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Authors: Margery Allingham

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BOOK: Coroner's Pidgin
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“Who is this?” he demanded.

“An old customer,” said Stavros dully, “a
good
old customer.”

Pirri stared at Campion again, his expression frankly incredulous. Finally he shrugged his shoulders and walked back the way he had come. In the doorway he paused, and addressed Holly:

“I don't make any charge,” he said firmly. “No charge whatever.”

He went on in to the back of the house, and at a nod from Holly the detective sergeant closed on Stavros. “I'm afraid you'll have to come with me and do what we've got to do,” he said. Stavros nodded; he looked broken and exhausted. “I'll come,” he said.

Holly let the little procession pass out of the room before he went over to Campion and Don Evers. “These damned foreigners,” he said. “We're trying to get this chap to go down and identify his wife, and on the way he suddenly sees his partner and makes a murderous assault on him. Then the partner won't prefer a charge. They're all alike; utterly unbalanced.”

“Maybe he suspects his partner of having something to do with the death of his wife,” said Don.

“Might be that.” Holly was non-committal. “He just saw him and rushed at him, and now the partner seems to suggest he often did it.”

Mr. Campion nodded to Holly and took Don's arm.

“I think you know . . .” he murmured.

“I'm with you,” agreed the young man promptly, and they went out into the cold sunshine together. “I suppose that all meant something to you,” said Don diffidently, as they walked down the narrow road. “Being uninitiated I just get the impression that everyone's gone clean crazy around here.”

“Not everyone,” said Mr. Campion seriously. “Not everyone, but someone has, you know; someone has, and I'm open to bet it's not our friend Stavros.”

CHAPTER ELEVEN

IF MR. CAMPION
had not been recognized as a valued friend by Taffy Warlock, the stage doorkeeper at the Alexandra Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue, it is quite possible that the incident which first shocked him and then made him so angry, would never have occurred. However, as soon as he presented himself in the concrete corridor at the seamy side of the footlights, Taffy put out his dusty head and greeted him with such unaffected joy that Campion (who had not after all so far received quite that welcome home to which every returning warrior has a right) was touched, albeit in every sense of the word.

Taffy was so certain that Miss Snow would be as delighted to see Mr. Campion as he was himself, that despite one of the strictest rules of the theatre, he sent him on down the staircase without bothering to announce him.

The matinée was well advanced into the second act, and from far away beyond the single bare bulb which marked a turn in the passage, came the first sound of the
Momma's Utility Baby Gets a Riveter's Lullaby
number, which was Eve's high spot in the middle of the show. Campion did not recognize it, although the rhythmic clanging interested him, and he did not realize that it was Miss Snow herself who was leading the chorus. He went along to the star's dressing-room, found her card upon the door, and knocked.

The door was opened abruptly and Stanislaus Oates looked out at him. The two old friends stared at each other with exactly the same degree of guarded casualness, and even then the situation might have been saved had not Johnny appeared behind Oates.

“Oh, hallo, Campion,” he said blankly. “Come in.” He was more transparent than they were and it was evident that he was put out; ‘caught out' was perhaps the more correct term, and Campion, whose first impression was that the Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department had for some reason or other decided to arrest the Marquess of Carados in person, began to understand that it was not nearly as easy as that.

Oates opened the door a little wider for him to enter. He was not at all pleased. Campion, who had known him well for close on seventeen years, was in no doubt about it. They were all three embarrassed and the newcomer did his best to withdraw.

“I dropped in to say hello to Eve,” he said. “I didn't realize it was a party.”

“It's not,” said the Chief. “I'm just going. Miss Snow will forgive me if I don't wait for her. Say good-bye for me, Carados, will you?”

“All right.” Johnny sounded dubious. “All right,” he repeated, adding suddenly, “you'd better take these, hadn't you?”

He gathered several papers from the settee in the corner where the two had apparently been sitting together, and handed them over. The Chief took them awkwardly, and his melancholy eyes met Mr. Campion's own for an instant. Mr. Campion had seen so many police memorandum slips in his time that he could hardly fail to recognize a bundle of them when they were passed under his nose, but he looked obligingly stupid. Oates was not deceived, and he nodded to him briefly as he thrust the packet into his breast pocket.

“I don't want you to leave London,” he murmured. “Your train will wait.”

It was said with belligerent jocularity, and Campion understood how ill at ease he was. The entire incident was very unlike Oates; for the life of him Campion could not help conveying his astonishment. The Chief's face darkened.

“Well, good-bye,” he said, and hurried off.

It was a retreat, and Campion, the mildest of men, was first shocked and then made angry. This was too much like a secret rendezvous with a suspected person for it to pass without an explanation, if he was to consider himself in any way a party to the investigation. If he was not to be such a party, then why this infernal curtailing of his long overdue leave. His face grew hard and he eyed Carados, who was standing with his hands in his pockets, surveying him gloomily.

Johnny did not speak, and the silence went on for a long time until Campion broke it himself.

“I believe we're dining together tonight,” he said.

“Are we?” Carados raised his big head at the words and a smile of sudden friendliness spread over his face. “I say, I am glad about that. Bush got hold of you, did he? What do you think of the story?”

“About the odd bottle of X, the mystery wine?”

“Yes, what do you make of it? Queer, eh?”

Campion was surprised. It had been an interesting little tale of a mild and gentlemanly kind, but when it was superimposed on a murder hunt and flanked by the most devastating conflict of all time, it seemed to him that it lost its piquancy. He was on the point of saying so when Carados forestalled him.

“It is extraordinary,” he said. “I'm damned glad you're coming, Campion.”

The thin man in the spectacles regarded his friend in astonishment. For a man who was a fair suspect for murder and had just had his wedding postponed on those grounds, he seemed to be engrossed in peculiar trivialities. Johnny walked up and down the room.

“Theo tells me the lad concerned is that youngster who's pinched my Susan,” he said suddenly. He sounded cheerful if not particularly at ease, and Campion took off his spectacles the better to see him.

“I've just left Evers now,” he said at last. “Nice, I thought.”

“Is he?” Johnny seemed glad to hear it. “I must meet him. You think he's sound, do you? It matters to me quite a lot.”

The enquiry was convincingly genuine and Campion did his best.

“I didn't look at his teeth or his bank balance,” he said primly, “but I liked him.”

“Good. Good.” Johnny Carados rattled the coins in his pocket and began to whistle softly. “I hope to God he's a decent bloke,” he went on presently, “I shan't part without a hell of a row if I don't approve, you know. She's got no
people now except that old lion fish of a father; Tom always did say the old man needed a keeper, and my hat, how right he was. Tom was her husband, by the way, wrote himself off about a year ago. Best kid I ever knew.”

“I had lunch with Mrs. Shering,” said Campion.

“Did you?” Johnny paused in his walk and looked round.

“Good chap. I was worrying about her. I haven't seen her since the wedding fizzle. She's a pet, isn't she?” He sighed. “I had lunch with papa, laying mines for the police. He's magnificent at sea, I believe; there's room there for his methods, no doubt. We lunched at Black's—not his element.”

Campion said nothing at all, his face was expressionless, and for a while it seemed that Carados had forgotten him. But after a time he sat down opposite him on the dressing-table chair and faced him. He looked younger than Campion had ever seen him and there was a startled expression in his grey-blue eyes. His question was unexpected.

“Campion,” he said, “when you were out there on the Continent did you ever feel you were actively at war?”

After a long moment of self-control Mr. Campion said affably:

“You ring a faint bell.”

Carados did not smile; his strong sensitive face remained anxious. “Well, then,” he said, “in that case you know what a lot of people around here don't know, and that is, that when one is actively at war one simply does the most expedient thing. Ordinary peace-time considerations and institutions come to look a bit remote; pleasant and good and all that, but luxurious and impractical, don't they?”

Campion thought he understood him. He looked up nervously, wondering how far he was going. “Yes, I know,” he said briefly.

“Well, there you are,” said Johnny. “It's a relief to find someone informed. That's the devil of it over here just now. We're all mixed up in this country; the people who are actively fighting are living at home alongside the people who aren't. Out there you were at least all on the one job.”
He got up and grinned. “I've only seen all this in the last day or so,” he said.

Campion sat looking at him. It was quite true, of course, it was a sidelight on the times which had not occurred to him before. He went on turning over the present situation in his mind.

“Johnny,” he said suddenly, “do you think that woman was killed in your room because of this projected wedding?”

Carados met his eyes, and let his own drop before them. “What can I think?” he said. “I don't care why, it's who I'm worrying about.”

He turned away to resume his tiger walk up and down the room. “When sophisticated people do crack, they crack to pieces,” he said. “What's frightening me is this. I'm beginning to believe that one of us has gone mad. I've tried to make it mean something else, but it doesn't add up any other way.”

Campion remained silent for some time. A little more light was filtering into the picture in his mind, but even so it was by no means clear while there was one great glaring unlikelihood in the story which he could not bring himself to swallow. He turned to an easier subject.

“What was she like?” he asked. “What sort of a woman?”

“Who? Moppet?” Johnny frowned. “Oh, she was all right, you know,” he said. “A jolly, vulgar little person with an interesting approach. You always felt she was just about to be terribly witty and yet she never was. She had an indescribable promise of romance, too, which turned out to be rather prim sentimentality; and yet you felt kindly towards her. The worst thing I remember about her was her energy, but I can't see anyone killing her for that. Besides, she was one of those people you like even when you can't stand them about any longer.”

“That's what Stavros said,” murmured Campion. “He said one couldn't live with her every day, but he only found that out after he'd married her.”

“Married her?” Carados was staring at Campion in amazement. “Are you talking about Stavros at the Minoan?”

“Yes. She was his wife. He married her at the beginning of the war, didn't you know?”

“No, I didn't know anything about her.” A wave of pure relief passed over his face. “I say, are you sure about that?”

“Certain. The police know all about it.”

“Oates didn't know.” Johnny was frowning again and the dull wretchedness returned to his face. “He'd have told me.”

Campion shrugged his shoulders. “The report may be waiting for him.”

“Maybe. Maybe. I hope you're right, Campion. If this is true it's a break. It means there's a chance that the whole thing comes from outside.” He broke off and stood looking at the other man. “Well, I'll see you tonight then,” he said, “this is good news. I was in a flat spin, absolutely bags of panic, and now I do see there is just a chance I may have been mistaken. . . . Oh, hello, Eve.”

“Hello. I'm sorry but I must change. Albert, my dear, I didn't know you were here. How are you?” Miss Snow came in with a rush followed by the consequential Mrs. Phipps, who had been her dresser for years. Her squeaky voice, so much beloved by her enormous public, expressed every shade of her surprise and pleasure, and Campion was warmed by it.

Eve was tired, but triumphant, and she made an absurd and attractive figure in a small, white boiler suit and a baby's bonnet; her face was painted like a doll's, and from her hand hung a little silver hammer trimmed with bells. She kissed Mr. Campion perfunctorily, and waved aside his excuses.

“No, darling, don't go,” she said. “I want to talk to you. Phippy, you take these, and I'll do my face.” She sat down at the mirror, while Mrs. Phipps, who reminded everybody of a hare in petticoats, moved around her in efficient bounds. When she was covered with a barber's cape Eve plunged her hands in the cold cream.

“You got rid of the policeman, Johnny?” she enquired. It was her first direct remark to him, and it came to Mr. Campion that a row was in progress.

“Yes,” said Johnny.

“Well, is everything all right?”

“My dearest girl, I don't know.” He looked down at her as she sat smearing the grease thickly over her mouth and eyebrows. “I don't know,” he repeated. “Thank you for letting me see him here. Good-bye, Campion, see you tonight.”

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