“What about the banking hall?”
“The records won’t be there. In any case, everything in the banking hall will be tightly locked.”
Daisy lit the fire and then waited impatiently. Outside, she could hear the scraping of shovels and then the swish of brooms as the street-sweepers got to work. A shaft of sunlight suddenly shone down through the grimy window.
Then there came a banging at the front door. Daisy stayed where she was, nervously chewing at a thumbnail.
She heard the clerk running down the stairs. She stood up and opened the door of her office a crack. She heard the doorman complaining that he had a bad leg and it had taken him ages to struggle through the snow and then a female voice. Mrs Danby. Oh, where was Rose?
An hour passed. Daisy was just about to go out and up the stairs in case Rose was in trouble when the door opened and Rose slipped in.
“Where have you been?” hissed Daisy.
Rose sank down in her chair. “It took me ages. But I’ve got some interesting information. Get on your coat and hat, Daisy. We’re going to Scotland Yard. I telephoned Detective Superintendent Kerridge.”
“But what about old Danby?”
“We’ll just need to risk her not knowing we even turned up for work.” They covered their typewriters and put on their coats, hats and gloves. Opening the door of their office, they crept out. To their relief, they could hear the doorman complaining about his leg to someone in the banking hall off to the left of the main door.
“Quickly,” said Rose.
∨ Hasty Death ∧
Four
Curs’d be the Bank of England notes, that tempt a soul to sin.
Sir Theodore Martin
Detective Superintendent Kerridge found he was looking forward to meeting Lady Rose again. After he had received her telephone call, he had in turn phoned Captain Cathcart. It pleased him to think they would all be together again, as they had been during that investigation the previous year at Telby Castle.
Kerridge was a grey man: grey hair, grey eyebrows, heavy grey moustache. He stood at the window of his office looking out at the Thames, and while he waited, he wrapped himself in one of his favourite dreams. In his mind he was a thinner, younger Kerridge manning the barricades at the People’s Revolution of England. “Down with the aristocrats!” he yelled and his supporters cheered. A beautiful young girl threw her arms around him and kissed him on the mouth. Kerridge blinked that part of the dream away. It was wrong to be unfaithful to his wife, even in dreams.
The door opened and Inspector Judd ushered Harry Cathcart in. “What’s this all about?” asked Harry.
“I received a telephone call from Lady Rose. She says she has vital information concerning the death of Freddy Pomfret.”
“I don’t know how she could have come by any information about society at all in her present occupation.”
“Which is?”
“I’d better see if she wants to tell you.”
The door opened again. “Lady Rose Summer and Miss Levine,” announced Judd.
“Your maid may wait outside,” said the detective, who had met Daisy before.
“Miss Levine is no longer my maid. She is my friend. She may stay.”
“Where’s Becket?” asked Daisy.
“In Chelsea,” said Harry. Daisy’s face fell.
“What are you doing here?” demanded Rose.
“I was summoned by Mr Kerridge,” said Harry, looking at Rose and thinking that a working life did not suit her. The hem of her coat was soaking from melted snow, her face was thinner and her eyes tired.
“Please sit down,” ordered Kerridge. “Tea?”
“Oh, I would like tea,” said Rose, “and perhaps some biscuits. We are very hungry.”
Kerridge picked up the phone and ordered tea, biscuits and cakes.
“Now, Lady Rose,” he said. “Tell me what you have found out.”
“Miss Levine and I have been working as typists at Drevey’s Bank.”
“Why were you working as a typewriter?” asked Kerridge, who did not approve of new-fangled words like ‘typist’.
“Because I wished to earn my living.”
“But you are taking employment away from some woman who really needs it,” said Kerridge.
“On the contrary. Captain Cathcart here arranged the work and it is make-work. Neither Miss Levine nor I are doing anything constructive. But if we could move on from your radical views, sir…”
“Go on.”
“For a short time I was working for a Mr Beveridge as his secretary. While I was in his office, one of the clerks came in and said something about large sums of money being deposited in Freddy Pomfret’s account.
“Today, because of the snow, the bank was quiet, few having turned up to work. I went upstairs and searched until I found a statement of his account. During the last few months, three large sums of money were paid into that account. Each for ten thousand pounds.”
“Who gave him the money?”
“Lord Alfred Curtis, Mrs Angela Stockton, and Mrs Jerry Trumpington. I think,” said Rose triumphantly, “that they were being blackmailed.”
“People lose a lot of money at cards,” Harry pointed out.
“Not for the same amount of money.”
“Lady Rose has a good point there,” said Kerridge, and Rose flashed Harry a triumphant look. “His flat had been turned over, papers thrown everywhere, but his jewellery was left and fifty pounds in a desk drawer. So what do you know of those three?”
“I met Mrs Jerry last year, Mr Kerridge,” said Rose, “and so did you. Large, gross sort of woman.”
“I remember.”
“I do not know Mrs Stockton or Lord Alfred.”
“I do,” said Harry. “Mrs Stockton is a widow. She married an American millionaire who died soon after they were wed. Lord Alfred Curtis is a willowy young man. One of the lilies of the field.”
“The whole lot of them are lilies of the field,” grumbled Kerridge. “A hard day’s work would kill ‘em.”
“Now, now, Mr Kerridge. You have before you three representatives of the working class and we are very much alive.”
“Sorry. I’ll follow this up, Lady Rose. We shall ask all three why they paid him that particular sum of money.”
“You know,” said Harry, “I bet all three say that Freddy was on his uppers and asked for that specific amount to clear his debts. If you like, I can start asking a few questions.”
“And I,” said Rose eagerly.
They were interrupted by the arrival of the tea-tray. Harry watched as Rose and Daisy enthusiastically munched their way through cakes and biscuits. “You are hungry,” he said.
“We ate very well last night,” said Rose, “but today we have had neither breakfast nor lunch because of the difficulty in getting to work through the snow and then in getting here. As I was saying, I can help further with the investigation.”
Harry suddenly saw a way of restoring Rose to her parents. “You cannot do anything while you work at the bank – anything further, I mean. But were you to go back to your rightful position, you would be able to move freely in society again.”
“Good idea,” put in Daisy fervently, thinking of a blissful end to days of typewriting and evenings of cheap food.
“Yes, I suppose that would be a good idea,” said Rose, struck by a sudden vision of long hot baths and clean clothes.
“You have no objection, Mr Kerridge?”
“No, I shall be glad of any help. But do remember, Lady Rose, someone murdered Freddy Pomfret and will be prepared, no doubt, to murder again.”
“Then, Daisy, we will return to Eaton Square and tell the servants to collect our belongings, and Captain Cathcart can inform the bank that we will not be returning there.”