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Rag and Bone: Billy Boyle 05

Page 13

by James R Benn


  “If he’s so respectable, why would he put his name to a lie?”

  “Billy, the Russians are as ruthless as the Nazis. His family would be killed or sent to a Siberian labor camp at best.”

  “Article 58,” I said.

  “What?”

  “Sidorov told me. It makes it a crime in the Soviet Union to not report any activity against the state. It gives the NKVD a blank check to arrest anyone.”

  “Ah, I see,” Kaz said. “If you refuse to do what you are told, and your family does not turn you in, they can be arrested.”

  “Nice and neat.”

  “Yes. Unfortunate that they will dig up those bodies again. It would save everyone a lot of trouble if they simply wrote their report and let them lie in peace.”

  I DIDN’T SEE any bomb damage on my way to New Scotland Yard, but gray smoke was visible to the east, from the area around St. Paul’s and the dockyards farther down the river. It drifted lazily across the morning sky, marking the remnants of last night’s sudden devastation. More bricks to stack in piles. More bodies laid out on the sidewalk.

  “Boyle,” Inspector Scutt said as I entered the detectives’ chamber. “We wondered how you made out in the raid last night. You went to see Chapman, didn’t you?”

  “Yes, I had the pleasure,” I said, sitting down in front of Scutt’s desk.

  “You were right in the thick of it then,” Flack said as he joined us. “Jerry’s a bit out of practice, but he managed to drop a few from the Surrey Docks up to Moorgate. Lucky for us a lot of them got nervous, or lost, and dropped their loads short. Tore up the countryside to the southeast, the bastards did, but better there than in the heart of London.”

  “Bomb alley, they call it,” Scutt said. “The whole area from the coast, between Dover and Hastings, and straight up to London. Any German bomber that aborts or tangles with our fighters will drop their bombs and head for home. Between those random hits and actual targets in the area, it gets fairly nerve-racking down that way. My wife’s family is from Folkestone, and I’ve heard plenty from them about it.”

  “Plus all the crashes, aircraft from both sides,” Flack said. “There were more than twenty bombers shot down last night. If most of the aircrew got out, that means we have almost a hundred Germans on the ground right now. The Home Guard is spread all over the countryside looking for them. Hasn’t been a dustup like this in months.”

  “I saw more than a dustup last night,” I said, trying to keep my voice neutral. Flack seemed a bit too excited about the raid for my taste.

  “Of course you did, Boyle,” Scutt said, seeming to understand my reluctance to rejoice in the return of the Luftwaffe. “It’s terrible, and at the same time, it brings us back to when we all stood together, Londoners and Englishmen alone, shoulder to shoulder. With all you Americans coming along, as grand as that is, sometimes I feel we’ve lost something.”

  “I heard it in the Tube station this morning,” Flack said. “People talking to each other, saying we can stand up to it. Hard to explain, and I don’t mean to sound callous, but it’s almost like the war had passed us by. Civilians, in London, I mean. Now, it’s back. Gives some meaning to all the difficulties. Rationing, homes destroyed, men scattered all across the world.”

  “All I saw last night was a lot of scared people, and corpses.”

  “It’s been my experience, Boyle, that with the light of morning, those who find themselves alive put the best face on things they can,” Scutt said. “I’d wager the most scared of the lot last night are shaking their fists against an empty sky this morning, cursing the bloody Germans. Human nature. Now, tell us about Chapman.”

  I did, leaving out much of the gin, and the knife at my throat, while focusing on his lack of interest in Egorov.

  “You may be right in that Archie, or his boy Topper, have already taken care of business for themselves. We’ll be on the lookout for any suspicious deaths, especially of anyone connected with the embassy,” Flack said.

  “Too bad you don’t have anything you can really trade with,” Scutt said, rubbing his chin. “Maybe some American supplies need to be sacrificed in the pursuit of justice.”

  “Good idea, guv,” Flack said. “Boyle, maybe you can arrange for some coffee to go missing. Drop a bit off for us, eh?”

  “It’s not a bad idea,” I said.

  “I didn’t really mean—”

  “No, I mean going into business with Archie and Topper. If they know who really killed Egorov, that could be the key. Might be worth a truckload of Spam.”

  “Don’t bother bringing that around,” Flack said. “Worse than bully beef, that stuff.”

  “Whatever you use, Boyle,” Scutt cut in, putting an end to a comparison of American and British canned meats, “it will have to come from your stores. The Met cannot provide supplies illegally. But we will assist in any way we can. Now we have some questions to put to you.”

  “OK,” I said. I watched Scutt and Flack exchange glances. No more philosophical comments about Londoners at war, no more jokes about Spam and tinned beef. They had questions to put to me, and that was a shift. When a cop has something routine to ask another cop, he simply asks him. When a cop is about to interrogate someone, he tells him he has questions.

  “Yesterday you were at the Rubens Hotel, correct?” Scutt began.

  “Yes, I was visiting a friend.”

  “Do you usually enter the Rubens via the staff entrance?”

  “What does that matter?”

  “We have been informed that you accosted a member of the staff there.”

  “He was spying on my friend.”

  “Who is your friend,” Flack said, studying a file Scutt had handed him, “and who was this Edward Miller spying for?”

  “Lieutenant Baron Piotr Augustus Kazimierz,” I said, giving them Kaz’s name and title, thinking that might impress the royalty conscious. “He used to work on General Eisenhower’s staff, and now he’s with the Polish Government in Exile.”

  “Edward Miller?”

  “He was being paid off by Kiril Sidorov, the Russian officer you met, to supply information on the Poles.”

  “We knew he was an informer, but not for whom. We have our own informants, but the data they provide only goes so far. What do you think Sidorov was after?”

  “Information, of course, just like you.” I didn’t like how this was going.

  “I think the stakes are a bit higher in this case,” Scutt said. “This is more than routine gossip and information gathering, and you know it. You’ve been holding out on us, Boyle.”

  “About what?” I tried to sound irritated.

  “About your friend, Lieutenant Kazimierz. His role in the controversy regarding the Kaytn Forest killings. That brings him in direct conflict with the Russians. Any reason you didn’t mention that to us? To your brother officers, investigating the murder of an NKVD man on their own patch?” Scutt’s voice had grown louder, and he leaned forward at the end, slamming his fist on the desk.

  “Yes,” I said, willing myself to speak calmly, letting a few seconds of silence creep between us. “Because he’s my friend, and I’d trust him with my life.”

  “That’s a fine answer,” Scutt said, studying me as he leaned back into his chair. “One I might be satisfied with if not for the fact that Lieutenant Kazimierz goes about London armed with a .32-caliber pistol. The same caliber as the bullet that killed Egorov.”

  “That bullet was too damaged to measure accurately,” I said, and regretted it instantly. I didn’t want to sound like a lawyer. “Kaz carries that for protection, that’s all.”

  “So far, it’s been dangerous for one Russian, dead, and one Englishman, whom you apparently beat senseless.”

  “Sheila,” I said, remembering the girl who had seen Eddie and me in the hallway. “She’s your informant. She’s the only one who saw me slap Eddie around. She must be sweet on him to claim I beat him senseless, not that he had much sense to begin with.”

&n
bsp; “Keep that to yourself, Boyle,” Flack said in a low, angry voice. “Your friend bears watching, and so do you, as far as I can tell.”

  “You’ve been watching him already. If you thought he was responsible for killing Egorov, then you would have picked him up.”

  “No, we don’t have enough at this point,” Flack said. “We know he’s armed with a weapon similar to the one used on Egorov. We know that he’s made inflammatory statements about the Russians, but we don’t know where he was that Friday night.”

  “Meaning you don’t have someone watching him at the Dorchester,” I said.

  “Boyle, please understand this,” Scutt said. “We are not watching any one individual. We employ informants to keep us updated on the comings and goings of the many foreigners we have in London. They are our allies, but they often don’t see eye to eye with each other. The fact that Lieutenant Kazimierz goes about armed was just one detail in a routine report.”

  “Sheila didn’t strike me as someone who could tell the difference between a .32 caliber and a blunderbuss. How did you find that out?”

  “It was determined in the routine course of investigation,” Scutt said. In other words, none of my business. They obviously had someone else inside. Or had they searched our rooms at the Dorchester?

  “Are we working together, or are we not?” I said. “Either way is fine, I just want to know.” I waited, watching Flack fume and Scutt consider. They were a good team, the experienced, calm inspector and the angry younger detective.

  “We are still working together,” Scutt said finally. “Detective Sergeant Flack will continue to monitor the Poles. Frankly, theirs is the only motive we have. If you believe your friend and his associates are not involved at all, then I suggest you pursue other leads.”

  “OK,” I said. I had to agree with them, although I wouldn’t do it out loud. “I’ll try Chapman again. Tell me, does Eddie know that Sheila is working for you?”

  “No, not according to her, anyway,” Flack said. “She’s been reporting to us for two months now, and she swears no one’s the wiser. Anything else you’ve failed to tell us?”

  “Just one thing I heard at High Wycombe. That the Russian delegation stopped coming right after they had a meeting there with some Royal Navy officers.”

  “What the hell does that mean?” Flack said.

  “I have no idea. The Russians, the American Eighth Air Force, and the Royal Navy. The first two aren’t talking, so I thought you might try your guys. Maybe ask our friend from MI5, Major Charles Cosgrove.”

  “Why don’t you?” Flack said.

  “Because the last time I saw him, I almost punched his fat face in.”

  “I think we will make the inquiry, Lieutenant Boyle,” Scutt said. “For the sake of Allied unity.”

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  IT WASN’T FAR from the Met to Norfolk House, but I wished it was farther so I’d have more time to work on my pitch to Colonel Harding. I didn’t think he’d take kindly to my stealing U.S. Army supplies, no matter how good the cause, or the fact that I’d get paid for them, black market wholesale rate.

  The sky was filled with low, dark clouds, just the thing to keep the Luftwaffe at bay. It would keep our bombers grounded as well, if the cloud cover extended over the Continent. How did our aircrew feel about that? Happy at another day of life on the ground, or wishing they could get in another mission toward the twenty-five they needed to be rotated home? All I knew for sure was that there must be a helluva lot of civilians all over Europe who prayed for lousy weather.

  “How did it go last night?” Harding said, before I’d gotten my trench coat off.

  “I survived the air raid.”

  “I can see that, Boyle. I mean with Chapman. You were headed to Liverpool Street when you left here yesterday.”

  “I can safely say he’s a homicidal maniac,” I said as I settled into an armchair across from Harding’s desk. “He’s set up at one end of the shelter like it was home sweet home, complete with bodyguards, a bedroom, and a pig sticker from the last war. But the one thing I thought he’d react to, he didn’t.”

  “Egorov?”

  “Right. If he had a hand in killing Egorov, I think he would’ve warned me off in no uncertain terms. But he hardly reacted. I’m betting that if Egorov was his main contact, he’s already settled the score with whoever killed him. Or maybe he had nothing at all to do with it.”

  “It would be helpful to find out which,” Harding said.

  “There is a way, I think. Obviously, I didn’t tell them I was an investigator. I hinted at a possible source of supplies. Black market stuff. Basically they told me to come back with something concrete or not to come back at all.”

  “So you want what?”

  “Oh, I don’t know,” I said, trying to act like this was all Harding’s idea. “A truckload of something. Nothing dangerous or too valuable. Booze, maybe?”

  “A truckload of liquor is damned valuable, Boyle!”

  “Yes, sir, but the thing is, we’ll get paid for it.”

  “What the hell am I supposed to do, give the army a stack of pound notes as reimbursement?”

  “OK, OK, liquor’s a bad idea. But it wouldn’t hurt to have some ready cash around the office for contingencies, would it?”

  “What do you expect to get out of this transaction with Chapman?” Harding said, ignoring my attempt at entrepreneurship.

  “The closer I get to him, the easier it’ll be for me to find out if he had anything to do with Egorov’s murder, or if he has any knowledge of it at all. He’s not your average good citizen. If he witnessed a murder, the last thing he’d do would be to go to the police.”

  “So you want to get into the black market and return any money you make to the army?”

  “Since I’ll be stealing the army’s supplies, it’s only fair.”

  “I think it’s worth a try. You won’t be surprised to hear that Big Mike has made friends with the cooks in the mess hall downstairs. That’s where he is now. You may need to spread some of that dough around, but try not to corrupt the entire kitchen staff.”

  “Thank you, Colonel,” I said as I rose from my chair. “I assume I can refer to your verbal orders in case we run into trouble?”

  “Hell no, Boyle. You get caught, you end up in the stockade. Who ever heard of a guy black marketeering who was following orders? Beat it.”

  I did. I found Big Mike in the mess hall, spooning sugar into a mug of coffee with three doughnuts at hand. I grabbed a mug and joined him.

  “How you doing, Billy?” Big Mike said, with his usual lack of military formality. Even though he wore khaki instead of blue, he was still a cop at heart. He carried his shield with him everywhere, badge number 473, Detroit Police Department. You never knew when a flash of tin to a brother officer in a foreign land would come in handy, and with what I had in mind, we might need it.

  “OK,” I said. “I sort of have Harding’s permission to pull off a heist, as long as we don’t get caught. I need some army supplies to get in good with a local hood. Interested in a little petty larceny?”

  “Could be, if you get Estelle back for me,” he said, as half a doughnut disappeared.

  “Come on, Big Mike, I don’t have enough clout to make that happen.”

  “That’s what Colonel Harding said, which is why I ain’t speaking to him, except what’s needed to conduct business. But you, you got an uncle in high places. You could make it happen.”

  “Big Mike, listen—”

  “No, Billy, you listen. You get Estelle back from North Africa. Get her assigned here, in London. Otherwise, I ain’t helping you, and I might even have to arrest you for whatever you’re cooking up.”

  “You can’t arrest anybody, Big Mike. You’re not a cop or an MP.”

  “No, but there’s MPs all around this joint. I want Estelle back.”

  “You really fell for her, huh?”

  “Billy, I ain’t never met a girl like her. Lookit me, I’m
no Errol Flynn, I’m a big guy, kinda clumsy at times. Most girls make a joke, like I’m a sideshow strongman. But Estelle, she looked me in the eyes and that was that. We both knew, it’s that simple. I can’t bear to think of her alone in Tangier, wondering if I even cared enough to try and find her. You know what I mean?”

  “Sure I do, Big Mike.”

  “Oh, yeah. Sorry, Billy, I didn’t mean anything about Diana. That’s different, she wants to go. You ain’t leaving her all alone.”

  “OK, Big Mike. I’m in. How about I get to work on it after we—”

  “No. Now. Go see Beetle and get Estelle back here. I’ll wait.”

  “Jesus, Big Mike! Beetle will keep me waiting for hours and then have my ass for asking! It’ll never work.”

  “No, he won’t, and yes, it will.”

  “How can you say that? Can you read his mind? If you claim to know Uncle Ike’s chief of staff so well that you can guarantee it, why don’t you ask him yourself?”

  “I sort of did. I told him this morning that you would be stopping by to ask his assistance in getting a material witness brought back to London.”

  “What the hell were you doing talking to Beetle? The king would need an appointment to see him.”

  “I asked around and found out he used to hunt quail in Virginia. He has that cocker spaniel with him, you know, the one he got in North Africa. So I talked to a British captain who just came on board. He’s the earl of something or other, and has a country place over near Cheltenham. I suggested to him that Beetle wouldn’t mind an invite to kill birds with him. He liked the idea, so I went to see Beetle, and told him all about it. He said he felt like shooting something, and invited me to come along. Probably just to carry the shotguns, but still it was a nice gesture.”

  “Where did Estelle come in?”

  “He asked how the investigation was going. Ike will be here in a few days, and he wanted to know if we’d have anything to report. I told him about Estelle getting transferred, and how it would be helpful to get her back here.”

 

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