Read Hardcastle's Soldiers Online
Authors: Graham Ison
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Historical
Table of Contents
Recent Titles by Graham Ison from Severn House
HARDCASTLE'S SPY
HARDCASTLE'S ARMISTICE
HARDCASTLE'S CONSPIRACY
HARDCASTLE'S AIRMEN
HARDCASTLE'S ACTRESS
HARDCASTLE'S BURGLAR
HARDCASTLE'S MANDARIN
HARDCASTLE'S SOLDIERS
BREACH OF PRIVILEGE
DIVISION
DRUMFIRE
JACK IN THE BOX
KICKING THE AIR
LIGHT FANTASTIC
LOST OR FOUND
WHIPLASH
WHISPERING GRASS
WORKING GIRL
Â
Â
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author's and publisher's rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain and the USA 2010 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS of
9â15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
eBook edition first published in 2014 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Copyright © 2010 by Graham Ison.
The right of Graham Ison to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Ison, Graham.
Hardcastle's Soldiers. â (A Hardcastle and Marriott historical mystery)
1. Hardcastle, Ernest (Fictitious character)âFiction.
2. Marriott, Charles (Fictitious character)âFiction.
3. Great Britain. Metropolitan Police OfficeâFiction.
4. MurderâInvestigationâFiction. 5. World War,
1914-1918âSocial aspectsâEnglandâLondonâFiction.
6. Great BritainâHistoryâGeorge V, 1910-1936âFiction.
7. Detective and mystery stories.
I. Title II. Series
823.9'14-dc22
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-6860-2 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-84751-213-0 (trade paper)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-492-8 (ePub)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
T
he news on that July morning in 1917 was bleak, even to a nation inured to nearly three years of war. On Monday the ninth, two days previously, the battleship HMS
Vanguard
had been destroyed by an explosion at Scapa Flow. Only three men had survived out of a complement of 807. The official communiqué gave no reason for the tragedy, other than to say that it was an accident. But that did not stop a
Daily Mail
reporter from hazarding a guess that a German submarine had got close enough to fire a torpedo into the vessel's magazine.
âBloody war!' muttered Ernest Hardcastle. Taking off his spectacles, he folded the newspaper and threw it into the waste-paper basket. He crossed to the open window and stared down momentarily at Westminster underground station below, just as a train pulled out, rattling the windows of his office. However, as the divisional detective inspector of the A or Whitehall Division of the Metropolitan Police, he was about to be occupied with matters closer to home than the tragic loss of HMS
Vanguard
.
âExcuse me, sir.' Detective Sergeant Charles Marriott â a first-class sergeant and Hardcastle's assistant â appeared in the doorway of the DDI's office on the first floor of Cannon Row Police Station. The station, and New Scotland Yard opposite, had been built in 1888 of granite hewn, fittingly by convicts from Dartmoor prison.
âWhat is it, Marriott? Not more bad news, I hope.'
âMatter of opinion, sir,' ventured Marriott. âAt about twenty past ten a railway copper called the PC on the Victoria Street and Vauxhall Bridge Road traffic point. One of the cashiers on Victoria railway station was found dead in his booth.'
âWhat was a cashier doing in a booth on Victoria Station, Marriott?' Hardcastle took out his pouch and carefully filled his pipe with St Bruno tobacco.
âIt's an arrangement the army has with a bank, sir. The cashier in question exchanges French money into sterling for troops arriving home from the Front. Looks as though he was attacked in the course of a robbery.'
âWhere on Victoria Station is this booth, Marriott?'
âOn the concourse, sir.' Marriott spoke hesitantly; he knew what was coming next.
âDammit!' exclaimed Hardcastle.
It was one of the perversities of the Metropolitan Police that responsibility for the platforms and track at the railway station rested with the B or Chelsea Division, whereas the concourse came under the aegis of A Division. Even before Hardcastle had been posted to Cannon Row Police Station, discussions had been going on among the hierarchy at Scotland Yard about transferring the responsibility for crimes committed on the entirety of the railway station to B Division.
After all, A Division â known informally as âthe Royal A' â had more than its fair share of responsibility, with Buckingham Palace, St James's Palace, Parliament, Westminster Abbey and the government offices in Whitehall within its purview, added to which was the onus of policing the royal palaces at Windsor Castle and Holyrood House in Edinburgh.
Hardcastle's view was that it was typical of the muddled thinking of the senior officers at Scotland Yard, that they had shilly-shallied over making what to him was a simple decision. Not that he would give voice to that criticism in the presence of a subordinate.
He took out his chromium hunter watch, glanced at it, briefly wound it, and dropped it back into his waistcoat pocket. âBetter go and take a look, I suppose, Marriott.' He took a box of Swan Vestas matches from his pocket and lit his pipe. âSent anyone up there?' he asked, emitting a plume of smoke towards the nicotine-stained ceiling.
It was Marriott's job to know the present whereabouts of every detective at Cannon Row, and he knew that Hardcastle meant an A Division CID officer. âI've already sent Catto and Lipton up there to secure the scene, sir,' he said, naming two detective constables.
âFat lot of good they'll be,' growled Hardcastle, seizing his bowler hat and umbrella, and making his way downstairs.
âAnd I took the liberty of calling Dr Spilsbury, sir,' continued Marriott, as he hurried after the DDI.
âI should hope so, Marriott,' muttered Hardcastle, who always wanted the country's leading forensic pathologist to examine the victim of any murder that he was investigating.
Spilsbury was renowned in courts throughout the country, and defence counsel always took special care in preparing their case when they knew he was to appear for the prosecution. In particular, his evidence in the infamous Brides in the Bath case in 1915 had resulted in George Joseph Smith being hanged for his crimes. During the course of that trial, a bath had been brought into the Old Bailey courtroom and filled with water. A nurse, attired in a bathing costume, stepped into the bath. Pulling the nurse's ankles upwards and submerging her head, Detective Inspector Neil demonstrated how Smith had murdered his victims. By so doing he almost succeeded in killing the unfortunate nurse, but newspaper reports attributed the demonstration to Spilsbury. He never denied it.
Turning out of the police station into Derby Gate, and thence to Whitehall, with his sergeant chasing behind him, Hardcastle peered in vain for a taxi.
âMight be quicker to take a bus, sir,' suggested Marriott warily. âI heard the other day that a lot of cabbies have joined the army.'
âDivisional detective inspectors do not travel to the scene of a crime on a bus, Marriott,' said Hardcastle sternly. At last, sighting a cab, he waved his umbrella at it imperiously. âVictoria Station, driver.'
The cab driver yanked down the flag on his taximeter. âHaving a day at the seaside, guv'nor?' he asked. âFive-and-nine on the Brighton line,' he added jocularly, quoting army housey-housey callers' slang for the number fifty-nine.
âJust get on with your bloody driving,' snapped Hardcastle. âI've got a murder to deal with.'
The chastened cab driver remained silent for the remainder of the short journey down Victoria Street.
It was drizzling with rain when Hardcastle and Marriott arrived at Victoria Station. A troop train had just disgorged a thousand or more soldiers returning from the Front. They were borne down with packs and rifles, while others, taking a brief respite, had dumped their kit around their feet. These men had arrived on leave, although few people would have guessed it. Each had a muddied, drawn and haggard appearance, as though he had been to hell. And back.
Many of the soldiers were clustered around the three money-exchange booths, one of which was to become the focus of Hardcastle's latest murder enquiry.
In an attempt to marshal those unfortunates who were bound for the Front, Movement Control sergeants dashed around shouting orders and scribbling on papers.
Clouds of steam swirled across the crowded station and the odour of burning coal filled the air. Occasionally the hubbub of noise was punctuated by the doom-laden whistles of hissing locomotives hauling their reluctant passengers on the first stage of their journey to France or Belgium.
Little knots of people were saying goodbye to loved ones returning to the fighting. Some women clutched handkerchiefs and were crying, while others did their best to put on a brave face.
One young girl, her long black coat failing to disguise her pregnancy, was clinging to a lance-bombardier who only yesterday had done âthe right thing' by her. Her face was buried in the rough material of his tunic, and she gripped the webbing of his equipment as though trying to prevent his going, doubtless wondering if she would ever see him again.
A line of ambulances stretched down one side of the concourse, the women drivers talking to a group of red-caped nurses of Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service as they waited for the next hospital train.
Suddenly, as if in response to some secret signal, the group broke up, clambered into their vehicles, and drove on to one of the platforms. They stopped and swung open ambulance doors as the first of a depressing number of wounded soldiers was carried off the train on stretchers.
Once again, reminding him of his visit to the little Belgian town of Poperinghe only last year, Hardcastle witnessed the human detritus of war being loaded for the last part of its long journey to Charing Cross Hospital, some of them to recover fully, some partly, some to remain in an awful limbo between life and death. And some to die. These pathetic human wrecks were the result of jingoism, political bungling, military incompetence and ignorance. And patriotism and gallantry of the very highest order.