Timetable of Death (19 page)

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Authors: Edward Marston

Tags: #Detective and Mystery Fiction, #Historical

BOOK: Timetable of Death
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‘You look uneasy,’ said Madeleine.

‘I’m very nervous,’ admitted Lydia.

‘That’s understandable.’

‘I don’t know what sort of a reception I’ll get.’

‘You know that your younger brother will welcome you and your mother is sure to be pleased that you’ve come home.’

‘It’s not my home any longer, Madeleine. I’m going there
to make a gesture and not to move in again. That’s out of the question.’ She smiled gratefully. ‘I couldn’t do this without you. It’s so kind of you to come all the way to Nottingham with me. It would have been much easier for you to stay on this train to Derby where you’d have a chance of seeing your husband.’

‘I can do that afterwards, Lydia. We’ll change at Kettering and catch the train to Nottingham. It’s the least I can do.’

Madeleine was not just prompted by sympathy. At their first encounter, Lydia had given her a privileged insight into the Quayle family and, after her visit home, might be able to furnish other details that had a bearing on the investigation. While acting as a friend, therefore, Madeleine had not entirely shed her role as a detective.

‘How long will you stay?’ she asked.

‘They may not wish me to stay.’

‘It’s your
home
, Lydia. They’ll insist on it.’

‘Stanley won’t, that’s certain, and I don’t know how Agnes will react.’

‘Blood is thicker than water. You’ll all be drawn together.’

Lydia was dubious. ‘Will we?’

They were passing through open countryside and they took time off to admire the landscape that was speeding past. The rural serenity was a sharp contrast to the tumult of the capital with its urban sprawl and constant smoke. Lydia had grown up in such surroundings but Madeleine could only yearn for them.

‘What will you do afterwards?’ she asked.

‘Well, I hope to see
you
at some stage, Madeleine.’

‘I’ll be staying at the Royal Hotel – if my husband permits that, of course.’

‘He’s hardly likely to turn you away,’ said Lydia with a laugh. ‘Judging by what you’ve told me about him, I’d say that he’d be thrilled to see you.’

‘And your family will be equally thrilled to see
you
.’

Lydia grimaced. ‘I’ve no illusions on that score.’

‘You reached out to them – that’s the main thing.’

‘I could only do that when I knew that my father was dead.’

Madeleine wanted to ask her about her plans for the future but felt that it would be too intrusive. Lydia was in a fragile state. While she was prepared to talk about her family, she’d said almost nothing about the woman with whom she’d been living. Madeleine recalled how Beatrice Myler had done her best to send her and Victor Leeming on their way when they called, and how resentful she’d been when they were invited into the house by Lydia. There must have been tension in the wake of their departure. Madeleine wondered if and how it had been resolved.

It was almost as if Lydia could hear the question that her friend was posing.

‘The answer is that I don’t know, Madeleine,’ she said.

‘You don’t know what?’

‘The situation in London became increasingly difficult. I had to leave.’

‘But you haven’t left for good, surely?’

‘I may have done.’

‘I thought you’d be going back eventually to Miss Myler’s house.’

‘Beatrice may not want me there.’

‘Oh, I’m sorry …’

‘I’m an orphan,’ said Lydia. ‘I’m travelling between two
homes that each may rebuff me in turn. My family may well find that what I did in walking out was unforgivable and Beatrice is entitled to feel the same. I’m just a poor orphan, Madeleine. I don’t belong anywhere.’

 

Robert Colbeck opted for the lesser of two evils. Determined to keep Edward Tallis away from the Quayle family, he agreed that the superintendent could instead confront Gerard Burns. It would keep him out of the way and give him the feeling that he was helping in the investigation. It might also make him less certain that Burns was the killer. Had he accompanied Colbeck, he would have been a real hindrance. Tallis had intervened before and not always with beneficial effect. In the previous year, he’d insisted on being involved in a case of abduction and got in Colbeck’s way. On another occasion, he’d thrust himself into a murder investigation in Exeter and been injured in the process. His most troublesome intervention had been in a case involving the death of an old army friend in Yorkshire. Because his emotions had got the better of him, Tallis had been a severe handicap and it was only when he’d been persuaded to return to London that Colbeck and Leeming had been able to solve what turned out to be a complex crime.

Arriving on his own at the Quayle residence, Colbeck was able to have a free hand. For the first time, he met the brothers together. Lucas was pleased to see him but Stanley was more reserved. After an exchange of niceties, Colbeck gave them a brief account of the progress of the investigation.

‘When will you make an arrest?’ demanded Stanley.

‘When we have sufficient evidence, sir,’ replied Colbeck.

‘You must have
some
idea who the villain is.’

‘As the sergeant explained to you, we have more than one suspect.’

‘Haygarth is behind it somehow,’ decided Lucas.

‘It’s either him or Burns,’ said his brother. ‘Have you considered that the two of them may have been acting together, Inspector?’

‘We’ve considered every permutation, sir,’ replied Colbeck. ‘The one you’ve suggested is the least likely. The only connection between the two individuals is that Mr Haygarth once tried to coax Mr Burns away from you.’

‘They’re two of a kind.’

‘I fail to see any likeness. They come from the opposing worlds of masters and servants. Mr Haygarth is an entrepreneur with soaring aspirations while the other man has secured what is for him the perfect post.’

‘Except that he can’t play cricket for this county any more,’ said Lucas, sadly.

‘He’s bound to regret that.’

Stanley was irritated. ‘Let’s not talk about that despicable man,’ he said, peevishly. ‘We’re well rid of him. I want to know why it is taking you so infernally long to gather evidence.’

‘The killer left no discernible trail, sir.’

‘Have you come all the way from Derby to tell us that?’

‘No,’ said Colbeck, ‘I came to ask you a favour.’

‘If we can be of any assistance,’ said Lucas, helpfully, ‘we will.’

‘That depends what you want,’ added Stanley. ‘We can’t have you poking around here at a time like this. I’m sure you understand that.’

‘I do, sir.’

‘So what is it that you’re after?’

‘I need permission to speak to your coachman.’ The brothers were baffled. ‘I assume that he used to drive your father to and from the station on a regular basis. Who, therefore, is in a better position to tell me about his movements?’

‘Cleary can’t help you,’ said Stanley.

‘You never know,’ argued Lucas.

‘I’ve spoken to him myself. He has no idea where Father was going on the day of the murder. Talking to him would be pointless.’

‘Nevertheless,’ said Colbeck, ‘I’d value a word with him.’

‘I have no objection,’ said Lucas. ‘Stanley?’

‘Is it really necessary?’ asked his brother.

‘It’s what brought me here, sir. You’re welcome to be present, of course, and that goes for both of you. Well?’ asked Colbeck. ‘Do I have your permission?’

 

Leeming’s rooted dislike of train journeys was intensified by the fact that he had to share a compartment with a garrulous farmer whose clothing gave off such powerful agricultural vapours that the sergeant had a fit of coughing. Fortunately, the man gave him no opportunity to speak and that was a blessing because Leeming found his broad Derbyshire dialect almost impenetrable. What he did gather was that the major landowners were the Strutt family, who owned the local cotton mills, and that they’d complained about the projected railway line so strongly that its direction was radically altered. Leeming could see through the window that the construction must have been
a highly expensive process because the train passed through a long, deep cutting and passed no less than eleven bridges within a mile. The Strutt family, he suspected, would not have been popular with the North Midland Railway, as it was at the time.

Glad to escape the stench of the soil and the interminable lecture in a foreign language, Leeming made his way towards the centre of Belper. It didn’t take him long to find the shop owned by Reuben Wigg. When he stepped into it, he was greeted by a blend of bewitching aromas. Superintendent Wigg and his brother bore little resemblance to each other. While the policeman was hirsute, the pharmacist was singularly lacking in hair. Bald-headed and clean-shaven, Reuben Wigg wore a white coat and an expression of severe disapproval. His brother had patently monopolised all of the arrogance allotted to the family and left a residue of umbrage for the pharmacist.

Before Leeming could speak, a customer came into the shop and was served first. After his departure, the sergeant was able to introduce himself and state his business, only to be interrupted by two more customers. When it happened for a third time, he asked if he could speak to Wigg in private. The pharmacist reluctantly called his assistant into the shop before taking his visitor into a back room with an even more pleasing pungency. Leeming asked the question that had brought him there.

‘Have you ever sold poison to your brother?’

‘No, I haven’t.’

‘Is that the truth?’

‘I haven’t sold anything to Elijah,’ said the other, ‘for one simple reason. He doesn’t think he’d have to pay. Because
I’m his brother, he expects to get everything free. You can’t run a business like that.’

‘How often do you see him?’

‘We see precious little of him.’

‘I have the feeling that you’re rather glad about that.’

‘Elijah and I are not the best of friends, Sergeant.’

‘Why is that?’

‘It’s a personal matter.’

‘Has he ever asked you for advice about poisons?’

‘Why should he? There are pharmacists in Derby.’

‘Yes, but you’re his brother.’

‘Only in name,’ said Wigg, sourly. ‘In answer to your question, I’ve never sold Elijah any poison but there have been many times when I’ve been tempted to administer some to him.’ The bell tinkled as someone else came into the shop. ‘I’ll have to go, Sergeant. My customers rely on me.’

Leeming was deflated. All that he’d gained from his visit was the news that the Wigg brothers were hostile to each other. Trudging back towards the railway station, he hoped that Colbeck and Tallis would have more productive encounters.

 

John Cleary was cleaning some harnesses when Lucas Quayle arrived with Colbeck in tow. After introducing the two men to each other, Lucas left them alone. Cleary put the harness aside and wiped his hands on a cloth.

‘I’m told that you’re a good cricketer,’ said Colbeck.

Cleary smiled. ‘I do my best, sir.’

‘You and Gerard Burns were outstanding.’

‘Ah, well, we’ve lost him, I’m afraid.’

‘Are you sorry about that?’

‘Very sorry.’

‘Why is that?’

‘Gerard was a friend. There are not too many of those around here.’

‘Have you played any cricket matches since he left?’

‘Yes, sir – we lost them all.’

Cleary was saddened rather than embittered. Since he excelled at cricket, the game was important to him and he’d enjoyed a run of success in the past. Without Gerard Burns in the side, the team was condemned to a series of losses.

‘What I’m trying to find out,’ explained Colbeck, ‘is where Mr Quayle went on the day of his murder. You drive him to the railway station, I understand.’

‘That’s true, Inspector, but he never said where he was going that day.’

‘Where did he usually go?’

‘Oh, he went to his office in Derby, even on Sundays sometimes.’

‘Did he catch a particular train?’

‘Yes, he kept to a strict timetable,’ replied Cleary. ‘Mr Quayle always caught the same train in the morning and if he needed me to meet him in the evening he’d tell me what time to be there.’

Colbeck warmed to the man. The coachman answered questions without hesitation and looked him in the eye as he did so. There was no hint of the evasion he’d met elsewhere. Cleary wanted to help.

‘What sort of a man was Mr Quayle?’

‘I’m not the best person to ask that, sir.’

‘Why not? You saw him almost every day.’

‘Yes, but all he did was to give me my orders. In all the years I’ve been here, we never talked properly. Don’t misunderstand me,’ he went on, ‘I had the greatest respect for Mr Quayle. He was a good employer and treated me well but I never really got to know him as a person.’ He waved an arm that took in the stable yard. ‘This is where I belong, sir.’

‘I’m not asking you to tell tales about him, Mr Cleary.’

‘There are none to tell.’

‘What about his row with Mr Burns? I’d call that a tale worth hearing.’

‘All I know is that we lost a good gardener and a decent man. Not that I’m taking sides,’ said Cleary, quickly. ‘Mr Quayle did what he felt was right. I’ve no argument with that.’ He removed his cap and ran a hand through his hair. ‘But I do miss Gerard on the cricket field. I’ve never seen a bowler like him.’

‘Has he ever been back here?’

‘No, Inspector.’

‘Are you sure?’

‘He told me he was going for good.’

‘Was that before or after he was beaten up?’

Cleary was surprised. ‘You
know
about that?’ he asked, replacing his cap.

‘I’ve spoken to him twice.’

‘What happened to him was bad. Gerard could hardly walk.’

‘Did that make you look at Mr Quayle in a different way?’

‘I do what I’m paid to do,’ said Cleary, levelly.

Colbeck studied him. He could see why the coachman
had befriended the gardener. Apart from cricket, they had much in common. They were younger than most of the servants and had positions that they cherished. In his mind’s eye, Colbeck could see them slipping off to a local inn together after the day’s work was done.

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