Authors: Piers Marlowe
The door opened again and Bill Hazard ushered in the visitor and Drury rose and pulled forward a chair.
âHow are you, Mr Bayliss?' he said, holding out his hand.
Peregrine Porter's chief clerk took it, and the grip of both men was firm and satisfactory to the other. Drury was a half-head taller than his visitor, stockier, filled out his clothes better. Tom Bayliss was beginning to give his desk stoop more prominence, and his limbs seemed slack.
So did the look in his eyes.
âOh, I can't complain, I suppose. No need to ask how you're keeping, Superintendent.'
âOver-worked, I'd say, if you did ask. That's the trouble with the computer age. The computers have to be fed, and they've got appetites like hungry work horses. They're never satisfied. I sometimes wonder if we don't have to feed them a ton to get back a few useful ounces.'
âYou sound prejudiced.'
âOh, I'm that all right. Ask Bill Hazard.'
Drury included the inspector with a wave of the hand. Hazard produced cigarettes and a lighter and after each man had taken in a couple of lungfuls of smoke Drury brushed aside the pleasantries and picked up the paper.
âYou rang up this morning because you'd seen it?'
Bayliss nodded through his cigarette smoke. âYes, I told you I would when I rang up the first time, the day after she'd come with the envelope.'
âDoes Mr Porter know you're here?' Drury asked.
Bayliss shook his head. âNo, he wouldn't approve, I'm sure.'
âYou're not telling us something we don't know, Mr Bayliss.' Drury tapped the ringed advertisement with a finger. âOr are you here to enlarge?'
There was a noticeable pause on the part of the visitor after this question had been put to him.
When Tom Bayliss spoke again he moved forward to the edge of his chair,
rocked to and fro a few times, then sat in a rather rigid pose staring somewhere just over Drury's left shoulder. The chief clerk appeared to be concentrating on his words.
He said, âIt's like this, Superintendent. I wanted to see you personally. About Miss Haven. But even more about Jeremy Truncard. I believe he's in love with her. I know he thought he was, and was miserable about her. I have a good idea she feels as much for him as for anyone, but I have never been able to decide that she could be in love with him. Or, indeed, in love with anyone.'
âYou suggesting she's a lesbian?'
Bayliss's eyes swerved a few inches and found Drury's face. He didn't look shocked, though he guessed Drury's tactics had been intended to shock something from him. If shock should prove the right means of separating him from something he didn't want to tell.
âNot that I know of,' he returned levelly. âI don't know a thing about her love life, if that's the term to use. I'm more concerned, as I told you, with
what a caper like this' â his chin jutted at the paper on the desk â âcould do to Jeremy Truncard.'
âHow did he take her other capers?'
âBadly. I told you, he was damned miserable about her.'
âHe told you?'
âI have a pair of eyes, Superintendent.'
Drury nodded, aware that he was being taken around in a circle, and anxious not to waste time. If Tom Bayliss was merely a damned old woman who felt he had to push his nose somewhere where his employer kept his own out and so clean, then Drury wanted to know.
âWhy the special interest in young Truncard?'
âHe's the grandson of old man Truncard, who started me in the firm. I feel â well, a mite responsible.'
âFor what?'
âFor seeing what I can do.'
âAbout what, Mr Bayliss?'
Tom Bayliss drew on the cigarette that had been smouldering between his fingers. A kind of withdrawn smile hovered over his features without settling.
âYou'd be good in court, with a wig and a gown spattered with cigarette ash.'
âI don't know enough law. You do, Mr Bayliss, and that's one reason why you've come to the police. Either you want to keep someone out of trouble or you want to make sure someone else doesn't create trouble for that person. My guess, from what you've said, is you're thinking Wilma Haven could make trouble for Jeremy Truncard, for whom you have a sense of responsibility that goes back to gratitude to his grandfather. Am I right?'
âNear enough.'
Drury lifted his brows. âWhere am I missing the target? Tell me. That's what I want to know.'
Tom Bayliss stretched forward and rubbed out his cigarette in the ashtray on Drury's desk. He did it ponderously and slowly, and with great attention, almost like a man defusing something that could explode in his face. He sat back in his chair, appearing to squirm a little. But Drury knew it wasn't a very comfortable chair. The Ministry of Works had very
primitive ideas about creature comforts.
âWilma Haven brought an envelope to the office the day she called to tell Mr Porter she was going to put this advert in the papers. She left it with me. It was sealed and there was an instruction in her own hand saying it was not to be opened until after her death.'
âDramatic, I suppose. But nothing new or novel,' Drury said, discounting the incident. âA will, a new codicil, a request. Some damned thing she's thought up to provide a new laugh for the Wilma Haven Fan Club.'
Drury looked at Bill Hazard for some show of approval, for there was none showing on the chief clerk's face. Hazard dutifully rocked his large frame with simulated mirth and made sniggering sounds that were like echoes of distant claps of thunder. But his eyes remained alert and watchful. Bill Hazard's attention was caught and he was interested in what was to come.
So was Frank Drury, but he wasn't prepared to reveal as much to his visitor.
âI don't think so,' Tom Bayliss said
seriously. âI've no idea what's in that envelope, but whatever it is I've a feeling I shouldn't like knowing it.'
Drury studied the face in front of him, while Bill Hazard stood motionless and making no sound.
âBecause of Jeremy Truncard?'
âI don't know.'
âBut you think it could concern him?'
Reluctantly Tom Bayliss nodded. âI think it could. I also know my boss. Whatever is in that envelope, if he has to open it upon the instruction written on it, he will do what he legally has to, no matter what the cost to anyone, even himself.'
Drury wasn't being dazzled by the prospect. He said, âA lawyer's job, after all.'
âI'm not a lawyer.'
âSo?'
âSo I think the police could be within their rights as preventors of crime by seeing Miss Haven, asking her what this advert really means.'
Drury was disappointed, but didn't show it when he said quietly, âWe've
no knowledge that a crime is about to be committed by Miss Haven.'
âRussian Roulette isn't exactly a game like crown and anchor or clock golf. The players have a revolver with five chambers blank and one filled with a cartridge, and they take it in turns to spin the cylinder and when it stops squeeze the trigger.'
âYou didn't have to explain how the so-called game's played, Mr Bayliss,' Drury admonished gently. âI know. I also know a few variants that are even more exciting if one wants to die in a hurry. But I don't know that Wilma Haven does. I've read what she's put in the paper â if she did have it inserted, and even that I don't know â but I don't know whether to believe it. She has a warped sense of humour, as a prosecution counsel once called it. She might be indulging in it again. Hence the fruit and vegetables. Pity she didn't add nuts. Or would that have been a giveaway?'
Tom Bayliss looked at him.
âYou're hard, Superintendent.'
âPossibly. I try to be a realist, Mr Bayliss. I have to or I wouldn't last
in this job. No.' Drury shook his head slowly, registering a firm negative. âUnless you can come up with a better reason, a much better one, I can't do anything about Wilma Haven or her stupid advertisement.'
His visitor sat there considering what he had just heard. He felt depressed, but told himself he had been expecting too much in coming at all. But he had to try. For Jeremy's sake. This thing could be bad for him if she went through with it.
He made his last try.
He said, âI think she's up to something. I think she's getting at someone. I don't know who, but I suspect that she feels that in this way she is going to score against that someone, and heavily. She always tries to do that. Against the Prime Minister, who didn't reply personally to a letter she sent him about an evicted family who had been turned out of their home by some damned Government department. Against a woman who had been at school with her and had been responsible for a young man becoming
a drug addict, then turned her back on him and married a title. Against a shop stewards' committee who managed to get a Jamaican ousted from his union and so left his family short of food â so she shot a deer to get the story in the papers.'
Drury interrupted quietly. âYou're not telling me anything I don't know, and most of the people in the British Isles as well.' Drury leaned back, watching the writhing lips of the man in the chair on the far side of his desk. âShe's up to something this time. All right, I can accept that. Tell me what it is, and I may be able to act. But I have to know more than you've told me because I can't just act on suspicion.'
âWhy not? She's got a record.'
âOf sorts, true. But she's also got a lot of sympathizers with the reasons that prompt her novel antics. If I knew she was intending to kill someone at this stupid Russian Roulette game, then I might be able to get some action with Home Office approval.'
âSomeone like herself?'
Drury dodged that by asking, âCan you
suggest anyone else?' and almost before the words were out knew what the answer would be.
âJeremy Truncard.'
âWhy?'
âHe'll see the advert. I think he is meant to. He'll turn up.'
âWhy?'
âTo stop her.'
âIs that a bad thing?'
âIt is if it's all designed to make him a laughing stock and through him his firm.'
A little grunt escaped the hitherto silent Bill Hazard. Tom Bayliss looked at the big inspector and let his gaze travel on to Drury's face. It now wore a more interested look.
âWhat does Jeremy Truncard do for a living?' he asked.
âHe's a research scientist.'
âAnd his firm?'
âIndependent Chemicals.'
Another deep grunt, half smothered, came from where Bill Hazard stood. Drury knew why. Hazard was recalling something that was no longer news. Since
the Government's decision to improve the effect of certain of the conventional firearms used by the armed forces, as a counter to a United Nations proposal for a further halt in the stock-piling of nuclear weapons, some sizable contracts had been given to a number of firms who had produced new ideas of destruction. One of the firms that had secured a number of valuable contracts was Independent Chemicals, who were said to have several new-style explosives that increased certain firing ranges by nearly fifty per cent and had a much greater destructive potential than any explosive used hitherto in police-action wars. Moreover, they had been reported as having an improved type of napalm that was still on the secret list, but which could cinderize bricks and mortar in mere minutes.
Drury thought he could figure what had hovered in hazy fashion at the back of Tom Bayliss's mind.
âWhat does Mr Porter say about it?' he asked.
âHe doesn't suspect.'
âYou've not discussed this with him?'
âI could be wrong.'
âThat's right, you could,' Drury said for effect, because he didn't want the other bouncing a fresh argument back at him too readily. âBut you don't think so.'
âTo be truthful, I don't know what the hell to think. I've had no sleep from thinking and trying to find an answer. I even tried ringing Jeremy at his research centre near Nuneaton. I was told he was away. That was all, away. No reason, no explanation. Just away.'
âThat worries you?'
âLike hell it does. She knows that. Of course she does. But she probably knows where he is. At one of Independent Chemicals' secret factories which has special security. So she can guess what he's involved in. She sees a way of blowing this thing up with her own explosive. The papers have played it down. In Parliament even the Opposition were careful not to be too damned awkward with their questions. In fact, there seems to be a conspiracy to get things moving now the decision has been
taken to stockpile new and improved conventional weapons. That could only mean one thing. They'll be made for other countries besides this.'
Tom Bayliss paused, panting as he had when he first phoned Drury some days back.
Drury said, âYou certainly have been thinking â hard. And it's all most interesting, but very speculative. I've nothing I can act on. Nothing positive. But of course I can make inquiries. I shall be in a position to mention the subject â only as a subject, of course â at a regular conference I attend. That might get action elsewhere. But I am C.I.D. Not Special Branch or one of the new secret departments that don't get written up by the regular crime reporters. I think I can promise you something. But it won't necessarily be much. I'll do what I can about Jeremy Truncard, but what I can do might be little. I can't go beyond this, and even so I'm making no promise, you understand.'
âI understand.'
When he left Scotland Yard, a few
minutes later, Tom Bayliss couldn't understand why he didn't feel easier in his mind. He had expected to draw a blank, and he had done something better than that although he could not decide how much.
As he came to a pillar box he paused, staring at it.
He seemed to be weighing something up in his mind. He put a hand in his pocket and took out a letter he had written, which was already stamped. It was addressed to Miss Wilma Haven, Broomwood, Hever, Kent.