Read The New Eastgate Swing Online
Authors: Chris Nickson
Christ.
He strode back to the office. They had an area to search now. A start. But it was a place filled with small businesses and the last remains of slum housing. Too many possibilities.
âYou took your time,' Baker said when he walked in. âI thought you'd hopped on a charabanc to Scarborough or something.'
âI saw Harker,' Markham said.
âWhere?'
He went through it all from the moment he'd run out of the Kardomah. When he finished, Baker said, âLet me get something from the car.' He returned within a minute, unfolding a map of Leeds on the card table and pointing with a stubby finger.
âYou lost him on Bridge Street. But he only had a thirty-second start, is that right?'
âLess.'
âAnd no sign of him at all when you walked along?'
âNothing at all.'
âWe know he couldn't have gone too far in that time.' He traced a small circle on the paper. âNothing beyond that.' He smiled, a feral grin showing tobacco-stained teeth. âWe might just be closing in on him.'
âThere's still plenty to go through. And he might have known I was behind him. He could have led me down there and ducked off somewhere else.'
âDo you think he did? In your gut?'
âNo,' Markham told him. He felt certain of it. âI'm sure he never saw me.'
âThat's good enough for me.' He rubbed his hands together. âLet's make a start.'
***
There were more businesses and doorways than he'd imagined. They'd split up; it was the only way to cover the ground.
âIt's like when I was a detective constable and we did house-to-house questioning,' Baker said. âIt's boring, but it can work. Just give them a very quick description and ask if they've seen anyone like that in the last day or so.'
***
By five o'clock his knuckles felt raw from knocking on doors and his voice was hoarse from saying the same words over and over. Two people thought they might have seen Harker, but neither remembered exactly where; he was no more than a faint impression.
The day had turned colder. At five he gave up. All the small business had closed for the day and the streets were empty. There was still plenty left for tomorrow. His feet ached as he walked back to the office on Albion Place.
Markham felt a hard knot of frustration. He should have just run and confronted Harker, taken his chances. Instead he'd tried to be clever and ended up losing him.
He sat at his desk, smoking and trying to warm up. The chill hadn't left his bones before Baker arrived, raising his eyebrows in a question. Markham shook his head.
âNever mind. We'll see the rest of them in the morning. Someone down there will know him.'
âIf we're lucky.'
âThen hope that we are.' He adjusted his hat. âI'm off for the night.'
***
He listened to the six o'clock news. Productivity was up, wages were rising. But there was always something going on somewhere to leave the world an unsafe place. The faint shadow of nuclear war always on the horizon. Markham switched off the wireless and selected a Basie LP. It was full of life and joy. The kind of music to dispel gloom. Just what he needed right now.
***
âBack to it,' Baker said. âWe'll find something today, don't you worry.'
They marched over to Bridge Street side by side.
âWhen I started out on the beat, all the Leylands round here were still full of people. They've knocked most of the houses down now. Good job, too, if you ask me. You wouldn't have wished them on a cat.'
âBad?'
âThey were packed inside. No indoor plumbing, outside privies down the block. You can say what you like about the past, but it wasn't pretty. All this renewal, it's the best thing. Give people somewhere decent to live like Quarry Hill Flats.' He gestured to the huge estate on the other side of Regent Street. It looked grey, forbidding, secretive, the main archway like a gate into some dark place. âWe were not long wed and moved in there in '38, when it opened. Everything new and modern. It was like paradise. You thought you'd walked into another world.'
He was just filling time, and they both knew it. A distraction before the grim work.
âWe'll meet back at the office at twelve,' Markham said.
***
After an hour a thin drizzle began to fall and then passed. The sky lowered as more clouds rolled in. By afternoon they'd probably have another fog. Not good weather for hunting someone.
Trevor Peel was still missing. He'd heard nothing more from the boy's mother. He'd half-expected the police to come calling with questions, but there'd been no word from them. Maybe she hadn't reported it, after all. Like so many people, the family probably kept their distance from the law. From some, the avoidance was natural, drummed into them over generations. Ringing the coppers would be a desperate resort.
More knocking on doors, more going into offices, small warehouses and factories. He kept at it doggedly until quarter to twelve. Not even a hint of Harker. Finally he gave up and strolled back to Albion Place.
Already there were the first wisps of mist in the air and he could hear people starting to cough, walking with scarves held over their noses and mouths.
Baker was scribbling a note.
âYou just missed a telephone call,' he said. âSomeone wants you to ring them back sharpish.' He handed Markham the scrap of paper with a number.
âWho is it?'
âSaid his name was Turnbull.'
The man who'd rung from MI5. Ted Smith's favour.
âDid you find anything?'
âNot a sausage. How about you?'
âThe same.'
He settled at his desk and began to dial the number. What did the man want? Maybe they'd found Harker. Maybe it was all over. Maybe.
He was shuffled through two layers of secretaries before Turnbull picked up the phone.
âI'm glad you rang me back.' That confident, patrician accent.
âWhat can I do for you, Mr Turnbull?'
âThere's something you ought to know. It won't be in the newspapers or on the news. You mentioned a chap called Tim Hill when we talked.'
âThat's right.' The secret service's contact at Cokely's. The one who'd turned the Germans into double agents.
âDid you know him at all?'
âI never met him. My partner talked to him.'
âThen perhaps you can remember him in your prayers.'
Dead? Hill was dead?
âI'm sorry to hear that,' Markham said. He turned the scrap of paper over, scrawled
Hill's dead
on the back and pushed it over to Baker. The man read it and raised his eyes in alarm. âHow did it happen?' Markham continued.
Turnbull was slow to answer.
âIt wasn't natural causes. My people are looking into it.'
MI5 had taken over the murder investigation from the police. That was what he meant.
âI see.'
âThat other chap you mentioned. Our Deutscher friend.'
âHarker.'
âWe're very eager to talk to him,' Turnbull said.
âSo are we,' Markham told him.
âAh.' A long pause and then, reluctantly, âPerhaps we should join forces.'
âWhat did you have in mind?'
âWe have two people on their way. They should be in Leeds by three. I've instructed them to come to your office.'
Not a request for help. A command.
âGo on.'
âI already have Warner there. He's looking into the matter with Mr Hill.' So bloody circumspect. He knew it came from years of caution, but no one was going to be tapping this line.
âWe've met.'
âVery good. I'm sure I don't need to tell you that the country would be grateful for you doing your duty.'
âWe'll talk to your men,' Markham said.
âVery good. Expect Mr Davidson and Mr Molloy.' Turnbull put down the receiver. Not even a thank you.
âIt seems we're assisting MI5.'
âFrom what I've seen of them in the past, someone needs to,' Baker said. âIf we're going to have to put up with them later, we'd better get some dinner now.'
***
Davidson and Molloy looked more like clerks. The same as Warner, Markham thought. Bowler hats, dark suits and overcoats, eyes slightly glazed from the long train journey, mouths pursed in disdain at being sent north.
They asked their questions, not bothering to take notes. But Markham expected that. They were recruited for their minds. They might look bored, but they'd be thinking. He hoped so, anyway.
âWe're going to need local knowledge,' Davidson said. He was a lanky man in his forties with jowls already developing. âWe'll co-ordinate with our chap who's here already and find out the state of play.' He glanced at his watch. âYou say you can't find Harker but you know where you lost him.' He made it sound like Markham's failure.
âThat's right.'
âWe'll start with that in the morning,' Davidson said briskly as he picked up his briefcase. He stood, his companion following quickly. âNine o'clock?'
âThey make me feel like one of those native guides you see in the pictures,' Baker said after the footsteps faded on the stairs.
âNot very friendly, are they?' They'd been supercilious, acting as if everything would be fine now that the professionals had arrived. And he didn't believe a word of it. They were just two more blunderers in the dark. âI saw some like that in West Germany.'
âHow good were they?'
âA few did well,' Markham answered after a little thought. âMost of them were a waste of time.'
âWell, I don't want to play second fiddle to a pair of spies. No “yes sir, no sir, three bags full” whilst they balls it all up.' He curled his hand into a fist. âWe know what we're doing, don't we?'
âAs much as they do.'
âThen let's handle it ourselves. The way we were before their bloke Hill got himself killed.'
âAnd what do we do if we find Harker?' he asked soberly.
âWe'll cross that bridge when we come to it.' But Markham knew what it meant. No mercy, no hauling him off to stand trial.
***
An evening of singers. Ella, Sarah, Billie. He loved the way they twisted themselves into the words, the way that Holiday could show the depth of emotion simply by slurring a word. There was beauty in it all, and it swung like the devil.
But always the sense of time passing. Running out. A clock relentlessly ticking.
He had strange dreams, Harker breaking into the flat and destroying his record collection, taking pleasure in smashing the records one by one. Even while it was happening he knew it wasn't real, but he was unable to move or stop it happening. All he could do was sit and watch it, the tears streaming down his cheeks.
Markham woke with a start, gulping for breath. The tendrils of the dream clung to him. He had to get up and smoke a cigarette before his mind cleared. The records were still there, neatly filed in alphabetical order.
He'd never expected to feel so much for music, that it could move him. But he'd grown up on the sound of the radio. The polite, reserved dance bands and the classical music of the Home Service. Music that seemed to peer down from a height.
Jazz invited him in. It spoke to him. There was freedom in it, that sense of exploration. It didn't have limits or boundaries. Markham ran his hand over the top of the LP covers, finished the cigarette and went back to sleep.
***
In the morning he felt the broken night. It took him a little while to wake up. His toast tasted like cardboard. Only after a second cup of tea was he ready to face the world.
Davidson and Molloy were waiting outside the office door, dressed in exactly the same manner as the day before. No small talk, they just sat and waited in silence for Baker to arrive. But he didn't. Nine o'clock. Half past and his seat was still empty.
âPerhaps he's poorly,' Markham said.
âThen why doesn't he ring?' Molloy sniffed. âWe have work to do and he knows that.'
But this was his protest. Markham understood that. Quietly and firmly withdrawing his labour. He knew exactly where the man would be.
Molloy and Davidson stayed until quarter to ten. They finally asked a few questions and Markham answered them honestly. He even explained about the house to house and saw them glancing at each other with contempt. But he doubted they could come up with anything better.
Finally they'd had enough.
âWe'll note your unwillingness to help in the file,' Davidson said stiffly.
âI've told you what we know.'
âWe expect
active
help, Mr Markham, not just words.'
Once they'd gone he hurried over to Bridge Street. He didn't bother to look over his shoulder. If they wanted to follow, that was fine; it wasn't a secret. But men like that would get short shrift around here. The superior attitudes would only get peoples' back up.
It only took ten minutes of searching before he found Baker leaving a small welding shop.
âHave they buggered off yet?'
âThey weren't too happy.'
âSod them.' He began to walk briskly up Templar Street.
âWhere are we going?' Markham asked.
âThe Olympic Cafe. I want to show you something.'
The coffee was tasteless, weak as dishwater. Markham pushed the cup aside.
Baker lit his pipe and was sitting back, smoking contentedly.
âWell?' Markham asked. âWhat is it?'
With a smile, the man brought a large, folded piece of paper from his pocket and placed it on the table, shaking his head as Markham began to reach for it.
âI told you we used to live in Quarry Hill Flats,' he began.
âI remember,' Markham answered impatiently. Every minute in here was one they could use searching.