something on it and sent him off with a motion of his head. Gently watched the waiter threading his way through the tables with bland indifference.

‘Well?’ he demanded.

The waiter made a slight bow. ‘The gentleman at table seven sends you this note, sir.’

Gently took it. It read: ‘Join me in celebrating your success.’ He took out his wallet and ostentatiously folded the note into it. ‘Give my regrets to the gentleman at table seven and tell him I’m here on business,’ he said.

The waiter bowed again and departed. Out of the corner of his eye Gently watched him gliding back between the tables. Leaming received his message with a shrug of his elegant shoulders, laughed, and pushed forward his glass for more champagne. But the sparkle had gone out of him now. The laughs were a little forced and came between intervals of brooding over his cigar, over his glass. Once or twice he tried to catch Gently’s eye, but each time Gently was resolutely looking in some other direction, or drinking his coffee. He never seemed to be looking at Leaming. He was just there, a dark, remorseless presence.

Leaming called for the evening paper and read it, frowning. It contained a full account of the inquest. There, with complete finality, the Huysmann case was dissected, analysed, judged and put away… solved and dismissed. Everyone had been satisfied. Yet there sat Gently like the Old Man of the Sea, clinging, watching, unshakable in his obstinacy, a ratiocinating limpet who refused to be given the slip. What did the stupid little man think he could do now?

The band was playing a popular hit tune of the moment. Several couples got up to dance. A woman Leaming knew came over to his table, gushing, looking for a partner.

‘Darling! I didn’t know you were here all alone…’

‘I just looked in for a bite to eat…’

‘Oh, but you simply must dance this one with me!’

‘I couldn’t, Laura… too soon after dinner.’

‘Just the teeniest weeniest hop, darling?’

‘Look — there’s Geoffrey Davis over there… rouse him out for a dance.’

He was staring at Gently more directly now, trying to catch him out. But Gently was not to be caught. The only indication he gave that he was interested in Leaming was that he never looked at him. Now, he was ordering another cup of coffee. With the waiter standing before him, his eyes had only to slip a fraction to one side for a glance at Leaming, yet they firmly refused to make that slip. It was silly, childish… like a schoolboy game. He became suddenly furious with Gently. If the man was there to watch him, why didn’t he watch him, instead of playing the fool like this? How much longer would he sit there, drinking coffee at one-and-six a cup?

Gently was beginning to wonder about that himself, though with such small cups it represented no hardship, and the coffee was quite good. He was getting hungry, of course… but the Venetian’s menu had been drawn up for Chief Constables rather than Chief Inspectors. So he toyed with an empty pipe instead. Dancing had become more general now and there was a steady trickle of new arrivals. Supper was being served to the tables all round him. A younger and more romantic couple had taken the table previously occupied by the asparagus-eaters, a callow young man cutting loose with his boss’s secretary, perhaps.

At eleven fifteen Leaming paid his bill with two five-pound notes, waiving the change. Gently made no move as he left his table and sauntered casually towards the foot of the stairs. There he paused to light a cigarette. The gold cigarette case opened and closed with a distant snap, and a waiter appeared from nowhere with a lighter. Leaming stood with his head bowed, apparently in thought. Then, as though remembering something, he raised his head with a smile and slipped across to the table where Gently was sitting.

‘You run to late hours in your business?’ he said brightly.

Gently eyed him without expression. ‘It depends on our clients… some of them never go to bed.’

Leaming took the seat opposite. ‘I thought you were down here on holiday… naturally, since our business was cleared up, I didn’t expect to find you engaged in something fresh.’

‘I’m not.’

‘Not on something fresh?’

‘No.’

Leaming looked at him uncomprehendingly. ‘But I thought this thing came to an end at the inquest… there doesn’t seem much left to explain.’

‘Some things come to an end at inquests, but this isn’t one of them.’

‘Well… if I can assist you in any way, don’t be afraid to ask. If it’s some silly little complication to do with the firm I dare say I can put you straight.’

Gently rocked a little in his chair. ‘It concerns the main issue,’ he said, ‘the person Fisher saw stabbing Huysmann… and the person who cut Fisher’s throat subsequently.’ His green eyes fixed on Leaming, still completely without expression.

Leaming remained silent, taut, cigarette angled from the corner of his mouth.

‘That doesn’t surprise you?’ enquired Gently, with a trace of sarcasm.

‘Yes… it does.’

‘You’d like to make a statement about it?’

Leaming’s eyes met his, brown and powerful, cautious as a wild animal’s: they broke into a smile. ‘Why should I make a statement about it?’

Gently shook his head, as though acknowledging the point. ‘Would you like to tell me how you spent yesterday afternoon?’

‘I’d love to… where do you want me to start?’

‘Start where you dropped me after lunch.’

‘Very well. I went to the office and looked through the afternoon mail… then I dictated some letters… then I took some specifications over to Sainty’s the contractors.’ Leaming paused, mockingly. ‘I was gone about an hour,’ he added.

‘And the time?’

‘Ah… the time. I felt that would be important. Well, I left the office at half-past three and re-entered it at twenty-six and a half minutes to five.’

‘And you were at Sainty’s during all that time?’

‘Dear me, no — only for about twenty minutes.’

‘Where were you during the remainder of that time?’

Leaming’s smile came back, strong, confident, almost reproving. ‘Oh, just driving around, you know. I’ve got a nice car. I get a kick out of negotiating the traffic with it.’

‘And that’s your official story?’

‘Yes, I think so… unless somebody can give me a reason for putting out a better one.’

Gently nodded, keeping his eyes fixed on Leaming’s. ‘Suppose I say that the little boy to whom you gave two shillings saw your car parked in Burgh Street… would that be reason enough?’

‘There’s a lot of cars get parked in Burgh Street.’

‘But this one was a red sports car… it had an aeroplane mascot. The little boy blew the propeller round. Also, it was parked near Mariner’s Lane.’

There was a pause, charged and vibrant. The smile still flickered in Leaming’s eyes. ‘No,’ he said at last, ‘I don’t think it is. Somehow, I’ve never relied very much on little boys as witnesses… have you? They forget things so easily… they rarely make a convincing impression. No, I’ll stick to my story.’

Gently said: ‘Then there’s the bag…’

Leaming made no response.

‘The gladstone bag that had the money in it, the bag that Fisher was bending over when his throat was cut.’ He leaned forward, his eyes boring at Leaming’s compellingly. But Leaming met them, hard and impenetrable. There was no give in him at all.

‘So it was a gladstone bag?’

‘Yes, a gladstone bag. And during the murder it got bloodied… so did some of the notes which were lying on top. The blood was wiped off the bag temporarily, but one can’t get rid of blood as easily as that — not so that it becomes undetectable in laboratory tests — so the bag had to be destroyed.’

‘Go on,’ said Leaming, ‘you’re interesting me.’

‘This evening, just before I came up here, I stepped into the timber-yard for a moment.’

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