Fear to Tread

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by Michael Gilbert




  Copyright & Information

  Fear To Tread

  First published in 1953

  © Estate of Michael Gilbert; House of Stratus 1953-2012

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

  The right of Michael Gilbert to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted.

  This edition published in 2012 by House of Stratus, an imprint of

  Stratus Books Ltd., Lisandra House, Fore Street, Looe,

  Cornwall, PL13 1AD, UK.

  Typeset by House of Stratus.

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library and the Library of Congress.

  EAN ISBN Edition

  0755105109 9780755105106 Print

  0755131894 9780755131891 Kindle

  0755132262 9780755132263 Epub

  This is a fictional work and all characters are drawn from the author’s imagination.

  Any resemblance or similarities to persons either living or dead are entirely coincidental.

  www.houseofstratus.com

  About the Author

  Born in Lincolnshire, England, Michael Francis Gilbert graduated in law from the University of London in 1937, shortly after which he first spent some time teaching at a prep-school which was followed by six years serving with the Royal Horse Artillery. During World War II he was captured following service in North Africa and Italy, and his prisoner-of-war experiences later leading to the writing of the acclaimed novel ‘Death in Captivity’ in 1952.

  After the war, Gilbert worked as a solicitor in London, but his writing continued throughout his legal career and in addition to novels he wrote stage plays and scripts for radio and television. He is, however, best remembered for his novels, which have been described as witty and meticulously-plotted espionage and police procedural thrillers, but which exemplify realism.

  HRF Keating stated that ‘Smallbone Deceased’ was amongst the 100 best crime and mystery books ever published. “The plot,” wrote Keating, “is in every way as good as those of Agatha Christie at her best: as neatly dovetailed, as inherently complex yet retaining a decent credibility, and as full of cunningly-suggested red herrings.” It featured Chief Inspector Hazlerigg, who went on to appear in later novels and short stories, and another series was built around Patrick Petrella, a London based police constable (later promoted) who was fluent in four languages and had a love for both poetry and fine wine. Other memorable characters around which Gilbert built stories included Calder and Behrens. They are elderly but quite amiable agents, who are nonetheless ruthless and prepared to take on tasks too much at the dirty end of the business for their younger colleagues. They are brought out of retirement periodically upon receiving a bank statement containing a code.

  Much of Michael Gilbert’s writing was done on the train as he travelled from home to his office in London: “I always take a latish train to work,” he explained in 1980, “and, of course, I go first class. I have no trouble in writing because I prepare a thorough synopsis beforehand.”. After retirement from the law, however, he nevertheless continued and also reviewed for ‘The Daily Telegraph’, as well as editing ‘The Oxford Book of Legal Anecdotes’.

  Gilbert was appointed CBE in 1980. Generally regarded as ‘one of the elder statesmen of the British crime writing fraternity, he was a founder-member of the British Crime Writers’ Association and in 1988 he was named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America, before receiving the Lifetime ‘Anthony’ Achievement award at the 1990 Boucheron in London.

  Michael Gilbert died in 2006, aged ninety three, and was survived by his wife and their two sons and five daughters.

  Quote

  “It may also be true that there have been changes for the worse in the national attitude to wrong-doing and that a man who steals does not incur the same measure of public reprobation which he would have done in the past . . .”

  Sir Frank Newsom.

  To the Chief Constables Association.

  June 11th 1952.

  1

  SOUTH OF THE RIVER. AN UNCALCULATED INSPIRATION

  When Wilfred Wetherall learned that the boys called him “Wellington” Wetherall he was not displeased. He was an admirer of the Duke, and he had no doubt that it was his references to this hero in the course of his history lessons that had planted the idea. A headmaster had to have a nickname. It could have been a good deal worse.

  There were physical resemblances, too, in the bony structure of his face, the jut of his nose, the spare frame and forward bending carriage. It finished there. Nobody, not even Wetherall himself, imagined that he had the Wellingtonian character, useful though it would have been in the daily difficulties which beset the headmaster of an understaffed, over-populated secondary school for boys in the south-east of London.

  The room in which he was sitting did not much resemble the traditional headmaster’s study. It was almost without adornment. The walls were painted (as were the walls throughout the school), the bottom half in pastel green, the top half in primrose, with a horizontal dividing band of dark green. These were the colours which the consultant psychologist to the School Planning Committee, had stated to be most conducive to study and relaxation. After six years’ practice, Mr. Wetherall found himself able to ignore their message. The floor was covered with dark linoleum. The furniture and fittings were those of a managing director who did not believe in frills.

  The modern, iron-framed windows looked bleakly north and east; but there was compensation for this in the skyline of distant masts and cranes where the river swung south, into Lime-house Reach.

  Mr. Wetherall replaced on the table a letter he had been reading, and sighed. It was a thing he often found himself doing. The letter was from a Mr. Turvey who considered (with an optimism which, in Mr. Wetherall’s view, bordered on lunacy) that his son might have a chance of a university scholarship.

  Swing doors creaked outside.

  They were swing doors which, in the first innocent youth of his associations with the school board, he had managed to get installed to cut off the end of the passage and so afford a little privacy to his study and the administration office on the other side of the corridor.

  Five deliberate steps, and a knock.

  “Come in,” said Mr. Wetherall. “Oh, it’s you, Croke; do sit down.”

  “I won’t sit down,” said Mr. Croke, “because I shan’t be a minute. It’s Mr. Barlow.”

  “Not again? We had him last week.”

  “He won’t let his son start calculus.”

  “I can’t find it in me to blame him,” said Mr. Wetherall. “I have never been able to see the faintest glimmerings of sense in it myself.”

  “It’s in the Higher Board Syllabus,” said Mr. Croke, rather stiffly.

  “Oh, quite so, quite so. Why does Barlow’s father object to it?”

  “He says that calculus leads to the splitting of the atom.”

  “I see. How unfortunate. He’s an ardent pacifist, too, isn’t he?”

  “Extremely ardent.”

  “Why not tell him that as the atom has been split once already it is most unlikely to be split again in our lifetime. Then if that doesn’t work I’ll have a word with him.”

  “It would be useless, I suppose, trying to persuade him that the differential calculus has no connection whatever with nuclear physics?”

  “Quite hopeless. You remember what he was like about Guy Fawkes.”

 
“Yes. Well, all right, I’ll try.”

  Mr. Wetherall resumed his contemplation of the skyline. There was something romantic, he thought, about masts along a tideway.

  Miss Donovan came in from the administration office across the passage. It should perhaps be made clear that the administration office was an even smaller room than Mr. Wetherall’s study and had been originally designed – the matter was uncertain – either as a very small extra staff-room or a very large cloak-room. Miss Donovan was simply Peggy; who was the sister of Sammy and of Patsy Donovan, and who Mr. Wetherall had known, on and off, since she was a slum child of five. She was now seventeen and looked neat, competent and twenty.

  “It’s this milk,” she said.

  “What about it?”

  “It’s the return.”

  “What’s wrong with the return?” Mr. Wetherall was cautious. He knew the power of returns. “Have we shown more milk than we drank, or drunk more milk than we showed – incidentally that’s rather a good example of the difference between the aorist and perfect tense, isn’t it.” Mr. Wetherall made a note for his grammar class.

  “The figures come about right with a little cooking”

  “Adjustment.”

  “Adjustment. But now they want them showed – shown, I mean – in two separate lots. ‘Milk served’ and ‘Milk drunk’.”

  “What the devil,” said Mr. Wetherall, “do they think we do with it? Throw it at each other.”

  “They’ve done that before now,” said Miss Donovan.

  “Show the totals as the same in both headings. If they don’t like it, it’s up to them to object. If they object perhaps we shall see what they’re getting at.”

  How would the Duke of Wellington have dealt with this?

  “There’s the boxing lists. I’m just going to put them up.”

  “I’d like to see them. Schools Area Finals. That’s tomorrow afternoon, isn’t it. Where’s it to be this time?”

  “The Co-op Hall. Starting four o’clock.”

  “That’s that rather dim place north of the Elephant, isn’t it?” Mr. Wetherall made another note on his desk pad. “Is Sammy still in?”

  “He surely is,” said Miss Donovan. “Seven and under. He had to sweat off four ounces to make the weight.”

  “He ought to try standing on his head,” said Mr. Wetherall.

  The telephone rang.

  “Who—oh, Mrs. Ambler. How are you? Your husband—I’m sorry to hear that. Laryngitis? He does seem to have bad luck, doesn’t he? No, of course he can’t turn up if he’s feeling bad. I’ll manage somehow.”

  “Though why,” he added, having rung off, “these things always happen to Mr. Ambler on Tuesday morning is more than I can make out. I suppose I’ll have to take his class myself. I really couldn’t know less about it.”

  Mr. Ambler was the visiting drawing master.

  He became aware that Miss Donovan was still with him. “Is there anything else, Peggy?”

  “Well, yes, Mr. Wetherall, there is. It’s Sammy.”

  “Hullo, what’s this?” He came out of the clouds with a jerk. A thing to do with boys could be important.

  “He’s been in trouble with you lately, I know, Mr. Wetherall. But it isn’t really his fault. It’s that new master. He was quite all right with Mr. Rollinson, but—”

  “Look here,” said Mr. Wetherall. “I can’t have this special pleading. If Sammy gets sent up for anything, I shall hear about it from him. Besides I haven’t seen him here for some time.”

  “You’ll be seeing him,” said Miss Donovan.

  Left to himself Mr. Wetherall picked up his pen, started to write such a letter as would deflate, without irritating Mr. Turvey, then put his pen down again and looked out of the window.

  Creak of double doors, seven short and rather nervous steps along the passage.

  “Come in,” said Mr. Wetherall.

  It was a boy of fifteen. The hair which might, in Miss Donovan, have been described, at a pinch, as auburn was here unblushing carrot.

  “What is it, Donovan?”

  “I’ve got a book, sir, from Mr. Pelley.”

  “Oh, dear,” said Mr. Wetherall.

  It should be explained that (unlike our great public schools in which, having paid a great deal more money, a boy is privileged to be beaten by almost anybody older than himself) in most state schools, the headmaster enjoys a monopoly of this form of punishment. If a form-master wished for a boy to be so dealt with he entered his name and offence in a book and sent the boy with the book to the headmaster; who attended to the matter and recorded the result in a further column. These rather incongruous civil service trappings did nothing to allay Mr. Wetherall’s distaste for the barbaric rite which followed.

  “What is it this time?”

  “Impertinence,” said the boy.

  “Yes, I can read. I’m asking what actually happened.”

  “Well, sir,” Donovan charged his lungs with a deep breath, “Mr. Pelley said something wasn’t cricket and someone asked him what it meant and he said that cricket was the most important game in a school and if you said a thing wasn’t cricket you meant that it wasn’t done and I said cricket wasn’t the most important game in this school by half boxing was and he said that in any decent school cricket was the game that mattered and I said well cricket’s a cissy game what’s the good of being able to play cricket if a chap came up in the street and tried to take your girlfriend away and then,” concluded the narrator putting his finger unerringly on the real heart of the offence, “people laughed.”

  “I see,” said Mr. Wetherall. (Curse Pelley and his old school tie). “It doesn’t seem perhaps a very serious offence” (got to back the man up all the same, very young) “but it was certainly impertinent. I think, in the circumstances, I’m going to set you enough work to keep you busy after school, during sport time. Tomorrow’s a games day—”

  Alarm flared.

  “Not tomorrow, sir.”

  “What—oh, it’s the boxing tomorrow, isn’t it?” Considering the nature of the offence, it would have been very fitting to deprive the boy of his boxing, but he knew himself to be incapable of such chilly logic. “Very well, on Thursday then.” He made a note in the book. He was quite aware that he was being weak. “And look here,” he said. “I don’t want any more of this. You’re coming up here a lot too much. You’re growing up now. You’ve got to think before you say silly things. Next time you’ll get hurt—”

  “Yes sir,” said Donovan cheerfully. Next time was a long way ahead.

  II

  It was a warm October day and even the brick and mortar of S.E.17 responded grudgingly to the ancient magic. The South Borough Secondary School for Boys is in the middle of the quadrilateral formed by the Old Kent Road, the New Kent Road, the Camberwell Road and Peckham High Street. It is a square half-mile which is almost indescribable because it lacks the first element of description, which is character. It is made up of two or three hundred streets of uninspiring houses; seven churches and twenty-seven chapels; two very small open spaces, created by some bygone town planning enthusiasm and a dozen larger ones opened up by the German Air Force, but even these are subdued to the general pattern of uneasy neatness; the rubble is stamped flat, the yellow bricks are piled into neat heaps. It is an area which lies in the middle of things greater than itself but takes nothing from them. The Old Vic Theatre on the north, the Oval cricket ground on the west, the roaring goods yards of Bricklayers Arms and Crossways and the passenger stations at Waterloo and London Bridge. In this depressing arena, the only arteries of life are the High Streets, where the blood flows red from chain store to chain store; where the social centre is the butcher’s queue and the spiritual temple is the Gaudeon Super Cinema. Away from the High Street the splashes of colour are pubs, late and lonely flowerings in reds and greens and golds.

  Mr. Wetherall made his way to the Old Kent Road and boarded a No. 53 bus, going south. Twenty minutes later he got off at the stop afte
r Deptford Broadway. He was on the fringes of Blackheath. Not Blackheath proper, which lies at the top of the hill, around the open space, but near enough to it to put it on his note-paper. Postally Brinkman Road was in Blackheath, if spiritually in Deptford.

  The Wetheralls leased the top floor of No. 20. The house, which had suffered sub-division in the thirties, was owned by a doctor, and though he was twenty years retired from active practice, a faintly antiseptic smell still clung to the lower floors. Above the doctor lived two Japanese. Above the Japanese, the Wetheralls.

  Immediately Mr. Wetherall got home, he knew that something was amiss. Alice Wetherall was in the kitchen, her hands folded and her lips pursed.

  “It’s too bad,” she said. “Major Francis’ food parcel hasn’t arrived.”

  “Oh, dear. Perhaps it’s lost—”

  “You know how regular he’s been. When it was a week late I began to wonder. I wrote to the railway on Friday. This came this morning.”

  It was hardly a letter. A printed memorandum. “Unable to trace the package in question – was there any proof of posting? Admit no responsibility.”

  “It doesn’t look very helpful,” admitted Mr. Wetherall. “I might ask Major Francis next time I write. It’s rather awkward, though. Supposing he had decided not—”

  “It’s been stolen,” said Mrs. Wetherall.

  “Stolen?”

  “By those railways. Didn’t you see that bit in the paper last Sunday. No. It was the Sunday before. About all the parcels they were losing. Food parcels chiefly, and cigarettes. Why should they be allowed to? What do we—what do we pay our fares for?”

  He thought for a moment she was going to cry.

  “Never mind,” he said. “I expect we can manage. We’ll have a meal or two out for a change. Why don’t we go to Luigi’s tonight?”

 

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