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Find the Lady
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Текст книги "Find the Lady"


Автор книги: Roger Silverwood


Соавторы: Roger Silverwood
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Текущая страница: 5 (всего у книги 12 страниц)

CHAPTER SEVEN

‘Ah. Mrs Duplessis. Good morning. Can I have a word with you?’

‘Oh?’ she said peering at him. ‘It’s Inspector Angel, isn’t it? Yes, of course. Please come in. Sit down … wherever you like.’

‘Here is fine. Thank you.’

Angel took the photograph, which he had carefully wrapped in polythene, out of his pocket. ‘Will you take a look at this? Do you recognize either of the two people sitting at the table?’

Mrs Duplessis took the photograph, held it to the light, adjusted her spectacles, looked back at Angel and said, ‘Of course. It was taken in the garden next door. It’s dear Alicia with … somebody.’

She peered at it more closely. ‘They’re having tea on the patio.’

Angel licked his bottom lip.

‘Do you know who she is with?’

‘Ah yes,’ she said after a moment’s hesitation. She pulled a face and added: ‘It’s that woman, Lady Blessington.’

‘You’re sure?’

‘Oh yes, Inspector. Positive.’

Angel sighed and nodded.

‘You couldn’t mistake her,’ she added. ‘And that blue dress. That hat. Yes that’s her.’

‘And that’s the woman who you saw rushing down the path just after three o’clock last Monday afternoon?’

‘Without any doubt, Inspector. Yes.’

‘Thank you,’ he said.

He smiled. He felt good. He now had a second witness who provided positive ID. ‘Now what can you tell me about her. You spoke to her, did you not?’

‘Only briefly. She was good at the social graces. Introduced herself. Told me she was a friend of Charles and Alicia Prophet. That she and Alicia went back a long way. That she had recently caught up with her. That’s about all she said.’

‘Can you tell me if there was anything unusual about her … any little thing … doesn’t matter how small.’

Mrs Duplessis looked blank, then shook her head.

‘Well,’ Angel began, ‘did she have any particular mannerisms. Did she have a twitch? Did she smell of anything? The smallest thing might help me to trace her, you never know.’

‘No. I can’t think of anything. She always kept a good distance from me. When she shook hands, she just held out the tips of her fingers, at arm’s length, very briefly. And after we had touched she pulled back and turned away, as if I had the plague.’

Angel thought about this.

‘Her voice was strained, as if it pained her to speak.’

He nodded encouragingly.

‘But title or no title,’ she added. ‘I am as clean as anybody. I am always washing my hands.’

‘I’m sure you are,’ Angel said kindly. ‘Was there anything else?’

‘Yes. There was something else that I noticed. Only a little thing….’

Angel nodded encouragingly.

‘A matter of bad manners, really,’ she said. ‘Whenever I saw her come up the path, she always walked straight into the house. She never knocked and waited … like you or I would do. She didn’t knock. Just barged straight in.’

‘Perhaps she did that because she knew Mrs Prophet was blind. They were supposed to be good friends. Save her getting up.’

Mrs Duplessis didn’t agree. She simply shook her head. She thought Cora Blessington was categorically rude.

Angel made a note of it.

‘How often did you see Lady Blessington?’

‘Three or four times. When I was in the garden. She would arrive suddenly, by taxi. Sail up the path. Wave and call out a greeting of some sort then dash into the house through the front door. An hour so later, a taxi would arrive, she would come out of the house, down the path to it and away.’

‘Did you always see her in the company of Mrs Prophet?’

‘I don’t think so. Dear Alicia hardly ever came out. Her blindness made it difficult.’

‘And what did she say to you about her?’

‘Nothing. I don’t think she ever spoke of her.’

‘What did Charles Prophet say about her?’

‘Can’t remember him saying anything in particular. But I don’t think he cared for her.’

Angel pursed his lips.

‘And I didn’t care for her,’ she added. ‘I can tell you.’

Angel nodded. He understood why.

It was ten o’clock.

Angel passed the open CID-room door on his way up the corridor to his office.

Ahmed saw him and called out: ‘Good morning, sir.’

‘Good morning, Ahmed,’ Angel said without even glancing back. ‘Have you heard from Newcastle about that address?’

‘Yes, sir. Been looking out for you, sir,’ he said, carrying a newspaper. ‘There are a couple of things.’

‘Come into my office, then. What’s up?’

Angel opened the door and Ahmed followed him in.

‘The address National Insurance have for Simon Spencer is 212 Huddersfield Road.’

‘Right, Ahmed. That’s good. Tell Scrivens I want to see him urgently, will you?’

‘Yes, sir. And I’ve brought this to show you,’ he said, unfolding the paper and putting it on the desk in front of him. It was that morning’s copy of the South Yorkshire Daily Examiner.

Angel looked at it eagerly, his eyebrows raised.

‘Ah!’ he said. ‘Mmmm. Done us proud. The front page. Couldn’t be better.’

The headline read: ‘Rubbish Skip Murder. Police completely baffled.’

Angel smiled and quickly read the item about Harry Harrison’s body being found in the skip and that he had been discovered hiding out in flat number twenty, Mansion Hill.

He smiled and put the paper down. He was as chuffed as a serial murderer let off with an ASBO.

He rubbed his chin.

He turned to Ahmed. ‘While I remember, I want you to go through back copies of Police Review also into the NPC and see if there are any women who have been released from prison in the last three months. They may have served time for fraud, and aiding and abetting fraud. Particularly, also, if they are known to have carried handguns. All right?’

‘There shouldn’t be many, sir,’ Ahmed said.

Angel wrinkled his nose. ‘I only want one,’ he bawled. ‘One’s enough!’

‘Right, sir,’ Ahmed said and turned to go.

‘Hang on, son. There’s summat else. I want a meeting of all CID on duty, in the briefing office at 16.00 hours today. DS Crisp already knows, so you needn’t bother him. But spread the word. Don’t miss anybody.’

‘Right, sir.’

‘And I’m expecting an Albert Amersham anytime now. He’s a witness. When he comes, will you show him in here?’

‘I got your message that you wanted to see me. I was fair worried. I never been into a police station afore, much less into an office. I’m a reight careful driver. I hope I haven’t been breaking any laws or anything. And my car is regularly serviced and kept safe. Well, it has to be. You know that. Else I wouldn’t get my licence.’

‘It’s nothing to worry about. Please sit down, Mr Amersham,’ Angel said. ‘Thank you for coming in so promptly.’

‘Aye. Ta,’ he said and looked round the little office. ‘It’s a darn sight posher than our dispatcher’s office, I can tell you.’

‘Yes. You work for A1 Taxis as a driver, don’t you? Tell me about being sent to twenty-two Creesforth Road on Monday afternoon, please.’

‘Well, let’s see. I’d just taken a fare to the railway station to catch the 13.48 to Leeds when it came up on the RT to go to Wells Street Baths to pick up a fare for Creesforth.’

‘What was your dispatcher’s name?’

‘Mmmm. Monday afternoon. It’d be Maisie. That’s all I know her by.’

‘What time would that be, Mr Amersham?’

‘Well they were only just in time for the train. I saw the train leave, so it would be a few minutes to two o’clock. Say five to two. I wasn’t late. I belted across town, down Wath Road, left onto to Wells Road and up to the entrance of the baths. And there she was, Lady Blessington.’

‘And how did you know her name was … Lady Blessington?’

‘ ’Cos she told me, when we got to Creesforth Road. Made a point of it, she did.’

‘And where was she waiting exactly?’

‘On the steps that lead into the baths.’

‘Did you think she’d just come out of the baths then?’

‘I suppose so. Niver thought about it. It was just that Maisie had said that that was where I was to pick her up from.’

‘What did Lady Blessington say to you? Can you remember?’

‘The usual. Just chatter, you know. The weather. It was a beautiful day. It was boiling hot.’

‘Did she have any luggage?’

‘She didn’t have no big luggage. No suitcases or anything like that. Just a handbag, I think. I’m not sure.’

‘Did you consider, that if she had been for a swim, she would have needed a towel and a swimsuit at the very least?’

Bert Amersham looked at him and blinked.

‘I niver give it a thought, Inspector. I just drive a motor. I don’t think about….’

‘Well, did she have a bag large enough to carry, say a medium-sized towel and a swimming costume?’

‘I suppose they don’t take up that much room. She probably had a bag that big, I am not sure, Inspector. Sorry and all that. I remember she had a handbag. She kept her money in a handbag. I remember that. Yes. I remember that I heard it click when she closed it after she paid me.’

He sighed. ‘That’s all right. Now did Lady Blessington have any particular mannerism or did she behave in any way unusual?’

‘We get all sorts, Inspector. All our customers are all different. She was as normal as any of them.’

‘We believe that she murdered the householder, a blind lady, Mr Amersham. I am desperate to find her. You may have seen or heard something that could give me a clue as to where we might find her.’

‘Wow! I didn’t realize. That’s a rum do.’

‘Anything else you can tell me? Did she smell of anything? Did she smoke? Did she speak with an unusual accent? Did you notice any scars or marks on her face, hands or legs?’

‘No, Inspector. I don’t think so. None of those things. Her dress came down nearly to ground and I thought that was a bit unusual, but then again, we get all sorts.’

‘You wanted me, sir,’ Scrivens said.

‘Yes, Ted. Come in. Close the door,’ Angel said. ‘There’s a retired bank clerk, Simon Spencer. He’s retired early. Very early. Too early! There is evidence to suggest that before he left, he got his money mixed up with the Northern Bank’s. Now there’s no proof yet, just a load of circumstantial. So I need you to tread carefully. The current address National Insurance have for him is 212 Huddersfield Road. Will you nip up there and ask him to be kind enough to accompany you back here to assist us with our inquiries?’

Scrivens grinned.

‘Do you want him in here, or in an interview room, sir?’

‘Interview room.’

Scrivens nodded and went out.

Angel picked up the phone and tapped in a number.

‘It’s DI Angel. Are you still at the Prophets’ house?’

‘Yes, sir,’ DS Taylor replied. ‘We broke off to attend the murder scene outside The Three Horseshoes, you know. And early this morning we swept Harrison’s flat. It wasn’t big, but there were three rooms. You told us to—’

‘I’m not chasing you, Don. Just enquiring.’

‘Oh? Right, sir. Well, we should be finished here this afternoon. There’ll be standard samples taken from here to process.’

‘Did you find anything significant at Harrison’s flat?’

‘No, sir. After eliminating his prints, there were no samples to take.’

Angel frowned. That meant there were no clues or DNA in the flat. He blew out a long breath. Thank God he had found the money and the prints on it!

‘Right,’ he said. ‘In your search there … at the Prophets’, did you come across an address book?’

‘Yes, sir. And a Christmas card list. I think it’s in a woman’s writing.’

Angel’s face brightened.

‘I’d like to have those A.S.A.P. And did you see a camera anywhere?’

‘A camera, sir?’

‘Yes. An ordinary domestic camera for taking snaps of the family and so on?’

‘No, sir. No camera.’

Angel frowned.

‘Right, Don. See you later this afternoon.’

He rang off.

CHAPTER EIGHT

The lift was out of order. Angel had to walk up three staircases to the third and top floor of Mansion House Flats. He started off well, but had to take the third staircase rather more slowly. When he arrived at the top, he hung onto the handrail and waited, breathing deeply several times. He stuck four fingers down the top of his shirt collar and pulled it away from his sticky neck. He sighed. He was thinking, he really would have to hold back on those meat pies and halves of Old Peculier at The Fat Duck for a few months. For some time, Mary had been suggesting that he took a flask, a banana and a hard-boiled egg into the office for lunch. He didn’t rate that idea much. It was the sort of thing desk-bound workers do. He hadn’t much time for people who pushed paper around for a living and got fat backsides from hanging onto a desk job for years on end. He had noticed a definite tightness of his trousers round the waist: maybe he’d give it serious thought. Last time they came back from Sketchley’s, he had thought he had been given somebody else’s by mistake.

A door banged shut on the floor below. It prompted him to move along the corridor smartly. He passed number twenty, which had been Harrison’s flat, to the one next door, number nineteen. As he approached, he could hear music blaring out from inside.

He knocked on the door.

He had to wait a little time, then it was opened by a pretty young woman in a short pink house-coat, long, white uncovered legs and imitation fur slippers with rabbits heads on them. She was holding a child aged about a year. Its eyes were closed and it had a comforter in its mouth. The radio blared out loudly behind her.

Angel blinked.

The young woman had a ready smile and a bright twinkle in her eyes. ‘Yes? What can I do for you?’ she said.

‘Miss Gaston? Margaret Gaston?’ he shouted.

‘Yes. Sure. Come in,’ she said pulling the door open wide.

‘Thank you,’ he shouted over the blaring radio. It was something as loud and incomprehensible as The Arctic Monkeys. ‘I’m Detective Inspector Angel from Bromersley Police.’

‘Oh yes,’ she said with a smile.

She had even, white teeth, a lovely mouth and long blonde hair hanging partly over her face like a film star of yesteryear. She looked straight into his eyes.

She carried the sleeping child with one arm, closed the door, reached down to a transistor radio on the floor, pressed a button and switched it off.

The silence was golden. Angel blew out a quantity of breath with relief.

‘I’ve already given a statement to Trevor,’ she added, looking concerned. ‘Wasn’t it all right?’

Angel licked his bottom lip. It had not exactly been a statement, and he was a little irritated to hear her refer to DS Crisp so familiarly. Young people talked that way. He knew it was his age.

‘That was fine,’ he said. ‘There are some other matters.’

She looked down at the child in her arms. ‘I’ve just got him off to sleep.’

Angel looked round the little room. It was sparsely but adequately furnished with brightly coloured plastic bricks scattered on the rug by the hearth, two teddy bears on the floor by the door, and baby clothes everywhere.

Margaret Gaston carefully put her baby in a cot, pulled up a blanket to cover him and lifted up the cot side. She kicked off the rabbit slippers across a rug on polished bare boards and flopped onto a huge leather settee and lifted her legs onto the length of it. Her bare feet showed bright red toenails. She went through the business of pulling down her housecoat to cover her underwear. Angel had noticed and tried to remember he was old enough to be her father.

‘Phew! It’s taken me an hour to get him off,’ she said. ‘Sit down.’

There was only the one easy-chair opposite, so choice wasn’t a problem.

She leaned forward to the settee arm, picked up a packet of Silk Cut, shot one out, looked at Angel and waved the packet.

Angel shook his head. ‘No thanks.’

She clicked a disposal lighter into life and then pulled hard on the cigarette. Then she laughed and said, ‘If he doesn’t want to go to sleep, it doesn’t matter how tired he is, he just won’t bloody go.’

Angel nodded sympathetically.

‘What do you call him?’

‘Carl Alexander Gaston.’ She said it like making an announcement, and enjoying the way it sounded. ‘What’s yours?’ she added taking a big drag on the cigarette.

‘Detective Inspector Angel.’

‘No. Your first name.’

‘Michael.’

‘Michael?’ she said thoughtfully. ‘It’s a nice name. But it’s so old-fashioned. Now, Carl Alexander is, sort of, cool and posh, isn’t it?’ she added with a smile.

‘Aye, it sounds very good,’ he said politely and pulled out an envelope and a ball-point. ‘There are some questions I need to put to you.’

‘Yes. Of course. It’s dead awful about Alicia. Perfectly dreadful. However will Charles manage? Have you found out who’s done it yet? Is it that Reynard that they keep on about on the telly?’

‘We haven’t found out yet, but we will. Now you used to clean for the Prophets didn’t you?’

Her eyes suddenly flashed. ‘Still do, I hope.’ She said, her mouth dropping open. ‘I have to have money, Michael. I get some from Social Security but it isn’t anything like enough. You think he’ll still want me to do the house and that, don’t you? I’ve never let him down, and I wouldn’t let him down now that she’s … that he’s on his own.’

Angel shook his head and wondered about his next question. Those long, shapely bare legs and feet moving about on the dark leather were distracting his concentration. She seemed to be unaware of it. He tried to look somewhere else.

‘I do three hours a day for four days a week. I do Tuesdays to Fridays inclusive.’

‘Yes. So you didn’t go to the Prophets on Monday last?’

‘No, Michael. Not Mondays.’

He blinked when she called him Michael. Hardly anybody ever did. He was not sure whether he objected. He let it go.

‘Who looks after Carl when you’re at the Prophets’?’

‘I take him with me. That’s what made the job so great. He’s happy in his pram. He would sleep most of the time. Alicia didn’t mind. She said she enjoyed the company. If he woke up, I either fed him or changed him. Alicia was very good about it.’

‘Did you ever see Mr Prophet?’

‘Oh yes. Not often, though. He was almost always at the office. He’s a lovely man. And so handsome. It’s a tragedy. When I heard about Alicia yesterday, I was gutted. I had to phone him. I had to tell him how sorry I was. And I wanted to say I’d do anything for him to help out while he got sorted. You know. More hours or different times … whatever he might have wanted, but I couldn’t get past that cow at the office.’

‘So you haven’t spoken to him since Mrs Prophet was found dead?’

‘No. Karen Kennedy wouldn’t let me. She always said he was with a client. Didn’t matter what time I rang, he was always with a bloody client.’

‘You’ve met her – Miss Kennedy?’

‘No,’ she said. ‘But I’ve seen her.’

She pulled a face.

‘You don’t like her?’

She pouted and said, ‘She’s all right, I suppose. It’s just that she’s always there. I can never even get to speak to him, when she’s there.’

Angel rubbed his chin.

‘And would you say Mr and Mrs Prophet had been happily married?’

‘Oh yes, I should think so. Don’t really know, do I? I didn’t see much of them together, but what I saw … they both seemed to get on very well. It was difficult for him, of course, Alicia, being blind.’

He nodded.

She stubbed the cigarette out in the ashtray and said: ‘You know, Michael, I told Trevor all this. Didn’t he tell you?’

‘Indeed, he did. But bear with me. I won’t be much longer.’

‘That’s all right,’ she said brightly. ‘I’m not going anywhere. Would you like a cup of tea?’

‘No, thank you.’

‘There’s no rush, Michael,’ she said pushing a shiny clump of hair out of her eye. ‘I don’t mind. You know I could go for days up here and see nobody … nobody at all. And I like older men. They talk more … intelligently, you know. Women talk about their kids and schools and clothes and how expensive things are. Men talk about … well, they talk about … well, different things,’ she said with a giggle and smiled at him. She crossed, stretched and then re-crossed her legs. She glanced across at the cot. She was pleased to see baby Carl was sleeping peacefully.

Angel rubbed his chin. He thought it was time his questions were asked, answered and that he got the hell out of there. ‘During your time at the Prophets’, did you ever see Lady Cora Blessington?’

‘Lady Cora Blessington? Sounds very posh. No. Who was she? Trevor asked me that?’

‘A tall, blonde woman, in a long blue dress and trainers, frequently seen at the Prophets’.’

‘No, Michael, I never saw anybody like that,’ she said thoughtfully. Then she added, decisively, ‘And being a blonde, believe me, I would have taken special notice of her.’ She laughed.

‘Did you ever hear either Mr or Mrs Prophet talk about Lady Blessington, refer to her, or to anybody like her? Her first name was Cora, by the way. Did they refer to anybody called Cora? Does that ring any bells?’

‘No, and I’m sure I would have remembered someone with a name like that.’

‘You never saw a letter or an envelope, took a message, saw a photograph or a card, with the name Lady Cora Blessington on it?’

‘No, Michael. And I would have remembered a posh name like Lady Blessington.’

Angel squeezed an earlobe between finger and thumb. He really had expected Margaret Gaston to have met and seen the missing woman and thereby have filled in the many gaps. The annoying thing was that the person who knew the most about Lady Blessington was Alicia Prophet and she was dead. Lady B was just like the lady in the three card trick. Now you see her, now you don’t. Some people had seen her, at a distance, fleetingly. Some people had never seen her at all. Angel had had some unusual cases over the years, but this was proving to be one of the most extraordinary.

‘Anyway, who the hell was she?’ Margaret Gaston said earnestly.

‘I wish I knew. There’s something else. There were some oranges in a plain white plastic bag found in the wheelie bin at Mr Prophet’s house on Monday last, the day Mrs Prophet was murdered. They appear to have been dumped there. They were bought from a particular stall in Bromersley’s open market. On that same day, Monday, at about two o’clock, you bought some oranges from the same stall. Were they the same ones?’

Her mouth dropped open.

‘You’ve been checking up on me. No. I told you I didn’t go near the Prophets’ house on Monday. Monday is my day off. Anyway, why would I want to buy oranges and then throw them in the bin?’

‘I don’t know, Margaret. You tell me. Where are they now?’

‘I’ve eaten them.’

Angel sighed. His eyes narrowed. ‘When did you eat the last one?’

‘Last night, while I was watching the telly.’

‘What did you do with the peel?’

‘The peel?’

‘Yes.’

‘Put it in the waste bin. Under the sink. In the kitchen.’

‘Ah. Good. I’ll have a look.’

‘It’s too late. I emptied it early this morning. It’s been collected. I saw the dustbin lorry drive away.’

He pursed his lips and let out a long sigh.

She looked across at him.

‘What’s so special about orange peel? You didn’t believe me. You were going to check up on me.’

‘If you were the Archbishop of Canterbury I would have checked up on you.’

She rested her head in her hand and said, ‘I suppose you have to.’

‘Yes. I have to.’

There was a pause.

‘Are you sure you wouldn’t like a cup of tea or coffee?’ she said. ‘I’ve got a drop of sherry somewhere, if you’d rather,’ she said mischievously. ‘It would relax you, Michael. You’re so tense. Are you like this at home? Are you married, Michael? What’s your wife like?’

She wriggled up the settee, turned to face him, supporting her head with a hand and her arm on the armrest.

‘Nothing for me to drink, thank you,’ he said quickly. ‘There’s only one more thing,’ he said.

‘Are you hungry? I can do you a bacon sandwich.’

He shook his head quickly.

‘The man who was living next door—’

‘Number twenty. Yes. I heard he’d been murdered. Outside The Three Horseshoes. It’s almost as if murder is following me about, isn’t it?’

Angel thought about her last remark. If it was, she didn’t seem at all phased by it. ‘Did you know him?’ he said.

‘No. Saw him once come out of the lift. Looked a lonely, miserable little sod. Walked with his head down and his hands in his pockets. Didn’t speak. Very quiet.’

‘Did he have any visitors?’

‘Don’t think so. Never saw anybody. Never heard anything. Never even heard his telly through the wall. He must have heard mine.’

He rubbed his chin. ‘Margaret. I’m going to have to ask you to vacate this flat tonight. It’s for one night at least, although it could be for longer.’

Her face straightened. She sat bolt upright and stared at him. Her bottom lip quivered. ‘You’re not arresting me, are you?’

‘Of course not,’ he said quickly. ‘It’s for your safety, that’s all.’

‘I don’t understand.’

‘It’s to do with your next door neighbour. We are expecting his place to be visited by somebody.’

‘No,’ she said. ‘I don’t want to go.’

He pulled his chin into his chest. ‘It’s really a matter of being extra careful, that’s all. I’ll make all the arrangements. Just assemble all you need for yourself and young Carl for, say, twenty-four hours. It’s may not be as long as that. I’ll get a WPC to come round and pick you up in an hour or so. She’ll take you to our safe house. You’ll be very comfortable. All mod cons. Telly, nice bathroom and everything. And absolutely safe.’

Her fingers went to her lips. She swivelled off the sofa. There was a flash of her long legs and white underwear. Angel tried to look away. He stood up.

She found the rabbit slippers and hurriedly pushed her feet into them. She shuddered, stood up and reached out for a cardigan hanging over a chair.

‘I don’t like it,’ she said, stabbing an arm into a sleeve. ‘Carl won’t settle. He’s never been away from here.’

Angel smiled at her. ‘You’ll be all right, just for a night.’

She wasn’t happy.

‘I don’t want to go. Carl won’t settle.’

‘Just one night,’ he said gently. ‘It’s for his and your safety.’

She nodded.

Angel glanced at an open door. ‘Can I have a look around while I’m here?’

‘Of course.’

He opened the door behind him. It was the kitchen. There were a few pots in a bowl in the sink, otherwise unremarkable. He came back into the room and looked at the next door. It was ajar.

‘That’s my bedroom,’ she called out unnecessarily.

He didn’t look back. He stepped forward a pace and pushed at the door. The hinges squeaked as it slowly swung open to reveal an unmade bed, a baby’s cot with a mobile hanging over it and clothes strewn everywhere, both on the furniture, on the bed and on the floor. Then there was something that made Angel suck in a short intake of breath and which set his pulse racing. On the wall above the head of the bed was a picture. It was the painting of a young woman in a long blue frilly dress. She had blonde hair and a straw hat.

Margaret Gaston came forward. She saw that something had startled him.

‘I haven’t had chance to tidy round yet.’

He took a couple of steps up to the picture, pointed to it and said, ‘Who is that?’

She looked up at it as if she’d never thought about it. ‘I dunno. It was there when I took the flat. It’s nobody. It’s only a print.’ She looked round the room at the explosion of clothes. ‘I can tidy up. It won’t take me long.’

Angel ran his hand through his hair.

‘Do you mean it’s always been there?’

‘Since I’ve been here, it has. Do you want it, Michael? It’s of no value, you know. It belongs by rights to Mother Reid, I suppose. If you want it, take it up with her.’

He sighed. He unhooked it off the tiny nail in the wall. It left a white mark on the dusty distempered wall. It weighed very little and was only about 20” by 30” on stout cardboard, framed by a thin wooden dowelling. He turned it over. There was a gold-coloured sticker on the back with black printing on it. ‘1930s Lady of Leisure. From the library of Joshua Pickering Galleries, 120-132 Argument Street, Farringdon, London. Stock No. 2239429.’

‘What?’ Angel bawled. He was surprised. He rubbed his chin thoughtfully.

Scrivens stood by the office door looking like a man who had won the lottery but lost the ticket.

‘I said there’s no such thing as 212 Huddersfield Road, sir. The numbers finish at 210. What’s the point of that?’

Angel’s lips tightened against his teeth. ‘The point of that, Scrivens, is to validate Simon Spencer’s existence dishonestly to the welfare state for free doctoring, free hospitals, subsidised dentistry and whatever other handouts he can get, without the exchequer and the judiciary being able to get back at him for taxes, fines and in this particular instance, fraud. And fraud big time.’

Scrivens raised his head.

‘We have ourselves a very ambitious crook,’ Angel said. ‘And, I think, a murderer.’

‘He may have murdered his partner in crime, Harry Harrison, sir?’

‘It’s getting to look that way. So hop off down to the Northern Bank. See the manager, Mr Thurrocks. Get the best possible description of Simon Spencer, you can. And get a photograph of him. Get a hundred prints of it with his description on it run off in time for this meeting at four o’clock, all right?’

Scrivens looked up as if a Roman candle had been fired up his trouser leg.

‘Four o’clock, sir!’ he cried, looking up at the wall clock. ‘That only gives me an hour and a half.’

‘Well, later than four would mean that the meeting would be pointless, wouldn’t it? Come on, lad. Chop. Chop.’

The door closed.

Angel rubbed his chin. It wasn’t looking good for Simon Spencer. He reached into his inside pocket and pulled out an envelope. There were some notes on the back of it. He ran down a list. He seemed satisfied that he had checked off all the points he needed to cover in preparation of the four o’clock briefing. He pulled out another envelope and began to check down that one. He found something. It was a telephone number. He picked up the phone and tapped it in.

‘A1 Taxis,’ a pert woman’s voice replied.

‘I want to speak to Maisie.’

There was a second’s hesitation, then she drawled, ‘Where do you wanna go?’ She probably thought she was talking to a stranger who had discovered her name and was emboldened to speak familiarly to her after becoming shored up by the partaking of a few pints of some alcoholic beverage.

Angel squared up to phone. ‘This is Detective Inspector Angel of Bromersley Police. I want to speak to the dispatcher who was on duty on Monday. One of your driver’s, Albert Amersham, said it was a lady called Maisie. Is that you?’

The woman’s voice changed. She suddenly became vital. ‘Oh. Yes. Yes, sir. I’m Maisie Evans. I was on duty on Monday from ten until six. Yes. What can I do for you, sir?’

‘This is a police inquiry, young lady. Someone booked a taxi from Wells Street Baths to The Beeches, 22 Creesforth Road. Your driver picked up the fare from the baths just before two o’clock. What can you tell me about the booking? Presumably it was phoned in. Who phoned it in and where did they phone from?’


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