Read The Complete Tommy and Tuppence Page 27


  “It depends how you go,” explained Julius unblushingly. “We’re going by way of Regent’s Park!”

  “Oh, Julius—what will the chauffeur think?”

  “At the wages I pay him, he knows better than to do any independent thinking. Why, Jane, the only reason I had the supper at the Savoy was so that I could drive you home. I didn’t see how I was ever going to get hold of you alone. You and Tuppence have been sticking together like Siamese twins. I guess another day of it would have driven me and Beresford stark staring mad!”

  “Oh. Is he—?”

  “Of course he is. Head over ears.”

  “I thought so,” said Jane thoughtfully.

  “Why?”

  “From all the things Tuppence didn’t say!”

  “There you have me beat,” said Mr. Hersheimmer.

  But Jane only laughed.

  In the meantime, the Young Adventurers were sitting bolt upright, very stiff and ill at ease, in a taxi which, with a singular lack of originality, was also returning to the Ritz via Regent’s Park.

  A terrible constraint seemed to have settled down between them. Without quite knowing what had happened, everything seemed changed. They were tongue-tied—paralysed. All the old cameraderie was gone.

  Tuppence could think of nothing to say.

  Tommy was equally afflicted.

  They sat very straight and forbore to look at each other.

  At last Tuppence made a desperate effort.

  “Rather fun, wasn’t it?”

  “Rather.”

  Another silence.

  “I like Julius,” essayed Tuppence again.

  Tommy was suddenly galvanized into life.

  “You’re not going to marry him, do you hear?” he said dictatorially. “I forbid it.”

  “Oh!” said Tuppence meekly.

  “Absolutely, you understand.”

  “He doesn’t want to marry me—he really only asked me out of kindness.”

  “That’s not very likely,” scoffed Tommy.

  “It’s quite true. He’s head over ears in love with Jane. I expect he’s proposing to her now.”

  “She’ll do for him very nicely,” said Tommy condescendingly.

  “Don’t you think she’s the most lovely creature you’ve ever seen?”

  “Oh, I daresay.”

  “But I suppose you prefer sterling worth,” said Tuppence demurely.

  “I—oh, dash it all, Tuppence, you know!”

  “I like your uncle, Tommy,” said Tuppence, hastily creating a diversion. “By the way, what are you going to do, accept Mr. Carter’s offer of a Government job, or accept Julius’s invitation and take a richly remunerated post in America on his ranch?”

  “I shall stick to the old ship, I think, though it’s awfully good of Hersheimmer. But I feel you’d be more at home in London.”

  “I don’t see where I come in.”

  “I do,” said Tommy positively.

  Tuppence stole a glance at him sideways.

  “There’s the money, too,” she observed thoughtfully.

  “What money?”

  “We’re going to get a cheque each. Mr. Carter told me so.”

  “Did you ask how much?” inquired Tommy sarcastically.

  “Yes,” said Tuppence triumphantly. “But I shan’t tell you.”

  “Tuppence, you are the limit!”

  “It has been fun, hasn’t it, Tommy? I do hope we shall have lots more adventures.”

  “You’re insatiable, Tuppence. I’ve had quite enough adventures for the present.”

  “Well, shopping is almost as good,” said Tuppence dreamily. “Thinking of buying old furniture, and bright carpets, and futurist silk curtains, and a polished dining table, and a divan with lots of cushions—”

  “Hold hard,” said Tommy. “What’s all this for?”

  “Possibly a house—but I think a flat.”

  “Whose flat?”

  “You think I mind saying it, but I don’t in the least! Ours, so there!”

  “You darling!” cried Tommy, his arms tightly round her. “I was determined to make you say it. I owe you something for the relentless way you’ve squashed me whenever I’ve tried to be sentimental.”

  Tuppence raised her face to his. The taxi proceeded on its course round the north side of Regent’s Park.

  “You haven’t really proposed now,” pointed out Tuppence. “Not what our grandmothers would call a proposal. But after listening to a rotten one like Julius’s, I’m inclined to let you off.”

  “You won’t be able to get out of marrying me, so don’t you think it.”

  “What fun it will be,” responded Tuppence. “Marriage is called all sorts of things, a haven, a refuge, and a crowning glory, and a state of bondage, and lots more. But do you know what I think it is?”

  “What?”

  “A sport!”

  “And a damned good sport too,” said Tommy.

  Partners in Crime

  A Tommy and Tuppence Collection

  Contents

  1 A Fairy in the Flat

  2 A Pot of Tea

  3 The Affair of the Pink Pearl

  4 The Adventure of the Sinister Stranger

  5 Finessing the King

  6 The Gentleman Dressed in Newspaper

  7 The Case of the Missing Lady

  8 Blindman’s Buff

  9 The Man in the Mist

  10 The Crackler

  11 The Sunningdale Mystery

  12 The House of Lurking Death

  13 The Unbreakable Alibi

  14 The Clergyman’s Daughter

  15 The Red House

  16 The Ambassador’s Boots

  17 The Man Who Was No. 16

  One

  A FAIRY IN THE FLAT

  Mrs. Thomas Beresford shifted her position on the divan and looked gloomily out of the window of the flat. The prospect was not an extended one, consisting solely of a small block of flats on the other side of the road. Mrs. Beresford sighed and then yawned.

  “I wish,” she said, “something would happen.”

  Her husband looked up reprovingly.

  “Be careful, Tuppence, this craving for vulgar sensation alarms me.”

  Tuppence sighed and closed her eyes dreamily.

  “So Tommy and Tuppence were married,” she chanted, “and lived happily ever afterwards. And six years later they were still living together happily ever afterwards. It is extraordinary,” she said, “how different everything always is from what you think it is going to be.”

  “A very profound statement, Tuppence. But not original. Eminent poets and still more eminent divines have said it before—and if you will excuse me saying so, have said it better.”

  “Six years ago,” continued Tuppence, “I would have sworn that with sufficient money to buy things with, and with you for a husband, all life would have been one grand sweet song, as one of the poets you seem to know so much about puts it.”

  “Is it me or the money that palls upon you?” inquired Tommy coldly.

  “Palls isn’t exactly the word,” said Tuppence kindly. “I’m used to my blessings, that’s all. Just as one never thinks what a boon it is to be able to breathe through one’s nose until one has a cold in the head.”

  “Shall I neglect you a little?” suggested Tommy. “Take other women about to night clubs. That sort of thing.”

  “Useless,” said Tuppence. “You would only meet me there with other men. And I should know perfectly well that you didn’t care for the other women, whereas you would never be quite sure that I didn’t care for the other men. Women are so much more thorough.”

  “It’s only in modesty that men score top marks,” murmured her husband. “But what is the matter with you, Tuppence? Why this yearning discontent?”

  “I don’t know. I want things to happen. Exciting things. Wouldn’t you like to go chasing German spies again, Tommy? Think of the wild days of peril we went through once. Of course I know you’re more
or less in the Secret Service now, but it’s pure office work.”

  “You mean you’d like them to send me into darkest Russia disguised as a Bolshevik bootlegger, or something of that sort?”

  “That wouldn’t be any good,” said Tuppence. “They wouldn’t let me go with you and I’m the person who wants something to do so badly. Something to do. That is what I keep saying all day long.”

  “Women’s sphere,” suggested Tommy, waving his hand.

  “Twenty minutes’ work after breakfast every morning keeps the flag going to perfection. You have nothing to complain of, have you?”

  “Your housekeeping is so perfect, Tuppence, as to be almost monotonous.”

  “I do like gratitude,” said Tuppence.

  “You, of course, have got your work,” she continued, “but tell me, Tommy, don’t you ever have a secret yearning for excitement, for things to happen?”

  “No,” said Tommy, “at least I don’t think so. It is all very well to want things to happen—they might not be pleasant things.”

  “How prudent men are,” sighed Tuppence. “Don’t you ever have a wild secret yearning for romance—adventure—life?”

  “What have you been reading, Tuppence?” asked Tommy.

  “Think how exciting it would be,” went on Tuppence, “if we heard a wild rapping at the door and went to open it and in staggered a dead man.”

  “If he was dead he couldn’t stagger,” said Tommy critically.

  “You know what I mean,” said Tuppence. “They always stagger in just before they die and fall at your feet, just gasping out a few enigmatic words. ‘The Spotted Leopard,’ or something like that.”

  “I advise a course of Schopenhauer or Emmanuel Kant,” said Tommy.

  “That sort of thing would be good for you,” said Tuppence. “You are getting fat and comfortable.”

  “I am not,” said Tommy indignantly. “Anyway you do slimming exercises yourself.”

  “Everybody does,” said Tuppence. “When I said you were getting fat I was really speaking metaphorically, you are getting prosperous and sleek and comfortable.”

  “I don’t know what has come over you,” said her husband.

  “The spirit of adventure,” murmured Tuppence. “It is better than a longing for romance anyway. I have that sometimes too. I think of meeting a man, a really handsome man—”

  “You have met me,” said Tommy. “Isn’t that enough for you?”

  “A brown, lean man, terrifically strong, the kind of man who can ride anything and lassoes wild horses—”

  “Complete with sheepskin trousers and a cowboy hat,” interpolated Tommy sarcastically.

  “—and has lived in the Wilds,” continued Tuppence. “I should like him to fall simply madly in love with me. I should, of course, rebuff him virtuously and be true to my marriage vows, but my heart would secretly go out to him.”

  “Well,” said Tommy, “I often wish that I may meet a really beautiful girl. A girl with corn-coloured hair who will fall desperately in love with me. Only I don’t think I rebuff her—in fact I am quite sure I don’t.”

  “That,” said Tuppence, “is naughty temper.”

  “What,” said Tommy, “is really the matter with you, Tuppence? You have never talked like this before.”

  “No, but I have been boiling up inside for a long time,” said Tuppence. “You see it is very dangerous to have everything you want—including enough money to buy things. Of course there are always hats.”

  “You have got about forty hats already,” said Tommy, “and they all look alike.”

  “Hats are like that,” said Tuppence. “They are not really alike. There are nuances in them. I saw rather a nice one in Violette’s this morning.”

  “If you haven’t anything better to do than going on buying hats you don’t need—”

  “That’s it,” said Tuppence, “that’s exactly it. If I had something better to do. I suppose I ought to take up good works. Oh, Tommy, I do wish something exciting would happen. I feel—I really do feel it would be good for us. If we could find a fairy—”

  “Ah!” said Tommy. “It is curious your saying that.”

  He got up and crossed the room. Opening a drawer of the writing table he took out a small snapshot print and brought it to Tuppence.

  “Oh!” said Tuppence, “so you have got them developed. Which is this, the one you took of this room or the one I took?”

  “The one I took. Yours didn’t come out. You underexposed it. You always do.”

  “It is nice for you,” said Tuppence, “to think that there is one thing you can do better than me.”

  “A foolish remark,” said Tommy, “but I will let it pass for the moment. What I wanted to show you was this.”

  He pointed to a small white speck on the photograph.

  “That is a scratch on the film,” said Tuppence.

  “Not at all,” said Tommy. “That, Tuppence, is a fairy.”

  “Tommy, you idiot.”

  “Look for yourself.”

  He handed her a magnifying glass. Tuppence studied the print attentively through it. Seen thus by a slight stretch of fancy the scratch on the film could be imagined to represent a small-winged creature on the fender.

  “It has got wings,” cried Tuppence. “What fun, a real live fairy in our flat. Shall we write to Conan Doyle about it? Oh, Tommy. Do you think she’ll give us wishes?”

  “You will soon know,” said Tommy. “You have been wishing hard enough for something to happen all the afternoon.”

  At that minute the door opened, and a tall lad of fifteen who seemed undecided as to whether he was a butler or a page boy inquired in a truly magnificent manner.

  “Are you at home, madam? The front doorbell has just rung.”

  “I wish Albert wouldn’t go to the Pictures,” sighed Tuppence, after she had signified her assent, and Albert had withdrawn. “He’s copying a Long Island butler now. Thank goodness I’ve cured him of asking for people’s cards and bringing them to me on a salver.”

  The door opened again, and Albert announced: “Mr. Carter,” much as though it were a Royal title.

  “The Chief,” muttered Tommy, in great surprise.

  Tuppence jumped up with a glad exclamation, and greeted a tall grey-haired man with piercing eyes and a tired smile.

  “Mr. Carter, I am glad to see you.”

  “That’s good, Mrs. Tommy. Now answer me a question. How’s life generally?”

  “Satisfactory, but dull,” replied Tuppence with a twinkle.

  “Better and better,” said Mr. Carter. “I’m evidently going to find you in the right mood.”

  “This,” said Tuppence, “sounds exciting.”

  Albert, still copying the Long Island butler, brought in tea. When this operation was completed without mishap and the door had closed behind him Tuppence burst out once more.

  “You did mean something, didn’t you, Mr. Carter? Are you going to send us on a mission into darkest Russia?”

  “Not exactly that,” said Mr. Carter.

  “But there is something.”

  “Yes—there is something. I don’t think you are the kind who shrinks from risks, are you, Mrs. Tommy?”

  Tuppence’s eyes sparkled with excitement.

  “There is certain work to be done for the Department—and I fancied—I just fancied—that it might suit you two.”

  “Go on,” said Tuppence.

  “I see that you take the Daily Leader,” continued Mr. Carter, picking up that journal from the table.

  He turned to the advertisement column and indicating a certain advertisement with his finger pushed the paper across to Tommy.

  “Read that out,” he said.

  Tommy complied.

  “The International Detective Agency, Theodore Blunt, Manager. Private Inquiries. Large staff of confidential and highly skilled Inquiry Agents. Utmost discretion. Consultations free. 118 Haleham St., W.C.”

  He looked inquiringly at M
r. Carter. The latter nodded. “That detective agency has been on its last legs for some time,” he murmured. “Friend of mine acquired it for a mere song. We’re thinking of setting it going again—say, for a six months’ trial. And during that time, of course, it will have to have a manager.”

  “What about Mr. Theodore Blunt?” asked Tommy.

  “Mr. Blunt has been rather indiscreet, I’m afraid. In fact, Scotland Yard have had to interfere. Mr. Blunt is being detained at Her Majesty’s expense, and he won’t tell us half of what we’d like to know.”

  “I see, sir,” said Tommy. “At least, I think I see.”

  “I suggest that you have six months leave from the office. Ill health. And, of course, if you like to run a Detective Agency under the name of Theodore Blunt, it’s nothing to do with me.”

  Tommy eyed his Chief steadily.

  “Any instructions, sir?”

  “Mr. Blunt did some foreign business, I believe. Look out for blue letters with a Russian stamp on them. From a ham merchant anxious to find his wife who came as a refugee to this country some years ago. Moisten the stamp and you’ll find the number 16 written underneath. Make a copy of these letters and send the originals on to me. Also if any one comes to the office and makes a reference to the number 16, inform me immediately.”

  “I understand, sir,” said Tommy. “And apart from these instructions?”

  Mr. Carter picked up his gloves from the table and prepared to depart.

  “You can run the Agency as you please. I fancied”—his eyes twinkled a little—“that it might amuse Mrs. Tommy to try her hand at a little detective work.”

  Two

  A POT OF TEA

  Mr. and Mrs. Beresford took possession of the offices of the International Detective Agency a few days later. They were on the second floor of a somewhat dilapidated building in Bloomsbury. In the small outer office, Albert relinquished the role of a Long Island butler, and took up that of office boy, a part which he played to perfection. A paper bag of sweets, inky hands, and a tousled head was his conception of the character.

  From the outer office, two doors led into inner offices. On one door was painted the legend “Clerks.” On the other “Private.” Behind the latter was a small comfortable room furnished with an immense business-like desk, a lot of artistically labelled files, all empty, and some solid leather-seated chairs. Behind the desk sat the pseudo Mr. Blunt trying to look as though he had run a Detective Agency all his life. A telephone, of course, stood at his elbow. Tuppence and he had rehearsed several good telephone effects, and Albert also had his instructions.