The Railway Detective
Page 6
‘I’ve done nothing illegal. Well,’ he added with a chuckle, ‘nothing that I’d own up to in a court of law. The Devil’s Acre is a world apart. We have our own rules here.’
‘I’ve just seen one of them being enforced.’
Colbeck bought his friend a pint of beer then the two of them adjourned to a table in the corner. It was some time since the detective had seen Mulryne but the man had not changed. Standing well over six feet tall, he had the physique of a wrestler and massive hands. His gnarled face looked as if it had been inexpertly carved out of rock but it was shining with a mixture of pleasure and surprise now. During his years in the Metropolitan Police, Mulryne had been the ideal person to break up a tavern brawl or to arrest a violent offender. The problem was that he had been too eager in the exercise of his duties and was eventually dismissed from the service. The Irishman never forgot that it was Robert Colbeck who had spoken up on his behalf and tried to save his job for him.
A pall of tobacco smoke combined with the dim lighting to make it difficult for them to see each other properly. The place was full and the hubbub loud. They had to raise their voices to be heard.
‘How is life treating you, Brendan?’ asked Colbeck.
‘Very well, sir.’
‘You don’t have to show any deference to me now.’
‘No,’ said Mulryne with a grin that revealed several missing teeth. ‘I suppose not. Especially when you’re dressed like that. But, yes, I’m happy here at The Black Dog. I keep the customers in order and help behind the bar now and then.’
‘What do you get in return?’
‘Bed, board and all the beer I can drink. Then, of course, there’s the privileges.’
‘Privileges?’
‘We’ve new barmaids coming here all the time,’ said Mulryne with a twinkle in his eye. ‘I help them to settle in.’
‘Would you be interested in doing some work for me?’
Mulryne was hesitant. ‘That depends.’
‘I’d pay you well,’ said Colbeck.
‘It’s not a question of money. The Devil’s Acre is my home now. I’ve lots of friends here. If you’re wanting help to put any of them in jail, then you’ve come to the wrong shop.’
‘The man I’m after is no friend of yours, Brendan.’
‘How do you know?’
‘Because he doesn’t really belong in this seventh circle of hell,’ said Colbeck. ‘He’s an outsider, who’s taken refuge here. A gambler who drifted in here to play cards and to lose his money.’
‘We’ve lots of idiots like that,’ said Mulryne. ‘They always lose. There’s not an honest game of cards in the whole of the Devil’s Acre.’
‘He still hasn’t realised that.’
‘Why do you want him?’
‘It’s in connection with a serious crime that was committed earlier today – a train robbery.’
‘Train robbery!’ echoed the other with disgust. ‘Jesus, what will they think of next? There was never anything like that in my time. The only people I ever arrested were beggars, footpads, cracksmen, flimps, doxies, screevers and murderers – all good, decent, straightforward villains. But now they’re robbing trains, are they? That’s shameful!’
‘It was a mail train,’ said Colbeck. ‘A substantial amount of money was also being carried. They got away with everything.’
‘How does this gambler fit into it?’
‘That’s what I need to ask him, Brendan – with your help.’
‘Ah, no. My days as a bobby are over.’
‘I accept that. What I’m asking you is a personal favour.’
‘Is it that important, Mr Colbeck?’
‘It is,’ said the other. ‘I’d not be here otherwise. It’s been a long day and walking through the Devil’s Acre in the dark is not how I’d choose to spend my nights. No offence, Brendan,’ he added, glancing around at some of the sinister faces nearby, ‘but the company in The Black Dog is a little too primitive for my taste.’
Mulryne laughed. ‘That’s why I like it here,’ he said. ‘The place is alive. The sweepings of London come in through that door, looking for a drink, a woman and a fight in that order. I keep very busy.’
‘Could you not spare some time to assist me?’
‘I’m not sure that I can, Mr Colbeck. I’ve no idea what this man looks like and not a clue where to start looking.’
‘I can help you on both counts,’ said the detective. ‘When I finally persuaded his wife that I needed to track him down, she gave me a good description of William Ings. He’s living with a woman somewhere. But the place to start is among the moneylenders.’
‘Why – did he borrow from them?’
‘He must have Brendan. He lost so much at the card table that he had to sell or pawn most of the furniture in his house. The only way he could have carried on gambling was to borrow money – probably at an exorbitant rate of interest.’
‘There are no philanthropists in the Devil’s Acre.’
Colbeck leant in closer. ‘I need to locate this man.’
‘So I see. But tell me this – does that black-hearted devil, Superintendent Tallis, know that you’re here?’
‘Of course not.’
‘What about Sergeant Leeming?’
‘There’s no need for Victor to be told,’ said Colbeck. ‘That way, he can’t get into trouble with Mr Tallis. This is my project, Brendan. You’ll only be answerable to me.’
‘And there’s money in it?’
‘If you can root out William Ings.’
Mulryne pondered. Before he could reach a decision, however, he saw a drunk trying to molest one of the prostitutes who lounged against the bar. When she pushed the man away, he slapped her hard across the face and produced a squeal of outrage. Mulryne was out of his seat in a flash. He stunned the troublemaker with a solid punch on the side of his head before catching him as he fell. The man was lifted bodily and hurled out of the door into the alleyway, where he lay in a pool of his own vomit. The Irishman returned to his table.
‘I’m sorry about the interruption,’ he said, sitting down.
‘You have a living to earn, Brendan.’
‘I do, Mr Colbeck. Mind you, I can always do with extra money. Since I became forty, my charm is no longer enough for some of the girls. They expect me to buy them things as well – as a mark of my affection, you understand.’
‘I don’t care how you spend what I give you.’
‘That’s just as well,’ said Mulryne. ‘Before I agree, promise me there’ll be no questions about any friends of mine here who might accidentally have strayed from the straight and narrow.’ His eyes glinted. ‘I’m not an informer, Mr Colbeck.’
‘The only man I’m interested in is William Ings. Will you help me?’
‘As long as my name never reaches Mr Tallis.’
‘It won’t,’ said Colbeck, ‘I can assure you of that.’
‘Then I’m your man.’
‘Thank you, Brendan. I appreciate it. Though I’m afraid it won’t be easy to find Ings in this rabbit warren.’
Mulryne was confident. ‘If he’s here – I’ll find the bastard!’
Polly Roach was much older than she looked. By dyeing her hair and using cosmetics artfully, she lost over a decade but her body was more difficult to disguise. She had therefore placed the oil lamp where the spill of its light did not give too much away. As she lay naked in his flabby arms, she made sure that the bed sheet covered her sagging breasts, her spindly legs and the mottled skin on her protruding belly. She nestled against his shoulder.
‘When are you going to take me away from here?’ she asked.
‘All in good time.’
‘You said that we’d have a home together.’
‘We will, Polly. One day.’
‘And when will that be?’
‘When it’s safe for me to leave here,’ he said, unwilling to commit himself to a date. ‘Until then, I’ll stay with you.’
‘But you to
ld me that I didn’t belong in the Devil’s Acre.’
‘You don’t, Poll.’
‘You promised that we’d live together properly.’
‘That’s what we are doing,’ he said, fondling a breast and kissing her on the lips. ‘I left a wife and children for you, remember.’
‘I know, Bill.’
‘I changed my whole life just to be with you.’
‘I simply want you to get me out of the Devil’s Acre.’
‘Be patient.’
William Ings was a plump man in his forties with large, round eyes that made him look as if he was in a state of constant surprise, and a tiny mouth that was out of proportion with the rest of his facial features. It was lust rather than love that had drawn him to Polly Roach. She offered him the kind of sexual excitement that was unimaginable with his prudish and conventional wife and, once she had a hold on him, she slowly tightened her grasp. During the first few days when he moved in with her, he was in a state of euphoria, enjoying a freedom he had never known before and luxuriating in sheer decadence. It was worlds away from the humdrum routine of the Post Office.
The shortcomings of his situation then became more apparent. Instead of having his own house, he was now sharing two small rooms in a fetid tenement whose thin walls concealed no sounds from the rest of the building. Ings soon learnt that his immediate neighbours, an elderly man and his wife, had ear-splitting arguments several times a day and he had been shocked when he heard the prostitute in the room above them being beaten into silence by one of her more brutal customers. In the room below, a couple had made love to the accompaniment of such vile language that it made his ears burn. In the past, paying an occasional brief visit to Polly Roach had been exhilarating. Living with her in a place of menace was beginning to have distinct drawbacks.
‘What are you thinking, Bill?’ she asked, gently rubbing his chest.
He sat up. ‘I’ve decided to go out again.’
‘Now? It must be almost midnight.’
‘There are places that never close.’
‘You don’t want to play cards again, surely?’
‘Yes, Poll,’ he said, easing her away from him. ‘I feel lucky.’
‘You always say that,’ she complained, jabbing him with a finger, ‘yet you always manage to lose somehow.’
‘I won this week, didn’t I?’ he said, peevishly.
‘That’s what you told me, anyway.’
‘Don’t you believe me?’
‘I’m not sure that I do.’
Anger stirred. ‘Where else would I have got so much money from?’ he said. ‘You should be grateful, Polly. It enabled me to leave my job and move in here with you. Isn’t that what you wanted?’
‘Yes, Bill. Of course.’
‘Then why are you pestering me like this?’
‘I just wanted to know where the money came from,’ she said, putting a conciliatory hand on his arm. ‘Please don’t go out again. I know that you feel lucky, but I’d hate you to throw away what you’ve already earned at the card table. That would be terrible.’
‘I only play to win more,’ he insisted, getting up and reaching for his clothes. ‘This is my chance, don’t you see? I can play for higher stakes.’
‘Not tonight.’
‘I must. I have this feeling inside me.’
Her voice hardened. ‘How much have you given to her?’ she asked, coldly. ‘I don’t want you wasting any of our money on your wife.’
‘That’s a matter between me and Maud.’
‘No, it isn’t, Bill.’
‘I have responsibilities.’
‘I’m your only responsibility now,’ she said, climbing out of bed to confront him in the half-dark. ‘Have you forgotten what you promised? You swore that I was the only person who mattered in your life.’
‘You are, Poll.’
‘Then prove it.’
‘Leave me be,’ he said, fumbling for his trousers.
‘Prove it.’
‘I’ve already done that.’
‘Not to my satisfaction.’
‘What more do you want of me?’ he demanded, rounding on her. ‘Because of you, I walked out on my wife and children, I gave up my job and I started a whole new life. I tried my best to make you happy.’
‘Then take me away from here.’
‘I will – in due course.’
‘Why the delay?’ she challenged. ‘What are you hiding from?’
‘Nothing.’
‘Then why this talk about it not being safe to leave here?’
He pulled on his trousers. ‘We’ll talk about this in the morning,’ he said, evasively. ‘I have other things on my mind now.’
She glared at him. ‘Are you lying to me, Bill?’
‘No!’
‘There’s something you’re not telling me.’
‘You’ve been told everything you need to know, Poll.’
‘I’m your woman. There should be no secrets between us.’
‘There are none,’ he said, irritably. ‘Now stand out of my way and let me get dressed. I have to go out.’
Polly Roach had played the submissive lover for too long now. She decided that it was time to assert herself. When she got involved with William Ings, she had seen him as her passport out of the squalor and degradation that she had endured for so many years. He represented a last chance for her to escape from the Devil’s Acre and its attendant miseries. The thought that he might be deceiving her in some way made her simmer with fury. As he tried to do up the buttons on his shirt, she took him by the shoulders.
‘Stay here with me,’ she ordered.
‘No, Polly. I’m going out.’
‘I won’t let you. Your place is beside me.’
‘Don’t you want me to make more money, you silly woman?’
‘Not that way, Bill. It’s too dangerous.’
‘Take your hands off me,’ he warned.
‘Only if you promise to stay here tonight.’
‘Don’t make me lose my temper.’
‘I have a temper as well,’ she snarled, digging her nails into his flesh. ‘I fight for what’s mine. I’m not going to let you sit at a card table and lose money that could be spent on me. I’ve been in this jungle far too long, Bill. I want to live somewhere respectable.’
‘Get off me!’ he yelled.
‘No!’
‘Get off!’
Stung by the pain and annoyed by her resistance, he pushed her away and lashed out wildly with a fist, catching her on the chin and sending her sprawling on to the floor. Her head hit the bare wood with a dull thud and she lost consciousness. Ings felt a pang of guilt as he realised what he had done but it soon passed. When he looked down at her, he was repelled by her sudden ugliness. Her mouth was wide open, her snaggly teeth were revealed and he could see the deep wrinkles around her scrawny neck for the first time. Her powdered cheeks were hollow. Ings turned away.
He had never hit a woman before and expected to be horrified at his own behaviour. Yet he felt no remorse. If anything, he felt strangely empowered. He finished dressing as quickly as he could. Polly Roach could do nothing to stop him when he retrieved his belongings from a corner and stuffed them into a leather bag. After taking a farewell look around the tawdry bedroom, he stepped over her body as if it were not there and went out with a swagger.
CHAPTER FIVE
Madeleine Andrews had refused the kind offer of accommodation in the neighbouring house, preferring instead to spend the night beside her father’s bed. With a blanket around her shoulders and a velvet cushion beneath her, she sat on an upright wooden chair that was not designed to encourage slumber. Every time she fell asleep, she was awake again within minutes, fearful that she might fall off the chair or miss any sign of recovery by the patient. In fact, Caleb Andrews did not stir throughout the night, lying motionless on his back in the single bed, lost to the world and looking in a pitiful condition. It was only his mild but persistent snore that convinced Mad
eleine that he was still alive.
She loved her father dearly. In the five years since her mother’s death, she had been running their home, taking on full responsibility and treating her father with the kind of affectionate cajolery that was needed. Madeleine was an attractive, alert, self-possessed young woman in her early twenties with an oval face framed by wavy auburn hair and set off by dimpled cheeks. She was calm and strong-willed. Instead of showing panic when told of the attack on her father, she had simply abandoned what she was doing and made her way to Leighton Buzzard as soon as she could.
By the time that she arrived, her father had been moved to the spare bedroom in the stationmaster’s house and a penitent Frank Pike was seated beside him. It took her over an hour to convince the fireman that he needed to go home to his wife in order to reassure her that he had not been injured during the robbery. Still troubled in his mind, Pike had finally departed, given some hope by the brief moment when his friend and work mate seemed to rally. He accepted that it was Madeleine’s place to keep watch over her father. Both she and the fireman prayed earnestly that she was not sitting beside a deathbed.
It was well after dawn when Caleb Andrews started to wake from his long sleep. Eyes still shut, he rocked from side to side as if trying to shake himself free of something, and a stream of unintelligible words began to tumble from his mouth. Madeleine bent solicitously over him.
‘Can you hear me?’ she asked.
He puckered his face as he fought to concentrate. When he tried to move the arm that was in a sling, he let out a cry of pain then became silent again. Madeleine thought he had fallen asleep and made no effort to rouse him. She simply sat there and gazed at him by the light that was slanting in through a gap in the curtains. The room was small and featureless but the bed was a marked improvement on the table in the stationmaster’s office. Greater comfort had allowed the patient to rest properly and regain some strength. When his daughter least expected it, Caleb Andrews forced his eyes open and squinted at the ceiling.
‘Where am I?’ he whispered.
‘You’re somewhere safe, Father,’ she replied.
He recognised her voice. ‘Maddy? Is that you?’
He turned his head towards her and let out another yelp of pain.