<h2><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI<br/> THE WAITER AT THE “BLACK POST”</h2>
<p>Laverick, notwithstanding that the hour was becoming late, found an
outfitter’s shop in the Strand still open, and made such purchases as he
could on Morrison’s behalf. Then, with the bag ready packed, he returned
to his rooms. Time had passed quickly during the last three hours. It was
nearly nine o’clock when he stepped out of the lift and opened the door
of his small suite of rooms with the latchkey which hung from his chain. He
began to change his clothes mechanically, and he had nearly finished when the
telephone bell upon his table rang.</p>
<p>“Who’s that?” he asked, taking up the receiver.</p>
<p>“Hall-porter, sir,” was the answer. “Person here wishes to
see you particularly.”</p>
<p>“A person!” Laverick repeated. “Man or woman?”</p>
<p>“Man, sir.</p>
<p>“Better send him up,” Laverick ordered.</p>
<p>“He’s a seedy-looking lot, sir,” the porter explained
“I told him that I scarcely thought you’d see him.”</p>
<p>“Never mind,” Laverick answered. “I can soon get rid of the
fellow if he’s cadging.”</p>
<p>He went back to his room and finished fastening his tie. His own affairs had
sunk a little into the background lately, but the announcement of this unusual
visitor brought them back into his mind with a rush. Notwithstanding his iron
nerves, his fingers shook as he drew on his dinner-jacket and walked out to the
passageway to answer the bell which rang a few seconds later. A man stood
outside, dressed in shabby black clothes, whose face somehow was familiar to
him, although he could not, for the moment, place it.</p>
<p>“Do you want to see me?” Laverick asked.</p>
<p>“If you please, Mr. Laverick,” the man replied, “if you could
spare me just a moment.”</p>
<p>“You had better come inside, then,” Laverick said, closing the door
and preceding the way into the sitting-room. At any rate, there was nothing
threatening about the appearance of this visitor—nor anything official.</p>
<p>“I have taken the liberty of coming, sir,” the man announced,
“to ask you if you can tell me where I can find Mr. Arthur
Morrison.”</p>
<p>Laverick’s face showed no sign of his relief. What he felt he succeeded
in keeping to himself.</p>
<p>“You mean Morrison—my partner, I suppose?” he answered.</p>
<p>“If you please, sir,” the man admitted. “I wanted a word or
two with him most particular. I found out his address from the caretaker of
your office, but he don’t seem to have been home to his rooms at all last
night, and they know nothing about him there.”</p>
<p>“Your face seems familiar to me,” Laverick remarked. “Where
do you come from?”</p>
<p>The man hesitated.</p>
<p>“I am the waiter, sir, at the ‘Black Post,’—little bar
and restaurant, you know,” he added, “just behind your offices,
sir, at the end of Crooked Friars’ Alley. You’ve been in once or
twice, Mr. Laverick, I think. Mr. Morrison’s a regular customer. He comes
in for a drink most mornings.”</p>
<p>Laverick nodded.</p>
<p>“I knew I’d seen your face somewhere,” he said. “What
do you want with Mr. Morrison?”</p>
<p>The man was silent. He twirled his hat and looked embarrassed.</p>
<p>“It’s a matter I shouldn’t like to mention to any one except
Mr. Morrison himself, sir,” he declared finally. “If you could put
me in the way of seeing him, I’d be glad. I may say that it would be to
his advantage, too.”</p>
<p>Laverick was thoughtful for a moment.</p>
<p>“As it happens, that’s a little difficult,” he explained.
“Mr. Morrison and I disagreed on a matter of business last night. I
undertook certain responsibilities which he should have shared, and he arranged
to leave the firm and the country at once. We parted—well, not exactly
the best of friends. I am afraid I cannot give you any information.”</p>
<p>“You haven’t seen him since then, sir?” the man asked.</p>
<p>Laverick lied promptly but he lied badly. His visitor was not in the least
convinced.</p>
<p>“I am afraid I haven’t made myself quite plain, sir,” he
said. “It’s to do him a bit o’ good that I’m here.
I’m not wishing him any harm at all. On the contrary, it’s a great
deal more to his advantage to see me than it will be mine to find him.”</p>
<p>“I think,” Laverick suggested, “that you had better be frank
with me. Supposing I knew where to catch Morrison before he left the country, I
could easily deal with you on his behalf.”</p>
<p>The man looked doubtful.</p>
<p>“You see, sir,” he replied awkwardly, “it’s a matter I
wouldn’t like to breathe a word about to any one but Mr. Morrison
himself. It’s—it’s a bit serious.”</p>
<p>The man’s face gave weight to his words. Curiously enough, the gleam of
terror which Laverick caught in his white face reminded him of a similar look
which he had seen in Morrison’s eyes barely an hour ago. To gain time,
Laverick moved across the room, took a cigarette from a box and lit it. A
conviction was forming itself in his mind. There was something definite behind
these hysterical paroxysms of his late partner, something of which this man had
an inkling.</p>
<p>“Look here,” he said, throwing himself into an easychair, “I
think you had better be frank with me. I must know more than I know at present
before I help you to find Morrison, even if he is to be found. We didn’t
part very good friends, but I’m his friend enough—for the sake of
others,” he added, after a moment’s hesitation, “to do all
that I could to help him out of any difficulty he may have stumbled into. So
you see that so far as anything you may have to say to him is concerned, I
think you might as well say it to me.”</p>
<p>“You couldn’t see your way, then, sir,” the man continued
doggedly, “to tell me where I could find Mr. Morrison himself?”</p>
<p>“No, I couldn’t,” Laverick decided. “Even if I knew
exactly where he was—and I’m not admitting that—I
couldn’t put you in touch with him unless I knew what your business
was.”</p>
<p>The man’s eyes gleamed. He was a typical waiter—pasty-faced,
unwholesome-looking—but he had small eyes of a greenish cast, and they
were expressive.</p>
<p>“I think, sir,” he said, “you’ve some idea yourself,
then, that Mr. Morrison has been getting into a bit of trouble.”</p>
<p>“We won’t discuss that,” Laverick answered. “You must
either go away—it’s past nine o’clock and I haven’t had
my dinner yet—or you must treat me as you would Mr. Morrison.”</p>
<p>The man looked upon the carpet for several moments.</p>
<p>“Very well, sir,” he said, “there’s no great reason why
I should put myself out about this at all. The only thing is—”</p>
<p>He hesitated.</p>
<p>“Well, go on,” Laverick said encouragingly.</p>
<p>“I think,” the man continued, “that Mr.
Morrison—knowing, as I well do, sir, the sort of gent he is—would
be more likely to talk common sense with me about this matter than you,
sir.”</p>
<p>“I’ll imagine I’m Morrison, for the moment,” Laverick
said smiling, “especially as I’m acting for him.”</p>
<p>The man looked around the room. The door behind had been left ajar. He stepped
backward and closed it.</p>
<p>“You’ll pardon the liberty, sir,” he said, “but this is
a serious matter I’m going to speak about. I’ll just tell you a
little thing and you can form your own conclusions. Last night we was open late
at the ‘Black Post.’ We keep open, sir, as you know, when you
gentlemen at the Stock Exchange are busy. About nine o’clock there was a
strange customer came in. He had two drinks and he sat as though he were
waiting. In about ’arf-an-hour another gent came in, and they went into a
corner together and seemed to be doing some sort of business. Anyways, there
was papers passed between them. I was fairly busy about then, as there were one
or two more customers in the place, but I noticed these two talking together,
and I noticed the dark gentleman leave. The others went out a few minutes
afterwards, and the gent who had come first was alone in the place. He sat in
the corner and he had a pocket-book on the table before him. I had a sort of
casual glance at it when I brought him a drink, and it seemed to me that it was
full of bank-notes. He sat there just like a man extra deep in thought. Just
after eleven, in came Mr. Morrison. I could see he was rare and put out, for he
was white, and shaking all over. ‘Give me a drink, Jim,’ he
said,—‘a big brandy and soda, big as you make
’em.’”</p>
<p>The man paused for a moment as though to collect himself. Laverick was suddenly
conscious of a strange thrill creeping through his pulses.</p>
<p>“Go on,” he said. “That was after he left me. Go on.”</p>
<p>“He was quite close to the other gent, Mr. Morrison was,” the
waiter continued, “but they didn’t say nowt to each other. All of a
sudden I see Mr. Morrison set down his glass and stare at the other chap as
though he’d seen something that had given him a turn. I leaned over the
counter and had a look, too. There he sat—this tall, fair chap who had
been in the place so long—with his big pocket-book on the table in front
of him, and even from where I was I could see that there was a great pile of
bank-notes sticking out from it. All of a sudden he looks up and sees Mr.
Morrison a-watching him and me from behind the counter. Back he whisks the
pocket-book into his pocket, calls me for my bill, gives me two mouldy pennies
for a tip, buttons up his coat and walks out.”</p>
<p>“You know who he was?” Laverick inquired.</p>
<p>Again the waiter paused for a moment before he answered—paused and looked
nervously around the room. His voice shook.</p>
<p>“He was the man as was murdered about a hundred yards off the
‘Black Post’ last night, sir,” he said.</p>
<p>“How do you know?” Laverick asked.</p>
<p>“I got an hour off to-day,” the waiter continued, “and went
down to the Mortuary. There was no doubt about it. There he was—same
chap, same clothes. I could swear to him anywhere, and I reckon I’ll have
to at the inquest.”</p>
<p>Laverick’s cigarette burned away between his fingers. It seemed to him
that he was no longer in the room. He was listening to Big Ben striking the
hour, he was back again in that tiny little bedroom with its spotless sheets
and lace curtains. The man on the bed was looking at him. Laverick remembered
the look and shivered.</p>
<p>“What has this to do with Morrison?” he demanded.</p>
<p>Once more the waiter looked around in that half mysterious, half terrified way.</p>
<p>“Mr. Morrison, sir,” he said, dropping his voice to a hoarse
whisper, “he followed the other chap out within thirty seconds. A sort of
queer look he’d got in his face too, and he went out without paying me.
I’ve read the papers pretty careful, sir,” the man went on,
“but I ain’t seen no word of that pocket-book of bank-notes being
found on the man as was murdered.”</p>
<p>Laverick threw the end of his burning cigarette away. He walked to the window,
keeping his back deliberately turned on his visitor. His eyes followed the
glittering arc of lights which fringed the Thames Embankment, were caught by
the flaring sky-sign on the other side of the river. He felt his heart beating
with unaccustomed vigor. Was this, then, the secret of Morrison’s terror?
He wondered no longer at his collapse. The terror was upon him, too. He felt
his forehead, and his hand, when he drew it away, was wet. It was not Morrison
alone but he himself who might be implicated in this man’s knowledge. The
thoughts flitted through his brain like parts of a nightmare. He saw Morrison
arrested, he saw the whole story of the missing pocket-book in the papers, he
imagined his bank manager reading it and thinking of that parcel of mysterious
bank-notes deposited in his keeping on the morning after the tragedy...
Laverick was a strong man, and his moment of weakness, poignant though it had
been, passed. This was no new thing with which he was confronted. All the time
he had known that the probabilities were in favor of such a discovery. He set
his teeth and turned to face his visitor.</p>
<p>“This is a very serious thing which you have told me,” he said.
“Have you spoken about it to any one else?”</p>
<p>“Not a soul, sir,” the man answered. “I thought it best to
have a word or two first with Mr. Morrison.”</p>
<p>“You were thinking of attending the inquest,” Laverick said
thoughtfully. “The police would thank you for your evidence, and there, I
suppose, the matter would end.”</p>
<p>“You’ve hit it precisely, sir,” the man admitted.
“There the matter would end.”</p>
<p>“On the other hand,” Laverick continued, speaking as though he were
reasoning this matter out to himself, “supposing you decided not to
meddle in an affair which does not concern you, supposing you were not sure as
to the identity of your customer last night, and being a little tired you could
not rightly remember whether Mr. Morrison called in for a drink or not, and so,
to cut the matter short, you dismissed the whole matter from your mind and let
the inquest take its own course,—”</p>
<p>Laverick paused. His visitor scratched the side of his chin and nodded.</p>
<p>“You’ve put this matter plainly, sir,” he said, “in
what I call an understandable, straightforward way. I’m a poor
man—I’ve been a poor man all my life—and I’ve never
seed a chance before of getting away from it. I see one now.”</p>
<p>“You want to do the best you can for yourself?”</p>
<p>“So ’elp me God, sir, I do!” the man agreed.</p>
<p>Laverick nodded.</p>
<p>“You have done a remarkably wise thing,” he said, “in coming
to me and in telling me about this affair. The idea of connecting Mr. Morrison
with the murder would, of course, be ridiculous, but, on the other hand, it
would be very disagreeable to him to have his name mentioned in connection with
it. You have behaved discreetly, and you have done Mr. Morrison a service in
trying to find him out. You will do him a further service by adopting the
second course I suggested with regard to the inquest. What do you consider that
service is worth?”</p>
<p>“It depends, sir,” the man answered quietly, “at what price
Mr. Morrison values his life!”</p>
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