“No.”
“Because they destroy an entire city block. And blow off roof tiles from the surrounding buildings. That’s why we drop incendiary bombs, small ones, at the same time. They start fires better that way, you see? They have professors who figure all that out, but they stay at home. Wouldn’t it be funny if one of them lived here?” He laughed, a short, harsh spit of derision.
“Okay, Tom,” I said. “We need to go to the local police station and report this. Can you show us where it is?”
“Of course I can,” Tom said, turning on me as if I was an idiot. “If you’ll tell me why the death of three vile criminals means anything. Who will answer for this? Who will hang for this?” He pointed at the blasted houses; the stacks of brick awaiting rebuilding; the wet, muddy holes in the ground; as if the bombers were still circling overhead, high in the same sky where, hundreds of miles away, his Lancaster loaded with fourteen thousand pounds of high explosives had once flown over cities and towns, cratering neighborhoods and ending lives, bringing retribution to the nation that had started this terrible war.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
“He’s no danger to anyone,” Inspector Grange said. “There are simply times when he stops. Becomes lost in himself, so to speak.”
“He seemed fine when we found the bodies,” I said. We’d spent most of the morning with a detective sergeant from Newton Abbot, giving our statements and having our stories checked. It helped that he knew Tom Quick and had settled him at a desk with a cup of hot tea, the English cure-all. “It was a charnel house, but he held up fine in there.”
“As he would have done had the perpetrators been there to be apprehended,” Grange said. “My guess is that he saw the area was clear, but before he could return to you, the bomb damage drew him in.”
“How do you know he wouldn’t have frozen if we had been confronted by armed killers?” I asked.
“That’s not Tom’s problem,” Grange said, settling back in his chair and stuffing his pipe with tobacco. Quick was upstairs in his quarters, with David Martindale keeping him company. Kaz was on the telephone, reporting in to Colonel Harding. I was stuck trying to understand Tom Quick.
“He kept talking about bomb loads. Blockbusters, that sort of thing,” I said.
“That’s because he was a bombardier,” Grange said. “They called those big bombs ‘cookies,’ as if they were children at play. I suppose it makes it easier, somehow, to change the name of the thing.” He puffed on his pipe, studying the glow of the coals as if it were preferable to thinking about the obliteration of cities.
“So what is it, guilt?” I asked.
“Nothing so simple,” Grange said, blowing smoke toward the ceiling. “Tom was a good man on the force, the kind of constable you know will move up the ranks. But then the war came along, and he joined the RAF as soon as he could. Wanted to be a pilot, but washed out for some reason, so he made bombardier instead. He came home on leave after his first five missions. He said they’d been easy, mainly against airfields and other German installations in France.”
“Military targets,” I said.
“Yes. The RAF hadn’t yet begun the nighttime bombing. He came to visit and let slip that they were going to hit Bremen next, as soon as he reported back. He shouldn’t have said anything, but he was terribly excited about finally bringing the war home to Germany, after all England had suffered. I scolded him, of course, and swore I wouldn’t say a thing.”
“Where was home?” I asked. “Not the bachelor quarters here.”
“No. Tom had a lovely wife and two children, both little girls. They’d moved to Plymouth to stay with her parents when Tom joined up. It was April 1941 when he had that leave. He returned to duty, and that very night he flew off with his squadron, and they dropped their thousand-pound bombs on Bremen. At the same time, the Germans hit Plymouth. Scored a direct hit on the air-raid shelter in Portland Square. Seventy-two people were killed in that one shelter.”
“Tom’s wife and children among them,” I said, a terrible understanding growing in my mind.
“Yes,” Grange said, staring at his pipe. It had gone out. “The night he first dropped his bombload on a German city. He was devastated. Almost broken by it, as any man would be. Others might seek revenge, delight in wreaking havoc on the people who had done such a thing. But there was no sign of that with Tom. He had compassionate leave to bury his family, of course, and we all went to the funeral. Going to funerals was almost a full-time job during the Blitz.”
“How did Tom react?”
“Like the man he was. He returned to duty and completed his thirty missions. Then he fell apart, completely. Catatonic for a while. I spoke to his RAF doctor before I took him on here, and he said Tom felt he was murdering his own family every time they bombed a city. Which by then was nearly every mission. It didn’t help that he lost a good friend on his last flight. His rear gunner, I think it was.”
“Which is why you took him on as a War Reserve Constable,” I said, wondering if that was the Freddie he’d mentioned. “But not a regular officer.”
“Yes, I owed him that much. I try to pair him up with others, keep him busy. I don’t think the county constable would ever take him back as a regular if he saw his medical file. But I have some latitude with the War Reserve fellows, so I did what I thought best. He tells people he was invalided out of the service because of his leg wounds. He did take some shrapnel, but nothing serious. It’s a convenient and kind lie we all go along with.”
“Will he be okay?” I asked.
“He’ll snap out of it; he always does,” Grange said. “But if you mean will he ever be the old Tom Quick again? No, that man’s long gone.”
I left Inspector Grange to his pipe and wandered into the office Kaz had been given to make his call to SHAEF. He was just hanging up the telephone. “Colonel Harding says he agrees, the body is more than likely connected to Sabini. He told us to stay here until at least tomorrow. General Eisenhower may be coming down to Slapton Sands to watch a training exercise. I gave him the number for Ashcroft.”
“Okay,” I said. “Let’s collect David and head back.” I gave Kaz the basics about Tom Quick as we took the stairs to the constable’s quarters. Quick had a small but comfortable room with a dresser, easy chair, table, and bed. Not a place you’d want to spend every waking hour, but not bad for a good night’s sleep after walking a beat. I wondered where he’d go when the war was over-but the way things were going, that was a long time off.
“Sorry I caused such a fuss,” Tom said, sitting up in his bed, his tunic loosened.
“Nothing to worry about, Tom,” David said. “Rest up. They’ll have you back on the job in the morning. See you tomorrow night for a pint, all right?”
“Yes,” Tom said. “I’ll look forward to it.” They shook hands, two scarred airmen. If I had to choose at that moment which scar I’d carry if I had to, the Spitfire would win out over the Lancaster.
We drove back to Ashcroft in silence. A cool breeze blew the remaining clouds away, revealing achingly blue skies. A beautiful day. Sabini and his goons were on a police surgeon’s slab, Tom was coming out of his stupor, and David had found a new friend, someone who might understand what he’d been through. And we didn’t have to worry about German spies sneaking ashore at Slapton Sands.
The day could have gone worse.
“There you are, David,” Meredith said as she walked through the door, turning away from a man holding a woven basket heaped with produce. “Helen was asking about you. You should tell the poor girl where you are. Baron, Captain, did you kidnap our David again?”
“We’ve had quite an adventure,” David said. “Are we in time for tea?”
“Just,” Meredith said. “I’ll tell Mrs. Dudley you’ll be joining us. Crawford, I’ll take the strawberries.” She went off, clutching the basket of bright red berries.