 This is Orson Welles, speaking from London, the Black Museum. Here in the grim stone structure of the Thames, which houses Scotland Yard, is a warehouse of homicide, where everyday objects, a flower pot, a coffee cup, a curtain rod, all are touched by murder. Here's a shilling. This is a familiar object, a shilling. It's a coin of the realm. So much silver alloyed with harder metals for purposes of wear, milled edged, engraved with the face of a British sovereign. Very familiar object indeed. It's a lucky piece all right, Inspector. Lucky for you, Barth. That's just what I mean, sir. Shillings don't buy much these days, but this one bought plenty. Now the Black Museum, starring Orson Welles. In the Black Museum, Scotland Yards Museum of Murder. Here's a small radio made for entertainment, for obtaining all the sounds that reach out through the ether, the area, thing for joy, for pleasure, but note the little wires protruding here, connected to the switch that turned this little sound box on, and the man turned that knob, as was his habit, with a little extra wires conducted current to an explosive. The man died. Later, he was swallowed to death by his murderer. Oh yes, here we are. Here's the shilling, subject of our story. Some tarnished still, gleaming silver, without a doubt it passed through many hands, proposed in pockets and purses. And then one day, a telephone rings. So many things are heralded by that sound. This one rings in an office in the yard. Two men interrupt a desultory conversation, one of them picks up the instrument. Inspector Graves office, for you, Inspector. Thank you, Sergeant. The inspector listens briefly, acknowledges the message, hangs up the telephone. Well, well, well. Troubles, sir? Not yet. Just an interesting bit of information. Remember Joey Barth? Dartmoor, isn't he? Not after the night. Oh, is he that long since we sent him away? Time off for good behavior. He gets out in the morning. Wonder if brother Davey knows. Same idea across my mind. How do you suppose it feels, Sergeant? Then know your brother is getting out. When you've taken over his business, bar, band and bottle club, and your brother believes you framed him into Dartmoor. There's a word for it, sir. Uncomfortable. That, of course, is an understatement, particularly when it's well-known, both to the underworld of London and to the police, that brother Joey has sworn to get brother Davey as soon as such action is possible. Now, obviously, no self-respecting police force appreciates murder. Follows them at certain precautions, must be taken. Sergeant, will you arrange for a 24-hour detail to stay with brother Joey from the moment he leaves the hospitality of Dartmoor tomorrow? Yes, sir. And advise the station house, which covers brother Davey's rather disreputable club, that Davey is expecting company. Yes, sir. I'd rather like to be there, you know, when Joey tells his brother he wants the club back and his share of the earnings of these past six years. Yes, it must have been quite a meeting. It took place, of course. No question about that. In fact, no attempt was made to prevent it. The police knew when it happened. They knew exactly when Joey Bart walked past the uniformed dormant into the nightclub in question. They so reported to Inspector Graves for some 45 minutes later that his telephone rang once more. Inspector Graves' office. Detective Smythe here. The inspector available. Just a moment. Smythe, Inspector. He's on the Bart matter. I'll take it. You'll Smythe? I'm in Davey Bart's office as the club inspector. Where's Joey? Gone, sir. We saw him go in. We didn't see him get out. More self-respecting police force does not appreciate murder when the murder is committed while policemen are on watch outside the scene of the crime. It is appreciated even less if possible. Therefore, action is required. General alarm for Joey Bart. Description is available. Yes, sir. Close that club and the whole customers will start until I get there. Let's go, Sergeant. All the resources of a great police department spring to life. And soon the inspector and Sergeant Max will are at the scene viewing the body of Davey Bart to the hole in its chest. Yes, that's Bart all right. All right, Smythe, let's have it. Well, that's just the way we found him, sir. A sprawl like that. Gun near him. Nothing's been touched except a check for fingerprints. Pictures have been taken? Yes, sir. Column have been here? Yes, sir. All right, take him away. Sergeant, very good, sir. Print's on the gun. Only the dead man's. Just the one set. There he is. Medical report? Shot at close range. Powder burns. It's a .38 automatic. I can see that. Anything else? Well, there's a wall safe. It was searched. What's this? It's a shilling, sir. What's it doing here? It was lying there on the desk when we got in, sir. The lights were on and it was shining in the lamp. Quite clear, wasn't it? A killing. An ex-convict disappeared open and short, simple. Still, the evidence must be collected with a view toward the eventual trial. You're George Lyle. Yes, sir? You have a record. Well, I went away once. Three months. Attempted robbery. Since then? I worked for Mr. Bach. Doing what? Oh, sort of his, uh, assistant. Yes, I know what you mean. All right, what happened here tonight? Well, Joey came here and the boss told me to let him in. Joey told the boss he needed money. The boss said he didn't have any. They started to argue. That was when the boss told me to wait outside and I did. Hear anything? Oh, the place is soundproof, Inspector. The nearer thing. Why did you come back inside? Took a chance. Seemed like an awful long time when Joey didn't come out. I found him. The boss I mean. What do you know about this? Hey, that's the boss's lucky piece. When Joey asked for money, the boss took it out of his pocket and told him it was all the money he had on him. That's when Joey said, I ought to kill you for that. Only your life ain't worth a shilling. Build a case. Interview the employees. First the doorman. Well, I was a kind of surprised inspector, but Mr. Bart said let Joey in the club when he showed up. Why? Why everybody knows, sir. Joey thought Mr. Bart framed him to get the club away from him. So you let him in? So I'll let him in. See him leave? No, sir. He must have gone out the back way, through that door. It leads out to the kitchen and the dressing rooms. There's a rear exit, sir, out in the alley behind. Now it's the turn of the kitchen help. The man in the best position to notice anything is the second cook. Yes, sir. That's my position opposite the door. Did you see anyone go by tonight? Only waiters and the girl in the show. The girl in the show? Yes, she has a dressing room in the hall. She sings. Her name? Ms. Fair, Mitzi Fair. Get the girl, Sergeant. Yes, sir. You just station all evening? The chef, he called me over to taste his dressing. Only once. All the rest of the time, I... Yes, but you must have missed anyone who went through the hall during that time. Well, it was only a minute or two. That would be enough. All right, leave a name and address for the constable on... The henchman, Lyons, saw and heard nothing. The doorman was too far away. The kitchen help was too busy. Still, everyone seemed to have known that Joy Bart was there that night, everyone, including the girl in the show. You sing in the floor, show, Ms. Fair. Is that it? I had the show, you might say, or what? Yes, was. The club is closed. You'll need another job. Thanks for the two weeks' notice. We can do without that. What do you mean I am the show? Well, I sing for the piano. Well, the band rest. There's no line, no comics. The space is too small. I see. What's your background, Ms. Fair? It was the usual shabby story, the early ambitions, the voice that failed to make the big time the small jobs to make a living in the eternal hope for the break. Then the steady work in the club. Any particular reason why Dave Bart kept you here so long? If you mean what I think you mean, there was nothing like that. Did you know his brother? Well, only to hear Davey talk about him. I came here after Davey took over. Your dressing room is out there, off the hall. If you can call a six-by-eight rat trap a dressing room, yes. See you in a stranger tonight? Not tonight. Other nights? Maybe. Maybe not. And if I had, I'd know better than to talk, Inspector. Davey operated within the law, as far as I know. But I've been around, Inspector. I knew anything. Chances are my life wouldn't be worth that shilling. You ever see it before? Looks like any other to me. I'm told it was Davey Bart's lucky piece. Oh, then? Well, I wouldn't know. With me, a shilling's a shilling, and they don't come my way easy. Now, today, a shilling can be found in the Black Museum. In just a moment, we will continue with the Black Museum starring William Well. Braves waited in his office at Scarfland Yard for the report he knew was inevitable. But Joey Bart had been run to work. This was routine. Meanwhile, he sifted facts with Sergeant Maxwell. Nothing to it, Inspector. It's Joey. It couldn't be anyone else. Say that in court, and a smart lawyer will prove it could have been anyone of a dozen people. Reasonable doubt, that's all. But Joey said he'd get his brother once he got out. That's not evidence, and you know it, Sergeant. There's plenty of evidence of the gun for instance. Davey's gun registered with only Davey's prints on it. A dormant saw him go in. Lions were here at the beginning of the fight. The open safe. With nothing stolen. At least plenty of money in it, and Joey came for money. He left by the back way. Well, no one saw him. If no one saw him go out, they could have missed someone else coming in. Our case is full of holes, Sergeant. It's not the kind I want to go into. You see, it's one thing to be certain in your own mind that someone committed murder. It's another thing to prove it in court, where your facts are subject to attack by lawyers, subject to the workings of 12 mines in a jury box, subject to the judge's interpretation of reasonable doubts. The inspector knew this. Ah, the telephone again. Perhaps this time. Dave speaking. Smile here, Inspector. We've found Bart. He's holed up in a tenement in the East End. 409 Ellison. One of those places cut up into one-room flatlets. He's in the third floor rear. Set the cordon slide, seal the place, and don't go in until I get there. The quarry run to earth, his hole sealed front and rear by the cordon of police. The inspector arrives. All under control, Smile. Yes, sir. He won't get out the back way this time. Good enough. Let's go in. A small, tight group gathers around the inspector. Smith, Maxwell, several uniformed constables all around. The end of the Ramshackle building start at the rickety stairway. Somehow this place escaped the holocaust of Hitler's bomb. It's old. Dirty. Dangerous. The landings are illuminated by fitful light from flickering yellow electric bulbs and fixtures that once held gas burners. The third landing, the group stops. Splits up. Each man takes his station one to each side of the doorway. The officer with a gun in position to shoot off the lock on the scaly door. The inspector with Sergeant Maxwell and Detective Smith facing the doorway. Here it goes. You know who it is about? Open up. Ladies and gentlemen, come in. Check him out, Sergeant. Yes, sir. Oh, does he want to be inspector? No weapon. Very well. I could have told you that. No guns for me, inspector. Hey, I'm glad you got here first though. I thought maybe it was some of David's boys with the same idea you have. But I didn't kill him. Now, about sense killing the goose with the golden eggs, is there, inspector? They took him to the yard. Held for questioning, the record said. The questioning was sharp and to the point. What did you get from your brother? A hundred pounds to start. That was all? Oh, he argued first, but I got good and sore. Trotterman's life wasn't worth the shilling he threw at me. We know about that. Yeah, George and Lyons were still there. After that day threw him out. Then I told Dave I could prove he'd framed me. He acted like he believed me. Told me I'd be a fool to take the club back after the way he built it up. Said he'd cut me in for plenty. He went to the wall safe. Took out a hundred quid and gave it to me as a down payment sort of. Of course I took it. And took his shilling, too. Told him he'd get his luck back when I figured he was going to be a regular on the payoff. You took his shilling? Yeah, here. That's it. He had it since he was a kid. See that, Nick, isn't it? He got that, putting it on a railroad truck so as the train could run over it. Sergeant, bring Lyons and the fair girl down here. Yes, sir. You see anybody in that back hall boat? Nobody. Dave said to go out that way. And I did. I wanted a little privacy, you see? Your boys were with me all the way to the club from Dartmoor. Do you hear anything in that hall? Only the pans in the kitchen. Now look, Inspector. I didn't kill him. Why should I? He was paying off. Nobody kills a guy who pays. Maybe. Maybe not. Outside, Barton, wait there. I'll see you again later. An accommodating ex-convict to say the least and willing to talk, willing to talk his head off. The inspector was puzzled. This was not part of the usual pattern. The puzzle seemed deeper when Mitzi Fair told him. That chili? No, that's not Davis. Davis was the one on the desk. I watched him play with it lots of times. You're certain of that? I'm sure. Positive. And the puzzle seemed deeper still when George Lyon said. Yeah, I remember now. That Nick in the shilling. Hey, Inspector, if Joey had this shilling with him, who put the other one on the desk? Know something about him? The answer to that question could be very interesting. Very interesting indeed. A whole new avenue of inquiry suddenly opened up. Suddenly became possible that Joey Bart had not been the last person to see his brother alive. It's a matter of who is telling the truth about those coins, Sergeant. If Lyons and Bart are, then the girl is lying. If the girl is honest, then Lyons and Bart are both lying. How do we find out, Inspector? We take our time. And we let Joey go. For the time being. For the continuous watch on him, of course. Arrange for it, will you, Sergeant? I want a little quiet. I've got some thinking to do. The Inspector had his peace and quiet briefly. Shortly thereafter, he adjourned to the Padlock nightclub with Sergeant Maxwell and Detective Smith. I saw him to provide wall-to-wall carpeting. I hate tearing up floorboards. Well, it helps for soundproofing. How are you coming along with the wall, Smith? Nothing hollow. Soundproof tiling under all the draperies. Hello? Here's something. Back at the couch, Inspector. Bobby pin. Blonde. The singers are blonde. Two badges, not the only blonde in London. If she were, we'd have to prove she dropped it after Jerry left this office. Oh, nothing doing on the walls, Inspector. Next. The desk. Take it apart, if necessary. Yes, sir. Dave Bart, look too honest, Sergeant. There's a reason for soundproof offices. If there's any record of that reason, it'll be here someplace. Well, the girls have something about visitors. Back door visitors. I know she did. Hello. Here's something. False bottom to this drawer. It measures six inches deep on the outside and only four and a half on the inside. Sliding panel? Probably. Sounds hollow enough. Ah. Here it is. The bottom slides back when you press this nail head. A couple of letters here. The record book. Good work, Smith. Well, Mr. Bart was methodical. Record of payment to the witnesses who swore his brother into prison. Income from various enterprises. Letters. Well, well, well. Enough there on the girl to keep her working for free the rest of her life. To say the least. Then it's for girl, Inspector. Or Jerry. Or both. Or neither. Lyons? There's a great deal on him, too. His 90-day sentence seems to have covered up a small item which could have meant ten years. Apparently several people were interested in the sudden death of Mr. Dave Bart. Shut the drawer, Smith. Leave everything as it was, except for the papers. We'll take those. And as we leave, Sergeant, suppose you forget to snap the lock in the front door. Understand, Sergeant? Yes, sir. It was neat. Neat and simple. The bait, of course, was the contents of the drawer. Three people were interested in what it contained. Given an open padlock, the opportunity to search, the magnet, which was the letters and records in that desk, should draw at least one person back to the room where someone had killed Dave Bart and left a shilling on the desk. The inspector waited. With him, Sergeant Maxwell and Detective Smith, the dozen assorted detectives and constables. They waited in the silent darkened nightclub behind the door with its open padlock. They waited in the dark hallway near the kitchen, among the piled up tables and chairs in the main room. They waited in the echoing empty club. Waited for the sounds they knew would come. Sounds which did come when the safety of night shrouded the street outside. The door, Inspector. I heard it, Sergeant. Crouched in the darkness, they heard the footsteps. Light, tentative. Then bolder, more confident, as eyes became accustomed to the gloom. A moment later, another one such. Quiet, Sergeant. The first intruder was aware of the second. More quickly, now the footsteps came into the main room of the club, crossed the dance floor. Suddenly, the second person broke into a run. Caught up to the first. Thought you'd come back, eh? Try to pin it on me. Did you with the sick and shilling? Now listen, outside the door, didn't you? That's when I came through. All right, Smith. The lights. What's all this? All right, God. Miss Fair, we'll take over now. Smart coppers, eh? Seeing in the dark, waiting, eh? I told you once, Inspector, no gun from me. She's got one, though, in her bag. Try to sock me with it. Well, Miss Fair, why did you plot that sick and shilling? I knew George was in there. We'd heard me crack about the shilling. I went in after George left. I wanted my letters. David may be miserable enough with them, and we argued. He tried to threaten me with his gun. I cried for it, and it was gone. I thought if there was a shilling, you'd think it was George. Yeah, a woman. Every time it's a woman. Never mind, boss. You can tell that to your friend. Miss Fair, you're taken in charge. And the charge is murder. And today, the shilling, which was the main clue in this case, can be seen in an honored position in the Black Museum. Orson Welles will be back with you in just a moment. Orson Welles. There was no premeditation. That was clear. And certainly there was provocation. Miss Fair went away, convicted of manslaughter. Joey Bart eventually reopened the club, which had been his property in the first place. Seems to be going straight. Only time, and a careful eye of the Metropolitan Police will know about that. Meanwhile, the shilling, contributed by Joey Bart, remains in its customary place in Scotland Yard, in the Black Museum. And until next time, we meet in the same place for another story about the Black Museum. I remain as always obediently yours. Starring Orson Welles is presented by arrangement with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer radio attraction. The program is written by Aura Marion, with original music composed and conducted by Sidney Torch. Produced by Harry Allen Towers.