William Blackstone Wildman Detective Story
The Sincere Spy
"Well, Winston, fill your glass and
sit you down by the fire."
Another rainy Sunday afternoon. I took my customary
chair, having decanted some of William Blackstone
Wildman's fine old port into a vessel more suitable for
the purpose at hand -- viz. to drink it. The wrinkled
old man raised his glass and cackled merrily.
"Cheers!"
Clink of glass on glass. He stretched out a gnarled
blue hand and picked up a battered cardboard box from
the floor beside him. Setting down his port, he opened
the box and unwrapped an object from a mass of tissue
paper. He passed it across to me.
"It's a wax model hand," I said, inspecting the old
curio. "Fingers in a flattened position. Thumb set
slightly apart. From a wax museum, am I right?"
"Quite right, Winston. A souvenir of a remarkable case
I worked on back in 1912. It is Napoleon's hand."
"Is that what you wish to call the case?"
"Oh, no. Heh, heh. I call it the case of the Sincere
Spy. Sincere in his convictions, but also a flesh and
blood spy -- without wax, you see, if you
remember your Latin, heh, heh, heh."
*********************************
Colonel Heinrich von Truss (he went
on) was an officer attached to the military staff of the
Kaiser's London embassy. It was known to us that he was
a spy, and he was kept under constant observation (I was
under the temporary employ of the War Office, and this
was one of my duties). But von Truss was merely the
receiver for German Intelligence; the identity of their
mysterious head agent, the Co-ordinator, was not known
to anybody in the Secret Service. His unmasking came
about, ironically, as a result of the murder of von Truss
himself in the Faustus Wax Museum on January 12, 1912,
which was a Tuesday, I recall. That was shortly after I
started working unofficially for the British Secret Service
under Sir Jacob Bond.
On that day papers concerning important plans for French
fleet maneuvers in the Mediterranean came into the hands
of the Co-ordinator -- we knew this from the confession
of a Foreign Office clerk. They were, of course, to be
transferred to von Truss at the earliest opportunity.
Consequently, a swarm of agents -- British, French,
Russian and what-all -- got after him. An intelligence
coup such as this could not be kept secret from those in
the game.
With the efficiency of his race, he quickly laid red
herrings across his track and shook off most of his
pursuers. I, however, succeeded in following him into the
Faustus Wax Museum in Brewer Street shortly before five
o'clock in the afternoon. Then I lost him.
A double was awaiting him in the Hall of the Conquerors.
That one I followed out into the dark alleys of Soho, and
tracked him to the Lamb & Flag in Covent Garden before
I realised my mistake. With an incident in the life of
John Dryden* soon brought to mind by this location, I made
an arrangement with some bully boys of my acquaintance
and hurried back to the Faustus, summoning my friend
Inspector Aphid and two constables on the way. It was
now past eight o'clock. Several hours wasted (and perhaps
I had spent too much time in the Lamb & Flag), and heaven
knows, we were probably too late.
---------
* John Dryden, the poet, was beaten up at the Lamb & Flag,
a notorious rough-house place, by hooligans hired by his political
enemies It is now a place where you take your girl before the opera.
--CMW
---------
The museum was locked up and dark, but by persistent
application to the great bronze eagle on the door we
aroused the night watchman, a little white-haired chap
called Hans.
"What for I should let you come herein?" he growled.
"For this," I said, showing him the muzzle of my American
'Peacemaker' revolver. (You see it over there, Winston;
a relic of my adventures in California in '91.)
"Here, Wildman, none of that," Aphid muttered as we
entered the building.
"Who is in charge of the museum," I demanded.
"Myself, Hans Heinz, mein Herr," the watchman said.
"Herr Donnerblitzen, der Direktor, iss from home tonight."
"Donnerblitzen!" I cried. "What fools we have been! Does
nobody know anything? Tell me, does he live on the
premises?"
"Ja, but as I said, he iss from home."
"Turn on all the lights! We must find those papers or there
will be hell to pay."
We began to search the museum, starting with the director's
quarters (empty). And on the ground floor, nothing. But
in the Hall of the Conquerors near a figure of Napoleon I saw an inconspicuous
door marked Private. An exit for von Truss?
"Where does that lead to?" I said, pointing.
"Die voork raums, mein Herr."
"Ha! Follow me, gentlemen..." I paused. "Locked. Open
this door, Hans!"
"I haf not der key on my ring, mein Herr." He shook a
bunch of keys in my face. "It iss lost. Also, it is not
permitted you should go in die voork raums."
"Say you! Aphid, there is a public stairway in the hall.
It may be there is another entrance."
Down we went, the boots of the constables clumping
loudly on the marble stairs. Facing the bottom of the
stairway, across a small hallway, was a large arch;
this led into the notorious Hall of Terror. To the left
a door led to the watchman's room. This was open, and
the room untenanted; a half-empty bottle of Schnapps sat
on the table. Next to the watchman's door was the back
exit, locked and bolted on the inside.
To the right of the archway there was a tableau of four
wax figures, posing in an infernal red light: a prison
cell, with Dr Palmer (the poisoner), two leering prison
guards, and with his back to us, a chaplain holding out
a large Bible to the unfortunate prisoner. An arc light
shone down melodramatically on that steady rock of faith
and hope being held out as a mockery to the doomed man.
Behind this grim scene, a false window, and the shadow of a
gallows. Next to all this nightmare, the unobtrusive door to the
workrooms.
It was not locked. We entered a long shadowy room
cluttered with workbenches and dismembered wax figures.
In a lavatory next to a small stairway leading up to the
locked door in the Hall of Conquerors I found a pile of
half-smoked cigarettes.
"Rhodesian," I said. "Von Truss must have waited here for
the museum to be closed, in order to obtain the papers
afterwards -- that the papers were hidden in the
building now seems certain. Well, there remains just one
more room to see before we start a systematic search for
the papers. But I fear they will have been long gone."
We went back into the hallway and entered the Hall of
Terror, a nightmarish exhibition compared to which the
scene in the tableau seemed as innocent as a wedding.
There were murderers, witches, thugs, and Dacoits; wheel,
gallows, and ducking stool. A guillotine, with Madame
Defarge and her cronies in devotional position round
it. A Chinese water torture apparatus, complete with
dripping water and a yellow stalagmite of a face beneath.
And along the entire back wall a session of the Spanish
Inquisition, with hooded monks, and Iron Maiden, and a
Rack.
"I say," Aphid exclaimed. "Realistic, eh? Don't it make
your hair stand on end!"
"Herr Donnerblitzen," Hans said proudly, "insist on
reality. Voorking models, all."
"Well," I said, "somebody has worked that one." I pointed
to the Rack. "That is von Truss."
There was a profound silence. The Chinese Water Torture
dripped. The shadow of the ducking stool jumped on the
wall. We whirled round to glare at the sheepish face of
one of the constables. Hans turned away, white-faced.
"Where are you going?" I said.
His reply was terse. "Schnapps."
"Fill five glasses, my man. You, constable, go with him.
Have yourself a drink -- no, that's all right. Then go
back to the Yard and bring more men. Call also at this
address." I wrote a quick note on a card (Mycroft, you know).
Meanwhile, Inspector Aphid had found the wax figure that
had preceded von Truss on the Rack lying beneath it.
Blood from the German was dripping down from a knife
wound in his side onto the dummy below. Shuddersome
business: The dummy looked more like a real corpse than
von Truss himself.
"'Ere are 'is clothes," the second constable said from
a dark corner. We searched them, but of course there were
no secret papers.
Suddenly we heard a groan and a crash from the hall, and
felt a cold draught on our necks.
"Outside, quickly," I shouted, and ran out through the
arch. Hans lay on the floor of his room, moaning, with
the fragments of several glasses beside him; by some
miracle the bottle of Schnapps was intact under the table.
The unconscious body of the constable was behind the
door. As Aphid went to the aid of the injured men, I
turned to the back exit in the hallway. The door was
wide open, and the alleyway beyond deserted.
"Look, mein Herr," said Hans, who had crawled out behind
me. "Der Doktor Polymer."
I looked. The parson from the prison tableau was gone.
Aphid cried out from the watchman's doorway: "'E was
there all the time. 'Iding. Well jigger me!"
"That's rather absurd," I said. "Why on earth would he
do a thing like that?"
"'E--he couldn't get out of the building. The watchman
had all the keys. And where else could he hide, with us
searching about?"
"I can think of several places. And if he wished to
impersonate a dummy, why not in the workroom, where he
would not be so conspicuously in sight?"
"Because," Aphid said with inescapable logic, "he had to
be near the back door to await his chance. The real
dummy will be in the workroom."
"Hide the tree in the forest. I see."
"Exactly, Wildman! While we was in the torture room he
stood here like the Rock of Gibraltar until Hans and
Smithers went for the spirits. Overpowers Constable Smithers,
takes the keys from Hans -- yes, you! You're in this,
my fine fellow, and you'll pay for it."
Hans had turned white. "Nein, nei...no, guv'nor. I hain't
got nuffink to do wiv it. 'E tol' me to keep me mouf
shut, or -- kkkik. Blimey! that Fritz bloke di'n't 'alf
squeal! Set me teef on hedge, 'e did."
"You are no German," shouted Aphid. "You are a fake!"
I interrupted. "Why did you let us in? Or, more to the
point, why didn't you let the other man out before
admitting us?"
"The German bloke wouldn't talk. The other bloke said
'e needed ten more minutes. I 'ad to keep you people up
at t'top, so's you wouldn't 'ear no screams."
Now Aphid had turned white. "Do you mean to say...
Harrumph! What did this man look like?"
"Big tall cove, wiv a...a clubfoot like. All done up in
black. Foreign, 'e was. 'E kep' calling me summat like
Gus Pudding."
"Gospodin," I said. "Russian. A Socialist. Now tell me
what happened just now when you left us."
"Ha! Well, yer see I recernised 'im as the parson in the
tabloo when we come down. So when 'e comes in and bashes
the peeler, I hain't suprised. I says, 'Yer shount
'a done that, I'm a law-abiding--' and 'e says all gruff
like, 'Gif to me de kyeys.'"
Hans's (Jack Hants's, as it turned out) mimicry was startling. Even his voice changed to a lower register.
"'Gif to me de kyeys, or I cut your troat from de right
ear to de left ear ond bach hagain.' So I gives 'im the
keys, and 'e pushes me ahead. When 'e's got it open,
'e goes--" Hans made such a frightful leer that Aphid
looked round behind his back--"and gives me such a shove
back into my room, I come up against the table all
topsy-turvy like."
Inspector Aphid rubbed his jaw. He turned to me and said:
"Do you suppose that Cossack found the papers you are
looking for?"
"That is why he tortured von Truss. I have no doubt he
was successful."
We stood about rather helplessly. Finally, I said, "You
had better go back to the Yard and see what you can do.
I'll remain here and guard the museum. Leave Hans here
with me, as I have some further questions to put to him."
He hesitated.
"Go!" I ordered. "Take these two with you." And the
representatives of Scotland Yard hurried off with their
wounded comrade. I turned to Hans, who was leaning against
a wall.
"Come forward, monsieur," I said. "I'll have the papers,
if you please. This revolver is loaded."
"Wotcher mean, guv. I hain't got no papers."
"Come now, there was no living person in that group, sir.
The figure of the chaplain was holding out at arm's
length...what?"
"A--a Bible."
"Indeed. Right under an arc light. Try holding out a
large book under an arc light for several minutes, and
I shall recommend you to any circus if you are able to
keep your arm from trembling or your hand from sweating.
There never was a sinister Russian spy."
Hans shrugged. "Ah, c'est la vie. This information rightly
belongs to my country, you know, but... You have great
powers of observation, mon ami."
"Pshaw! You, sir, did well to divert suspicion from
yourself with such speed when we interrupted your
activities so inconveniently. Without that sudden
diversion, the truth would soon have been out. You must
have knocked out Smithers immediately upon leaving the
torture chamber. That would give you time to remove the
parson figure to the workroom and set the stage for the
false escaping Russian. But why did you remain here in
the building? Again, why did you admit us?"
He smiled quite pleasantly. "Your knocking at the door
came just as I had elicited the location of the papers.
I killed the devil and went up to admit you under the
mistaken impression that you were some allies I had
summoned."
"Then you have not yet recovered the papers? Where are
they?"
He motioned me to follow him up the stairs. "I must
know, first, what you intend to do with me?"
"Our respective governments," I said oratorically,
"are now cordially allied in the interest of peace,
prosperity, and a balanced distribution of power. France
has seen fit to entrust to His Majesty's Government
certain strategic information. It is our duty to ensure
that such trust is warranted. Therefore, I am in honour
bound to recover those papers for the British Ministry.
When I have done so, M. Jean Hanteur, alias Herr Hans
Heinz, alias Mr Jack Hants, you shall go free."
"Ah, ha!" he said. "You know my name. This talk of Bibles
is what you call a bluff, eh?"
"In part," I chuckled. "Where are the papers hidden?"
"Under Napoleon's waistcoat. The left side. His hand,
of course, will have to come off."
It was, naturally, the inevitable hiding place. Several
minutes were needed to get at the papers. I could see
why Hans had wished to draw us away from the museum,
so that he, or a confederate, could be alone with
Napoleon for a while. Finally....
"Voila." He pulled them out and handed them over without
any hesitation. I took a quick look at them. They were
genuine.
"Very well, Hans, you may go. Thank you, also, for
drawing my attention to Herr Co-ordinator Donnerblitzen,
who 'iss from home tonight'."
The Frenchman coughed. "My friend, you did not think to
look inside the Iron Maiden."
"Shocking! But then you are not an Englishman. Please
give my regards to Monsieur Poisson of the Bureau.
Au revoir!"
"Vive l'Entente!"
"Shall we finish off this bottle of Schnapps?"
"There is no time."
"There is time enough for this, my friend."
And so we did, in that strangest setting (almost) in my career. Hans Heinz and
I had many adventures thereafter during the Great War and I consider him one
of my best friends. Alas, he was one of the people killed during the Mata Hari
business. My foresightful note to Mycroft resulted in what you call a cover-up of
major proportions. That was fine, indeed. In the long run, the secret papers turned
out to be absolutely useless -- they were fake, a perfidious French trick.
From the William Blackstone Wildman Collection by Grobius Shortling
[Another wax museum murder... Well, what's wrong with that? Everyone with any
romance in his or her soul should have a wax museum story in them. (Wildman, a
private detective, rides roughshod over police procedure, even in those days, but
that's the convention for this type of thing.) --Grobius]
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