Peter Ruff and the Double Four. E. Phillips Oppenheim

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Peter Ruff and the Double Four - E. Phillips Oppenheim

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now,” Peter Ruff suggested, pointing to the motionless figure, “you can give me some explanation as to this!”

      Merries looked away from him all the time he was speaking. His voice was thick and nervous.

      “There were three of us lunching together,” he began—“four in all. There was a dispute, and this man threatened us. Afterwards there was a fight. It fell to my lot to take him away, and I can’t get rid of him! I can’t get rid of him!” he repeated, with something that sounded like a sob.

      “I still do not see,” Peter Ruff argued, “why you should have brought him here and deposited him upon my perfectly new carpet.”

      “You are Peter Ruff,” Merries declared. “ ‘Crime Investigator and Private Detective,’ you call yourself. You are used to this sort of thing. You will know what to do with it. It is part of your business.”

      “I can assure you,” Peter Ruff answered, “that you are under a delusion as to the details of my profession. I am Peter Ruff,” he admitted, “and I call myself a crime investigator—in fact, I am the only one worth speaking of in the world. But I certainly deny that I am used to having dead bodies deposited upon my carpet, and that I make a habit of disposing of them—especially gratis.”

      Merries tore open his coat.

      “Listen,” he said, his voice shaking hysterically, “I must get rid of it or go mad. For two hours I have been driving about in a motor car with—it for a passenger. I drove to a quiet spot and I tried to lift it out—a policeman rode up! I tried again, a man rushed by on a motor cycle, and turned to look at me! I tried a few minutes later—the policeman came back! It was always the same. The night seemed to have eyes. I was watched everywhere. The—the face began to mock me. I’ll swear that I heard it chuckle once!”

      Peter Ruff moved a little further away.

      “I don’t think I’ll have anything to do with it,” he declared. “I don’t like your description at all.”

      “It’ll be all right with you,” Merries declared eagerly. “It’s my nerves, that’s all. You see, I was there—when the accident happened. See here,” he added, tearing a pocketbook from his coat, “I have three hundred and seventy pounds saved up in case I had to bolt. I’ll keep seventy—three hundred for you—to dispose of it!”

      Ruff leaned over the motionless body, looked into its face, and nodded.

      “Masters, the bookmaker,” he remarked. “H’m! I did hear that he had a lot of money coming to him over the Cambridgeshire.”

      Merries shuddered.

      “May I go?” he pleaded. “There’s the three hundred on the table. For God’s sake, let me go!”

      Peter Ruff nodded.

      “I wish you’d saved a little more,” he said. “However—”

      He turned the lock and Merries rushed out of the room. Ruff looked across the room towards his secretary.

      “Ring up 1535 Central,” he ordered, sharply.

      Peter Ruff had descended from his apartments on the top floor of the building, in a new brown suit with which he was violently displeased, to meet a caller.

      “I am sorry to intrude—Mr. Ruff, I believe it is?” Sir Richard Dyson said, a little irritably—“but I have not a great deal of time to spare—”

      “Most natural!” Peter Ruff declared. “Pray take a chair, Sir Richard. You want to know, of course, about Lord Merries and poor Masters.”

      Sir Richard stared at his questioner, for a moment, without speech. Once more the fear which he had succeeded in banishing for a while, shone in his eyes—revealed itself in his white face.

      “Try the easy-chair, Sir Richard,” Ruff continued, pleasantly. “Leave your hat and cane on the table there, and make yourself comfortable. I should like to understand exactly what you have come to me for.”

      Sir Richard moved his head toward Miss Brown.

      “My business with you,” he said, “is more than ordinarily private. I have the honour of knowing Miss—”

      “Miss Brown,” Peter interrupted quickly. “In these offices, this young lady’s name is Miss Violet Brown.”

      Sir Richard shrugged his shoulders.

      “It is of no importance,” he said, “only, as you may understand, my business with you scarcely requires the presence of a third party, even one with the discretion which I am sure Miss—Brown possesses.”

      “In these matters,” Ruff answered, “my secretary does not exist apart from myself. Her presence is necessary. She takes down in shorthand notes of our conversation. I have a shocking memory, and there are always points which I forget. At the conclusion of our business, whatever it may be, these notes are destroyed. I could not work without them, however.”

      Sir Richard glanced a little doubtfully at the long, slim back of the girl who sat with her face turned away from him. “Of course,” he began, “if you make yourself personally responsible for her discretion—”

      “I am willing to do so,” Ruff interrupted, brusquely. “I guarantee it. Go on, please.”

      “I do not know, of course, where you got your information from,” Sir Richard began, “but it is perfectly true that I have come here to consult you upon a matter in which the two people whose names you have mentioned are concerned. The disappearance of Job Masters is, of course, common talk; but I cannot tell what has led you to associate with it the temporary absence of Lord Merries from this country.”

      “Let me ask you this question,” Ruff said. “How are you affected by the disappearance of Masters?”

      “Indirectly, it has caused me a great deal of inconvenience,” Sir Richard declared.

      “Facts, please,” murmured Peter.

      “It has been rumoured,” Sir Richard admitted, “that I owed Masters a large sum of money which I could not pay.”

      “Anything else?”

      “It has also been rumoured,” Sir Richard continued, “that he was seen to enter my house that day, and that he remained there until late in the afternoon.”

      “Did he?” asked Ruff.

      “Certainly not,” Sir Richard answered.

      Peter Ruff yawned for a moment, but covered the indiscretion with his hand.

      “Respecting this inconvenience,” he said, “which you admit that the disappearance of Job Masters has caused you, what is its tangible side?”

      Sir Richard drew his chair a little nearer to the table where Ruff was sitting. His voice dropped almost to a whisper.

      “It seems absurd,” he said, “and yet, what I tell you is the truth. I have been followed about—shadowed, in fact—for

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