“The Secretary of State is meeting with a foreign agent who is here very much incog. Came in as a servant of a real ambassador. Slipped quietly into Washington, and not a soul knew he was here. He met the Secretary in a closed room; no one saw him come or leave – ”;
“Well, the Secretary tells me that in that room where nobody could see he offered this man a cigar. His visitor took it, tried to smoke it, apologized – and lit one of his own vile cigarettes.”
“Hm-m!” Delamater sat a little straighter in his chair; his eyebrows were raised now in questioning astonishment. “Dictaphone? Some employee of the Department listening in?”
“Impossible.”
“Now that begins to be interesting,” the other conceded. His eyes had lost their sleepy look. “Want me to take it on?”
“Later. Right now. I want you to take this visiting gentleman under your personal charge. Here is the name and the room and hotel where he is staying. He is to meet with the Secretary to-night – he knows where. You will get to him unobserved – absolutely unseen; I can leave that to you. Take him yourself to his appointment, and take him without a brass band. But have what men you want tail you and watch out for spies… Then, when he is through, bring him back and deliver him safely to his room. Compray?”
“Right – give me Wilkins and Smeed. I rather think I can get this bird there and back without being seen, but perhaps they may catch Allah keeping tabs on us at that.” He laughed amusedly as he took the paper with the name and address.
A waiter with pencil and order-pad might have been seen some hours later going as if from the kitchen to the ninth floor of a Washington hotel. And the same waiter, a few minutes later, was escorting a guest from a rear service-door to an inconspicuous car parked nearby. The waiter slipped behind the wheel.
A taxi, whose driver was half asleep, was parked a hundred feet behind them at the curb. As they drove away and no other sign of life was seen in the quiet street the driver of the taxi yawned ostentatiously and decided to seek a new stand. He neglected possible fares until a man he called Smeed hailed him a block farther on. They followed slowly after the first car … and they trailed it again on its return after some hours.
“Safe as a church,” they reported to the driver of the first car. “We’ll swear that nobody was checking up on that trip.”
And: “O. K.” Delamater reported to his chief the next morning. “Put one over on this self-appointed Allah that time.”
But the Chief did not reply: he was looking at a slip of paper like those he had shown his operative the day before. He tossed it to Delamater and took up the phone.
“To the Secretary of State,” Delamater read. “You had your warning. Next time you disobey it shall be you who dies.”
The signature was only the image of an eye.
The Chief was calling a number; Delamater recognized it as that of the hotel he had visited. “Manager, please, at once,” the big man was saying.
He identified himself to the distant man. Then: “Please check up on the man in nine four seven. If he doesn’t answer, enter the room and report at once – I will hold the phone…”
The man at the desk tapped steadily with a pencil; Robert Delamater sat quietly, tensely waiting. But some sixth sense told him what the answer would be. He was not surprised when the Chief repeated what the phone had whispered.
“Dead?.. Yes!.. Leave everything absolutely undisturbed. We will be right over.”
“Get Doctor Brooks, Del,” he said quietly; “the Eye of Allah was watching after all.”
Robert Delamater was silent as they drove to the hotel. Where had he slipped? He trusted Smeed and Wilkins entirely; if they said his car had not been followed it had not. And the visitor had been disguised; he had seen to that. Then, where had this person stood – this being who called himself the Eye of Allah?
“Chief,” he said finally. “I didn’t slip – nor Wilkins or Smeed.”
“Someone did,” replied the big man, “and it wasn’t the Eye of Allah, either.”
The manager of the hotel was waiting to take them to the room. He unlocked the door with his pass key.
“Not a thing touched,” he assured the Secret Service men; “there he is, just the way we found him.”
In the doorway between the bedroom and bath a body was huddled. Doctor Brooks knelt quickly beside it. His hands worked swiftly for a moment, then he rose to his feet.
“Dead,” he announced.
“How long?” asked the Chief.
“Some time. Hours I should say – perhaps eight or ten.”
“Cause?” the query was brief.
“It will take an autopsy to determine that. There is no blood or wound to be seen.”
The doctor was again examining the partly rigid body. He opened one hand; it held a cake of soap. There was a grease mark on the hand.
Delamater supplied the explanation. “He touched some grease on the old car I was using,” he said. “Must have gone directly to wash it off. See – there is water spilled on the floor.”
Water had indeed been splashed on the tile floor of the bath room; a pool of it still remained about the heavy, foreign-looking shoes of the dead man.
Something in it caught Delamater’s eye. He leaned down to pick up three pellets of metal, like small shot, round and shining.
“I’ll keep these,” he said, “though the man was never killed with shot as small as that.”
“We shall have to wait for the autopsy report,” said the Chief crisply; “that may give the cause of death. Was there anyone in the room – did you enter it with him last night, Del?”
“No,” said the operative; “he was very much agitated when we got here – dismissed me rather curtly at the door. He was quite upset about something – spoke English none too well and said something about a warning and damned our Secret Service as inefficient.”
“A warning!” said the Chief. The dead man’s brief case was on the bed. He crossed to it and undid the straps; the topmost paper told the reason for the man’s disquiet. It showed the familiar, staring eye. And beneath the eye was a warning: this man was to die if he did not leave Washington at once.
The Chief turned to the hotel manager. “Was the door locked?”
“Yes.”
“But it is a spring lock. Someone could have gone out and closed it after him.”
“Not this time. The dead-bolt was thrown. It takes a key to do that from the outside or this thumb-turn on the inside.” The hotel man demonstrated the action of the heavy bolt.
“Then, with a duplicate key, a man could have left this room and locked the door behind him.”
“Absolutely not. The floor-clerk was on duty all night. I have questioned her: this room was under her eyes all the time. She saw this man return, saw your man, here” – and he pointed to Delamater – “leave him at the door. There was no person left the room after that.”
“See about the autopsy, Doctor,” the Chief ordered.
And to the manager: “Not a thing here must be touched. Admit only Mr. Delamater and no one else unless he vouches for them.
“Del,” he told the operative, “I’m giving you a chance to make up for last night. Go to it.”
And Robert Delamater “went to it” with all the thoroughness at his command, and with a total lack of result.
The autopsy helped not at all. The man was dead; it was apparently a natural death. “Not a scratch nor a mark on him,” was the report. But: “… next time it will be you,” the note with the staring eye had warned the Secretary of State. The writer of it was taking full credit for the mysterious death.
Robert Delamater had three small bits of metal, like tiny shot, and he racked his brain to connect these with the death. There were fingerprints, too, beautifully developed upon the mysterious missives – prints that tallied with none in the records. There were analyses of the paper – of the ink – and not a clue in any of them.