Read Death of an Avid Reader Online
Authors: Frances Brody
When I reached the stairs, Lennox was calling. âWhere are you?'
There was fear in his voice.
We met halfway. There was a long, awkward moment when he froze and I could have squeezed passed him.
âThere is no point in going down there, Mr Lennox.'
He let out his breath and turned.
I followed him back up.
At the top of the stairs, when he was seated once more, I broke the dreadful news. âDr Potter is dead.'
âDr Potter?'
He looked so pale, so shaken. There was something odd about his response, as if he was not surprised about the death but about the identity of the deceased.
âDid you telephone the police, Mr Lennox?'
He shook his head. âI didn't. I hoped I was mistaken.' He stared at me. âDr Potter. What was he doing there?'
âI don't know. Father Bolingbroke is with him, giving him a blessing.'
I was still holding
Gothic Ornament.
He stared at it, his mouth dropping open. âWhatâ¦?'
âWe had better telephone.'
As we climbed the stairs to the balcony, my legs felt heavy as lead. If the ghost I did not believe in had appeared at that moment, I would have not have been surprised.
I pushed open the door marked
Private.
Inside, I placed the valuable book on the table.
Lennox stared at it, as though it might offer an explanation. â
Gothic Ornament.
Why was
Gothic Ornament
in the basement?'
I picked up the telephone receiver and handed it to him. He shook his head and took a step back. âYou say he is dead. Could you be mistaken?'
âNo.'
âThen
you
tell them.'
Within moments, I was connected to Leeds City Police. When I reported the death of Dr Potter, under suspicious circumstances, it was as if someone else was speaking.
After I replaced the receiver, Lennox said, âSuspicious?' He sat down in his chair. âHow could this happen?'
âDoes he have a family?' I asked.
âI don't think so.'
âThe police will need his address, his next of kin.'
âIt's in the share register.' He stood, as if suddenly glad that he could do something. He opened a drawer of the filing cabinet. In the silence of the room, it made a grating clatter. He took out a folder and placed it on the desk.
He opened the folder and took out a list of names, neatly typed in alphabetical order.
Dr Potter had two addresses, one the Department of Mathematics at the university, and the other âThe Big Bothy', Weetwood.
Mr Lennox is a man of methodical habits. He placed a ruler under the name and address.
Once more
Gothic Ornament
caught his eye. He picked it up, walked to a cupboard, opened it and placed the book inside.
As if this action had broken a spell, he came back to the desk, picked up the telephone and dialled a number. âThe Leeds Club,' he said to me, putting his hand over the mouthpiece. After a moment he said, âI need to speak to Mr Castle.'
âDon't say anything over the telephone, Mr Lennox. We must wait for the police.'
âHe must be told. We cannot keep this from the president.'
âThe police will tell him.'
Lennox cleared his throat. âIt's me, Lennox.' A pause. âYes, I'm still at the library, and something has occurred. I wish you would come.'
I did not want to listen any more. I went downstairs to do what one must in these situations: find the kettle.
Only when I was alone, in the tiny room not much bigger than a cubbyhole, lighting the gas ring to heat water and staring at the blue flame, did it fully hit me how appalling this was. Dr Potter is such a brilliant man, so charming, so full of life.
Just a few short hours had passed since we met on the stairs and he joked about Mr Lennox having framed that old cutting about the library's acquisitions. Had Dr Potter intended to play a practical joke by taking a valuable book into the basement and then saying, I told you to be more careful with our treasures, Mr Lennox?
Everything about our encounter took on a new significance: the recommendation that I read his undergraduate magazine articles from forty years ago, about the ghost, and about a disappearance. What was it he had said? Where is the lovely counter assistant? She was the only one who would go willingly into the dreadful basement.
I wished I had known him better. Dr Potter was a bright light in a dull world, always slightly comical in committee meetings yet with an underlying seriousness, as if about to immerse himself in the most important business of ⦠what? Mathematics, I supposed. What were his personal circumstances? I had no idea. The question never arose. But he was always alone. What else might he have said to me had we spoken longer?
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Inspector Wallis arrived, with Sergeant Ashworth and PC Hodge, the beat bobby. That was only the start of the comings and goings. They were followed by a medical man, the coroner's officer and a photographer. Finally, stretcher bearers, accompanied by Sergeant Ashworth, took away Dr Potter's body.
Father Bolingbroke had left after giving his address to PC Hodge. I could have left too but was anxious to give an account of my chat with Dr Potter earlier in the day, while it was still fresh in my mind, just in case there was some clue as to why this terrible thing had happened.
I had heard Mr Castle arrive from the Leeds Club that is in the adjacent street, a few yards away. Mr Lennox greeted him with great relief.
I was once more tucked away in the little room with the kettle but overheard Mr Castle and Mr Lennox. I caught snippets as they talked, Lennox reliving his experience.
âDreadful ⦠knew straight away ⦠saw his pale fingers ⦠dead â¦
Gothic Ornament â¦
a mistake ⦠wrongâ¦'
Mr Castle spoke in low, measured tones of reassurance. â⦠not wrong ⦠poor Potter ⦠such a brain ⦠where isâ¦'
I heard my name, and Lennox saying he thought I had left with Father Bolingbroke.
Reluctant to be drawn into conversation, I slipped away to the ladies' room where I washed my face, looked at my blotchy skin in the mirror, and tried to keep from crying.
When I emerged, I heard footsteps, followed by the click of the door closing. I went to look out of the window into the foggy night. After a few moments, two figures came out of the doorway below, Castle and Lennox, library president and librarian. Castle is over seventy years old, but strong and upright. Watching them from above, it appeared that the older man was almost supporting Lennox who leaned towards him. When they disappeared into the gloom, the window turned grey-black and blank, as if a blind had been drawn down.
I was aware of someone nearby and turned to see PC Hodge.
He gave a small, friendly smile. Sympathetic. âQuite a shock for you, madam. Are you all right?'
âYes. The librarian, Mr Lennox, took it very hard. I think that helped me to steel myself.'
âThat's the way sometimes, Mrs Shackleton. The sergeant has gone to the mortuary, with the deceased. I'm to take your statement, but is there anyone you would like me to telephone for you?'
âNo, I'll be all right, thank you.'
âLet's find a couple of chairs, eh?'
We walked towards the committee room. âWith Mr Lennox gone, who will lock up the library?'
âThe inspector has taken charge of the keys. The library won't be opening tomorrow morning. We'll take care of that, too.'
Once we sat down, the constable took out his notebook. âI know the chap who works with you, Jim Sykes.'
Something in the constable's voice told me that he and Sykes probably did a good turn for each other now and then. âI'll tell Mr Sykes you were here.'
Before we had time to begin, a piercing noise interrupted, the sound of a police whistle, coming from the basement.
âSorry about this.' The constable put the notebook back in his pocket as he hurried away.
The clock on the mantelpiece ticked loudly. The fire crackled.
I should not be here. I have a case in hand. Perhaps it was to escape from the awfulness of the present, but a thought struck me. There was another way we might trace Sophia Wells and her mother. Mrs Bradshaw, having experience of work in a fishmonger's, may have returned to that work. I must remember to tell Sykes. He could make enquiries along the wet fish row in Kirkgate Market. One of the stall holders may know of the family from Scarborough.
Not much more than five minutes had passed when the constable returned, a little out of breath. âYou are a nurse, Mrs Shackleton?'
Sykes must have told him. âYes, I served with the Voluntary Aid Detachment during the war.'
âYou better come. There's another one, in a bad way.'
Following PC Hodge, once more I took the steps to the lower floor.
I had begun to realise how large an area the basement covered, extending the width and length of the entire building, which includes adjacent shops. PC Hodge thankfully made a wide detour, avoiding the area where the bookshelves had tumbled, or been toppled, onto the unfortunate Dr Potter.
At the far side, in a corner, a few yards from the steps that must lead to the alley where I found the fez, I saw the inspector. He was standing over someone who lay very still.
I caught the smell from the poor creature before properly seeing him.
Inspector Wallis shone his torch on the man who was curled in a foetal position.
âI'd be obliged if you'd take a look at him. No broken bones that I can see but he is in a bad way.'
As I bobbed down, I realised why the inspector had not wanted to come too close to the man. I knelt beside him. His breath came in short, rasping gasps. He shivered. His forehead burned with fever. Looking into the man's mouth, I saw that his tongue was coated. There was a strong smell of diarrhoea and urine. A sudden coughing fit racked his body; congested lungs.
As the inspector said, no bones were broken.
âHe has broncho-pneumonia. The sooner you get him out of here into the warmth the better.'
Burly Constable Hodge needed no other prompt from me. He took up his position, waiting a second or two for the nod from his boss, then handed me his torch and picked up the man in his arms. As he moved him, the stench became stronger. God knows how long the poor man had lain there.
âI'll follow you up,' the inspector said. âHodge, telephone for an ambulance.'
âSir.'
As the constable and I moved away, the inspector shone his torch around the floor where the man had lain.
Holding the flashlight, I led us back, keeping to the wall.
At the bottom of the stairs, Hodge said, âYou better go first, madam.'
The constable made his slow way behind me towards the only warm room. Looking a little red in the face, he lay down his burden on the hearth rug. âHe's skin and bone, but heavy.'
There was a drop of stewed tea in the pot. I poured a cup, added sugar, and put it to the semi-conscious man's lips. Constable Hodge raised the man's head. Between us, we managed to help him take a few drops.
âWhat's your name, chum?' Hodge asked.
The man groaned and wheezed. He was beyond saying his name. Perhaps he was beyond reach of being kept in this world. His breath was laboured. He made a rattling sound as he exhaled. His chest rose and fell under the colourful waistcoat.
âI'd better phone for that ambulance.'
âThe office is up the stairs, off the balcony.'
âThanks.'
The man's hair was black and wavy and his eyebrows bushy. He sported a sorry stage-villain handlebar moustache. Under his pallor, olive skin gave him a foreign look and the suggestion of a life lived outdoors. He wore a knitted waistcoat in garish colours, green, red and yellow. I had seen those colours before, and not long ago. The garment was simply made; knit a row, purl a row. Whoever clicked needles for the monkey's coat had also produced this colourful creation. It was the work of a child, an inexpert knitter, or perhaps the man himself; the organ grinder who had lost his monkey.
As he moved, the man winced. There was something heavy strapped to his middle. It was a makeshift money belt, with tapes slotted through a hessian bag. I undid it for his comfort, and then glanced in the bag: gold sovereigns, and plenty of them.
It was the action of a few seconds. I heard a sound, reached for my satchel and put the bag of sovereigns and the tapes inside. I could not have said why, except that it seemed the right thing to do. Once I had done it, I fastened the satchel, telling myself that all our efforts must be on the man himself, without the distraction of something that might suggest guilt or raise suspicion. He needed to be in hospital, not in a cold cell.
Inspector Wallis opened the door and stepped inside. âHow is he?'
âBadly. I could do with a wet towel for his forehead. There's a gentlemen's lavatoryâ¦'
He spoke somewhat brusquely. âRight. I'll fetch a towel.'
Inspector Wallis and I have twice come into contact with each other and each occasion has been somewhat fraught. The first time was when my Scotland Yard friend, Marcus Charles, came north and took charge of an investigation that Inspector Wallis would have preferred to deal with himself. The other occasion was social and should not have caused rancour but I believe he had taken against my outbidding him at a charity auction for a hideous indoor plant that I imagine neither of us wanted. I would not have minded but my bid was entirely accidental. I had been adjusting my hat.
This evening would provide ammunition enough for Leeds City Police to shoot scorn at their local lady detective. What was she doing in the library at that time on a Friday night? She was shooing away ghosts and ghouls, with a papist priest and a helpless librarian.
The inspector returned with a damp towel, which he had folded. He handed it to me. I placed it on the man's brow.