Chapter Seven

“But I assure you, Inspector,” said Mr. Jeejeeboy earnestly, “that what I am telling you is entirely the truth. I know the ring well. It never left her finger.”

“It wasn’t on her finger when we found her,” said Mercer.

“Pray don’t say that.”

“Why not?”

“It is so dreadful. I cannot bear to think of her in the grave. She was so vital. Just a child, Inspector, but a vital child.”

Mercer looked at him. He was either genuinely moved or he was a very good actor. There were tears in his eyes.

“Was this where she kept her stuff?”

“I allowed her to do so. She could not take it back to that—that den where her father lived. I will show you.”

They were in the room behind the shop. It was crammed with cartons, crates, boxes and bottles and smelled pleasantly of coffee and spice and sawdust. They threaded their way down a narrow passageway among the clutter to the far end, where there was a wall-cupboard. Mr. Jeejeeboy opened it with a flourish. Except for a couple of wire coat-hangers it was quite empty.

“That was her very own cupboard,” he said. “The only private place she had in the world.”

The tears were coming down fast now.

“I suppose she kept it locked.”

“Of course. My assistants are frequently in this room. I know them to be trustworthy, but you cannot blame her for being careful.”

“Who had keys?”

“She had one, and I had another.”

“One of these?”

Mercer took out of his pocket the keys they had found in the red plastic bag. Hard work with emery paper and a nail file had got most of the rust out of the wards.

“Yes. That is the one. The long one.”

Mercer tried it in the lock. It was stiff, but it worked. He said, “The afternoon she disappeared. That’s to say, the last afternoon anyone saw her. Was she in here?”

“That afternoon, she could not have been in here. Because it was the early closing day.”

“How do you know?”

Mr. Jeejeeboy looked surprised. “Wednesday is always the early closing day.”

“How did you know she was last seen on a Wednesday?”

“How did I know? Of course I knew.”

“How?”

“Everyone was talking about it.”

“Talking about what?”

Mr. Jeejeeboy started to look harassed.

“When she did not appear, Inspector, her friends started to ask themselves, ‘When did we see her last?’ Someone said, I saw her on Monday. Another said, Tuesday. Then it was remembered that she had been seen in the town, walking down the street, on the late afternoon of Wednesday speaking to a clergyman. After that, nothing.”

Mercer listened critically. He had long ago concluded that it was not so much what witnesses said, but the way they said it. He thought that the thin brown anxious little man might be telling the truth.

He thought about it as he drove the five miles along the new by-pass to Staines.

The Carcroft Engineering Works was a small place, out on the Chertsey Road. He had a word with the manager, and Beardoe was brought into the office. He was a middle-aged man, who hid his apprehensions about life behind a large moustache and a gruff manner. He thawed a little when he found what the Inspector wanted.

“Taylor? I wouldn’t say I knew him all that well. We got on all right. Tell you the truth I was a bit surprised Mr. Prior took him on. He didn’t seem to have had much experience.”

“That was the point I was interested in,” said Mercer.

“He must have talked sometimes about other jobs he’d done. It’d be a natural thing to do. Where he’d been before. That sort of thing.”

“He may have done, but it was a good time ago, Inspector. Three years and more. I do seem to recollect he told me he’d worked at a place in Southwark.”

“The Crescent Garage.”

“That sounds right.”

“He didn’t mention any other place?”

Beardoe ran a black engrained finger nail down the flank of his moustache and started to say something and then stopped and thought about it again. “I do recollect,” he said, “one night. He must have been pissed at the time or he’d never have said it, but we were talking about stolen cars. He said, if ever you were lumbered with a hot job, the place to take it to was—”

“Was what?”

“I’m damned if I can remember. It was a foreign name. Sounded like Italian or Greek. He gave me the address too. I wasn’t very interested, you understand.”

“I quite understand. But if you could remember it – either the name or the address – it would be very helpful.”

“You know how it is,” said Beardoe. “When you try to remember a thing, you can’t. When you’re not trying, it comes back to you.”

“If it should come back to you,” said Mercer, “ring me at this number at once.”

He drove back to Stoneferry in the dusk, devoting only a quarter of his attention to the road and the rest to a consideration of the question of whether he might not be chasing a wild goose. Possibly it was this preoccupation that prevented him from noticing a small black saloon car, which had kept two cars behind him on the way out and was maintaining the same respectful distance on the return journey.

At about this time, Mrs. Prior had a shock. She had come back from an afternoon of shopping and gossiping, had parked the car, and opened the front door. Her husband was standing in the hall. She saw at once that something was wrong. His face was unnaturally white, and when he stretched his hand out and put it on her arm, she saw that it was shaking. “Henry, my dear!” she said. “You’re ill. I’ll put you straight to bed.”

It was the effort he made to control his voice which told her that something really serious had happened.

He said, “You remember that man who came this morning.”

“The Police Inspector?”

“Yes.”

“Has he been here again?”

“He hasn’t been here again. And listen to me. If he does come here again, he’s not to be allowed inside the house. If he rings up, you don’t answer the telephone.”

His voice was rising. She took him by the arm and led him back into the sitting room. She said, “Sit down, there. By the fire. I’ll get you a drink.”

She took as much time as possible in pouring out the drink, and by the time she came back with it, her husband had recovered some of his self-possession. As she handed him the glass, her hand brushed his hair. She said, “Your hair’s quite wet. What on earth have you been doing? Bathing?”

Mr. Prior started shivering again.

On the following Monday morning the formal inquest was opened on what the newspapers now referred to as ‘The Body on the Island’. The coroner, Mr. Byfold, a sleepy-looking man with three chins and a dimple, said, “I take it, Inspector, that you will ask for an adjournment. We appreciate your difficulties in this case. How long would you like?”

“The police would ask for an adjournment of seven days.”

“I’d be happy to give you longer than that.”

“It seems probable that we should be able to offer evidence of identification within that period.”

“Very well, Inspector. Adjourned until September 20th.”

“Weren’t you sticking your neck out a bit?” said Superintendent Clark.

“I don’t think so,” said Mercer. “We’ve got a prima facie identification already. There’s no doubt the handbag was hers. The powder compact made it pretty certain and the keys clinched it. She disappeared two years ago. And we’ll get Dr. Champion to say that’s about the time he estimates the body had been buried. And another thing – it’s only negative evidence – but as far as I can make out Sweetie had never been near a dentist.”

“We’d better warn Champion that we shall be relying on his evidence. Well, what’s happened now, Tom? You’re looking damned pleased with yourself.”

Inspector Rye, who had come in without knocking, said, “We’ve got an answer about that ring. In fact, we’ve got the object itself. Turned over to us by a pawnbroker at Slough.”

He put the ring on Clark’s desk and the three men looked at it curiously. It was a pretty thing, and clearly quite valuable.

“Has he got a record of the deposit?”

“He certainly has,” said Rye. “He was so suspicious of the whole transaction that he made a note, in his own handwriting, in the margin of the ledger. ‘Calls himself Smith. Old man. Dressed like a respectable tramp.’ “

“Sowthistle.” Mercer and Clark said it together.

“Get us a positive identification,” said Clark, “and we’ll pull him in.”

“I’ve done it, sir. You remember when there was all that fuss with the Local Authority. Hedges’ picture was in all the papers. I took the pawnbroker straight down to the Slough Gazette Office and showed him some of the photographs.”

“And he identified him?”

“Not a shadow of doubt.”

“He’s an unmistakable sort of character,” said Mercer.

“All right. We can organise a proper identification parade afterwards. If it comes to that. Meanwhile I imagine you’ll pull him in and charge him.”

“With theft? Or murder?”

“I must leave that to your judgement after you’ve questioned him.”

“We shall have to make our minds up which horse we’re backing before we charge him.”

“I am acquainted with Judges’ Rules,” said Clark. “I also believe that any detective officer worth his salt knows how to get round them.”

Mercer said equably, “You wouldn’t care to give me that in writing, sir?”

“No. I would not.”

“Because we really are in a bit of a cleft stick. If we charge him with theft, he’ll put up some story. Sweetie was going away and gave him the ring. Why? To pay for board and lodging, or because she loved the old bastard, or for any other reason he puts forward. The point being that if Sweetie isn’t here, she can’t deny it.”

Clark said, “Mmm.” He didn’t sound pleased.

“On the other hand, if we go the whole hog and charge him with murder, it could misfire badly. There’s a lot of suggestive evidence. He wouldn’t have dared to sell the ring unless he was sure she wasn’t coming back. But it’s not direct evidence. We may get there in time, but if we go off at half cock, the whole thing may blow up in our faces. You remember what a lot of sympathy he got out of the papers last time. We don’t want a second campaign of that sort, do we?”

The Superintendent was spared the trouble of answering by Detective Massey, who put his head round and said, “Sorry to interrupt. But we’ve had a message from the box out on the Staines Road. They’ve pulled in Hedges.”

“Pulled him in. What for?”

“Assault, sir.”

“What happened?”

“From what I gather, he was walking along the road and he flagged a lorry. He had a big knapsack on his back, and the driver thought at first he was a hiker, and stopped. When he saw Hedges—”

“Smelled him, you mean.”

“Yes. Well, anyway, he said ‘no’. Hedges was pretty tight, and he got mad, and tried to clamber on board, and there was a bit of a fight and in the middle of it, one of our patrol cars came along. Then Hedges hit the policeman.”

“That solves one of our difficulties, doesn’t it,” said Mercer. “By the way, what was in the knapsack?”

“All his clothes and things.”

“You mean he was scarpering?”

“It certainly looked like that. He told the lorry driver he was heading for the West Country.”

The Superintendent said, “Well, I think that’s very satisfactory. You’ll take over, Mercer.”

“I’ll take over,” said Mercer. The scar on the side of his face showed up red for a moment.

Sowthistle was brought in at midday. The events of the morning had not improved his appearance. He was taken straight up to the C.I.D. room. Coming in from the street, at about three o’clock, Inspector Medmenham stopped and said to Station Officer Tovey, “What on earth’s all that noise? Where’s it coming from?”

“Up in the C.I.D. room,” said Tovey with a wooden face. “They’re questioning that old man they brought in for clocking Peters.”

“Has it been going on for long?”

“About an hour.”

Medmenham said, “Oh!” and walked upstairs and along the corridor. He was making for the Superintendent’s office.

At four o’clock Tom Rye came into the C.I.D. room with three cups of tea on a tray. He looked curiously at Sowthistle, who was crouched on a chair, his face in his hands, and his whole body shaking.

Rye said, very quietly, “The Chief ’s getting worried.”

Mercer said, “Then tell him from me to stop worrying. I haven’t laid a finger on the old sod, and I’ve had Massey here all the time to watch me not doing it. Right, son?”

Massey, who was sitting in a corner with a notebook balanced on his knee, nodded.

“Then what’s he been screaming about?”

“It’s a defensive mechanism. When I ask him a question he can’t answer, he opens his mouth and screams.”

“Do you think he knows something?”

“He knows something, and we’re going to get it out of him if we sit here all night asking questions. And all tomorrow, and the day after.”

“Would you like me to give you a spell?”

“Not right now,” said Mercer. “We’re just beginning to get to know each other.”

The ragbag in the chair showed no sign of hearing what was said. Now he looked up and Rye could see two eyes, startlingly alive within their red circumferences, and spittle at each corner of the loose mouth.

“He’s not having a fit, is he?”

“If you want my honest opinion,” said Mercer, “it’s ninety per cent put on. He knows bloody well what we want, don’t you, grandpa?”

Sowthistle snarled at them.

“That’s more like it,” said Mercer. “Stop playing the idiot boy. Just be your own filthy self. Then we shall get on. Let’s start again. When did you say you saw Sweetie last?”

Rye went back again at six o’clock with tea and at eight o’clock with yet more tea. At half-past nine Mercer came out and walked along to the Superintendent’s office. Clark was still at his desk. He looked as if he was feeling the strain more than Mercer.

He said, “How’s it going?”

“We’ve got a confession. Of a sort.”

“Written?”

“Written out, but not signed. He says he’ll think about signing it tomorrow. When he’s not so tired.”

“Which means he’ll repudiate the whole thing.”

“Very likely. But it was made in the presence of two police officers. It’s enough to hold him. When he comes up tomorrow, we can oppose bail on the grounds that there are more serious charges pending. They’ll give us that, won’t they?”

“Treat Murray Talbot right,” said Clark, “and he will give you all the help you want. Get that confession signed and we’ll charge him straight away.”

“I’m not all that happy about the confession. Not as it stands right now.”

“What does he say?”

“He’s told us at least six different stories. The one I’ve got down is the last one he told us. That Sweetie came home pretty high herself one evening. They had a real set-to, she fell and hit her head. He found she was dead, and pushed her into the river. When I said, then how did she end up three foot down in a grave on Westhaugh Island, he said he supposed he must have buried her.”

“Do you believe a word of that?”

“Frankly,” said Mercer, “no. Whatever happened to her, it wasn’t that. It was something a lot more cold-blooded. And anyway, she wasn’t killed by a blow on the head. She was strangled. But he was involved in her death. I’m sure of it. She’s on his conscience. She’s at the back of his mind. She’s walking in his sleep.”

“You’ll be walking in your sleep if you don’t get to bed soon,” said Clark.

Mercer started back to his lodgings in Cray Avenue, but halfway there, changed his mind and turned down to the river. He had an unpleasant taste in his mouth and he thought that a pint of beer might wash it out.

Mercer took his beer into the back room at The Angler’s Rest and found Jack Bull and Rainey in front of the fire, drinking whisky.

He said, “Where’s the supporting cast?”

“Johnno’s just pushed off,” said Bull. “Vikki wouldn’t come out tonight. She’s sulking.”

“That young madam wants slapping down,” said Rainey.

“I wouldn’t advise you to try it,” said Bull. “She packs a fast right hook, with a lot of weight behind it.”

“Speaking from experience?” said Mercer.

“Am I not.” Bull rubbed the point of his jaw with a big finger.

“You ought never to have taken her on,” said Rainey. Whisky seemed to have loosened his tongue. “She’s playing hell with my figures.”

“As long as her own figure’s right, I don’t give a damn what she does.”

“Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”

“My dear old Percival,” said Bull with sudden ferocious good humour, “you must know that I’m far too old and far too evil to be warned. I’m beyond redemption. And you’re tight. Go home to bed.”

There was no doubting the mood of the last sentence. It was in the imperative affirmative. Rainey finished his drink and shambled to his feet.

“Maybe you’re right,” he said. He made for a point to the right of the door, tacked at the last moment, and made contact with the door handle.

“And whilst you’re passing the bar, see if you can remember to order a couple of whiskies. Doubles.”

“Is his name really Percival?”

“Gospel truth. Perce the Purse, the boys call him. He’s a highly qualified accountant and a bloody marvellous mathematician. When he’s sober.”

“Is he often?”

Bull laughed, and said, “He’s mostly sober from ten till six. If he wasn’t, he’d be out on his ear.”

“It’s your business, but I should have thought there might be danger in having a man like that in charge of the cash.”

“Yes and no. He’d swindle me if he dared. But he knows I know that, and I’m watching for it, so he doesn’t do it. Also he knows, if I caught him fiddling, I wouldn’t only sack him, I’d break his bloody neck.”

The drinks arrived. Bull paid with a pound note and waved away the change. “Water or soda?”

“I never touch the stuff,” said Mercer.

On top of the beer the whisky slid down smoothly. Bull let a companionable minute tick by before he said, “And how are you finding Sinferry?”

“It’s an interesting sort of place,” said Mercer. “Full of characters.”

“Like Sowthistle Hedges?”

“No. Not like Sowthistle. He’s unique, I should say.”

“He’s a free-wheeler,” said Bull. “Do you know, when he first came here, must have been more than thirty years ago, before he sank up to his neck into the shit, he was quite a boy. When the local council tried to make him pay rates he fought them through the Rating Tribunal and the High Court. Conducted his own case and won it. I believe it’s still the leading case on the difference between a house and a houseboat.”

Mercer tried to visualise Sowthistle addressing the High Court and failed. He said, “Talking of characters, I met a real one today. Mr. Brattle.”

“Charlie Brattle. One of the best. A warm man, too. That boathouse and the land round it has been in the Brattle family for a hundred years. I’m told that a firm of property developers offered him twenty thousand for it. They wanted to put up a river club complete with chalets. When he said ‘no’ they upped the offer to thirty thousand. He told them to go and jump in the river.”

The landlord put his head round the door to say, “Any more orders?”

“Two more large whiskies,” said Mercer.

“Make it four,” said Bull. “Save your legs. What were you talking to Brattle about? Don’t tell me he’d broken the law.”

“Certainly not. I was looking for Prior’s place. He took me across in the punt.”

“Henry Prior?”

“That’s right. Used to keep the Stoneferry Garage. Before he ran into that bit of trouble.”

“Henry was all right,” said Bull. “We may have been cutting each other’s throats in business, but that didn’t stop me liking him personally.”

“So he told me.”

“Oh?”

“About you buying his fixed equipment.”

“It was good stuff. More useful to me than the scrap dealers. If I’m just being bloody inquisitive, tell me to keep my trap shut, but why would old Henry Prior interest the police?”

“As a matter of fact, it’s something you might be able to help me on. Being in the same line of business. You remember the mechanic who caused all the trouble.”

“Taylor.”

“That’s what he called himself. Did you, or any of your chaps, ever talk to him?”

“I didn’t. They might have done. Why?”

“I’d be very interested to know where he came from. In fact, I’d be interested in anything about his past at all. He’s such a shadowy figure. Comes from nowhere, wrecks the Stoneferry Central Garage, departs to nowhere.”

“I could ask my boys. They’re bound to ask me why I want to know.”

“Tell them I’m a nosy bastard,” said Mercer. He sank back still more comfortably into the padded armchair.

“I’d be telling ’em nothing but the truth at that,” said Bull with a grin which showed a set of sharp white teeth. “You are a nosy bastard.”

“I’m interested in people,” said Mercer. The second whisky had followed the first, and his voice had a very slight slur to it. “In where they come from, and where they’re going to, and what makes them tick. And I’m interested in things that happen. When a lot of different things seem to be happening at the same place and the same time, I want to know whether it’s blind chance, or whether it’s cause and effect. Once, in London, I wanted to find out why a boy was late for school some mornings and not on others. He always set out from home at the same time. It was worrying his mother.”

The outer bar was very quiet now. The landlord had got rid of the other customers and must have departed to organise his own supper.

“Go on,” said Bull sleepily. “Tell me.”

“He’d been put on by his older brother to watch the bank manager and report what time he arrived at the bank. Sometimes the manager was punctual. Then the boy got to school in time. Sometimes he wasn’t. Then the boy was late. It was as simple as that.”

“Let’s have the punch line,” said Bull. “The older brother was a bank robber and you caught him.”

“He was working for a crowd who organised wage snatches. I stopped that particular snatch, and I caught this.” His finger caressed the scar on the left side of his face. “It’s a memento from a very undesirable character called Fenton.”

There was a long silence after this. A casual observer might have supposed that the two big men stretched out in chairs in front of the fire were asleep.