glad I nailed him,” Desmond remarked,
and added, addressing the Chief,
“Tarock, of Cracow, you know, sir!”</p>
<p>The big man nodded. “He’s no loss,” he
remarked. “He’d lived too long, anyway.”</p>
<p>“From what my house agent friend told
me,” Francis resumed, “we guessed that the
house would be a regular fortress. So I
took a charge of guncotton with the cutting-out
party the Chief let me organize and blew
the lock off the front door. How Clubfoot
escaped being killed by the explosion I don’t
know. When we got in, we found the nest
empty except for that choice specimen, Mandelstamm,
who was spitting teeth into the
basin in the bath-room out of the most
beautiful mouth you ever saw. Whew, Des.,
you must have fetched him a clip!”</p>
<p>“He walked into my fist,” his brother retorted,
grinning. “But what about Grundt?”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid he got away through my
fault. The shooting inside the house rather
rattled me . . . on account of you, you
know . . . and I blew the lock before
our men had got into their stations at the
back. Clubfoot must have escaped through
the basement and got down to the river, for
we discovered afterwards that an electric
launch he used to keep up a creek had disappeared.
I presume he took Max and Heinrich
with him. They left poor Bewlay where
they killed him upstairs.”</p>
<p>“He died well,” said Desmond, giving him
his epitaph. He turned to the Chief. “And
this treaty, sir? Clubfoot has got away with
it, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“He has!” replied the big man grimly.</p>
<p>“He was under the impression that it was
coded in 3A,” Desmond went on. “It wasn’t,
you know, though I didn’t disabuse his mind,
of course. It was in no code <i>I</i> had ever seen
before.”</p>
<p>“Or will ever see again. The only two
keys in existence, one in Constantinople and
the other in London, were destroyed by my
orders within twenty-four hours of the
courier being kidnapped. The F.O., you see,
changed their minds about 3A and used a
special cipher. Do you know that the Bolsheviks
offered twenty-five thousand pounds
for a copy of that treaty <i>en clair</i>? The
Secretary of State has been in a perfect
agony of mind about it, for the party who
negotiated this document, with certain influential
Turks behind the scenes at the
Porte, was not an official emissary. And if
Parliament had got wind of the affair at this
stage . . .” He broke off and whistled.</p>
<p>“Chief,” said Desmond, “we must do
something for this girl Xenia. Her people
are all in prison in Russia, and now that
Tarock is dead . . .”</p>
<p>“That’s already seen to,” replied the big
man. “Mademoiselle Xenia is being cared
for by some friends of mine, and in a little
while, when she has got over this shock, I
think I ought to be able to utilize her knowledge
of Russian at one of our report centres
in the Baltic States. In any case, I mean
to remove her as soon as possible out of
Clubfoot’s reach.”</p>
<p>“He’s vanished into thin air, I suppose?”
Desmond remarked.</p>
<p>“A perfect Vidocq!” the Chief observed.
“But never fear: he’ll be after us again,
if only to pay us back for checkmating him
this time!” And he grinned with great contentment.</p>
<p>“And what’s our next move to be, sir?”
asked Desmond.</p>
<p>“You and that brother of yours,” replied
the Chief, “will, each and severally, equip
yourselves with a bag of golf-clubs and report
to-morrow morning at a course not too
far removed from London and devote yourselves,
until further orders, to reducing your
respective handicaps.”</p>
<p>“But Clubfoot . . .” the two young
men broke out.</p>
<p>“Clubfoot will keep. But you’ll not beat
him with your nerves frayed out at the ends.
You two get out into the fresh air and forget
all about him. And in the mean time . . .”</p>
<p>“Luncheon is served,” announced Desmond’s
man.</p>
<p>“As good an occupation as any,” observed
the Chief, “in the intervals between the
rounds!”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />