Meet The Baron

Free Meet The Baron by John Creasey Page B

Book: Meet The Baron by John Creasey Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Creasey
Tags: Meet The Baron
limped into his cubicle, saw his visitor, and lifted his scraggy old hands in dismay.
    “Vy, Misther Bristhow, tho thorry, tho thorry! Vy didn’t you come in the private entranth, Misther Bristhow? Come thith vay, thith vay, and mind the stheps - vun - two - three - - ”
    Bristow followed the Jew into the grimy parlour at the rear of the pawnshop, and marvelled to himself that a man as rich as Levy Schmidt could live in such filth. He shrugged the thought away. Levy had a perfect right to handle his own money and affairs as he liked; and Levy, moreover, was a valuable informant.
    The parlour was as gloomy as it was dismal, despite the brilliance of the sun outside. It was heaped with more second-hand clothes, odd articles of furniture, crockery, and cutlery. Nothing that could be pawned was missing. Mile End patronised Levy frequently and exhaustively from sheer necessity.
    “Now vot, Misther Bristhow - thit down, pleath - can I do for you? Can it be - ”
    “What a lot more you’d say if you didn’t talk so much!” said Bristow cheerfully. “The Kenton brooch, Levy. You’ve got it?”
    Levy nodded. His dirty, scrawny face was lined with years, and his brown, hooded eyes gleamed as he regarded the detective with satisfaction. He turned away and limped towards a square steel safe in the corner of the parlour.
    “Vy yeth, Misther Bristhow, vould you pelieve it, I forgot? Mind you,” the pawnbroker added hastily, “I voth forthed to pay ten poundth for it, Inthpector; he vould not leave it viddout a pit of money. You come back ven I haff more in the thafe, I thaid, and he promithed he vould, Inthpector - just vun minute more. Hey! The Kenton brooch, hey!”
    Bristow took the bauble in his fingers and peered at it. The lambent green fires in the stones greeted even the dim light of the shop parlour. Bristow pulled a photograph from his pocket and compared it with the jewel in his hand. It was the genuine Kenton brooch he was prepared to swear.
    He slipped it into his pocket, wrapped in tissue-paper, and nodded at the Jew.
    “That’s it,” he said. “Now who was the man? Know him?”
    “Never thet eyeth on him before in me life, misther!”
    “What did he look like?”
    “Vell - it’th dark in the thop, Inthpector. Tall and dark and vot you might call viciouth, hey? Not a nithe man to know, hey? And his coat-collar voth turned up - like thith.” Levy put his scrawny hand behind his neck and hunched his shoulders expressively.
    “Coat or overcoat?” asked Bristow.
    “Overcoat, and a day like thith!” Levy lifted his hands to the ceiling. “Vy, didn’t it thout thuthpithion?”
    “Why didn’t you telephone for a couple of policemen?” asked the Inspector a little irritably.
    “Vell” - Levy shrugged his shoulders until the miscellaneous collection inside the pocket of his once black, now green coat jingled together - “vot could an old man like me do, Inthpector? Get the brooch, I thaid - that wath the firtht thing. And then telephone you, hey?
    Not by a word or sign did Levy betray that he knew more than he said. True, he had given the only description of the visitor he possessed; but Levy had no love for the police, and he had a great love for jewels of the quality of the Kenton stone. Between him and the visitor who had brought the jewel there had passed a conversation that Bristow would have given a lot to have heard.
    “I’m not grumbling,” the Inspector said, knowing that if he grumbled he would get little or no information. “What was his voice like?”
    “Not a nithe voith,” said old Levy. “Hard, misther, vid the corner-mouth talk, hey?”
    “Hm,” said Bristow, and his mind worked automatically.
    “An old lag, but not a Londoner, or he’d know Levy. The light business shows his nerve, and he’ll probably be known in the Midlands or up north. Broke, or he wouldn’t have taken ten pounds and an excuse for the brooch. He won’t come back, of course.”
    “Where’s the ticket

Similar Books

Crimson Waters

James Axler

Healers

Laurence Dahners

Revelations - 02

T. W. Brown

Cold April

Phyllis A. Humphrey

Secrets on 26th Street

Elizabeth McDavid Jones

His Royal Pleasure

Leanne Banks