Authors: Dolores Gordon-Smith
âThat, I take it, is what Mr Hunt meant when he said that the police had made a disgraceful suggestion?'
âI suppose so.' Rackham frowned thoughtfully at the end of his cigar. âIt was one of Wilfred Murray's cases. He was a bit lacking in tact, old Murray, but I can't disagree with him. It must have been about the last case he took on before he retired. I don't think you ever came across Murray, did you? When he finally got his gold watch I took over some of his cases, including the Mark Helston business. As it was officially mine, I was at the meeting with Mr Hunt yesterday. I went through the file beforehand, but I couldn't tell him anything he didn't already know.' He took an absent-minded sip of coffee. âOf course, a case is never officially closed until it's resolved, but I honestly don't think there's anything I could do that old Murray hasn't done.'
Jack sent up a thoughtful cloud of aromatic smoke. âSo that's the official explanation, is it? That Mark Helston, for reasons best known to himself, upped and left off his own bat?'
âWhat other explanation can there be? You know as well as I do that when someone vanishes, there's only two solutions that hold water. It's either foul play or the man's taken himself off. Even if it's an accident or loss of memory, someone, somewhere, will spot him. God knows, there were enough pictures of Helston around the place. I can't rule out foul play altogether, but I would've expected the body to have come to light by now.'
âM'yes,' agreed Jack. âCorpses have an inconvenient habit of popping up. They make themselves unmissable after a time. He's not pretending to be someone's left luggage, is he? No, that would've been noticed. The river? That's not on, either. Even if you weighted the body down, the clothes would have rotted and the actual doings surfaced. You
could
do it by wrapping the body in chains attached to something heavy like an anchor, but it seems pretty elaborate. Is there a nice, handy, disused mine shaft or old railway ventilation chimney somewhere?'
âThere might be,' said Bill doubtfully. âBut that begs the question of who wanted to put him in there in the first place. You see, even if you can do a vanishing trick with a body, there's a trail of motive and suspicion. I can't see it would be to anyone's advantage to murder Helston.'
â
Someone
must have benefited from Mark Helston turning into an empty space. I mean, if he could run to a flat on Albemarle Street he must have had a bob or two. Who collared the readies?'
âNo one. No one directly, that is. Helston didn't have any capital. He had his salary from Hunt Coffee and a generous allowance from his grandmother. He was her blue-eyed boy, all right. As far as I can make out, his sister, Patricia, wasn't nearly so lavishly treated.'
âDid his sister resent it?'
Bill shrugged. âShe might have done, but if she did, it was her grandmother who got the blame. Patricia, or Pat, as she's always called, was devoted to her brother.'
âSez you.'
âSez me. Besides that, she married money. Gregory Jaggard, the car bloke.'
To his surprise, Jack's eyebrows shot up and he seemed to develop a nervous twitch in his neck. Bill was about to speak when an imperious glance stopped him. His friend nodded across the room. A well-built, fair-headed man was sitting at an angle to them, cigar in hand, talking to a man whose thatch of red hair was just visible above the top of his chair.
âIt's him,' Jack said in an undertone.
Although it seemed unlikely that Jaggard could overhear them, neither man wanted to carry on the conversation with Jaggard in the room. Jack was about to suggest taking their drinks into the billiard room when Gregory Jaggard stood up, and, with a goodbye to his companion, threw his cigar into the fire and left.
Jack relaxed. âHow come you didn't spot him when we came in?'
âI've never cast eyes on the man,' said Bill. âThis wasn't my case, remember. All I know is what I've read in the file.'
âOf course you do. Sorry. But look here.' Jack hunched forward, keeping his voice low. âGregory Jaggard may seem well off, but I've heard that car concern of his is pretty wobbly. Hardly any of the quality car firms, bar one or two, are a sound bet. They all look glamorous enough, but that's usually because of the amounts going in, not coming out. It's damn good fun, but a lousy way to make money.' He frowned. âAre you sure Helston's sister married Jaggard? I thought he married a girl called Tyler or Tyrell or something. I've seen her a few times at Brooklands.'
âShe was a war widow,' said Bill. âAre you sure about Jaggard's firm? Because if you are, that could cast quite a different complexion on things.'
âHow so?'
âIt's all tied up with the will Helston's grandmother left.'
Jack sighed in exasperation. â
What
will, for heaven's sake? Don't you know that where there's a will, there's a motive? Tell me, damn you, and stop being so tight-fisted with the details.'
Bill laughed. âAll right. The gist of it is that Helston's grandmother was a very rich woman. There was some complicated tale about who she'd married, but whoever it was, they were pretty well off and left it all to her. She made Helston a generous allowance, as I said, and Patricia a far more modest one. Mark and Patricia's parents died years ago and their grandmother brought up the two children. When Mark disappeared she took it very badly and, to cut a long story short, she had a minor heart attack followed by a major one and died. Now by the terms of her first will, Patricia got five thousand, there were the usual bequests to servants and charities, but the whole of the remainder went to Mark.'
âAnd to come down to vulgar figures, that was . . .?'
âThe best part of two hundred thousand pounds.'
âGood God!' Jack gazed at Bill with gratifying astonishment. âI thought you said nobody gained. Hell's bells, with that sort of money kicking about you could have a line of murderers queuing round the block. Did Mark have any idea of how rich the old lady was?'
Bill shook his head. âThat's the point. No one did. Her allowance to Mark was her one extravagance. She lived at the rate of six hundred a year, paid her bills promptly and gave everyone the impression her income had declined over the years. All the time her capital was building up at compound interest.'
âWow! And again, wow! But now Mark's out of the picture, who gets it?'
Bill frowned. âThat's just it, you see. After Mark vanished his grandmother made another will. That was after her first heart attack. She probably knew she didn't have long left. When â she firmly believed it was when and not if, apparently â Mark turned up again, the terms of the original will would stand, but in the meantime, the whole amount was to be put into a trust for him. Patricia and her husband could draw upon the income, but they couldn't touch the capital until it was proved that Mark was dead.'
âHang on. If that's invested nice and safely at three per cent, say, that's about . . .' Jack closed his eyes and did some mental gymnastics. âI'd say that was six thousand a year.'
âNot bad. There's actually a bit more than that, because of a block of shares she had that pay about nine per cent. The total income amounts to around eight thousand a year.'
âYou told me no one benefited,' said Jack reprovingly. âYou may think those sort of dibs aren't worth having, but I bet Patricia â as was Helston â Jaggard thinks it's well worth knowing about. I bet Gregory Jaggard does too.'
âBut she didn't know it existed,' said Bill plaintively. âNobody did. It was split up into so many different holdings even the lawyer didn't have a clue how rich she was.'
Jack drew in a long mouthful of smoke. âThat does alter things, I agree. Damn! There's another thing, too. If that was the reason, it'd make more sense to first see off grandma, then bump off Mark. It's a bit obvious, but it'd work. Doing it this way leaves an awful lot to chance. There'd be no guarantee that the will would be altered. If Mark were a properly attested corpse then his grandmother would presumably alter her will in favour of Patricia. Having him vanish like this leaves everything open. It's no end of a powerful argument against your idea that he's slung his hook, though. He'd hardly stay vanished knowing there's two hundred thousand for the taking.'
âIt depends why he went,' said Bill, dryly. âYou're assuming, along with Mr Hunt, that Mark had no reason to disappear. What if he's committed a crime?'
âWhat sort of crime?'
âTheft, perhaps? He might have murdered someone for all I know.'
A slow smile twitched Jack's mouth. â
That's
something I wouldn't suggest to Mr Hunt. Have you got many murderees in want of a murderer? No? Because you see, don't you, that idea implies that not only has Mark Helston managed to successfully conceal himself since January, he also contrived a murder of such brilliance that nobody knows it's occurred.'
Bill grinned in return. âOkay, strike that one from the record. I'd love to know what the devil's happened to him, though.'
âMe too. This case is growing on me, Bill.'
He stopped as the red-headed man who had been talking to Gregory Jaggard stood up and, seeing Jack, started in pleased surprise and came across the room.
âIt's Meredith Smith,' said Jack in a low voice. âHe's an old pal.'
Meredith Smith greeted Jack warmly. âI haven't seen you in absolutely ages, Jack. The funny thing is, I was going to look you up.'
Jack bowed to the inevitable. âTake a pew, Merry. This is William Rackham of Scotland Yard and this, Bill, is Captain Meredith Smith.'
âPleased to meet you,' said Smith, tidying his gangly limbs into a chair. âExcuse me butting in, won't you? I'm at a bit of a loose end. Scotland Yard, eh? My guv'nor was in the police over in Hong Kong.' He looked at Jack, steepling his fingers together. âI can do the Sherlock Holmes stunt as well, you know. And I deduce, my dear Watson, that you had a letter today inviting you to a certain house in Belgravia to investigate the disappearance of one Mark Helston.'
Jack and Bill stared at Meredith Smith in astonishment.
âHow on earth d'you know that?' asked Jack.
âYou know my methods,' said Smith with a laugh. âTo come clean, I wrote the letter. How d'you get on in your audience with H.R.H.?'
âWith the King?'
âIdiot! Harold Rushton Hunt, commonly referred to as H.R.H., also known to minions, such as myself, as The Boss. Nice old boy, isn't he?'
âVery. But look here, Merry, old fruit, I thought you worked for the Chicago and Mid-Western Bank.'
âYou're behind the times. They wanted me to move to Detroit or somewhere equally foul, and I wasn't having it at any price. Things were said on both sides and we came to a parting of the ways. After a couple of months of wondering where the next three squares were coming from, I was beginning to think Detroit might not be such a bad notion after all, when, like an angel from heaven, I received an invitation from H.R.H. to pop round and see him. I duly popped, with such satisfactory results that you are now, I'm glad to say, looking at the chief financial wizard and general factotum of Hunt Coffee Limited.'
âWell done. Er . . . what on earth made him pick you?'
Meredith Smith's eyebrows rose. âYou could find a more flattering way to phrase that.' He laughed. âActually, I wondered as much myself when I got the letter. Believe it or not, I'm related to him.'
âGood grief! Are you?'
Smith nodded. âYes. There was always a sort of cloud over it at home, so I never knew the ins and outs of it, but my grandmother was H.R.H.'s sister, Enid. She married my grandfather, who was also called Meredith Smith, but she abandoned the family and ran off with Jonathan Burbage, the actor-manager chap. Having seen a photo of Grandfather Smith, I don't know if I blame her. He seems to be all beard and whiskers. Jonathan Burbage owned a string of theatres and was quite disgustingly rich. It was their daughter who was Mark's mother. I didn't have a clue about any of this. I thought my grandmother had died long before I was born.'
He laughed. âThe funny thing is, that as far as H.R.H. is concerned, it could have happened yesterday. He pumped my hand, and asked me to overlook the grave injury his family had caused mine and all that. Well, what with not knowing the first thing about it, and having to go and fight the Great War and being rather more concerned with finding some way of keeping body and soul together, I hadn't done a frightful amount of brooding on the flighty goings-on of my grandmother in 1880 or thereabouts. After I worked out what he was talking about, I said not to worry, it was all water under the bridge and all that. H.R.H. brightened up and told me he was glad to see I'd taken it in such a sporting manner, or words to that effect. Poor old Enid had come in for some heavy Victorian disapproval and been barred for years, as far as I can make out. It was only when her daughter died that she got accepted back into the family fold once more, bringing with her Mark and Patricia.'
âWhen did all this happen, Merry? Mr Hunt offering you the job, I mean.'
âJust over a month ago. Mark's sliding off left an enormous gap in the firm, and H.R.H. wanted someone in the family to fill it. Fortunately I've always had a head for figures and although I'm only accidentally in the family, it was close enough to count. Between the three of us, I rather think H.R.H. had been upset by his sister's will. You know she only died a few weeks ago? She left everything to Mark, and nothing to me. As I'd never heard of the woman before H.R.H. told me about her, I can't say it bothered me much, but H.R.H. obviously thought she should have done something for Grandpa Smith's family. Anyway, he offered me a job at a corking salary, so here we are.'