“What did Mrs. Dumpty say in her suicide note?” mused Mary.
“‘I went to his home and prayed for God to forgive me as I pulled the trigger.’”
“Only when we came around to interview her,” continued Mary,
“she didn’t know we were investigating something that had happened that morning—she must have thought we’d just discovered the body.”
“It explains why Dumpty had been lying low,” added Jack. “He obviously didn’t want her to have a second go at him.”
He stared at the skeleton in the shower basin.
“I reckon he’d only just discovered Tom Thomm’s body when Lola saw him.”
“Why didn’t he report it?” asked Mary.
“Because,” said Jack simply, “he was up to no good—and up to no good big time. But it still doesn’t tell us where Humpty had been living this past year.”
“So… are we any closer to who killed Humpty?”
“We know they used a .44-caliber handgun, that it’s probable Winkie saw them do it and—” He thought for a moment. “And that’s about it.”
The rain had stopped by the time they stepped out of the building. The sky had darkened even though it was barely midafternoon, and cautious motorists had switched on their headlights, causing the wet road to glisten. The doorman, inspired by all the activity, had put his pillbox hat on at a jaunty angle and saluted as they walked past.
“Briggs called,” said Baker as he saw them to the Allegro.
“Let me guess. Press conference?”
“In one.”
30. Another Press Conference
CRIME BOSS JAILED
Notorious racketeer and underworld crime boss Giorgio Porgia was found guilty yesterday on 208 counts of “undertaking home improvements with menaces.” The court heard that Porgia and his gang would routinely use threats, violence and intimidation to sell unwanted home improvements to frightened residents. Loft conversions were carried out where no loft had been; double glazing was replaced up to seven times on the same property, and houses were unnecessarily rewired using string. Porgia was sentenced to thirty-five years in prison, having already pleaded guilty to token charges of wanton lack of taste, poor color harmony and badly aligned wallpapering. He was also banned for life from owning a conservatory.
—From The Toad, March 2, 1984
“…but what was actually said at that fateful tea party, it was impossible to ascertain,” continued Chymes while the pressroom stared at him, hanging on his every word, “until I devised a forensic technique which I call ‘cake-crumb scatter-pattern identification.’ This works on the principle that if someone eats cake while talking, the crumbs are ejected from the mouth at different rates according to the syllables of the words spoken. By analyzing the pattern of crumbs on the tablecloth, I was able to deduce that the conversation was not about the weather, as Mrs. Pitkins claimed, but the subject of the misdiagnosis of botulism poisoning, a line of questioning that we were able to bring to our suspect, who soon confessed everything in a tearful scene that made a fitting end to the whole painful inquiry.”
Friedland was greeted by the usual standing ovation, which he modestly dismissed with a wave of the hand. There were a few technical questions about his new technique, regarding varying weights of the component parts of the cake and how far you might project a chocolate sprinkle when pronouncing “psoriasis,” something Chymes deftly answered with complicated diagrams on an overhead projector as DS Flotsam gave out printed copies of all the details.
Jack, Briggs and Mary were watching from the door of the anteroom.
“What am I doing here?” asked Jack. “I’ve got nothing really substantial to add—I don’t really know if Winkie’s death was even connected.”
“It’s from the seventh floor, Jack.” Briggs said it without enthusiasm. Someone was leaning on him.
“What’s going on, sir?”
Briggs looked down and rubbed his forehead. “The Guild is very powerful, Jack. I’m sorry.”
Before Jack could even begin to think what he might mean, Chymes strode past them as he walked out of the pressroom. He went back on to take a curtain call but then came off again, glared at Jack with a confident smile and said, “You want the heat, Jack? Try the fire.”
And he joined Flotsam and Barnes on the other side of the anteroom, where they attended to him as a manager looks after a boxer who has just come out of the ring.
Usually Jack waited for the journalists to file out, as they generally made a lot of noise, and if Archibald or anyone else was polite enough to stay, he would at least be heard. But today was different. Today no one filed out. There was silence. For a moment Jack thought Chymes was about to go back on, but he had already started to discuss the possibility of solving the Slough Thuggee cult murders in time for the early-evening news the following day.
“Sir,” said Mary as she leaned around the door to peer at their expectant faces, “I think they’re waiting for you.”
“That’s not possible,” replied Jack, his heart missing a beat. He looked at Briggs, who wouldn’t catch his eye. He’d clearly been set up.
“Shit.”
“What?” asked Mary.
“I’m going to be boned out there.”
“You can refuse to go on.”
“If it’s not now, it will be later. No, let’s get it over with.”
He walked on to the symphonic clatter of camera motor drives.
“Good afternoon,” he began, feeling what he imagined was something akin to bowel-moving stage fright. “My name is Detective Inspector Jack Spratt, and I am head of the Nursery Crime Division here at Reading Central. On Monday morning at approximately one A.M., Humperdinck Jehoshaphat Aloysius Stuyvesant van Dumpty was murdered by a person or persons unknown as he sat upon a wall at his place of work. He died instantly. At present we are unable to state a motive.”
Josh Hatchett asked, “How was he killed?”
“He was shot.”
A murmur went through the collected newsmen. So far this wasn’t going too badly.
“Do you have any suspects?”
“We have a woman named Elizabeth ‘Bessie’ Brooks. We will be issuing a photograph after the press conference. In a separate development, Mr. William Winkie, Humpty Dumpty’s next-door neighbor, was found murdered in Palmer Park this morning. We are not ruling out the possibility of a connection.”
“Is Mrs. Garibaldi-Dumpty’s suicide connected to Mr. Dumpty’s death?”
“It is a direct consequence of it, yes.”
Hector Sleaze had been staring at what looked like a hastily photocopied list of press cuttings.