The Beard of the Prophet
BORGO PRESS BOOKS BY GERALD VERNER
The Beard of the Prophet: A Mr. Budd Classic Crime Tale
The Dragon Princess: A Novel of Adventure
COPYRIGHT INFORMATION
Copyright © 1939 by Gerald Verner
Copyright © 2011 by Chris Verner
Published by Wildside Press LLC
www.wildsidebooks.com
DEDICATION
To Ernest Dudley, with every good wish
CHAPTER ONE
MR. BUDD HEARS OF THE PROPHET
That obese and sleepy-eyed detective, Superintendent Robert Budd, always referred afterwards to the queer incidents surrounding the death of old Reuben Hayles as “that hokum business at Liddenhurst.” And to a certain extent this description was justified.
The old, neglected manor house and its strange occupant, the storm which raged throughout that terrible night, and the horrible and ‘impossible’ death of the old man, did not strictly belong to real life at all.
They were, as Mr. Budd remarked disparagingly at the time, ‘story book stuff,’ and his sense of reality was, in consequence, a little outraged.
The whole thing began on a morning in late August, when he was summoned to the Assístant-Commissioner’s room and found Colonel Blair, smooth and dapper as usual, examining the contents of a big folder that lay open on the desk in front of him.
“Sit down, Superintendent.” His superior nodded towards a vacant chair. “I’ve got something rather queer here. You’ve heard of Reuben Hayles, I suppose?”
“The archaeologist feller?” murmured the big man, and the Assistant-Commissioner inclined his head.
“That’s the man,” he said. “The newspapers were full of him six months ago. He was supposed to have discovered the tomb of Mohammed. There was great excitement at the time. Professor ‘This’ said he had, and Professor ‘That’ said he hadn’t. Letters were written to The Times praising him and abusing him alternately. He read a paper to the Archaeological Society, proving conclusively that he had found the tomb of the prophet, and another distinguished gentleman read a paper proving equally conclusively that he’d done nothing of the kind. Nobody, apparently, has the least idea which is right.”
The fat man blinked sleepily. Certainly he hadn’t, and he didn’t very much care.
“Well, it appears,” continued Colonel Blair, “that this man Hayles has recently been receiving a series of threatening letters. Instead of disregarding them, as the majority of people would, he seems to have taken a serious view. So much so, in fact, that he has asked for police investigation and protection.”
“Surely, sir,” murmured Mr. Budd, raising his eyebrows in surprise, “it’s a matter for the local police to deal with?”
“In the ordinary course, yes,” said his superior. “But Hayles is a distant cousin of the Home Secretary, and he has particularly requested that we should look into the matter. Liddenhurst, where Hayles lives, is on the edge of the Metropolitan area, so I’m sending you down to pacify the old man.
“It’s unusual, I know,” went on the Assistant-Commissioner, when he saw Mr. Budd’s expression, “to detail such a trivial case to any officer of your rank—but the circumstances are exceptional. Personally I don’t suppose for one minute that there’s anything in these threats. They’re the usual sort of twaddle, but there you are.” He shrugged his shoulders and flicked open the folder in front of him. “Here are the letters,” he said, pushing the cardboard cover across the desk, and Mr. Budd sat forward wearily, and inspected the contents.
They consisted of four sheets of cheap notepaper and the messages, which had been typewritten, were short. The first was dated July 15th, and ran:
“Your sacrilege will bring violent death in its train. Take heed for your time is short.”
It was signed: “The Prophet.”
And the second, which was dated ten days later read:
“Every passing hour brings your doom nearer. The curse is upon you.”
The date of the third was only a week after the second:
“I am coming for you soon. The hand of Mohammed is raised to strike.”
There was an interval between this and the last of nearly three weeks, and the threat became more definite:
“Death will come to you on the night of the full moon. Prepare to meet your doom.”
Mr. Budd sniffed disparagingly when he had read the last of the notes.
“The Prophet!” he muttered contemptuously. “Some crazy fanatic, I suppose. I can’t understand any sane man taking this nonsense seriously, sir.”
“Neither can I,” said Colonel Blair, “but there it is. Hayles may be eccentric, but he’s certainly not mad, and he evidently takes these threats very seriously indeed. Tomorrow night is the night of the full moon,” he added.
“And Mr. Hayles, bein’ scared, wants somebody there in case this prophet feller turns up as promised,” murmured the stout man.
“Exactly!” The Assistant-Commissioner helped himself to a cigarette, lit it, and nodded through the smoke.
“When d’you suggest I go, sir?” asked Mr. Budd, without enthusiasm.
“Tomorrow morning,” answered Blair. “In the meanwhile, you’d better take these letters and see if you can learn anything.”
The stout superintendent picked up the folder and tucked it under his arm.
“I’ll take Sergeant Leek with me, sir,” he said, pausing at the door. “I don’t suppose anythin’ ’ull happen, but just in case it does we’d better do the thing according to routine.”
He left London at ten o’clock on the following morning in his dingy little car, accompanied by the lean sergeant, and neither experienced any premonition of the tragedy that was awaiting them.
It was a hot, still morning; there was not a breath of air and the atmosphere was stifling. Neither was it appreciably cooler when they reached the open country. The sun beat down from a cloudless sky, and the surrounding countryside lay parched and scorching beneath its glare.
Liddenhurst was a tiny village with a handful of houses and a whitewashed inn. The road to the Manor House wound through dips and hollows overhung by trees, for the welcome shade of which Mr. Budd was grateful. They passed a small, square-towered church of great age with tombstones clustering closely round it, and turned into the right-hand branch of a fork. A mile farther on they came in sight of the entrance to the drive, and it was not prepossessing. The lodge was a ruin, the gates decayed structures of rotting timber.
The stout man slowed the car and eyed the faded inscription on the crumbling pillars.
“This is the place,” he said, and Leek glanced dubiously at the weed-grown approach, twisting between unkempt shrubs.
“Don’t look as if anybody’s been here for years,” he remarked, and the stout superintendent agreed.
But there was the name—readable, if only just—and he swung the car into the drive. Rounding the bend he saw before him a big, rambling house, ivy covered, and set amid a profusion of rank grass, weeds, and nettles. A great cedar tree grew in front of the porch, and in spite of the brightness of the sun its black, plate-like branches gave a sinister aspect to the place.
Mr. Budd thought it was not surprising that a man living in such a house should be troubled with nervous fancies. He began to feel a little dispirited himself.
He brought the car to a halt and got laboriously down in front of an ivy-covered porch, mounted the shallow, moss-stained steps, and pulled at a rusty iron bell. After some delay the door was opened by a thin man with a tremendous nose, who peered at him shortsightedly.
“Mr. Hayles live here?” murmured the fat detective.
“Yes, sir,” said the owner of the nose. Its use was now obvio
us, for he talked through it. “Are you the gentleman he’s expecting?”
“I’m from Scotland Yard,” grunted the superintendent, and produced a card.
The large-nosed man invited him into the hall.
“If you’ll wait just a moment, sir,” he said nasally, “I’ll tell Mr. Hayles you’re here.”
He took the card and hurried away up the wide staircase. The interior of the house was in keeping with the outside. The big entrance hall was gloomy; the panelling dull and lifeless; the parquet floor worn. The musty odour, which is usually associated with houses that have long been shut up, filled the air, and even the copper bowl of sickly-looking flowers that stood upon an old gate-legged table failed to dispel the dreariness.
Mr. Budd looked about him and mopped his perspiring forehead, wondering whether Mr. Hayles kept any beer in the house. There was a faint murmur of voices emanating from somewhere, and he had just located it as coming from behind a closed door on the right, when the servant appeared halfway down the staircase and called to him. With Leek at his heels the big man mounted the broad stairs, was conducted along a corridor, and ushered into the presence of Mr. Reuben Hayles.
The archaeologist was sitting at an enormous desk, which was littered with books and papers—an elderly, bald-headed, whiskered man, with large horn-rimmed glasses and a grey, stubbly chin.
“Sit down, Superintendent. Sit down,” he said in a high-pitched, querulous voice. “I’m very glad to see you.”
Mr. Budd sat down.
“This is Sergeant Leek, sir,” he murmured. “I thought it best to bring him with me.”
The man behind the desk nodded. He was palpably nervous. His face twitched spasmodically, and his thin hands kept moving restlessly, touching the various objects within his reach on the desk with jerky movements.
“I’ve seen the letters which were sent to you,” said Mr. Budd, breaking a rather awkward silence. “And I understand that you attach importance to them?”
“Do not you?” asked the old man quickly.
“To be quite candid, I don’t, sir,” answered the Superintendent, shaking his head. “I’ve seen too many such things in my time to take ’em seriously. There’s a class of person who can’t help writin’ anonymous letters. It’s a kink. It’s my belief that you’re just a victim of one of these queer people. That is, of course, unless you have anythin’ more tangible to go on.”
“No, no, I haven’t!” the archaeologist broke in quickly. “I must admit, however, that these—er—communications have disturbed me, particularly in view of my recent discovery of Mohammed’s tomb. Whether anything occurs tonight or not, I’m greatly relieved to have you, and—er—the sergeant on the premises. Greatly relieved!”
There was fear in the faded eyes, and Mr. Budd received the impression that Reuben Hayles knew a lot more than he had said. It was inconceivable that a man of his intelligence should have been reduced to such a state of mind merely by the receipt of those childish letters.
There was something else, something more practical that had brought that lurking fear to his eyes and induced him to apply for police protection. His thoughts were interrupted by a tap on the door and somebody came in.
“Oh, it’s you, Brown!” The old man looked up over Mr. Budd’s head. “Er—Superintendent. Meet my secretary, Mr. Washington Brown.”
Mr. Budd turned to greet the newcomer, and suppressed a gasp of surprise.
CHAPTER TWO
THE PEOPLE OF THE MANOR HOUSE
Washington Brown bowed, smiling pleasantly, and revealing in the process a remarkably perfect set of milk-white teeth, contrasting sharply with his coal-black skin.
“I must apologise for interrupting your conference, sir,” he said in faultless English. “I was unaware you had anyone with you. I have only just returned from the post office with the stamps.” He came over to the desk and placed a stamp book in front of his employer.
“Thank you, Brown,” murmured the archaeologist. “You didn’t interrupt us. There’s nothing secret about the reason for these—er—gentlemen being here.” He glanced at a softly ticking clock in front of him. “Luncheon will be ready in twenty minutes, and I’ve no doubt they would like a wash after their journey. Will you find Murley and have them shown to their rooms?”
“Certainly, sir.” The secretary went over to the door and opened it. “Will you come with me, please, gentlemen?”
Mr. Budd extricated himself from the rather close embrace of the chair in which he had been sitting, and stood up.
“Please make yourselves quite at home,” said the old man. “I am extremely busy at the moment on my new book. If there’s anything you want, ask Brown or Murley and they will attend to it. I will see you at luncheon.” He picked up a pen and bent over his work, and they followed the secretary out into the corridor.
Closing the door softly behind him, Washington Brown murmured a polite excuse, went to the head of the stairs, and called. After a short delay, the big-nosed man appeared. He listened a little sullenly to Brown’s orders, and then, when the secretary, with a smile of startling brilliancy, left them, proceeded to carry out his instructions.
The rooms that had been allotted to them were on the floor above, and commanded a view of the neglected parkland. They were large and rather drab, hung with faded chintz, and sparsely furnished. Murley pointed out a bathroom at the end of the corridor, showed them where their bags had been put, inquired if there was anything else they wanted, and took his departure.
Leek lingered in Mr. Budd’s room, a lugubrioua expression on his lean face.
“Rum sort of place, ain’t it?” he remarked,
The stout man grunted as he unpacked his bag. Some of the archaeologist’s obvious uneasiness seemed to have communicated itself to him, or perhaps it was the atmosphere that pervaded the whole house that made him feel vaguely conscious of a sense of impending trouble. Was there really some potent danger surrounding Reuben Hayles? Or was it only the old man’s imagination?
Looked at in the setting of that dilapidated mansion with its musty smelling, disused atmosphere and unkempt grounds, the business of the anonymous threats took on a more sinister aspect. He began to wonder if anything would happen after all that night, the night on which the moon reached its full.
It was difficult to be sceptical with the memory of that fear which he had seen shining nakedly from the old man’s eyes. He, at least, believed in the prophet’s prophecy.
He went into the bathroom for a wash, trying vainly to shake off his sudden depression. But it remained an unpleasant feeling which refused to yield to sane thinking.
A brazen gong echoed through the house to signal the serving of lunch, and Mr. Budd, followed by the rather self-conscious and nervous Leek, went down. He was met in the hall by Murley, and conducted to the dining room.
It was a long, low-raftered room, with french windows opening on to what had, at one time, been a lawn, but which was now nothing more than a waist-high tangle of weeds and rank grass. At the long table that occupied the centre of the room, seven people were seated. The butler ushered the big superintendent and the sergeant into the two vacant chairs, and Mr. Hayles at the head of the table introduced them to his household.
They were a queer lot of people. There was a small man of unhealthy-looking fatness, with a thick moustache and large, surprised eyes as though he lived in a constant state of astonishment at everything that was going on around him. His name Mr. Budd did not quite catch, but it sounded like Glibber. He was a cousin of Hayles’, and apparently also interested in archaeology. The superintendent thought this may have accounted for his having married Mrs. Glibber, a thin, gaunt woman, with a long dark face and hollow eyes, whose age might have been anything between fifty and a hundred and twenty, so dried up and lifeless did she appear.
Next to this unpleasant-looking female was a young man with watery eyes, a pimple of a chin, and rather long, lank, fair hair that fell over his forehead every time he moved his head
, and which he had a nervous habit of brushing back as though he was being bothered with flies. His name was Dinwater, and he was, apparently, their host’s nephew.
On the right of the old man was a curious-looking, olive-skinned man of foreign appearance, with deep, brown, dog-like eyes, whose nationality was evidently Turkish, for he was introduced to Mr. Budd as Mahmoud Bey. And, lastly, there was the girl.
Kathleen Travers was slight and fair, and if she was not the type that a magazine artist would have used as a model for a cover design, she was pretty in a pale, rather washed-out way. She also, the stout man discovered later, was a relation.
They eyed Mr. Budd and the lean sergeant covertly and curiously. Apparently the reason for their presence was general knowledge, for the subject of the prophet letters was brought up almost immediately and discussed at length by everybody with the exception of the girl and Washington Brown, who listened in silence.
What surprised the detective most was that they all seemed to regard the matter as serious, although nobody seemed to have the slightest inkling concerning the identity of the writer. There was also another thing which Mr. Budd’s sleepy-looking eyes detected, and that was a veiled antagonism between them. They watched each other with a kind of suspicious alertness, as though each was afraid of what the other might say next.
Altogether a queer lot, the big man decided.
Sergeant Leek, embarrassed and confused by the unusual array of spoons and knives and forks beside his plate, sat in gloomy silence, eating whatever was set before him, and praying inwardly that the meal would shortly come to an end.
It did eventually, and he and Mr. Budd escaped into the weed-grown garden.
“Funny bunch, ain’t they?” said Leek, shaking his head mournfully. “That girl was all right, though.”
“Now don’t you go gettin’ sentimental,” warned Mr. Budd severely.
“What d’you mean?” protested the sergeant indignantly. “I was only contrasting her with the rest of ’em.”