Chief Inspector Maigret Visits London (13 page)

BOOK: Chief Inspector Maigret Visits London
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Chapter Twenty-four

However, much to the frustration of the local police, and Patrick Evremond, who also kept watch, The Recruiter did
not
visit the Evremond home that night. Patrick was there because he feared that a police slip-up might allow his sister's persecutor to slip through their net. He believed he was well-hidden in the shadows of the front garden of the house opposite, but the police knew that someone was there. So did Chief Inspector Scott after the local police contacted him to ask what they should do next.

‘I think there's a good chance that it's young Patrick Evremond,' he said. ‘So just keep an eye on him, but let him be for now. He's a good lad: he just trying to protect Genevieve, but he knows better than to get in the way if anything unexpected happens.'

In fact no one entered, or left the Evremond house that night. No one until 10 pm, that is.

‘Hello, who's she?' one of the local policemen asked as the front door opened and the figure of a woman was highlighted in the door-way. She closed the door quietly, looked around carefully, then walked quickly down the path towards the front gate.

‘Search me,' replied his partner. ‘But best to get on the phone again to see what Chief Inspector Scott thinks about it.'

‘What if he's already in bed? He won't be best pleased if we wake him up.'

‘That's a risk we'll have to take. And he did say that he wanted to be advised if anything happened, no matter what the time.'

‘Okay, fair enough.'

But Clive Scott was not in bed asleep, although he was in his PJs. Nor was he annoyed at being disturbed. ‘Well done, lads. Get one of the other patrol cars to continue the observation while one of you follows her on foot,' Clive Scott said, ‘discreetly, of course. Don't spook her. I trust you're using unmarked cars?'

‘Yes, of course we are, sir.'

‘Good. Let me know where she goes and what she does no matter what time it is. Understood?'

‘Okay, sir – will do.'

An hour later Clive Scott's phoned rang again. ‘Well? Where is she now?'

‘You'll never guess, sir.'

‘I don't blasted-well want
to guess; that's why I asked you!'

‘Sorry sir. She went to an address in Whitechapel, not far from the area where you-know-who did you-know-what.'

There was a sharp intake of breath from the other end of the phone line. ‘Are we talking Jack the Ripper territory, Sergeant?'

‘Yes, sir, you've got it in one. The house was smack bang in the middle of his favourite hunting ground.'

There was another intake of breath. ‘How did she get there?'

‘She walked to East Dulwich station, which was a fairly long way, then caught the train to Liverpool Street, and afterwards took a taxi. Young Conroy did well to keep up with her, but somehow he managed.'

‘If he was in uniform the game's up by now!'

‘No, he was wearing his usual clobber: jeans, windbreaker and baseball cap. We're training him for undercover work in the local clubs.'

‘Well done again, lads. Tell Conroy to keep watch for the next two hours then get someone to relieve him so he can go off duty. I want the house kept under observation all night. Understood?'

‘Yes sir, understood – will do.'

‘Now give me the address and I'll get the City of London police to check it out first thing in the morning. Do we know who the woman is?' Clive Scott asked, as he quickly wrote down the Whitechapel address.

‘Not really. Best bet seems to be she's one of the girl's nurses, although her behaviour was definitely suspicious. Or, at the very least, she was being ultra-cautious. Do you want me to ask Patrick Evremond?'

‘Yes, why not: then at least he'll know then that
we
know he's there. Tell him Clive Scott said he's to go back to wherever he's staying by midnight at the latest. Stress that it's important that he's fresh in the morning when he visits his sister. Remind him that I want him at the house by 9.30 am, but that he should keep out of sight until I signal him. And impress on him that we've got everything under control. Is all that clear?'

‘Yes, sir.'

‘But keep on your toes; we don't know what time the suspect might show up.'

‘Okay, sir.'

Ten minutes later Clive Scott's phone rang again.

‘It's Tom Moore, sir.'

‘Okay, Sergeant, spill the beans.'

‘Patrick didn't know the woman, but he sure got one hell of a fright when we pounced to ask if he did,' Tom Moore chuckled. ‘He really hadn't realised that we'd spotted him. I think he might go home quite soon now: probably he's suffered what you might call a… er… '

‘Let me guess; a clothing… er… embarrassment of some kind?'

‘Yes, I reckon he'll need a change of underwear, and sharpish!'

‘You guys ought to know better,' Clive Scott laughed, ‘the poor kid must have been scared witless. How long did it take him to stop shaking?'

‘A good few minutes, I reckon, sir.'

‘Well, that will do him no harm. He needed to be reminded that this is a dangerous situation to be involved in. Now goodnight, Sergeant: anything else happens, you'll have to use your best judgement and deal with it yourself. I'm off to my bed.'

‘Goodnight, sir.'

At 9.15 the next morning, the two Met officers, Chief Inspector Scott and Sergeant Gillespie, arrived at the Evremond home to find that Patrick was already there: lurking with intent, as Clive Scott said when he greeted him, before repeating that he should to keep out of sight until they called him. Also with the Scotland Yard officers was Mark Lucas, a genial police doctor with many years of experience, who would examine Genevieve, and take a blood sample from her when the time came.

To say that James Evremond was annoyed at finding himself arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud (passing dud £20 notes), would be an understatement. He stood on his front doorstep and he huffed, he puffed, then threatened to blow Scotland Yard's house down, by lodging a law suit against them for a huge amount of damages, on the basis of false arrest, defamation (of character), or police harassment. Any, or all
,
of those legal options, he shouted at them, would be at his disposal once he had seen his lawyer.

When he saw that Clive Scott remained completely unmoved by these threats, he tried a different approach. He would be
happy
to cooperate with Scotland Yard, he said, but that would have to be later, because he couldn't leave his house: his daughter was seriously ill, and one of her nurses was on holiday and the other one had not yet returned from her night off.

At that stage, Clive Scott played his trump card. He signalled to Deirdre Wilson, a young red-haired woman, who had been discreetly keeping out of the way while Evremond shouted and fumed at the police officers. Chief Inspector Scott brought her forward, and introduced her as a nursing sister specialising in intensive care work, who would take care of his daughter during his absence. This left Evremond without a leg to stand on, figuratively speaking.

So then he asked if he might say goodbye to his daughter, and Clive Scott said he could, but only if he was accompanied by Andy Gillespie, while Clive himself kept his size 13 shoe firmly wedged in the front door, so that the door could not be slammed in their faces.

After five minutes, or so, he and Andy reappeared, but Clive Scott had not expected what happened next. As he removed his foot from the doorway so that James Evremond and Andy could pass, Evremond turned quickly and pulled the door shut behind them. Now he was triumphant! If they wanted to get into the house they would either need a search warrant, he said, or his permission, which he would not be prepared to give.

At that point Chief Inspector Scott sighed deeply (in the style of Chief Inspector Maigret!) and played his ace card, which he had hoped to keep up his sleeve for much longer: he called Patrick Evremond.

When James Evremond saw his son his attitude completely changed. He went pale, his shoulders drooped, and he gave up the fight, although he glared at his son as their paths crossed. But neither of them spoke a word. Like father, like son, Andy Gillespie thought. But well done to Patrick who, although obviously upset, managed to hold himself together.

As James Evremond was bundled into a squad car and driven off to Scotland Yard at top speed, Clive Scott asked Patrick, in formal police-speak terms, if they had his permission to enter and search his family home, in the absence of a search warrant. He replied that they did, and handed the chief inspector the front door key.

Then the eight of them: the two Met policemen, three uniformed officers from the local force, the police doctor, the intensive care nurse, and Patrick Evremond, entered the Dulwich mansion. The moment he was inside, Patrick raced straight up the stairs, taking them two at a time. He stopped when he reached the landing, and peeked into his sister's room. He took one look at her: sitting quietly and patiently in the armchair next to her bed, his uncomplaining little sister, the image of their mother, but now so frail and ill, that he was unable to speak. At that moment Genevieve looked up, and when their eyes met, she smiled and held out her arms to him, and Patrick ran forward, falling to his knees in front of her chair, with his head resting on her lap. And there, while she gently stroked his hair, he sobbed until it seemed that his heart must surely break in two.

Chapter Twenty-five

‘Shall we go upstairs too, so I can examine the patient?' Dr Lucas asked, as he watched Patrick bound up the stairs.

‘No, Mark, not yet: let's be kind to them and give them ten minutes to themselves. Why don't you and Deirdre find yourselves a comfortable chair each while I get these lads organised,' he said, gesturing in the direction of the south London police officers.

‘Right-O, just give us a shout when you want us to go to work.'

With the medical team sorted, Clive Scott turned his attention on the uniformed officers. His instructions were very detailed and specific: firstly, he reminded them that they had no search warrant, which meant that their legal position was rather uncertain. ‘Be aware that we are pretty much in uncharted waters here, lads' was the way he put it, and because of this there was to be no “rough-house stuff”. In other words, no locked door, cabinet or drawer that they might come across was to be forced open. If they encountered such an obstacle they were to let either he or Andy Gillespie know immediately. Secondly, everything was to be left
exactly
the way they'd found it. Thirdly, they must wear forensic gloves at all times, and nothing – ‘repeat, nothing' – was to be removed without his permission.

‘Understood, lads?' he asked after he had read them his version of the infamous Riot Act,
7
and the officers nodded. ‘Good. Now off you go, and mind you do a thorough
search – I'll be prowling somewhere around the place, so if you need me just shout.'

Within a short while, one of the officers had come across just such an obstacle. It was a door, obviously leading to the basement, which was firmly, and substantially, locked.

‘Not to worry,' said Chief Inspector Scott, calmly extracting a large bunch of master-keys from his pocket. ‘I'm sure one or other of these will do the trick'. And he was right. ‘Why would the basement door be locked, when all the other cupboards, including Evremond's writing desk, are not?' Andy Gillespie puzzled.

‘That, Andy, is what we are about to find out,' his boss replied. ‘Wait,' he said to the officers who were about to charge down the basement stairs like bulls in a china shop, ‘you lads get yourselves a nice hot coffee from somewhere. Andy and I will do the honours with this search. And one of you is to stay on guard outside the front door. I want no one in or out without my permission.
Capisce?'
The officers nodded again.

‘Right, Andy, let's get on with it,' the chief inspector said as the officers left. ‘And put your damn gloves on!'

The basement was clean, neat and orderly, like the rest of the house, but in one corner they found something surprising: three medium-sized cardboard boxes, sealed up tightly, with Chinese characters written on them.

‘Well, well, well,' said the chief inspector, ‘what have we here? How's your Chinese, Andy?'

‘About the same as yours, boss. But I reckon you don't have to be a genius to work out that the words written all over in large letters might just mean something like
explosives
or danger.'

‘And I reckon you might be right, old son. Do you have your trusty Swiss army knife about your person anywhere?'

‘Never leave home without it, guv.'

‘Then get to work and open one of these blasted boxes!'

And when the box was opened, they had another surprise. Stacked in neat bundles were what looked to be nothing more than sparklers, the kind that were often used for Guy Fawkes' night, or children's birthday parties.

‘Why all the cloak-and-dagger stuff for this old tat, guv?' asked Andy Gillespie.

‘That's what we need to find out – and pronto,' his boss said.

So the uniformed officers were brought back into service to lug the boxes upstairs, but not before the chief inspector had stuck large “Evidence” stickers all over them. Then the boxes were taken off for examination by the Scotland Yard laboratory. And, when they were, it would be found that these were very different from the usual celebration sparklers, even though they looked much the same, if larger than usual. These sparklers were not meant for children's parties: these sparklers were absolutely
lethal.

As the boxes were driven off in a police van, Clive Scott's phone rang. It was Sergeant Tom Moore from the local police.

‘Sir, I thought you'd want to know that the woman who left the Evremond house last night looks like she might be on her way back to Dulwich. She's just left the Whitechapel address. The officer on duty took a photo on his mobile of the man who kissed her goodbye at the door. I'm sending it to your phone now.'

‘That's good work, Sergeant. Is the woman being followed?' ‘Yes, sir, and it seems like she's coming your way.'

‘She's definitely on her way back?' ‘A fiver of my hard-earned cash says she's doing exactly that, sir.' ‘Tell your officer not to lose her. Keep her under close observation. If she gets a train from Liverpool Street to East Dulwich let me know immediately. I want to be ready for her when she gets here.'

‘Will do, sir; over and out.'

When the photo came through onto Clive Scott's mobile, it was disappointing to say the least. The man's face was obscured by the woman's, which made identification impossible.

‘Cheer up, boss,' Andy Scott said. ‘At least we can see that he's tall, and that he has long dark hair.'

‘Yes, but is he our man? That's the $64,000 question,' his boss replied morosely.

While all this was happening, Dr Lucas and Sister Deirdre Wilson had finally gone upstairs to see Genevieve Evremond.

‘These people are here to help you, Ginny,' Patrick said, patting her hand, ‘one's a doctor, and the other's a nurse. I'll just be downstairs if you need me.'

‘Guilty as charged,' the fatherly Mark Lucas said with a cheerful wink. ‘And I promise that neither one of us bites! But first of all, we'll open the window to let some good fresh air into the room. In my experience that's always been the best way to start.'

After Patrick had left the room, Sister Deirdre helped Genevieve get back into bed. She was appalled by how weak she was, and thought, as she looked at her, that she already had the shadow of death on her sweet young face. Then she noticed the devilish Goat of Mendes head symbol hanging around the girl's pale neck.

‘Let's take this off, shall we?' she said gently, ‘so I can give you a good sponge bath later. I'm sure that will make you feel much better.' Nurse Wilson looked steadily across the bed to where Dr Lucas was standing and raised her eyebrows. Get that damned thing down to Chief Inspector Scott immediately, his eyes said. And careful with the way you're holding it. I'm sure he'll want to try to get fingerprints from it. The nurse nodded, and quietly left the room.

‘Now, sweetie,' he said, in his most reassuring voice, ‘I'm just going to take a little sample of blood from you, but I promise I will be quick and it will only hurt a tiny bit. How are you feeling today?'

‘I'm alright, thank you, Doctor. I'm happy now that Patrick's come home,' she said. ‘I was very frightened before he came, but now he's here I'm fine. I just don't want to die alone: that would be so sad, I think.'

There was not the faintest hint of complaint in her voice as she spoke. And that was what completely devastated Dr Mark Lucas.

BOOK: Chief Inspector Maigret Visits London
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