Raffles shrugged. “As to who we are, he probably made enquiries of the butler, or somebody in the local pub. Assuming the butler was not in on the robbery, of course, and that wouldn’t surprise me in the least! Betray us? I hardly think so, Bunny. Didn’t you see his face when I mentioned — and his betrayal of us? Honour among thieves, Bunny, that’s the watchword.” And he lit another Sullivan and laughed at my expression.
The insurers were interested in the fake necklace, very interested indeed. They called in Scotland Yard, and Mackenzie himself arrested Morgan for insurance fraud. The day after the news of the arrest broke, the shares in the Megalithic Trust began to slide; when trading resumed after the holiday, dealings in the shares were suspended; ten days into the new year the firm went bust, and Mackenzie’s investigation was widened to include all Morgan’s business dealings. And at the spring assizes, Morgan was sentenced to ten years in the Dartmoor quarries.
The fence who had betrayed Raffles simply disappeared. I gather that the police view was that he had feared their attentions and had left the country to escape detection, but I rather fancy that the squalid alleys and rotting wharfs by the London river could tell a different tale.
All was not unrelieved gloom and despondency, though. Raffles and I — and the unknown burglar, too, I have no doubt — had a very merry Christmas, and a prosperous start to the New Year.
The Sound of One Foot Dancing
by James Van Pelt
I shook the chains holding the soundstage’s side doors locked, then started the long walk through the darkened studio to check the front. The day had been a full one. Mr. Sandrich, the director, had the crew knock down the Lincoln Day set and assemble the 4th of July one. He didn’t like three of the flats, and they had to be redone. The dancers and extras got antsy, and all the while reporters were trying to get in to interview Fred Astaire about how he felt about yesterday’s declaration of war. In the meantime, one of our cameramen had a son on the
It was three in the morning, and I should have been going home myself, but a percussive tapping from the Holiday Inn set kept me here. Tired as I was, I had to smile. Astaire was practicing by himself again. It didn’t matter when Sandrich called the day, Astaire stayed to work. I’d heard he weighed a hundred and forty pounds when the picture started. The Paramount doctor said he was down to one twenty-six and prescribed thick steaks, which were delivered from the commissary every night at seven. He hardly touched them.
The front doors were locked, so I found a chair in the dark beside the set and watched Fred Astaire dance. Only one overhead spot was turned on that isolated him in its lighted circle. His hands were in his pockets, and he danced with only one foot. The taps flew briskly, different rhythms, slow at first, a quick rattle, then a steady syncopation. He switched, so now his other foot beat out a rhythm. His head was down. I’d seen him do this before, a dancer’s warmup. Soon, he started moving on the stage, more ice skating than dancing, in and out of the light.
I relaxed into the seat. The steady tapping of his flashing feet lulled me and excited me too. No one could be so tired that watching Fred Astaire wouldn’t wake him. Without music, he made tunes. Without a partner, he made a duet. His hands were out, practicing one side of a routine I recognized. It was the part from
Astaire accelerated. His feet hardly touched the stage, while his tapping seemed not to come from him, but to be an accompaniment. I’d seen him dance many nights, but not like this, one hand curled around an invisible waist, the other in the air, holding an invisible hand. Round and round. Through the light, brilliantly lit, and than back to the dark, a gray shape swirling, tapping, humming his musical part.
Then, he stopped. “Where’d you go?” he said, his voice echoing in the empty studio. “Where’d you go?”
I cleared my throat. He jumped. He didn’t know I’d been watching. “Where’d who go, Mr. Astaire?”
“Is that you, Pop?” He shaded his eyes from the spot and peered toward me.
“Yes, sir. Nice dancing, sir.”
“Where’d the girl go?” He looked at his empty hand, puzzled.
“Girl, sir? We’re alone. Studio’s locked up.”