Read The Best of British Crime omnibus Online
Authors: Andrew Garve,David Williams,Francis Durbridge
âWould you like some coffee? I was just going to make myself a cup.'
âNot for me.' Yardley swung round, gazing blandly into Harry's eyes. âBut you go ahead.'
âThere was no need to call round, sir,' Harry said, meeting the older man's stare. âI'd have delivered the letter to you.'
âYes, I know that. But I wanted to see you.' Yardley nodded at the most comfortable of the leather-covered chairs. May I sit down?'
âYes, of course.'
While the cushions of the chair sighed under the weight of Yardley's mammoth posterior, Harry perched himself on the arm of the settee.
âGo ahead. Make your coffee.'
âThat's all right. The coffee can wait. I've plenty of time. I'm on leave anyway.'
âAh, yes,' Yardley nodded, as if this was news to him. âUntil when?'
âThe twenty-fifth. What was it you wanted to see me about?'
Again Yardley contemplated Harry for a moment before speaking. His mouth had a curious way of twitching at the corners when he was about to say something.
âDawson, you told me last night that you had never met Newton â not until you saw him on the golf course.'
âThat's right.'
The next question was fired suddenly, like a slow bowler unexpectedly flinging down a fast ball. âThen how about a man called Higgs. Do you know anyone of that name?'
âHiggs? No, I don't think so.'
Yardley felt in his pocket and drew out his wallet. âThe full name is Basil Higgs.'
âBasil?' Harry stood up. He had remembered the name now. âI made out a cheque to a man called Basil Higgs yesterday morning.'
âThat's right.' Yardley produced the cheque from his pocket. âYou did indeed, Dawson. A cheque for five pounds.'
Harry took the cheque which Yardley handed him. âWhere did you get this cheque?'
âWe found it, last night.'
âWhere?'
âIn a drawer in Peter Newton's flat.'
âBut â I didn't give it to Newton!'
âI'm quite prepared to believe that since it is made out to a Mr. Basil Higgs,' Yardley conceded equably.
âYes, but I didn't give it to Higgs either. You see I â let me explain.'
âI wish you would,' said Yardley with feeling.
Briefly Harry described the saga of Zero, how the Conways had seen the advertisement and telephoned to say they had found the dog.
âI drove over there yesterday morning to pick him up. They seemed very nice people. He's an invalid. Has to get about in a wheelchair. Anyway, when I was leaving I mentioned the reward and Arnold Conway suggested that I give the fiver to some pet charity of his. He asked me to make the cheque out to the secretary, Basil Higgs.'
âI see.' Yardley stretched out an arm to take the cheque. He replaced it in his wallet which he put in his pocket. âThen how did Newton get hold of it?'
âI don't know.' Harry shook his head in complete bewilderment. âI just can't imagine.'
The two men were staring at each other in silence when there came a sharp knock on the street door, followed by a peal of the bell.
âIs that the postman?' Yardley had begun to rise expectantly from his chair.
âMost probably.'
Harry went out into the hall and opened the door to the landing. The postman had just reached the top of the stairs and was standing there with a bundle of letters. Against the top one he was holding the registered letter receipt book.
âMornin'.'
âGood morning.'
âRegistered letter for Dawson. Sign here, please.'
Harry signed his name with the postman's pencil and accepted the long bulky envelope which was handed to him. âThank you.'
âThankin'
you,
sir,' the postman replied cheerfully, as the door closed.
Harry put the bundle of mail down on the hall table and, holding the registered envelope in his hand, walked slowly back into the sitting-room.
âHas it arrived?' Yardley could not conceal his impatience.
âYes.'
Still looking at the long, slightly bulging envelope Harry crossed to the desk and picked up his father's letter knife. As he inserted the point under the heavily sealed flap Yardley was at his shoulder.
Harry drew out a single sheet of plain notepaper. It bore no address or date. The message had been printed in rough capitals:
âTHIS IS WHY YOUR FATHER WAS KILLED. PETER NEWTON'
âThis is why your father was killed.' Unashamedly Yardley read the message aloud. Harry handed him the sheet and ripped open the side of the envelope. Inside was an object carefully wrapped in tissue paper. Harry undid several layers of the paper before the object inside was revealed. It was an ornate, beautifully made dog collar.
âIt's the collar!' Harry exclaimed.
âThe collar?'
âYes. The one that was stolen. The one Zero was wearing.'
âNow, wait a minute,' Yardley protested. âYou're sure this was the one that was on the poodle?'
âHarry turned the stiff leather ring in his hands. âYes. I'm sure.'
âThen what the devil does this message mean?'
Yardley's brows met as he frowned over the printed words. âSearch me. It doesn't make sense.'
âAll right.' Yardley laid the message down on the desk and nodded at the collar. âThen tell me about that. Where did it come from, originally?'
âI don't know where it came from. All I can tell you is that my father gave it to Mrs. Rogers for her birthday.'
âWhen was this?'
âAbout a month ago. Unfortunately Mrs. Rogers is away at the moment. Her nephew got the ' flu and she's looking after him for a few days.'
Harry laid the collar down on top of the message. âI wonder what the devil Newton was getting at?'
âSo do I. It looks a perfectly ordinary collar to me. A little ornate perhaps.'
Yardley turned away. He seemed to have come to a sudden decision.
âI'd like to see you later this morning, Dawson. Could you be in my office at eleven?'
âYes,' Harry said, looking at his watch. âI shall be in the building. They're taking my prints some time this morning.'
âIt's routine.' Yardley spoke casually. âThey've been giving your car a thorough going-over, as you probably know.'
While he spoke the bell had been ringing. Not the bell on the street door but the small bell on the door that opened from the flat on to the landing.
Harry slipped past the Chief Superintendent and went to open it. He found Nat Fletcher with his finger poised to give the bell-push another jab. He held a bulging manila envelope in his other hand.
âHallo, Nat!' Harry greeted his friend guardedly. Since last night he was not too sure which side Nat was on. It was reasonable to believe that duty called him to act in harmony with his Chief Superintendent.
â'Lo, Harry. Is Yardley here?'
âHe is. He is indeed. Come along in, Nat.'
Yardley was evidently not expecting Nat to track him down to the Dawson flat.
âHallo, Nat. What brings you here?'
âGood morning, sir. I've just come from Newton's place. Things are beginning to look interesting.'
âWould you like some coffee, Nat?' Harry offered, hoping to get things on to the old friendly basis.
Nat brushed the invitation aside: âNo, thank you, Harry.'
âWhat do you mean, interesting?' Yardley demanded.
Nat unbuttoned the showerproof coat he habitually wore.
His face showed the effects of a night without sleep.
âWe were just finishing off at the flat when Jackson found a door behind what we thought was a larder. There was a small room, fitted up as an office. Desk, typewriter, filing-cabinet, all the usual office paraphernalia.'
âWell?'
Nat was standing close to the desk on which he had laid the envelope. He had spotted the collar lying on the sheet of note paper. âWe've just spent a fascinating half-hour going through the filing-cabinet, sir â to say nothing of the desk.'
âGet to the point,' Yardley snapped, irritated by Nat's suggestive tone.
âWhat did you find, Nat?' Harry chipped in.
Nat looked from Harry to the Superintendent and back again. There was a mischievous smile on his face, like a conjurer who knows he is going to surprise his audience.
Suddenly he picked up the envelope and let the contents slip out on to the table in the centre of the room.
There were about fifty glossy photographs and every one of them was of a different girl. Some were nudes, some were semi-nudes, some represented girls in the act of stripping, others showed them in black suspender belts clipped to black stockings. They had been taken from every conceivable angle and the fullest possible use had been made of light to heighten the effect.
In silence Yardley riffled through the collection. His breathing had become a good deal heavier. Nat stood back, enjoying the effect he had created. Harry picked up a photograph of a girl with a brash face and very well-developed bust.
âI know this girl. She's a prostitute. She gave evidence in the Oxford case about six months ago.'
Nat nodded his agreement. âIt's my guess they're all prostitutes, every one of them. There's over two hundred photos in that room, sir.'
âTwo hundred.' Yardley was still intent on the selection of fifty which Nat had brought. âOur friend Newton must have had a very large circle of friends.'
âA very
strange
circle of friends, sir,' Nat corrected. âNo names, no phone numbers, no addresses, no details, of any kind. Just the photographs.'
Yardley scooped the photographs together and pushed them back into the envelope. He handed it back to Nat.
âWhat the hell was Newton up to, Nat?'
The indoor swimming baths had only recently been opened. They had been built to the most modern standards and offered every conceivable amenity. The main pool was on the Olympic scale and lined on both sides by tiers of benches for spectators. At eleven on a normal weekday morning these were almost empty.
Harry Dawson sat on the front row watching the girl who was just completing her third length in a fast racing crawl. The white bathing cap raised a bow-wave ahead of her and the water rushed over her lithe form. In the confined space voices were echoed and magnified. The air was damp and heavy, laden with a faint smell of chlorine.
The swimmer reached the end of the pool, turned under water with the agility of an eel and immediately increased her speed in a racing finish. This time when she reached the end she let her legs sink and stood up in the water. She placed her hands on the side of the pool, levered herself up until she could place one leg on the top. It was a movement as graceful as a ballet sequence. The moisture gleamed on the curve of her back as she reached for the towel on the bench.
Perhaps sensing Harry's eyes on her she turned and saw him sitting a few yards behind her. She immediately gave him her brilliant smile and walked towards him.
âHallo, Mr. Dawson.'
âHallo, Liz.'
She was pulling off her bathing cap as she approached, shaking her hair out into its natural shape.
âI didn't know you came here.'
âI don't normally. Douglas told me this was the place to find you on your day off.'
Her breast was rising and falling as she recovered her breath after the all-out effort of that final length. Harry had never seen Liz in a bathing suit before. He could not help thinking that her well-rounded yet firm and athletic figure was about ten times more seductive than those photographs which Nat Fletcher had found in Peter Newton's flat.
âDid you want to see me about something? Is there trouble at the shop?'
âI wanted to ask you about this.'
Harry produced Zero's collar from his pocket and showed it to her.
âIsn't that Zero's?'
âThat is the number one question. Can you identify it?'
Liz wrapped the big towel round her person and took the collar.
âIt certainly looks the same. But where did you get it from, Mr. Dawson? I thought you said Zero wasn't wearing a collar when he was found.'
âDon't worry your head about that, Liz. All I want to know is whether that's the same collar my father bought.'
âYes.' Liz was turning the collar over in her hands. âThe medallion looks a little different, butâ'
âWhat do you mean, it looks different?'
âI thought the medallion seemed a little smaller butâ' She shook her head and handed it back to him. âNo, it's the same collar. I'm sure of it.'
Harry put the collar back in his pocket. âHave you any idea where my father bought it?'
âYes. He got it from Heaton's pet shop. The one in St. John's Wood. I think it's in Valence Street.'
âDid you suggest Heaton's to him?'
âYes. We were talking about Mrs. Rogers one morning and your father said he didn't know what on earth to buy her for her birthday. I suggested a collar for Zero.'
A party of school-children, well-disciplined and marshalled by a couple of women teachers, had emerged from the changing-rooms. Harry guessed that at any moment they would be released into the water with screams of delight. He had noticed a café or refreshment room separated from the pool by glass panels.
âFancy a drink of something? Replace all that energy you've been burning up.'
Liz nodded eagerly. âThank you. I'd love a coffee.'
Harry followed her into the café. She led him towards the counter where there were several empty stools. She perched herself on one and rearranged the towel round herself.
âLiz. There's something I've been meaning to ask you,' Harry said, as he slid on to the stool beside her.
Liz turned her large, dark eyes enquiringly towards him. âYou saw a lot of my father. You saw him most days, in fact. Did he ever say anything, or do anything, thatâwell, aroused your curiosity at all?'