The Case of the Running Mouse: A Ludovic Travers Mystery

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The Case of the Running Mouse: A Ludovic Travers Mystery Page 1

by Christopher Bush




  Christopher Bush

  The Case of the Running Mouse

  “Is he bad, sir?”

  “Worse than that,” I said. “In fact, he’s dead.”

  1943. Ludovic Travers, consulting specialist for Scotland Yard, is on a fortnight’s well-earned leave in London from his military posting. Anticipating relaxation, he is instead thrown into a fresh mystery by a letter from one Peter Worrack, the owner of a genteel gambling club.

  Worrack’s business partner, Georgina, has disappeared. Or has she? Ludo rapidly has doubts, but the reasons for any deception remain obscure until he takes on the case, and finds that the clues he’ll need to consider include the jokes of a radio comedian, a handful of jaded club-goers, the novelty of a mouse in the wainscoting—and someone desperate enough to commit murder most foul.

  The Case of the Running Mouse was originally published in 1944. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.

  TO

  JOHN BUDE

  MAY HIS STATURE, AND HIS

  CIRCULATION INCREASE

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page/About the Book

  Dedication

  Contents

  Introduction by Curtis Evans

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Afterword

  About the Author

  Titles by Christopher Bush

  The Case of the Platinum Blonde – Title Page

  The Case of the Platinum Blonde – Chapter One

  Copyright

  INTRODUCTION

  Winding down the War and Taking a New Turn

  Christopher Bush’s Ludovic Travers Mysteries, 1943 to 1946

  Having sent his series sleuth Ludovic “Ludo” Travers, in the third and fourth years of the Second World War, around England to meet murder at a variety of newly-created army installations—a prisoner-of-war camp (The Case of the Murdered Major, 1941), a guard base (The Case of the Kidnapped Colonel, 1942) and an instructor school (The Case of the Fighting Soldier, 1942)--Christopher Bush finally released Travers from military engagements in The Case of the Magic Mirror (1943), a unique retrospective affair which takes place before the outbreak of the Second World War. In the remaining four Travers wartime mysteries--The Case of the Running Mouse (1944), The Case of the Platinum Blonde (1944), The Case of the Corporal’s Leave (1945) and The Case of the Missing Men (1946)--Bush frees his sleuth to investigate private criminal problems. Although the war is mentioned in these novels, it plays far less of a role in events, doubtlessly giving contemporary readers a sense that the world conflagration which at one point had threatened to consume the British Empire was winding down for good. Yet even without the “novelty” of the war as a major plot element, these Christopher Bush mysteries offer readers some of the most intriguing conundrums in the Ludo Travers detection canon.

  The Case of the Running Mouse (1944)

  Dedicated to British mystery writer John Bude (Ernest Carpenter Elmore), with the wish that “his stature, and his circulation increase” (a wish that has certainly come true in the last few years as John Bude’s mysteries have been reprinted by the British Library, ironically causing Bude’s name to eclipse, for the moment, that of many once much better-known mystery writers from his own day), The Case of the Running Mouse finds Christopher Bush’s series sleuth Ludovic “Ludo” Travers again confronting, as he did in The Case of the Magic Mirror, ill deeds done by dissolute London elites, something in the manner of a more genteel and gentlemanly Philip Marlowe, the LA PI created by renowned Anglo-American crime writer Raymond Chandler, whose readership, it appears, included Christopher Bush (see my introduction to The Case of the Magic Mirror). In Mouse Ludo enters a blacked-out world of illicit sex and drugs and high stakes gaming, where the men are bad and the women worse, and the war is but a dim backdrop to the heedless pleasure seeking of wealthy hedonists. Down posh streets a man must go, and that man is Ludo Travers.

  The Case of the Running Mouse opens in February 1943, a month that in real life saw the war turn decisively in favor of the Allied cause, with the resounding defeats of Japan at Guadalcanal and Germany at Stalingrad. On fourteen-day leave from his post in Derbyshire, Ludo Travers heads to London, his “spiritual home,” which he has not seen in five months. Ludo and his wife Bernice, who is serving with the Red Cross in northern England, have relinquished their “far too commodious” flat in St. Martin’s Chambers and pensioned off Ludo’s manservant, Palmer, a longtime welcome presence in the series; yet the couple maintains a small furnished place at Norfolk Mansions in east Kensington, with three ample rooms and service meals included, along with the attentions of an agreeable Telegraph-reading hall porter named Frank. On Ludo’s first morning home at this pied-à-terre, a maid at the breakfast table hands him a private communication, pregnant with strange meaning, from one “P. Worrack.”

  Seemingly under the impression that Ludo Travers is a professional private detective, this P. Worrack expresses the desire to consult Ludo “on a matter of particular secrecy.” Ludo is immediately dazzled with the prospect of being “almost implored to undertake some case or other entirely off my own bat,” having for so many years been a “colleague and often very much a subordinate of George Wharton” of the Yard. Ludo admits to doubts, however:

  In our day-dreams we see ourselves performing the heroic and incredible with a craft and aplomb that years of futility have kept in repression. Maybe you have been yourself in some giant bomber, roaring across Germany at roof height, manoeuvering over Berchtesgaden and dropping an eight-thousand-pounder plumb on Hitler, and then shooting down a dozen or so Focke-Wolfs on the way home. We will omit the resultant Victoria Cross and the world acclaim, and pause to wonder in cold blood just how we should feel if a Lancaster were suddenly to materialise and we were hoisted into it. That was how I felt at suddenly undertaking the role of a first-class private sleuth.

  Despite these misgivings borne of an innate modesty which is rather at odds with the hard-boiled ethos, Ludo can never resist the lure of detection, and he soon finds himself in a private consultation with his first client, Percival “call me Peter” Worrack. Having lost a leg in the fighting at Dunkirk, Peter Worrack on behalf of wealthy and attractive young widow Georgina Morbent now manages a London nightclub—or, as Worrack to be “perfectly frank” puts it, “what the papers call a gambling den.” To Worrack’s evident consternation, Georgina Morbent has seemingly vanished, having departed at Euston station for Ireland, allegedly to see William O’Clauty, the Dublin trainer of her two racehorses, and apparently never arrived there. Besides Peter Worrack and William O’Clauty, those individuals in some way or another concerned in Georgina’s disappearance are Mrs. Barbara Grays, Georgina’s younger widowed sister (“her husband was killed in France just before Dunkirk”); Barbara’s friend Tommy Hamson (“used to be in the Indian police . . . a pretty fast mover, like all of our particular crowd, and he seems to have plenty of money”); gambling den habitués the Hon. Harold Lewton-Molde and Miss Scylla Payton (“the grandson of a peer” and a “weak-chinned specimen, but she’s tough”); Lulu Mawne (“a kind of secr
etary, spare croupier, and general receptionist” at the club); ersatz French barman Jean; and a prankster naval commander, just back from six months at sea, nicknamed “Tubby,” naturally enough.

  To help him investigate the challenging case, filled to the brim with questionable characters, Ludo employs his own private detective, Bill Ellice, a bright chap who will figure importantly in later Travers mysteries. The mysterious Morbent affair soon takes a darkly sinister turn, however, when one of the people in the case dies from poisoning after imbibing brandy at Georgina’s nightclub, right in the presence of Ludo himself (not to mention the novel’s titular “running mouse.”) Ludo finds himself in the position of holding back certain information from Inspector Brontway, whom the Yard has sent to investigate the suspicious death (though George Wharton will soon horn his way into the goings-on as well). Indeed, for much of the novel Ludo daringly plays a lone hand, hoping that a deck direly loaded with death cards--the mystery woman’s gloved hand; the pawned emerald ring; the withdrawn 250 pounds in one-pound notes; the altered will; the dismissed maid who listens at keyholes; the beautiful blonde dubbed Goldilocks; the radio comic’s stale joke about the egg-laying hen; and, last but certainly not least, the horrifically severed head--does not get the better of him and put him underground!

  Curtis Evans

  Part One

  THE RELUCTANT AMATEUR

  CHAPTER I

  FIND THE LADY

  It was on a February morning, in 1943, that I had what I shall always regard as one of the most gratifying surprises of my life. I doubt, too, if I can find anything commensurate in general experience to convey to you how great the surprise was. That it was a mistake did not matter in the least, for it was a mistake by which I could legitimately profit. Perhaps the thrill I got was the kind that comes to a naval lieutenant when he is given command of a ship and a roving commission at that. Or a humble servant of Intelligence perhaps, who, after years of decoding, is suddenly told he is to be dumped down in Germany as a master spy. However, perhaps I had better explain.

  In the previous autumn I had missed seven days’ leave, and when later I had the chance to take it I preferred to wait till the next leave was due, and have one glorious burst of fourteen days. The one snag turned out to be that my own leave did not happen to coincide with the short leave that was due to my wife, who had been transferred to a hospital up north. But I had no fear of time lying heavy on my hands. London is my spiritual home and as I had not seen it for five months I was anticipating a crowded fortnight.

  Our flat in St. Martin’s Chambers had long since been given up as far too commodious for war-time, and we had taken a little furnished affair on the east side of Kensington. Its three rooms were ample, and service meals were available; and as the different in rent was considerably in our favour and some sort of pied-à-terre seemed essential, we saw no reason to regret the expense. I arrived there rather late that February afternoon, and after a bath and a change into mufti, treated myself to one of the service teas. Then I rang up Scotland Yard.

  George Wharton was away, I was told, but expected back in a day or so, when he would be given my message. I was rather disappointed at that, for I had looked forward to taking George out to lunch and hearing about his latest activities. Before the war, George—Superintendent Wharton to you—and I had worked together on a score or so of cases. A bit presumptuous perhaps, my talking of working together, though George would always have it that way. I had begun by being called in on a certain case as the financial expert I was supposed to be, and what I was able to contribute turned out to be of considerable use. It so happened, too, that my flibbertigibbet, crossword kind of brain took George’s fancy, and when his next case materialised he felt lonely with nobody around as an amiable mascot. Besides, we had grown uncommonly fond of each other, and, to cut a long story short, whenever anything in the nature of a tricky case turned up from then on, he either contrived to bring me somewhere near the spot or else had me flagrantly called in as a consultative expert. And now, perhaps, you have spotted why I rang up the Yard about George. What I had fondly hoped to hear was that he was engaged on some case that might not be without interest, in which event I should have spent some of my fortnight on a busman’s holiday. That confession also gives you a good inkling of the distance I have travelled from grace since I first worked with George. Then I had a horror of duplicity. Now, thanks to ten years of his influence and three in the Army, I am not only an accomplished and unblushing liar, but have up my sleeve tricks that would make a quartermaster mute with jealous rage.

  I went to a show that first night of my leave, and in the morning took my time about getting up. When the service breakfast appeared, the maid brought with it a letter she had found on the mat. And that, I knew at once, was curious, for the letter was a private one. Everyone likely to send me a private letter knew my military address, and this letter, moreover, had not been forwarded from St. Martin’s Chambers. Perhaps it was a begging letter of sorts, I thought as I opened it, but even then I was rather puzzled for my address at Norfolk Mansions was not in the telephone book. Then, when I began the letter, I was more puzzled still.

  Flat 34,

  Dromore

  Knightsbridge.

  Feb. — 1943

  Dear Mr. Travers . . .

  That was the immediate surprise. Not Major Travers, but Mr. Travers, and I trust you will believe me when I say that in the surprise was no suspicion of snobbery. It was just that for two years I had seen myself as Major Travers, and that abrupt return to the incredible days of pre-war was just a bit of a jolt. So I turned the letter over to see the name of the writer.

  Yours truly,

  P. WORRACK

  was what I read, and the name conveyed nothing on earth, so I turned the letter over again and began to read it.

  Dear Mr. Travers,

  I want to consult your firm on a matter of particular secrecy, and shall be glad if you will either make an appointment at your office or call and see me. I rang your old address at St. Martin’s Chambers and was given your new one but they didn’t appear to know where your office was.

  The reason I rang you was that I remembered seeing your name in connection with Scotland Yard, which gave me, if you will pardon my saying so, a guarantee of the kind of firm yours is, for in the circumstances in which I now find myself, I should hesitate to employ a detective agency that was not of the highest class.

  I am not a wealthy man but I shall be prepared to pay any retaining or other fees that are usual. I know also that it is a lot to ask but I should be glad if you could attend to me as I am not disposed to put the matter in the hands of any subordinate, however trustworthy. Needless to say I am prepared to pay accordingly.

  Yours truly,

  P. WORRACK

  The Travers Detective Agency,

  (At) Norfolk Mansions,

  E. Kensington.

  I read that letter a second time, and my first reaction was a feeble smile. Then I was really interested, and, strangely enough as it may seem to you, just the least bit nervous. It was not that the letter didn’t seem genuine enough, for there was no doubt in my mind about that. My name had appeared often enough at coroners’ inquests and in courts of law. Moreover, the hall porter at St. Martin’s Chambers was a new man, and when asked for a Mr. Travers would naturally have said merely that Mr. Travers was now at such-and-such an address.

  What intrigued me was that I should have been taken for the head of a private detective agency, and as such should be about to be consulted on a matter of delicacy and importance. There was I, in fact, for years a colleague and often very much a subordinate of George Wharton, being asked and almost implored to undertake some case or other entirely off my own bat. And this had happened with fourteen days’ leave in front of me. On a gold salver there was being offered me the kind of job I had longed for all my life. Why then, you may ask, the uneasiness?

  Well, you know how things are. In our day-dreams we see ourselves perf
orming the heroic and incredible with a craft and aplomb that years of futility have kept in repression. Maybe you have been yourself in some giant bomber, roaring across Germany at roof height, manoeuvring over Berchtesgaden and dropping an eight-thousand-pounder plumb on Hitler, and then shooting down a dozen or so of Focke-Wolfs on the way home. We will omit the resultant Victoria Cross and the world acclaim, and pause to wonder in cold blood just how we should feel if a Lancaster were suddenly to materialise and we were hoisted into it. That was how I felt at suddenly undertaking the role of a first-class private sleuth.

  For one thing, I look about as like a detective as the Archbishop of Canterbury. Before the war I might, perhaps, have been regarded, if with some amusement, as a kind of neophyte or apprentice, for my clean-shaven face was then somewhat pallid, and my horn-rims gave me the look of an earnest intellectual who was groping for his real metier. My six foot three, a leanness of frame, and a genteel stoop, might have helped the illusion, but now my glasses are less obvious, my face tanned, my back is straight and my tooth-brush moustache looks almost aggressive. My vocabulary, too, is far from intellectual, and has become garnished with slang and expletives that are my wife’s dismay and despair.

  But I knew from the very first that it was only a question of time before I should be getting in touch with the unknown Worrack. What worried me was just how I was to convince my client, and then, in a matter of moments, that uneasiness disappeared. After all, I should not be committed to undertaking whatever commission it was that he had in mind for me, for I could listen to all he had to say and then back out, and I knew at least a couple of reputable firms whom I could recommend as more in his line. Nor had I any doubt of my powers of duplicity and conviction. Three years of Army conferences, and inspections, and extemporisings are quite good training for nimbleness of manoeuvre. In fact, it was when I realised my own adequacy that I suddenly found myself dialling the Knightsbridge number on Worrack’s letter.

 

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