Read The Death Collector Online
Authors: Justin Richards
Sir William paused, took off his glasses and polished them on the corner of his jacket. âThere is a mystery here, Mr Archer and Miss Oldfield,' he told them. âSomething is happening that may challenge our understanding of the scientific world. And, with your help, I mean to discover what.'
There was silence for several moments after Sir William had finished. Sir William regarded his audience
carefully, the light glinting on his spectacles as he replaced them and waited for their reaction.
Liz spoke first. âIt is very generous of you to take us into your confidence, Sir William.'
âAnd we do appreciate the need for complete secrecy,' George added, looking at Liz.
Sir William nodded seriously at this. But his manner changed in an instant as a voice called from the doorway:
âSo who was this Glick bloke, anyway?' Eddie stepped into the room. âI only ask 'cause it seems like his diary's the key to all this.'
Sir William stared at Eddie for several seconds.
âWhat?' Eddie demanded.
âHave you been out there for long?' Sir William asked, his voice quiet and strained.
âOh yeah, I heard everything,' Eddie assured him. âNo need to go over it all again.'
âThis is Eddie,' George said quickly.
âHe's, er, he's been helping us,' Liz added.
âIf you can call it that,' George muttered.
âIndeed?' Sir William pulled a large white handkerchief from his pocket and dabbed at his forehead. When he returned it to his pocket he seemed to have recovered. âAnd you can vouch for Eddie?' he asked.
âWell,' George said, âhe's a pickpocket and a rogue, but I think he's trustworthy.'
âHe seems to have his own moral code,' Liz said.
âHonour amongst thieves or something.'
âLike I said,' Eddie interrupted, âwho's this Glick?'
Sir William fixed Eddie with a steady gaze, as if summing him up. âSir Henry Glick was a palaeontologist and geologist.'
âWhat?'
âHe was a scientist,' George told him.
âAnd a very eminent one,' Sir William agreed. âHe was destined for great things, or so it was thought.'
âSo what happened?' Liz asked.
âAccording to my sources, he died young. Very tragic, before he could realise his potential. His diaries are useful as they catalogue his discoveries and theories and give us some insight as to the mental processes he went through on his journey of enlightenment.'
âSo why does someone want the last volume?' George wondered. âIf his work is already known about.'
âI really cannot imagine. His early years were apparently his most productive, before he became ill. He continued to work, of course. In fact he was one of the twenty-one scientists invited to dinner at the Crystal Palace on New Year's Eve 1853. It was, by all accounts, quite an occasion though I was not myself invited.' He sniffed, as if irritated by this apparent oversight.
âWhat was the occasion?' Liz wondered. âJust the New Year?'
âNo, it was to celebrate the creation of the dinosaur
statues that are now in the Crystal Palace Park. In fact the dinner was held inside the Iguanodon statue before the top was lowered. There was a drawing of the event in the
Illustrated London News
, I remember. Sir Henry Glick was due to make a speech which was eagerly anticipated. But on the evening his illness took a turn for the worse. It was, I think, the beginning of the end for him. He made his apologies and left early. Perhaps,' Sir William said with a sad smile, âhe was sickened by the rather self-serving speech that I gather the eminent palaeontologist Richard Owen gave.'
âI've seen a monster that looked like a dinosaur,' Eddie offered.
Sir William was impressed. âYou have been to the Museum of Natural History?'
âCourse not. I saw it in the grounds of a big house. Monstrous it was. Huge, with great teeth.'
âNot this again,' George sighed. âI told you â it's all in the imagination. All you saw was the branch of a tree blowing in the wind or something.'
âGeorge is right,' Liz said gently.
Eddie stared back at them defiantly. âMaybe,' he said. âBut I went back there last night, and I heard it breathing. In a big shed at the edge of the lawn.'
âYou did what?' Liz said, aghast.
âWhere was this?' Sir William asked quietly.
âJust off Clearview Road. The place where they
nabbed your mate Albert Wilkes. Place with lizard things on the gate posts,' Eddie told him.
âNabbed Albert Wilkes?' said Sir William in surprise.
âBut that's Augustus Lorimore's estate,' George said. âIt has to be.'
âThe industrialist?'
George nodded. âFunny thing, you know. But that's who Percy told me to go to for help.'
âNot that he was much help, was he?' Liz said.
Sir William was frowning. âHow would Percy Smythe know Augustus Lorimore, I wonder. And what's this about Albert Wilkes being there? Tell me, what exactly did poor Percy say?'
George struggled to remember. âHe said Lorimore's name. And he said “help” I think. He was telling me Lorimore could help.'
Sir William's face was grave. âBut the man was dying,' he said quietly. âHe was asking
you
for help, for himself. Mentioning Lorimore's name under those circumstances ⦠Well, isn't it just as likely that he was telling you who was to blame for his death?'
George felt suddenly cold. âI suppose it's possible,' he admitted. It was not something that had occurred to him, but now it seemed to make sense. And it explained Lorimore's strange behaviour when they had met â how he had wanted the last surviving page of the diary. âBut, Augustus Lorimore? There was
something else nagging at him too, something at the edge of his mind.
âLorimore,' Liz said. She was staring at George. âIf you were spelling that out to someone, and they missed the first letter â¦'
âOrimore?' George said, bemused.
Liz went on. âAnd if they were interrupted or the contact was broken.'
âWhat contact is this?' Sir William asked.
âI dunno,' Eddie told him. âThink she's going barmy.'
But George understood now. âIf you just spelled out the middle part of his name,' he said. âO R I M O.'
âWhat you said that glass spelled out at the séance,' Eddie said jumping about in excitement. âAlbert Wilkes told you, his spirit told you. Like I said it would.'
âWell, something did,' Liz said. âUnless it's just a coincidence?'
âIt sounds like a big coincidence,' Sir William said. George explained quickly what had happened at the séance, and the older man nodded. âWe live in strange times, Archer. Though of course it
could
be just coincidence.'
âDon't sound like coincidence to me,' Eddie said. âSpecially if this Lorimore lives in the lizard house where the monster is. The house where Wilkes was dragged off by Blade.'
âMonsters or not,' Sir William decided, âit does seem at least a possibility that Lorimore is indeed behind
these macabre events. But we should be wary of jumping to conclusions without sufficient evidence.'
âAnd I went to see him,' George groaned. âI went and told him about the surviving fragment of the diary, and what I was doing. He knows everything.'
At that moment, in Sir William's office at the British Museum, Garfield Berry was hunting through the papers on the desk. He found the notes from the examination that Sir William had performed on the body of Albert Wilkes, and quickly and efficiently set about making a copy.
When he was finished, he replaced the papers exactly as they had been. He put his copy in an envelope together with a short covering letter that explained that he had received the request and hoped that this was what was wanted. He also included the address of another employee of the Museum â a man called George Archer. It had not been difficult to get into Mansfield's office and find the information he needed. Berry sealed the envelope and quickly wrote the name of the recipient on it: Augustus Lorimore.
Berry locked the office behind him with a duplicate key that Sir William knew nothing about. He did not expect Sir William back for a while yet, but he was still in a hurry. The man with the scar was waiting.
Mr Blade waited patiently and silently while Augustus Lorimore read Berry's letter. Clutching the paper in spindly, spider's leg fingers, Lorimore read it through twice. His lips twitched as he reached the end for the second time. Then he bunched the letter into a tight ball and hurled it across the drawing room.
Blade did not react. But he noted where the letter had fallen so he could recover and burn it later.
âYou wish me to deal with these people, now that we know where Archer lives, sir?'
âI don't care what happens to them, Blade.' Lorimore turned away, studying the sightless birds that stared back at him from behind the glass. âJust so long as I get what I want, and they never interfere with my work again.'
âI shall be happy to arrange that, sir,' Blade assured him. He was smiling thinly, his mouth a knife-slash across his face. âIt will be dark early this evening. We can move then, without fear of being seen.'
Lorimore turned back from the display case. âI can't wait until this evening, you dolt.' He nodded at the window on the other side of the room. A thin mist was already pressing up against it, filtering the pale winter sunlight. âThe smog is thickening already. I'm sure your thugs can run fast enough to escape any interference. And in half an hour you'll barely be able to see your hand in front of your face.'
There were springs and cogwheels and screws and oddly shaped bits of metal all over the table. Eddie watched with interest as George arranged the bits and pieces. He had a magnifying glass mounted on a metal bracket so he could see what he was working on. When Eddie tried to peer through, George pushed him out of the way with a grunt of annoyance.
âWhat you making, anyway?' Eddie demanded for the third time.
âIt's only a prototype,' George mumbled.
âA type of what?'
George sighed and put down the tiny wheel he had been examining. He hunted for another with the tweezers, eventually selecting one that looked to Eddie to be identical to the first.
Liz had left them soon after Sir William Protheroe. That had been hours ago now. Eddie reckoned it must be getting on for lunchtime, but he was fascinated when George got out his collection of tools. They
were so tiny â like proper carpenter's tools, only much smaller. There were screwdrivers, knives, tweezers, clamps, and even a miniature saw.
âYou a jeweller?' Eddie asked.
âNo,' George told him. âI mend clocks and watches.'
Eddie had quite a collection of pocket watches stashed away. He considered offering them to George, but he might not approve. Anyway, most of them worked, if he bothered to wind them up.
âI still don't know what it is,' Eddie said, watching closely as George started to assemble various components he had built into a single compact unit.
âIt's for Liz â Miss Oldfield. She wants me to work out a mechanism for sending a silver ashtray flying across the stage.'
âWhat stage?'
âAt the theatre. She indulges in amateur dramatics.'
George sat back and inspected his work. The spring was fixed between two metal plates. One kept the whole contraption stable on the top of the table. The other was fixed to the top at an angle. A small key emerged from the side of the device, and George wound it carefully. As he did so, the spring contracted and the top plate, which was slightly indented, lowered and levelled.
âPass me that ball bearing, will you?'
Eddie did so. âIt isn't an ashtray,' he pointed out.
âThis is just to test if my design will work.' George
placed the ball bearing on the top plate. The small steel ball sat easily in the middle, where the plate had been hollowed slightly. âIf it does, I can build a larger version that will catapult the ashtray.'