Death in the Fearful Night (An Inspector Littlejohn Mystery)

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by George Bellairs




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  Death in the Fearful Night

  by

  George Bellairs

  1

  THE AFFAIR AT FREAKE’S FOLLY

  THE GAMEKEEPER from Huncote Hall was a tall, thin, sad-faced man, dressed in a sports-coat, soiled flannel trousers and gumboots and he had a drooping ragged moustache. He had an aggressive manner, too, as though everyone he spoke to were a trespasser on the estate and ready to argue about being ordered off. His intimates, however, knew that it was his compensation, his answer to the outside world for his inferior position at home, where his domineering wife ruled him without mercy. His name was Woodcock.

  Woodcock was standing in the middle of a crowd of people all of whom he treated with the same lack of concern. The spectators were made up of policemen, journalists, plain-clothes men, and the idle and the curious from miles around. He was telling Superintendent Littlejohn, of Scotland Yard, the story he’d been retailing to everybody else for the last four days.

  “It was like this …”

  It was late autumn and past the harvest. There was a scent of damp air and dead leaves about, but above the trees of the clearing in which they were all standing, the sky was clear and blue.

  “I got up at half-past five and came in this direction from the Hall. The missus wanted some mushrooms …”

  He gave the crowd a searching, sidelong glance, as though expecting his wife to be a part of it and ready to set about him as she often did in public.

  “The best fields for mushrooms lie between here and the town. So I crossed the home farm meadow and took the short cut past Freake’s. You have to be up good and early for mushrooms. Everybody’s after ’em.”

  “What time did you pass Freake’s?”

  The question came from a tall, fresh-complexioned, irritable man in the uniform of a Police Superintendent, Herle, of the Midshire County Constabulary. He was self-conscious and held himself like a soldier on parade.

  The gamekeeper made little spitting noises, as though trying to clear his lips of bits of tobacco.

  “I told you before. It was about half-past six. The clock in the house stood at that as I went in.”

  He glanced across at the shabby building to the right of where they were standing. It was a queer edifice of stone, the back in ruins, the front turned into crude living quarters with deep narrow windows and a tumbledown door. There was a ruined tower, like that of a sham castle, overgrown with ivy, at the far end of the frontage. It had been erected during the Regency to house an eccentric member of a wealthy land-owning family and still carried his name, Freake’s Folly.

  “Go on.”

  “I didn’t pass within sight of the house; I kept in the trees. It didn’t do to let Bracknell see you on his property. I’d no rights there, but, as I said, it was a short cut.”

  He paused for effect. The reporters standing round knew what was coming, but they looked as eager as though they were hearing it for the first time.

  “I wouldn’t ’ave stopped if it hadn’t been for the dog. He was chained-up in the kennel there but, instead of barkin’ his head off, as he usually does if anybody comes within miles of the place, he was howlin’ just like a baby cryin’ …”

  Another pause. Woodcock passed the back of his hand across his mouth this time.

  “I stopped and peeked at him through the trees. He took no notice of me. Jest kept turnin’ up his muzzle to the skies and yowlin’ like he was heartbroke. It was then I see the door was open, too.”

  “The dog were took to the kennels at Fenny Carleton and bit the R.S.P.C.A. man on the way. So savage, he were, they ’ad to put ’im to sleep …”

  A spectator in the front row said it sotto voce to his neighbour. Woodcock turned and fixed him with a stare until he grew silent.

  “I thought to meself perhaps Bracknell might be ill or somethin’ else wrong, so, after a bit of thinkin’, I went to take a look. There wasn’t any sign of him through the windows and in between the dog hollarin’, everything was as silent as the grave…”

  He paused again and the silence seemed to return. It was as if they were all holding their breath waiting for what was coming.

  “… So, I went in. There, in the livin’-room, was Samuel Bracknell, stretched his full length on the floor, with a knife in his back. It turned me up good an’ proper, I can tell you.”

  He surveyed the surrounding faces, as though expecting applause, but none came. He looked disgusted.

  “That was last Saturday. I guess whoever did it’s got far enough away by now.”

  He said it for the benefit of the police, who, he thought, hadn’t appreciated enough his share in the affair. True, he’d pocketed quite a few five-bobs from the newspaper men who had questioned him and another few shillings from the swarms of motorists and cyclists who’d been buzzing round since the day of the crime. But the police hadn’t even thanked him.

  “Thank you, Mr. Woodcock,” said Littlejohn.

  That was better! The Superintendent was even offering him a cigarette from his case and lighting another himself. Woodcock smiled maliciously at P.C. Gullet, with whom he carried on a perpetual feud.

  Gullet shepherded the crowd away, somehow including Woodcock in it, too.

  “Move along, there. Don’t h’impede the investigation.”

  The retreating Woodcock protested, waving the cigarette which Littlejohn had given him in Gullet’s face as though it were a passport.

  “I’m a witness … I’m part of …”

  “Move on.”

  The reporters had been in and around the town of Carleton Unthank for the past two weeks, for the death of Samuel Bracknell was the third in that short time. First, a girl of twenty-three, returning home after choir practice; then, a few days later, a postman’s daughter, aged seventeen. Both had been killed with a knife.

  Now, Bracknell, in just the same way. A man between forty-five and fifty.

  The police had drawn a blank on the first two investigations, but now the newspapers had something fresh to report.

  THE MIDSHIRE MANIAC

  County Police Send for Scotland Yard Superintendent Littlejohn at Carleton Unthank

  Littlejohn and Cromwell had arrived that morning. Carleton Unthank was a pleasant market town, joined to nearby Fenny Carleton by a string of ribbon building, and the whole forming a community of about ten thousand people. The local police headquarters were at Carleton Unthank and Superintendent Herle had been sent there by the county constabulary to take charge of the case.

  Over a cup of tea, Herle had earlier put the two London detectives in the picture.

  “On the night of September 21st, Nancy Tooley, a good-looking girl of twenty-three, a farmer’s daughter and engaged to be married, left the choir practice at Carleton Unthank Church at ten o’clock. She hadn’t far to go and had ridden down on her bicycle. Her fiancé, also a farmer, had been to a meeting of the local agricultural committee, and kept later than usual, so she had gone off home alone. Her friends said she was a bit annoyed when she found her young man wasn’t there to meet her as usual, so she flounced away in a bit of pique. She was found in the small hours, one-thirty to be exact, in the ditch off the by-road leading to her father’s farm. She’d been stabbed in the back with this …”

  Herle opened a drawer and produced the weapon. It consisted of a blade about six inches long, broad a
t the base where it entered a black hardwood handle into which it was firmly held by brass rivets; the rest worn and tapering down to a fine point at the end of a keen edge. It was like a well-used butcher’s knife.

  “Medical evidence gives the time of Bracknell’s death at between eight and nine o’clock. The method was the same in each; a deep stab in the back. Medico-legal reports say the same knife was used each time, but the wounds indicate that in the case of the women, the murderer seized them from in front, held them to him, and stabbed them. With Bracknell, however, the blow was delivered from behind. In each case the heart was pierced. The knife was withdrawn and carried away in the first two murders; in the last one, it was left in the wound. There was no sexual crime against the women; they hadn’t been interfered with at all and there were no signs of a struggle.”

  Herle had six files on his desk. He turned one over and consulted the next.

  “Then, on the night of September 27th, Marlene Turville, a postman’s daughter at Carleton Unthank, left home at eight o’clock to attend a harvest social in the church school. She was a nice, quiet girl of seventeen, who’d a matter of a quarter of a mile to walk to the social. She was found, murdered, a mile out of Fenny Carleton in the opposite direction from her way to the school. A search-party found her about midnight.”

  He turned to the next file and told the story of the third crime, committed on September 29th, two nights after the second.

  “It might have been that Bracknell, who was a queer, isolated chap, came across someone acting suspiciously, or in the vicinity of one or both of the bodies on the nights in question. He may have spoken about it to them or else accused them outright. The murderer was obviously the same in each case. Perhaps a homicidal maniac. He was bound to kill again to shut Bracknell’s mouth. The difference was he left his knife at Bracknell’s place. He may have been scared off by something.”

  “And the rest of the files?” said Littlejohn, finishing his tea and lighting his pipe.

  Herle smiled.

  “The first murder caused a sensation, but the second created panic. The three remaining files are of unsuccessful attempts or false alarms. Two were followed by suspicious characters; the third was actually accosted, but pushed the man aside and ran away. We expect many more. One of the complaints was from a girl who was brought here by her mother, who did all the talking. Another by a girl who had hysterics and had to be given sal volatile and have her face slapped. The other … well … she thoroughly enjoyed it. She was the type. Proud of it, and got an immense thrill out of retailing all the details.”

  “Any clues?”

  “You couldn’t exactly call them clues. Merely events. Nancy Tooley had, as I told you, been to choir practice. She had her music book with her when she left the church. It was rather large and bound in soft morocco leather. She had it in the carrier basket on the front of her bike. In checking her belongings and examining the body and the bicycle, we couldn’t find the tune-book. The murderer seems to have taken it with him.”

  “Any fingerprints?”

  “None. Not a single one, either on the knife or on anything—such as the bicycle—connected with the victims. Marlene Turville carried a handbag, with money and cosmetics in it. That had vanished. Nancy didn’t have a handbag, but kept her lipstick and powder in the pocket of her raincoat. They were still there. It therefore might be that the murderer was out for loot. In other words, handbags. He perhaps mistook the soft-backed tune-book for a handbag. It was dark, remember. In such a case, the attack might have been made to get the girls’ cash and when they resisted or screamed, the murderer just killed them. As for Bracknell, the same motive. The intruder at Freake’s Folly could have been after money …”

  Littlejohn shook his head.

  “Is that likely, Herle? Why tackle young country girls when there are better fish available in the neighbourhood? Why carry a knife, thus making the affair murderous and premeditated, instead of merely hitting them hard with his fist if they resisted? It’s all too hit-or-miss and as far as the carrying of a weapon goes, highly dangerous.”

  “Perhaps so. There was another funny thing about Marlene’s death. It might have nothing whatever to do with the case, but about a foot away from the body on the grass verge, there was an orange and a little further on, a swede turnip.”

  “Queer clues?”

  “Yes. Marlene was on her way to a social in connection with decorating the church with fruit, vegetables and flowers for the following Sunday. The crime was committed on Thursday. She hadn’t any offerings with her because her father had taken her heavy basket of stuff down to the school earlier in the evening. It contained neither swedes nor oranges. Where did the two beside the body come from? Or was it pure coincidence?”

  “I can’t say, but we’ll remember it. And that’s all?”

  “Yes. We’ve questioned everybody we could about the movements of the two girls and Bracknell prior to the murders. A complete blank. No fingerprints. No reasonable motives. The local people are sure there’s a maniac hiding in the woods, and the newspapers, I must say, have done nothing to allay their fears. They’ve had a field-day and stirred-up a perfect frenzy of terror. In Carleton Unthank, the men have formed a squad of vigilantes and no women go abroad at night without escorts. In the daytime, the children have guards to and from school. The police have come in for torrents of letters, suggesting things and showering abuse. The whole area is crawling with guards and pickets from the former special constables, the British Legion, and the Oddfellows. … So, the murderer avoids them and goes to a forsaken spot like Freake’s Folly and kills the tenant there …”

  “Freake’s Folly?”

  “It was built about 1800 for the father of one of the ladies of Huncote Manor, a mile or so out of town. His name was Freake and he went a bit queer, to put it mildly. A sort of alchemist, or something. Contemporary prints show it was a kind of sham castle with a tower which still remains. He studied the stars from the top of it.”

  “Is it a farm, now?”

  “Yes and no. It has thirty acres with it. It was carved out of the home farm of Huncote Manor. It’s approached from the main Fenny Carleton-Leicester highway by a side-road called Dan’s Lane. Old Freake’s name was Daniel. When Dan’s Lane ends, there begins a small forest of oaks and beeches. The house is in the middle of these in a clearing and from a distance seems totally buried in them. The forest ends and about twenty acres more of cleared land runs parallel with the boundary of Home Farm. The Folly is about half a mile across the field to the home farmhouse.”

  “Has it been occupied ever since it was built?”

  “No. It stood empty, I gather, for a long time after the death of old Freake. Then, one or two good-for-nothings of the Huncote family lived there … Remittance men, you might call them. In its day, it was a fine house. Panelled beautifully, they say. But all the good stuff of the interior was rifled in the early part of the century, when it was deserted till 1914; then the War Office used it for storage. There was talk of pulling it down or felling the timber, but nothing came of it. Then, about 1954, Bracknell took it over. It still belonged to a member of the family at the manor who emigrated to Australia. He came back on a visit and decided to stay, so settled-in at Freake’s Folly, which he seemed to fancy.”

  “Why did they never join the land to the home farm? It would have paid better than leave it derelict, wouldn’t it?”

  “No farmer would want that adding to his fields. It’s poor, barren and swampy. Bracknell did very little with it, except chase off trespassers. He even forbade the keeper and agent from the hall to come near. The hall is now let to the county as an old-folk’s home. He was a recluse and a bit of a mystery. I suggest we go down to the Folly and see for ourselves. You’ll find it an ideal setting for a murder.”

  “So, we’ve really got to start from scratch?”

  “Yes, sir. I’m sorry. That’s why the Chief Constable thought it better to enlist your help. You might bring a fresh slan
t and new techniques on a case like this. We’ve worked hard with no results. You can imagine what checking-up for miles around on sales of oranges and swede turnips must have been like! And all no good. Everybody seemed to have appetites for and be buying-in swedes and oranges about that time.”

  “We’ll do our best. Do you believe in a maniac who suddenly wandered in the district and murdered for the sake of it?”

  “No, sir. I don’t.”

  Herle met Littlejohn’s look with a straight clear stare.

  “I don’t. It’s someone who in his relations with everybody else except his victims, behaves just like you and I. He lives in these parts and it might be anybody. It might even be me!”

  There was a small pleasant hotel, the Huncote Arms, in Carleton Unthank, run by a sloppy little man called Russell, who had hair like a shaving brush and a front tooth missing.

  “The pair of you are very welcome,” he told Cromwell, who made arrangements for the rooms. “It’s time this case was settled and the murderer hung. We’ve sold a barrel of beer less every week since this ’orrible business started. People just won’t come out after dark. One of the reporters of a London daily called it Unthank, the Town of Fearful Nights. My missus is scared to death, too. She’s gone home to her mother at Upton-on-Severn … If things go on like this, we’ll have to put up our shutters …”

  “Don’t do it whilst we’re here, will you?”

  The place was spotlessly clean, the beds were comfortable, and Mr. Russell said he’d been a chef at a large London hotel until he decided to take it easy. A buxom, healthy, young blonde, called Bertha, showed them their rooms and generally seemed to run the business whilst Russell did all the talking. Cromwell wondered whether the murderer or Bertha had been the cause of Mrs. Russell’s flight to the Severn.

  2

  THE HOUSE IN THE WOOD

  “WE’D BETTER have some lunch first, and then, if you like, we’ll go and take a look at the scene of the crime …”

  Herle was certainly a glutton for work. Littlejohn and Cromwell had left London by the early train to Leicester, changed to a diesel to Fenny Carleton, and arrived there just after eleven. At the police station, Herle had talked solidly for an hour and a half in his pleasant countryman’s voice, telling them all about the crimes and what the local police had done in the way of investigations.

 

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