Page:The Viaduct Murder (1926).pdf/153
"I'm sorry, officer," said Gordon, "but you must see that we've been going round one another in circles. You're looking for a murderer—let me make a rash guess, and put it to you that it's Brotherhood's murderer you're looking for? Well, we're doing exactly the same. It seems that, by a mere chance, he's been taking refuge in a passage which communicates with this room which is rented by Mr. Reeves here. And instead of finding the murderer, we've found one another."
"Very irregular, gentlemen. You know as well as I do that if you've any information in your possession which might lead to the conviction of the criminal, it's your duty to communicate it to the police. Of course, I'm very sorry if I gave you gentlemen a fright, but you've got to look at it this way, Whose business is it to see justice done, yours or mine? You see, if it hadn't been for you gentlemen giving the alarm, not meaning to, I'm not saying you meant to, but if you gentlemen hadn't given the alarm, I might have got this chap bottled up properly in the passage there; and now how am I to know where he is? That's the way you've got to look at it."
"But the coroner's jury brought in a verdict of suicide," objected Reeves.
"Ah, that may be; but you see it's this way, the Force isn't tied down by what the coroner's jury says, and if the Force has its suspicions, then it acts accordingly; and if anybody else has their suspicions, then it's their duty to communicate them to