Calamity in Kent, A British Library Crime Classic (2 page)

BOOK: Calamity in Kent, A British Library Crime Classic
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“Look here, Mr. Bender,” I said. “I happen to be a journalist. This may be a great chance for me.”

He looked a little scared. “You mean…you mean that the papers will print all about this?” he said.

“Well.” I grinned. “It'll be one of the sensations of the century,” I said. “After all, a man murdered in a locked lift. It's a real mystery, isn't it?”

“I suppose so,” he admitted. But there was something a bit reluctant about his tone. I wondered if I had made a mistake by telling him who and what I was. Still, the damage was done now, if, indeed, it was damage. And the next job was obviously to see what I could about the dead man.

“Can I have a look at the body?” I asked.

“What about the police?” he responded. I had been wondering how long it would be before he got around to that. Still, I knew that I could handle him.

“If I come with you to the lift,” I said, “that will be an extra witness. It will give you support if they ever come round to suspecting you.”

“You think they might?” There was a real quaver about his voice now. There was no doubt that I had put some fear into his heart by suggesting that he might perhaps come under suspicion. I was sorry for the chap in a way. But I had to put my own future as a journalist first. This might well put me on the Fleet Street map again, after the long absence from newsprint which had been caused by my illness.

“I'll be a perfect witness to support you, Mr. Bender,” I said. “Lead on to the lift! I'll see what there is to be seen, and then we'll fetch the police in. Don't worry; there'll be no trouble for you, no trouble at all.”

I could see that his mind was not really at ease. He was more than a bit worried. Probably he hadn't realised, until I reminded him, that this was to become a front-page sensation in the press. But all the same he had enough sense to see that I might well be of some use to him, if he ever came under suspicion of this murder.

So, like a lamb, he led the way towards the lift. I was excited enough. The prologue, I told myself, was over. The first act of the play was about to begin.

Chapter II

In Which I Meet a Dead Man

I was not really surprised that Aloysius Bender was to all appearances a trifle reluctant to lead on to his lift. The man was still nervous. He threw away his cigarette with a jumpy gesture, and his limp, as he walked slowly towards the lift gates, was very pronounced.

As for me, I was a bit excited. In my time I had been in on a few scoops. This, however, was the first time that I had ever had the inside story of a murder handed to me on a plate. And I knew that a recent increase in the newsprint ration meant that the papers would give a bit more space to the case, if it was truly sensational, than they had been able to do in years. I grinned savagely as I looked at the limping man ahead of me. What was he going to lead me on to? That it was going to be something pretty sensational I felt only too sure.

He fumbled in his pocket. I was consumed with impatience. Then I saw what it was. The lift-gates were still fastened. No doubt he had relocked them, in a more or less mechanical manner, as soon as he had made his horrifying discovery.

I looked at the lock with some interest. It was a massive padlock of an old-fashioned type, and it joined chains which in effect tied the two gates together. But I have known one or two crooks in my time, and I would have been prepared to wager that the lock could have been picked by any skilful man with a good bunch of skeleton keys. The thing looked so heavy that the poor ignorant man in the street would have thought it to be perfectly safe, and the burglar, wishing to pick it, would have thought it to be the simplest job in the world.

Still, the chap now had managed to get a bunch of keys out of his pocket, and was struggling to insert one of them into the lock. His hands still trembled so violently that he found it a tough job. The key rattled against the lock, but did not go into the keyhole.

I lost patience. “Here, give the keys to me!” I snapped. I grabbed the keys from him and in a moment had the padlock unfastened.

Bender swung open the sliding gates. He then stood back, as if he was still too scared to go in. I glanced inside the lift, and stepped in.

There was no doubt that it was murder. The man was lying flat on his face, with one arm doubled under him in an unnatural manner. Sticking out of his back was the short hilt of a nasty-looking knife. It was, as far as I could see without touching it, one of those unpleasant weapons that they issued to Commandos during the war. It had clearly been driven in with pretty considerable force, just below the left shoulder-blade. And, judging by the blood, it must have struck an artery of some sort. The blood was pretty liberally spattered about the Broadgate Lift. I reflected that the dainty ladies who paraded the promenade from day to day would probably prefer to climb down the stairs for some days to come. If I knew anything about police methods, the lift, in any event, would not be in use for some time.

By this time Bender had followed me into the lift.

I looked at him with eyebrows raised. “Well?” I said.

“Well?” he replied.

“Have you looked at his face?” I asked.

“No.”

“But you said that you didn't know the man,” I objected.

“I don't.”

I gently raised the body so that the face became visible. It was a handsome face, made in the classical mould. There was a black toothbrush moustache, neatly trimmed. The hair was black and sleek. I should have placed the man at about thirty years of age, though that was, naturally, a mere guess. Anyhow, say he was between twenty-five and forty. That's near enough for the moment. I'd never seen him before to my knowledge.

“Still think you don't know him?” I snapped.

“I'm sure I don't,” said Bender.

“Good enough,” I commented.

I fished in the corpse's inside pocket. I know that, strictly speaking, this was not legal, but I had to get some information before the police arrived; otherwise, I knew, it wouldn't be easy to sell the story to any paper.

There was a wallet there. It contained about twenty pounds in pound notes. And there were a few papers there, too. I looked at them hastily. Letters addressed to Mr. John Tilsley, at the Charrington Hotel, Broadgate. And a bunch of visiting cards, inscribed with John Tilsley's name. No address, though. In fact, there was nothing to connect the man with anywhere outside the little Kentish town where his dead body was now lying.

I could see that Bender was looking at me pretty suspiciously. Indeed, I imagine that my behaviour must have seemed moderately odd to anyone not well acquainted with the ways of journalists. Still, I knew that I was in on a good thing, and I was not prepared to allow a liftman's suspicions to put me off. It was absolutely essential that I should do something which would make a good story for the Fleet Street market. I had got the name of the dead man; I had got his Broadgate address. That was a fairly promising start. No doubt at his hotel they would be able to tell me something about him. The main thing was that I didn't want to waste too much time. I knew that, if I took long, the police would have a few awkward questions to ask as to what I had been doing. And where the police are concerned, I like to keep a place discreetly in the background.

But, at the same time, I felt that I should do my best to get hold of some more information. I took one or two of the letters out of their envelopes. They looked commonplace enough. They were clearly personal letters of the most innocuous kind, signed “Bill” and “Sally.” The addresses at the top of the letters were London addresses, and the letters were the sort of thing which most of us have written from time to time to friends on holiday. They merely expressed the hope that Tilsley was having a good time at Broadgate, and went on to give some scraps of what were obviously mere personal gossip about friends and neighbours, acquaintances and relatives. I didn't think that there was any question of there being any genuine revelations here.

I looked up at Bender. “Chap called Tilsley, it seems,” I said. I tried to make my voice sound as casual as I could. It would not do to let this fellow develop all sorts of suspicions as to my interest in the case. He might tell the police too much about what was going on. Then any sort of journalistic material which I hoped to get hold of would be completely lost, and my chance to get back into the headlines would be gone.

“Tilsley?” he repeated, in a colourless kind of tone.

“Yes.” I studied his face carefully, but it did not seem to me that there was anything resembling recognition there. I would have been prepared, at that moment, to swear that John Tilsley was a complete stranger to Aloysius Bender. And, anyhow, I didn't see why he should not be. A locked lift is a cunning enough place to hide a body—but it would not be so cunning if one had the only available key.

But was it the only available key? It was some indication of the speed with which the whole affair had taken place that this was a question that had not previously entered my mind.

“Mr. Bender,” I said.

“Yes?”

“You said that there was a key—in fact, I've seen it—which remained on the bunch in your pocket all night.”

“That's right.”

“Is there another key anywhere?”

“Another key?” He stared at me stupidly as he said this. Again I felt my patience going. Of course, I told myself, this fellow had undergone a pretty nasty experience; it probably gave him a sense of shock, and it might indirectly be responsible for any sort of stupidity which he might show. And yet, even though I knew that this was reasonable enough as an explanation, it did not make it any easier for me to be patient with him.

“Yes, man,” I said. “Somebody got in this lift last night, after you locked it, stabbed our unfortunate friend here, got out again, and relocked the lift on the outside. That is, of course, unless the murderer could manage to get through the iron gates without unlocking them. And I don't believe in that kind of dematerialisation.”

“I see.” He paused and looked at me. I thought that I could see signs of some spark of intelligence in those green eyes; but I had been mistaken. He simply relapsed into a lumpish silence.

“Well,” I said. “Is there another key somewhere? There must be a second one, you know. After all, suppose you lost your key, the lift wouldn't just go out of action, would it? Or would it?”

He shook his head. “No, it wouldn't go out of action,” he admitted.

“Then where is the other key?” I was getting completely impatient now, for I knew that in a matter of minutes I should have to tell the police about our discovery. I had wasted enough time already, time that I should find it mighty difficult to account for, if the legal gents should ever enquire into what I had been doing that morning.

“In the council offices, at the top of Manvell Street,” he replied suddenly, as if he had abruptly come to life.

“Ah!” This was more the sort of information that I was after.

“It hangs on a peg inside the entrance to the offices, just above where the commissionaire sits,” he went on. The man was getting quite chatty now, I reflected. It seemed that he was either getting over the preliminary shock of his discovery, or he was losing the mistrust of my motives which was only too obvious a little earlier.

“I see,” I said. I had made no notes up to now, trusting to my moderately good memory. I knew that nothing was so likely to put off a reluctant talker as the fact that what he said was being written down. I suppose that the taking of notes, even by a journalist, savours a bit too much of the policeman noting evidence for most people to like it very much. However, I now thought that I had probably milked Mr. Bender of all the information that he was likely to be able to give me.

“Mr. Bender,” I said.

“Yes.”

“Do you know the police station?”

“Of course.”

“Is it far away?”

“About ten minutes' walk, I should think.”

“Would you go and fetch the police? I'll stand guard here and make sure that nobody interferes. It is important that we do that, and I think it would be better if you fetched the police, since you will know the way to the station far better than I should.”

“All right.” There was a kind of sulky acquiescence in his voice. I knew that he was not too willing to do what I was asking, but at the same time it was impossible for him to dispute the rationality of my suggestion. I was, in fact, kicking myself for not having thought of it a bit sooner. If I had only sent him off to the police before I searched the body I might well have been able to get the information without Bender knowing what I had been doing. And now he was sure to blab to the police, and I should have to do a bit of explaining.

Still, the damage was done. It was no good crying over spilt milk, so to speak.

Bender went off, leaving me in charge. I had another rapid glance at the body. I thrust my hand, with some reluctance, into the other pockets. One of the side-pockets of the coat contained a pipe, pouch, and a box of matches—nothing else. The other one had some loose change and a lighter. It was queer, I thought, that this man had little in the way of identifiable property—certainly nothing to indicate that he had had any sort of life before coming down for this holiday in Kent. His hip-pocket I was reluctant to examine, since I knew that it would never do if I got any blood on my hands, and there was blood in plenty in the region of the hip-pocket. Still, I managed to steel myself to the task.

I was rewarded. The pocket contained a small notebook. This, I told myself, might well be the personal property which would lead to something. It did, indeed. Inside its cover was scrawled: “John Tilsley, 25 Thackeray Court, S.W.5.” I jotted down the address on the back of an envelope which I took from my own pocket. It might well be that this clue would lead to something. After all, I did not expect that this murder had its origin in Broadgate. It almost certainly originated from something in the man's own private life.

The notebook itself had nothing in it which conveyed much to me. It had various queer combinations of figures scrawled in it. It seemed to me that these were either some sort of gambling system or notes of mathematical problems. In either case, it did not seem to me that they could convey anything to the ordinary reader, or that they could have any sort of direct connexion with the man's death. That was, unless they were really some sort of private shorthand, written in a code which I, for one, was totally unable to decipher in the time which was likely to be at my disposal before the arrival of the police.

So, I slipped the little notebook into my hip-pocket. I knew that I might well have left fingerprints on these things, but I had no time to mess about, trying to remove them; and in any event I guessed that the police were not likely to try to see if there were any finger-prints on things safely stowed away in the pockets of a murdered man. They would not miss the notebook, anyhow. The weapon was what they were most likely to concentrate on. And I had been very careful to have nothing to do with that.

Now I had a look at it. I walked all round it, studying it from all angles. My first impression was confirmed by this detailed study. It was undoubtedly the knife that was issued to Commando troops during the war. Just how it had found its way here was, of course, a problem that I couldn't solve—not at the moment, at any rate.

Then the light in the lift changed. I had pushed the gates to, but hadn't locked them. Now they had been pulled to one side by someone standing on the promenade.

“Hullo, hullo, hullo!” said a rich, unctuous voice. “And what has been going on here?”

BOOK: Calamity in Kent, A British Library Crime Classic
4.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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