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fooling, or I’ll drink the damn stuff myself.”

She nodded, waved me away.

“Hurry!” she said. “I’ll tell you what you want to know if you get

it. Go on . . . hurry!”

I ran down the steps into the street, looked left and right for a

taxi. There wasn’t a sign of one. I decided it would be quicker in the

long run to wait, so I stood on the edge of the kerb, kept watch.

It looked as if I was now on the right track. Netta had brought a

girl back with her and I was willing to stake everything I owned that it

was this girl who had died in Netta’s flat. Who could the man be?

Netta’s boy friend? Someone else? Could it have been Julius Cole?

And who was the girl?

I suddenly felt I was being watched. I didn’t look around

immediately, but lit a cigarette, tossed the match into the gutter, then

glanced over my shoulder. There seemed no one about, but for all

that, I was pretty sure someone was tailing me. I thought of Frankie,

wondered if he was going to have another try at beating my brains in.

I stood there for ten minutes or so before a taxi returning to the West

End, drew up. I told him to take me to the Blue Club, and as we drove

off, I peered through the rear window. I spotted a sudden movement.

Inspector Corridan stepped out of a dark doorway, stood in the

middle of the pavement, looking after me. He glanced up and down

the street as if hoping to find another taxi to follow me, but he was

unlucky.

I grinned to myself. So Corridan had followed me to Madge

Kennitt’s place. He wouldn’t know I had visited her. He probably

thought I had been to see Julius Cole. It looked as if Corridan was

keeping an eye on me; did think I might be hooked up in this case.

A quarter of an hour later I arrived at the Blue Club. Ten minutes

after that, I was trying to pick up another taxi back to Cromwell Road,

the precious bottle of Scotch under my arm. It had cost me five

pounds, but I hoped the information I was going to receive would be

worth that and more.

When a taxi eventually turned up, my wrist watch showed eleven

forty-five. I gave the address, sat back, relaxed.

The run to Cromwell Road seemed interminable, but in actual

fact, it only took ten minutes. I paid off the taxi, noted that Madge

Kennitt’s light still burned, grinned to myself. I guessed the old hag

was waiting as impatiently for the whisky as I was for the information.

I pushed open the front door and stepped softly across the hall,

mounted the stairs, I didn’t want Julius Cole to hear me. Madge

Kennitt’s door was ajar. I paused, frowned. I remembered closing it

when I left. Maybe she had opened it to let the cat out, I thought,

pushed the door, glanced into the room.

Madge was lying on the chaise-longue, her mouth open, her eyes

glassy. Blood welled from a great gash in her throat, poured down her

floppy bosom on to the Turkey carpet.

She was as dead as a soused mackerel.

Chapter X

FOR a full minute I stood staring at Madge Kennitt too shocked to

move, then I stepped into the room, stood over her.

Her sightless eyes glared up at me, the blood dripped steadily on

to the floor. I turned away, weak at the knees.

Because I didn’t know what to do, I wandered around the room,

looking aimlessly for the weapon that had killed her. I couldn’t find it.

I stepped to the chaise-longue, peered over the offside.

Three empty whisky bottles and the carton of Woodbines met my

eyes. The dust on the floor-boards that side was thick; written in the

dust within reach of Madge’s hand which flopped lifelessly on the

floor was a word. I moved closer, peered at it. It was badly written,

and it seemed to me that Madge might have written it either when

she was dying or just before the killer had struck. It took me a few

seconds to decipher the scrawl. She had written on the floor in the

dust the name: Jacobi. It meant nothing to me, but I stored it away in

my mind for future reference.

I suddenly remembered Corridan. If he was still hanging about

outside and decided to come in to see what I was doing, I’d be in a

hell of a spot. I made a dive for the door, ran down the stairs, opened

the front door. I looked up and down the street, but could see no one.

Across the street was a telephone box, and I hurried over, dialled

Whitehal 1212, asked for Corridan.

While I waited, I glanced idly along the street. The headlights of a

car appeared out of what seemed an alley, down the street on the

opposite side to where I was telephoning. A moment later a car came

swiftly towards me, went on towards the West End. As it passed

under a street light, I recognized it. It was the battered Standard

Fourteen and Frankie was at the wheel.

Before I could think anything of this, someone came on the line to

say Corridan was out on patrol with a police car. I asked for them to

get into immediate touch with him and to tell him to come at once to

Mrs. Crockett.

“Tell him it’s a murder,” I said, hung up.

I didn’t fancy waiting for Corridan in Madge’s room, so I returned

to the house, sat on the doorstep. While I waited, I did a little

thinking.

I was at last getting somewhere. I’d have probably solved the

whole business if Madge hadn’t dropped her bottle of whisky; but I

wasn’t discouraged. I had found out that a girl had been in the flat

with Netta, and I was positive that it was she who had died and not

Netta. It seemed pretty obvious that she had been murdered, and I

wondered with a feeling of sick apprehension, if Netta had taken a

hand in the murder. Could the man who had returned with Netta and

the other girl be Jacobi, whoever he might be? Had he been listening

to Madge and me talking, and had killed Madge before she could give

me the information she had promised? Was that what Madge had

tried to convey when she had scrawled the name in the dust? What

was Frankie doing on the scene of the murder? How much was I going

to tell Corridan? If he suspected me before, he had every reason for

suspecting me still more now. I should have to handle him with care.

Corridan arrived in a fast police car in less than ten minutes. He

jumped out of the car, ran up the steps before I could get to my feet.

“What’s this, Harmas?” he snapped, his cold eyes searching my

face. “What’s happened?”

“Madge Kennitt’s been murdered,” I said briefly.

“What are you doing here?” he said.

“I came to see her,” I returned, told him briefly what had

happened. “You saw me leave, Corridan,” I went on. “I spotted you as

I was driving away. Why were you tailing me?”

“It’s just as well that I was, isn’t it?” he returned curtly. “I’m

beginning to wonder about you, Harmas. You’re not making things

easy for yourself, are you?”

“You don’t think I had anything to do with her death?”

“You could have killed her, couldn’t you?” he returned, shortly.

“Every time someone dies connected with this case, you appear on

the scene. I don’t like it. I’ve told you before to keep out of this, and

I’m telling you again for the last time. This is no business of yours.

Now, will you please understand that once and for all?”