The Loss of the Jane Vosper (20 page)

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Authors: Freeman Wills Crofts

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BOOK: The Loss of the Jane Vosper
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Glancing up, French noticed that the tie-beams of the roof trusses had been recently notched. At these places the wood, which was dark and grimy with age, showed white and fresh. The notches individually were small, but they were distributed over the tie-beams to make a pattern. They made, in fact, a trace round the shed at a distance of about ten feet from the walls, the trace having two straight lines connected by semicircular ends. French was puzzled.

‘What do you make of those marks?’ he asked Carter, pointing upwards.

Carter rubbed his chin. Then after a while he shook his head.

‘They’re fresh marks, those,’ French went on, ‘and there, that looks like a new plug.’ He pointed to a glossy black power plug which was attached to the middle of the centre tie-beam, just in the centre of the shed. It was connected to the electric meter by what was evidently a new cable running along the tie-beam and down the shed wall.

‘Place is well lighted,’ French went on, glancing again at the roof.

Six 100-watt lamps hung from the roof, and in addition there were two over the bench and one over the desk in the office.

‘I wonder if that would be a runway?’ Carter said suddenly, pointing up at the notches.

French stopped and looked at him. A runway! Yes, it just might be.

‘If so, sir,’ Carter went on, ‘there might have been an electric hoist on it, fed by a flex from that plug.’

‘You’re scintillating this morning right enough,’ French observed. ‘Take particulars of it, so we can trace its purchase if we want to.’

Carter began to sketch and measure, while French continued prowling about, noticing everything that was to be seen.

The only thing which he had not examined was the fireplace. He now moved over to it and stood staring down. There appeared to have been a recent fire, as there were the remains of burnt sticks and papers. The papers were, so far as he could see, in ash, and he wondered whether anyone had stirred the fire to break the flakes. If so, it would be a little suggestive. He didn’t think any scraps of paper were left, but there might be some beneath the wood. If the examination of the shed became serious, it would be worth looking.

French brought over one of the empty cement bags and very carefully plugged the chimney opening, so as to prevent a down draught damaging any paper not yet crumbled to ash. Then, having washed his hands at the sink, he rejoined Carter.

‘Got those details?’ he asked.

‘Yes, sir. There’s not much but the size of the thing and the shape of the notches.’

‘Height of tie-beams from the floor?’ ‘I’ve got that, sir.’

‘Well, we’ve done enough here in the meantime. There may be nothing in this; so far we’ve come on nothing suspicious. We’ll go down to that Kelvin Hotel and have a word with the manager. Then if it still seems worthwhile we’ll find Rice’s new yard and see Rice.’

‘There’s certainly nothing here to worry about,’ Carter returned. ‘There’s just what you’d expect in a shed hired temporarily by a builder.’

French agreed, and they let themselves out.

The Kelvin Hotel was a small, dingy establishment, of which the bar seemed to be the most important adjunct. But when the two men went inside they found that in a rough way it was not uncomfortable. French asked to see the manager, and a man with the cut of a retired butler appeared and said that his name was Smith and that he was the proprietor.

‘Then I want your help, Mr Smith, if you please,’ French said in a friendly way. ‘You’ll see who I am,’ and he produced his official card.

Smith seemed impressed. ‘Come into my room, gentlemen,’ he invited, leading the way into the recesses of the building. ‘Will you,’ he hesitated slightly, ‘take anything?’

‘Not when we’re on business, thank you,’ French answered, and went on to explain that he was making private enquiries about Mr James Rice, who he understood had stayed for some time in the hotel.

‘That’s right,’ Smith agreed. ‘He was here for ten or eleven weeks, off and on.’ He twisted his head on one side and screwed up his eyes knowingly. ‘Anything wrong?’

‘Not that I know of,’ French said stolidly, ‘but we want to trace him, as we think he was a friend of a man who’s disappeared, and we hope to get some information from him.’

Smith nodded. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘in that case I’m afraid I’m not going to be of much use to you. He’s gone and he didn’t leave any address.’

‘I wish you’d describe him, Mr Smith, to be sure it’s the same man.’

‘He was a big, heavy man, with a heavy face. Fairish hair and blue eyes, and clean shaven, except for a small moustache.’

‘That’s the man. Has he left you long?’

The proprietor turned over the leaves of a book. ‘On the 17th, last Thursday. He’d been here since–’ Again he turned over the pages. ‘Monday, the 29th of July. About eleven weeks off and on.’

‘Off and on? Perhaps you’d give me the dates?’

Smith did so, and French continued. ‘And you say he left no address? Tell me, how did he leave?’

‘How?’

‘I mean, did he walk or get a taxi?’

Smith smiled. ‘He took his bag in his hand and he walked on his two feet,’ he said. ‘We don’t see many taxi folk down here.’

‘A man might have luggage,’ French pointed out. ‘Well, he hadn’t. Not more than he could carry.’ ‘What sort of man was he? I mean sociable or silent, or what?’

Smith smiled again. ‘I’d say that sociable is about the last word you’d use to describe him. A very silent man was Mr Rice. Kept himself to himself. Never came and had his pint in the bar with the others. Not that I had any fault to find with him, you understand. He was easy to attend to and paid on the nail. But he was close. I never even got to know what his business was.’

‘A builder,’ French explained. ‘Partner in a small firm.’

‘Ay, he would just be something like that. Well, he must have had an office, for none of his letters came here.’

‘I was just going to ask you that. No letters at any time?’

‘None. I don’t think a single letter came.’

‘Telephone messages? Telegrams?’

‘None at all.’

‘Or callers?’

‘Not a caller, either.’

‘Not what you’d call expansive,’ French commented. ‘I wonder if you have his signature? Could I see it?’

There was, somewhat to French’s surprise, a visitors’ book, and Rice had signed it. French compared the signature with those given him by Duckworth. They were obviously the same.

‘Well,’ said French, ‘I don’t suppose I’ll learn more than what you’ve told me, but when I’m here I might as well see the servants who attended him, and if his room’s not occupied perhaps I might have a look at it.’

Smith had no objection, and French interviewed the waitress and chambermaid, though without gaining any additional information. Then he examined the room Rice had occupied, which was still unlet. But here again he found nothing of the slightest interest. Presently, thanking Smith, he and Carter took their leave.

‘That’ll do for tonight,’ French said as they sat in a District train, bound for Westminster. ‘I don’t know that all this is getting us anywhere. So far we’ve come on nothing suspicious. I’ll think it over tonight, and decide whether to carry on with it tomorrow.’

But all that his cogitations led to was that, though this line might not be profitable, it was the only one he had to work on. And, after all, the fact that Sutton had been suspicious was a fairly strong argument for continuing. Sutton was no fool, and though he had not had the training of the Yard, he was a skilful detective. French returned to the Yard in the morning determined to carry the matter a stage further.

The most important thing seemed to be to find and interview Rice, and he began by putting some men on the first of these two jobs. They were to begin by examining the London and Telephone Directories, though, if the new yard had just been opened, it was unlikely that it would be in either. The telephone people, however, might have had an application for a phone, and this was to be the next enquiry. Finally, if these efforts led nowhere, the police in Town were to be circularized, and the various rating and other authorities were to be approached, as plans for new buildings would probably have been submitted.

While these enquiries were in progress French went down again to Duckworth & Crozier’s office to ask one or two further questions. Mr Duckworth he found in a chastened mood and ready to give him any further help he could.

But his information didn’t amount to very much. There was electric light and a telephone in the shed when let, this being taken into consideration in the price. Duckworth, however, knew of no runway. If one had been there Rice must have had it installed and removed on his own responsibility, a thing, Duckworth pointed out indignantly, which he had no right to do. Not only had the tie-beams been cut into and thereby weakened, but a weight might have been suspended from them which they had not been designed to carry, and the man might have brought down the entire roof. Scandalous!

Asked if he had any idea what Rice could have been doing with timber, cement and clay, Duckworth grew superior and said, ‘Perhaps his business.’ French let it go at that.

When he reached the Yard he found that three ‘Rice Bros, Builders & Contractors’ had been located – in Stepney, Kennington and Camden Town respectively. He and Carter spent the afternoon visiting one after another, but in each case a short investigation proved that not one of them could possibly have had any connection with the man who had stayed at the Kelvin. French returned to the Yard and got on to the men who had turned up these names.

‘No, sir,’ all of them declared in reply to his questions. ‘There’s no other firm of the name in London. No builder’s yard had been taken under the name, and none has been given up. All sources of information have been covered, and if there had been such a firm we should have got to know.’ And when French went in detail into what they had done, he was forced to the conclusion that they were right.

But, if so, it threw a very significant light on the whole affair. If this tale of Rice’s about wanting the shed temporarily till his firm’s yard was ready for occupation were a falsehood, the whole business immediately became definitely suspicious. Sutton’s opinion became confirmed, and the matter would have to be probed to the bottom. French decided that for the present, at all events, he must carry on.

-10-
THE ELECTRIC RUNWAY

Next morning, no further information having come in to the Yard, French and Carter set off to the telephone exchange to which the shed was connected. French on the previous evening had made a list of all the enquiries he could think of which might conceivably throw light on the affair, and this visit to the telephone people was his first item.

His question here was a simple one. The installation numbered 4237 was in a certain shed in which the police were interested. Could he get a note of any numbers which had been in communication with this installation during the last eleven weeks?

The district manager said he was anxious to help the chief-inspector in any way in his power, but he doubted whether the information was available. As the chief-inspector doubtless knew the individual numbers of subscribers using the service were noted only in the case of trunk calls. These were kept until the accounts were made up and were then destroyed. There was therefore a chance that a record of trunk calls to or from the yard might be in existence. In the case of local calls the individual numbers of the subscribers involved were not noted, and no information could be given.

As he spoke the manager pressed a button, and a young woman appeared. She, it seemed, was in charge of the account in question, and he asked her to produce all details she had for the required period.

French, however, was out of luck on this occasion. After a short delay the girl reappeared to say that for the last three months there had not been a single trunk call to or from the number. There had not, in fact, been many calls of any kind, though there had been a few local ones.

Another of the routine lines of approach had petered out! Though he hadn’t expected much, French was disappointed. He looked up his book, ticked off the first item, and noted the second. This was a visit to the electricity station serving the area containing the shed.

Here he had slightly more success, though the information he received was not of great value. Like his predecessor in the telephone exchange, the manager rang up for an assistant as soon as he understood what was required. This time the summons was answered by a young man.

‘I think, Parkington, you dealt with that man Rice, who wanted the power point in his shed in Redliff Lane? This is a chief-inspector of police, and he would like to hear all about it.’

The young fellow, obviously thrilled, said that he could give all details.

‘This man Rice called here in person,’ the manager went on, ‘and asked to see someone in authority. I saw him myself. He said he had rented a shed in Redliff Lane for three months, and he wanted to install a temporary travelling lifting apparatus. He thought a pair of electrically-operated blocks on a runway would suit, and he wanted a point put in from which he could get the power. I discussed the simple business formalities required, to the terms of which he agreed. I then called Mr Parkington here, and he went down to the shed with Rice. Tell them, Parkington, what took place.’

‘I went down to the shed with him, sir, and he showed me where he wanted the runway. It was to go right round the shed in a sort of oval. I thought a single power point in the centre, connected with the motor by a flexible cable, would suit. Mr Rice agreed, and we had a plug put in. The flex, he said, would be supplied with the motor, so we had nothing to do with that.’

‘Can you tell me the capacity and the maker of the runway?’ French asked.

‘Mr Rice said it was to lift a ton, but he didn’t say where he was getting it. He said he only wanted a temporary job, as it was not his own shed, and it would be coming down in two or three months when he moved to his own premises.’

‘Then,’ the manager continued, ‘we had a letter from Rice saying he was giving up the shed. The current was cut off, a bill was sent Rice, he paid it, and the transaction closed.’

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