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Authors: Frances Brody

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‘Why do you say that?'

‘Well it usually is, isn't it? Though I wouldn't have thought it. Marian is a respectable girl. She didn't have much money, which of us does? But she kept herself clean and tidy, kept regular hours, was happy with her job, always had her nose in a book, spent far too much on candles, ate like a bird, but was fond of custard, never had visitors or gentlemen callers, except…'

‘What?'

‘Now that I think of it, just before she left, there was this feller. He was hovering about, out there, by the wall. I didn't like the look of him. And I never would have connected him to Marian. He looked like he was up to no good. The kind you'd imagine might be spying out a house with an open window. Not that folk round here have much to steal. Me and mine, we're probably the best off around here but that's not saying a lot.'

‘Can you describe this man?'

She let out a puffing sound and pulled a face. ‘He were a biggish lout, dark hair a mess, cuffs short on his long arms. Bow legs.'

‘How biggish?'

‘Five foot nine mebbe, same as my lad, bit of an apish look. Swaggered off when he saw me looking. Could be summat or nowt but I hadn't seen him round this end before.' She handed me Marian's books. ‘Keep them for her. I hope you find her.'

‘Thank you.'

There were two novels, a childhood copy of
The Secret Garden
and Compton Mackenzie's
Carnival,
along with a French improver. So she had abandoned French.

Her job, her lodgings, her French; what else had she given up? And who was the loutish youth up to no good? I felt a sudden sense of dread.

Whether or not Marian proved to be Lady Coulton's daughter, it seemed that life may have dealt her a cruel blow.

Twenty

There were too many maybes and possibilities. Longing for something I could be certain of, I began the drive home.

What I wanted was for Sykes to appear, brandishing a copy of a marriage certificate. Mrs Jennifer Bradshaw married Mr Somebody or Other Montague.

What I wanted was a telegram from Sophia's old school friend: Sophia Wells took up a post in the Leeds Library, or the Harrogate Library, or Lands End, or John o' Groats. Anywhere, as long as it was definite.

An eerie sound greeted me as I opened the front door, odd discordant strains from the piano.

I opened the drawing room door. There sat the monkey, Percy, on the piano stool, striking keys with one paw. With the other paw, he turned the page of the sheet music, and inclined his head towards me, as if waiting for praise.

‘Clever Percy.'

Mrs Sugden had heard the front door. She came into the hall. ‘What a racket it's making. I hid the key to the piano, but it found it. Twice. Thinks it's a game.'

‘It doesn't help that I put something inside the piano that belongs to the monkey's master. That's why it sounds so awful, and it can't be doing the piano any good.'

I lifted the top and took out the sovereigns. Immediately, the monkey became interested and began to sniff the bag.

Mrs Sugden handed me an envelope. ‘This came, an answer to your telegram.'

‘That was quick. I thought Miss Davidson would be teaching and not see it till she got home.' I ripped open the envelope, hardly daring to hope for some proper information at last.

The message read:

DO NOT KNOW WHAT LIBRARY EMPLOYS SOPHIA
STOP
TELEGRAMS FRIGHTEN MOTHER
STOP

SEND NO MORE

BELLA DAVIDSON

With a deep sigh, I handed the telegram to Mrs Sugden. ‘Put that in the Coulton file folder please.'

Mrs Sugden glanced at it. ‘Oh dear, you know what's happened don't you? Bella was busy at her teaching. The old mother hurried all the way to the school carrying your telegram.'

‘Yes, and she's sickly. I've probably finished her off.' I flopped down in the chair. ‘I am completely at a loss. I don't know what to do.'

‘If you're stopping in here, I'll fetch a shovelful of the kitchen fire through.'

‘No. I'll keep my coat on while I think.'

‘I'll put the kettle on.'

The monkey had lost interest in the bag of coins and was rifling through papers on top of the piano. He brought me Dr Potter's student magazine.

‘Thank you, Percy.'

He nodded acknowledgement.

The magazine contained a couple of poems by other students, an account of a rag day and charity collection. There was a plea for contributions on topical interest, short fiction and poetry. I could see why Editor Potter made this appeal. Almost all the articles were by Horatio Erasmus Potter himself.

His account of the library ghost bore a close resemblance to Miss Merton's version, though with a little more detail. In the year 1884 on a dark night, gas lights having been extinguished, Mr McAllister, the librarian, was alone. He saw ghostly lights in the topography room. He caught sight of a pale face and a tall dark figure. Thinking this an intruder, he fetched a revolver and made a challenge, but the ghost vanished. In one crucial aspect young Potter's account differed from Miss Merton's. Before the librarian saw the ghostly lights and the spirit, he had heard a noise that disturbed him, a sound emanating from the bowels of the building. There was a hint that the ghostly intrusion was a student prank. The article ended with the words, ‘Play up and own up! Who perpetrated this jolly jape on a serious and conscientious librarian? Read the next issue.'

But, according to Dr Potter, there had not been another issue, and he should know.

Perhaps Dr Potter's livelihood had been more secure as a mathematician, but he would have made a good writer. I flicked through his pieces. Then, as later, he had a tendency towards the scurrilous. There was an article about an absconding solicitor, Mr Nelson of Nelson, Castle and Nelson. An executor in several wills, Nelson had disappeared with clients' funds. A young secretary had mysteriously gone absent at the same time. ‘Had they run off together,' Potter asked in his article, ‘to live a life of luxury on stolen money?'

The comment about the secretary must have been what Dr Potter was referring to when he said there was a disappearance. Perhaps he thought that Marian Montague had also eloped, carrying valuable books with her.

I wondered whether the Mr Castle in the law firm was a relation of our Mr Castle, library president.

The pages included a round-up of local news: the arrival of the fairground at Holbeck, the success of local brewers and a bicycle club outing.

I took the magazine into the dining room and placed it in my filing cabinet, out of the way of Percy.

It was no use. I had to do something more about finding Marian Montague, if only to eliminate her from enquiries, as the police would say.

Picking up the telephone, I braced myself to speak to Mrs Carmichael. It would appal her to know that I had gone in search of Marian, but that could not be helped.

She answered on the third ring.

‘Hello, I'm sorry to interrupt your afternoon. After we spoke at lunch, I became concerned about Marian Montague. I wanted to see her for myself, but she seems to have vanished. She is not at her lodgings. No one in the yard you pointed out knew anything about her.'

‘I don't understand. Why are you concerned?'

‘It's not something I can explain, especially over the telephone, but believe me, I have my reasons. I wonder if you might check her records and see whether there is a home address for the stepfather, or a referee who might know her whereabouts?'

She gave a great sigh, letting me know what a waste of time this was. ‘I'll look, if that's what you want, but I shall have to ask Mr Lennox if I am allowed to divulge the information. Are you at home?'

‘Yes.'

‘I will telephone back to you.'

I could not settle to anything else but picked up a pencil and waited by the telephone. It was just possible that Mrs Carmichael would shortly tell me that the school certificate presented by Miss Montague was in a different name: Wells.

It was a good ten minutes before the telephone rang.

‘Mrs Shackleton speaking.'

‘Hello, it's me. A most extraordinary thing … her records have gone. I have the most particular filing system and there is nowhere else they could be. It would not surprise me if she found her way in here and destroyed them, so as not to be traced and charged with theft.'

‘I see, well thank you for looking.'

The apprehension I had felt for Marian earlier turned to a kind of fear. I was suddenly chilly, my hands like ice.

As I disconnected the call, Mr Sykes arrived. I saw straight away that he must have had about the same amount of luck as I. None.

I picked up my mittens. ‘Let's go outside and take a turn around the wood, Mr Sykes.'

We went out of the back door and through the garden onto our well-trodden path through Batswing Wood. The air was fresh and clear, the sky surprisingly blue and hosting busy white clouds.

Sykes thrust his hands deep into his pockets. ‘There are no records of Mrs Bradshaw having remarried, not in Leeds anyway. As to answers to advertisements, I picked up two more and followed through but without success.'

I told him about the telegram from Sophia's friend.

He sighed. ‘I've kept on trying regarding libraries. I visited Central Library and some local branches. No one has heard of her. It's as if she and her mother have vanished into thin air.'

Someone had spread crumbs on the grass for the birds. A couple of magpies pecked greedily.

‘Mr Sykes, I told you about my hunch, my theory, that Sophia Mary Ann Wells and Marian Montague are one and the same person.'

‘Yes. It's the kind of theory to come up with when you meet a dead end.'

‘Marian was dismissed from the Leeds Library. Being a private library it is not linked in with the municipal libraries, except on a friendly basis between librarians. Anyhow, her staff records have disappeared. Am I making too wild an assumption in presuming Marian to be Sophia Wells?'

‘Anything is possible. Even if you are wrong, it's worrying if a lone young woman has disappeared, thief or no thief.'

‘Dr Potter was concerned about her. I see that now.'

‘Our only hope is for better answers to our newspaper advertisement.'

‘I can't bear to just do nothing.'

‘Mrs Shackleton, tomorrow it will be a week since you saw Lady Coulton. No one could have done more than we have. It's a matter of time.' We slowed our steps as a robin perched, cocking its head to one side as if posing for a photograph. ‘What else can we do but wait?' Sykes asked. ‘I would suggest having a printer run off some letters that we could send to every library in the county, but we have only the friend's word that Sophia works in a library.'

‘I'm going to the police, about Sophia, and Marian.'

‘They'll love you, with a murder investigation going on.'

‘What murder investigation? Inspector Wallis has found a convenient culprit.'

‘It's too soon to feel defeated. We're not beat yet. This isn't like you.'

I stepped into a crunchy pile of leaves that had been protected against the rain.

‘I can't bear to do nothing. What if while we wait and wait, Lady Coulton dies?'

Twenty-One

The corridors of police headquarters ran wick with men stomping about in an important fashion, carrying pieces of paper. I could hear the tap tap of typewriter keys and the sound of raised voices. Don't hesitate, I told myself. Act as if you belong here and know exactly where you are going.

The inspector was not in his office.

For a moment or two, I lingered in the corridor, wondering what to do.

It surprised me that I recognised his footsteps on the stairs. He has a steady, unhurried tread and shoes that made a clickety-click from the metal segs on his heels.

I stood by his door, acting sentry.

‘Hello, Mrs Shackleton.' He showed no surprise.

‘Hello. I've brought you Dr Potter's student magazine.'

‘Ah yes, thank you. You could have left it downstairs.'

Determined not to appear the complete supplicant, I handed him the magazine. ‘There's something else, something I meant to tell you, and I have a request, too.'

‘Will it take long?'

‘No.'

‘Come in.'

This time he did not sit behind his desk but brought a chair from by the wall and placed it near the one at the front of his desk.

‘What's the request?'

‘One of the counter assistants from the library, Marian Montague, aged twenty-four, was dismissed on suspicion of stealing.'

‘Go on.'

‘She protested her innocence.'

‘Of course.'

‘And now she has gone missing from her lodgings. I think Dr Potter was worried about her. He mentioned a previous disappearance, which is in his article. A solicitor embezzled his clients' money and made off with a secretary. I don't see the connection but it made me wonder.'

‘What is your own interest in Marian Montague?'

Was I that transparent? ‘I am searching for a missing person, Sophia Mary Ann Wells. For all sorts of reasons, I believe that she may have been using the name Marian Montague.'

He raised an eyebrow. I hoped he would not ask me what reasons, but he did. ‘What makes you think she is the same person?'

‘Her age, appearance, that Marian could easily be preferred to Mary Ann, which was the name she used at school. Mrs Bradshaw, the mother, was about to remarry and that could explain a new surname. I have information that Sophia took a job in a library.'

‘I saw your announcement in the papers on Saturday.'

‘So far all our enquiries have come to nothing.'

‘Surely it is early to be giving up?'

‘There is some urgency to the search.'

BOOK: Death of an Avid Reader
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