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"Doctor John Simons speaking," he said presently. "Come _at once_ to Moorgate Place, Moorgate Street. Murder been committed by--Severac Bablon. Most peculiar weapon used. The police, no doubt, would value an expert opinion. You _must_ be here within ten minutes."
The arrival of a couple of constables frustrated whatever object Dr.
Simons had had in detaining Mr. Rohscheimer, but the doctor lingered on, evidently awaiting whoever he had spoken to on the telephone. The police ascertained from Rohscheimer that he had held an interest in the "Douglas Graham" business, that this business was of an usurious character, that the dead man's real name was Paul Gottschalk, and that he, Rohscheimer, found the outer door fastened when he arrived at about seven o'clock, opened it with a key which he held, and saw Gottschalk as they saw him now. The office was in darkness. Apparently, valuables had been taken from the safe--which was open. The staff usually left at six.
This was the point reached when Detective Harborne put in an appearance and, with professional nonchalance, took over the investigation. Dr.
Simons glanced at his watch and impatiently strode up and down the outside office.
A few minutes later came a loud knocking on the door. Simons opened it quickly, admitting a most strange old gentleman--tall and ramshackle--who was b.u.t.toned up in a chess-board inverness; whose trousers frayed out over his l.u.s.treless boots like much-defiled lace; whose coat-sleeves, protruding from the cape of his inverness, sought to make amends for the dullness of his footwear. He wore a turned-down collar and a large, black French knot. His hirsute face was tanned to the uniform hue of a coffee berry; his unkempt grey hair escaped in tufts from beneath a huge slouched hat; and his keen old eyes peered into the room through thickly pebbled spectacles.
"Dr. Lepardo!" cried Simons. "I am glad to see you, sir."
"Eh? Who's that?" said Harborne, looking out from the inner office, notebook in hand. "You should not have let anybody in, doctor."
"Excuse me, Mr. Harborne," replied Simons civilly, "but I have taken the liberty of asking Doctor Emmanuel Lepardo, whom I chanced to know was in London, to give an opinion upon the rather odd weapon with which this crime was perpetrated. He is one of the first authorities in Europe, and I thought you might welcome his a.s.sistance at this early stage of your inquiry."
"Oh," said the detective thoughtfully, "that's different. Thank you, sir," nodding to the new-comer. "I'm afraid your name isn't known to me, but if you can give us a tip or two I shall be grateful. I wish Inspector Sheffield were here. These cases are fair nightmares to me.
And now it's got to murder, life won't be worth living at the Yard if we don't make an arrest."
"Yes, yes," said Dr. Lepardo, peering about him, speaking in a most peculiar, rumbling tone, and with a strong accent. "I would not have missed such a chance. Where is this dagger? I have just returned from the Izamal temples of Yucatan. I have brought some fine specimens to Europe. Obsidian knives. Sacrificial. Beautiful."
He shuffled jerkily into the private office, seemed to grasp its every detail in one comprehensive, peering glance, and pounced upon the dagger with a hoa.r.s.e exclamation. The Scotland Yard man watched him with curiosity, and Julius Rohscheimer, in the open door, followed his movements with a newly awakened interest.
"True Damascus!" he muttered, running a long finger up the blade. "Hilt, Persian--not Kultwork--Persian. Yes. Can I pull it out? Yes? Damascened to within three inches. Very early."
He turned to the detective, dagger in hand.
"This is a Turkish yataghan."
No one appeared to be greatly enlightened.
"When I say a Turkish yataghan I mean that from a broken Damascus sword-blade and a Persian dagger handle, a yataghan of the Turkish pattern has been made. There are stones incrusted in the hilt but the blade is worth more. Very rare. This was made in Persia for the Turkish market."
"One of Severac Bablon's Arabs," burst in Rohscheimer hoa.r.s.ely, "has done this."
"Ah, yes. So? I read of him in Paris. He is in league with the chief of the Paris detective. Him? So. I meet him once."
"Eh?" cried Harborne, "Severac Bablon?"
Julius Rohscheimer's eyes grew more prominent than usual.
"No, no. The great Lemage. Lemage of Paris--his accomplice. This dagger is worth two thousand francs. Let me see if a Turk has been in these rooms. I meet Victor Lemage on such another occasion with this. He say to me, 'Dr. Lepardo, come to the Rue So-and-such. A young person is stabbed with a new kind of knife.' I tell him, 'It is Afghan, M.
Lemage.' He find one who had been in that country, arrest--and it is the a.s.sa.s.sin. There is no smell of a Turk here. Ah, yes. The Turk, he have a smell of his own, as have the negro, the Chinese, the Malay."
Pulling a magnifying-gla.s.s from one bulging pocket of his inverness, Dr.
Lepardo went peering over the writing desk, pa.s.sing with a grunt from the bloodstained paper bearing the name of Severac Bablon to the other doc.u.ments and books lying there; to the pigeon-holes; to the chair; to the rug; to the body. Crawling on all fours he went peering about the floor, scratching at the carpet with his long nails like some monstrous, restless cat.
Harborne glanced at Dr. Simons and tapped his forehead significantly.
"Humour my friend," whispered the physician. "He may appear mad, but he is a man of most curious information. Believe me, if any Oriental has been in these rooms within the last hour he will tell you so."
Dr. Lepardo from beneath a table rumbled hoa.r.s.ely:
"There is a back stair. He went out that way as someone came in."
Julius Rohscheimer started violently.
"Good G.o.d! Then he was here when _I_ came in!" he exclaimed.
"Who speaks?" rumbled Lepardo, crawling away into the outside office, and apparently following a trail visible only to himself.
"It is Mr. Julius Rohscheimer," explained Simons. "He was a partner, I understand, of the late Mr. Graham's. He entered with a key about seven o'clock and discovered the murder."
"As he came in our friend the a.s.sa.s.sin go out," cried Lepardo.
Harborne gave rapid orders to the two constables, both of whom immediately departed.
"Are you sure of that, sir?" he called.
Against the promptings of his common sense, the eccentric methods of the peculiar old traveller were beginning to impress him.
"Certainly. But look!"
Dr. Lepardo re-entered the inner office, carrying several files.
"See! He begins to destroy these letters. He has certainly taken many away. If you look you see that he has torn pages from the private accounts on the desk. He is disturbed by Mr. Someheimer. Can you know the address of his lady secretary-typist?"
Harborne's eyes sparkled appreciatively.
"You're pretty wide at this business, doctor," he confessed. "I'm looking after her myself. But Mr. Rohscheimer doesn't know, and all the staff have gone long ago."
"Ah!" rumbled Dr. Lepardo, dropping his gla.s.s into the sack-like pocket.
"No Arab or such person has done this. He was one who wore gloves. So I no longer am interested. Here"--placing a small object on the desk beside the yataghan--"is new evidence I find for you. It is a boot-b.u.t.ton--foreign. Ah! if the great Lemage could be here. It is his imagination that makes him supreme. In his imagination he would murder again the poor Graham with the yataghan. He would lose his boot-b.u.t.ton.
He would run away--as Mr. Heimar comes in--to some hiding-place, taking with him the bills and the letters he had stolen, and the notes from the safe. Once in his secret retreat, he would arrest himself--and behold, in an hour--in ten minutes--his hand would be upon the shoulder of the other a.s.sa.s.sin. Ah! such a case would be joy to him. He would revel. He would gloat."
Harborne nodded.
"If Mr. Lemage would come and revel with me for half an hour I wouldn't say no to learning from him," he said. "But it isn't likely--particularly considering that this is a Severac Bablon case."
"Ah!" rumbled Dr. Lepardo, "you should travel, my friend. You would learn much of the imagination in the desert of Sahara, in the forests of Yucatan."
"You know," continued Harborne, turning to Simons, "these Severac Bablon cases--I don't mind admitting it--are over my weight. They bristle with clues. We get to know of addresses he uses--people he's acquainted with--and what good does it do us? Not a ha'p'orth. Of course, it's a fact that he's had influential friends up to now, but this job, unless I'm mistaken, will alter the complexion of things. What d'you think Victor Lemage will say to _this_, Dr. Lepardo?"
But there was no one to answer, for the man from the forests of Yucatan had vanished.
The charwoman of Moorgate Place was the next person to encounter Dr.
Lepardo, and his kindly manner completely won her heart. She had seen Miss Maitland--the dead man's secretary--regularly go to lunch and sometimes to tea with a young lady from Messrs. Bowden and Ralph's. The staff at this firm of stockbrokers was working late, and it was unlikely that the young lady had left, even yet. Dr. Lepardo expressed his anxiety to make her acquaintance, and was conducted by the garrulous old charwoman to an office in Copthall Avenue. The required young lady was found.
"My dear," said Dr. Lepardo, paternally, "I have a private matter of utmost importance to tell to Miss Maitland--to-night. Where shall I find her?"