Read Angel Confidential Online
Authors: Mike Ripley
Tags: #london, #fiction, #series, #mike ripley, #angel, #comic crime, #novel, #crime writers, #comedy, #fresh blood, #lovejoy, #critic, #birmingham post, #essex book festival, #religious cult, #religion, #classic cars, #shady, #dark, #aristocrat, #private eye, #detective, #mystery
âAt a â ah â that's confidential, I'm afraid. But it wasn't where she was living, just somewhere I was told she'd be this morning.'
âSo why not start again tomorrow morning? Same place, same time?' I was full of helpful suggestions.
âBecause she was only going to the ... to where she was this morning ... this morning. If you see what I mean. This morning was my one chance and I got blown.'
âI think you mean you blew it.'
âPardon?'
âNever mind. So why not head back to Shepherd's Bush? Call it a day. Grab a real cab or a bus. Why the emotional blackmail? Why me?'
âI haven't any money,' she sniffed. âI only look a few pounds from petty cash and it's all gone. Bus fares, the tube, cups of coffee, lunch, it all mounts up. And a spare pair of tights just in case. I would have given you a cheque at the other end if you'd been a real cab.'
I bit my lip and breathed deeply, but be honest, Mother Teresa would have resorted to harsh language at this one.
âSo what were you trying to find out, anyway?'
Why did I ask? What possessed me to waste vital oxygen that way?
âWhere she lives, what she does. Why she was here, for example.'
âWell, that last bit's easy.'
She blinked at me through glasses that, if they were any thicker, would come with wipers.
âIt is? What do you mean?'
âDo you know who she went to see?'
âThat's what I'm trying to find out.'
âI know, but look, all these houses are practices.'
âWhat?' She looked blank.
âAll the houses are sub-divided into medical or dental practices. Oh, never mind. Just tell me which house she went into.'
âThat one.' She pointed across the street. âThe one with the green door and all those brass plates.'
âAnd what's her name?'
She hesitated at that, then went for broke.
âRudgard. Stella Rudgard.'
âOkay, hop out and wait here. I'll show you how it's done.'
There I went again. Typical man.
Â
The big houses in Wimpole Street tend to be divided into consulting rooms run by either one large medical consulting practice or several smaller ones, or maybe just a group of medics with nothing more in common than a shared secretary/receptionist/nurse, who is always the key person in the set-up as she's the one who sends out the bills.
My orthodontist had a part share in a receptionist/nurse who also worked for the physiotherapists operating on the next floor. She was blonde, probably Austrian and fiftyish â around the biceps. I had no idea how old she was, but she hadn't lost her accent. The first thing she'd said after checking my credit rating and writing my name on a file cover was: âRrrright, Meester Angel, strrriiip down to your underpants, pliz.'
I had started to comply, but when I happened to mention that this was a trifle informal for a dental examination, she slapped her forehead and muttered something about force of habit.
The other gopher invariably shared among the practices is a concierge figure, usually an elderly, middle-class widow fallen on hard times and only really doing the job because it gets her out of the house. Their main task is to open the front door, check your name and show you into a waiting room with floor-to-ceiling sash windows, yellowing net curtains, uncomfortable armchairs and fake walnut tables groaning under last year's
Country Life
.
They then retreat to the back of the hall and into a glass and wood conservatory-like structure housing a switchboard at least ten years technologically redundant; but they still haven't quite got the hang of it. There they guard the Appointments Diary â a book treated more reverently than a Guttenberg Bible â their knitting and yesterday's milk, which surely someone should have collected by now.
The bottle-green door Veronica Blugden had pointed out had enough brass plate on it to be worth stealing for scrap. There were 12 names listed, each with a Scrabble triple word score of letters after them. I didn't bother reading, I just rang the bell.
The concierge lady answered it, taking her own dignified time. She was dressed as I could have guessed: dark blue turtleneck top and long tartan skirt. I liked the Nikes she wore, but I supposed they were for comfort rather than a fashion statement. Around her neck, a long string of fake pearls competed with a gold spectacles chain to see which would strangle her first.
âYes? Can I help?'
There was a trace of an accent there. Maybe Mittel-European dispossessed aristocracy rather than Guildford middle-class with a head cold. Then again, maybe not.
âTaxi for Miss Rudgard,' I said, snapping into character and showing her my new teeth.
I had Armstrong parked at the kerb, engine running. There you are, now I am a cab. And I had pulled on the old sweater I always kept in the boot (one leather elbow-patch, the other elbow-holed), so I looked the part. To a civilian I looked the part. A London black cab driver getting out of his cab? When did you last see that?
âI'm sorry?' She opened the door fully to check me out.
No worries about me being a mugger or burglar. Total confidence. After all, this was Wimpole Street.
âTaxi for Miss Rudgard,' I repeated, then looked at my watch. âOrdered for 4.30.' Did I let a hint of impatience creep into my voice, perhaps? Well, what can you expect from the lower orders?
âIs she a patient?' The concierge looked genuinely perplexed.
âYou tell me, luv, I ain't got a clue.'
She fumbled her glasses onto her face and turned back into the hall, leaving the door wide open. I think the âluv' had got to her, but she really ought to have been more careful. I could have had the painting off the wall and been away on my toes before she turned round. Come to think of it, being Wimpole Street, the painting might have been worth having. I decided to file the address away for a rainy day.
Actually, she did turn round before she reached her cubby-hole, as if suddenly remembering something.
âRudgard, did you say?'
âThat's what I was told, luv.'
âShe's just left.'
âShe can't have, luv, I'm her taxi.'
âBut she has. I remember it quite clearly. She was the four o'clock appointment for Mr Linscott.'
I shrugged my shoulders and showed her my palms in the universal ânot my fault' gesture that London cabbies have perfected from the sitting position.
âI can assure you, she's gone.' She reached for her Appointments Diary to prove it. No-one could dispute a holy entry.
But then the phone rang, and of course she had to answer it.
âGood afternoon,' she said into the receiver while stabbing the desk diary with a finger.
I leaned into her cubbyhole to get a better look.
âMiss Sanderson? Ah yes. No. No. I'm sorry, but no â¦'
I dropped my eye down the day's entries. Each doctor or consultant had a colour code. Mr Linscott. whatever he did, had been seeing females all afternoon at half-hour intervals. I was in the wrong business.
âIt's just not possible, Miss Sanderson. Dr Cutts is away this week â¦'
There at â1600 hours' (I liked that) was âMiss E Rudgard'. âE' for Estelle, I guessed. They wouldn't allow Stellas in here. âI'm sure it isn't opening up. Go back to the poultice. And thank you. Goodbye.'
She came back to me, only slightly flushed.
âYou see. Rudgard at four. She's been and gone.'
âWell,' I started huffily, âyou'd better tell this Doc Linscott that his patients are causing honest blokes like me to lose trade. Downright irresponsible, I call it â¦'
âOh, that Miss Rudgard isn't a patient,' she said earnestly.
I gave her the full smile.
âIsn't she?'
And I didn't have to call her âluv'.
Â
Back on the street, I drove all of ten yards before Veronica Blugden flagged me down.
âDon't worry,' I said as she got in the back, âI wasn't trying to do a runner on you.'
The excitement had left her breathless.
âSo? Do you know where she lives?'
âNo, but I know where she'll be at nine o'clock tomorrow when she starts her new job.'
There was a silence from the rear of the cab, and I relished it.
âHow did you do that?'
âEasy, really.'
Â
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âIt's my Rule of Life No. 83. Approached in the right way, anyone will tell you anything, and it will usually be true.'
âI don't follow.'
âObviously not. Or at least, not very well.'
âAnd just
what
is that supposed to mean?'
âYou didn't follow that Stella Rudgard very well, did you? You lost her.' .
âThat's a horrid thing to say.'
âJust stating the facts, ma'am.'
âAre you saying I'm no good at my job?'
âYou're the private eye, or whatever it says on your card.'
âWell, really. I've never been so insulted in all my life.'
âThen you can't be as old as you look,' I said quietly.
Â
Of course, after that little exchange, I ended up driving her to Shepherd's Bush. It was either that or another scene by the kerbside accompanied by tears and histrionics; some of them hers. Along the way, I told her what I had found out.
Estelle Rudgard, whoever she was, had been for an interview with a Mr Linscott, consultant surgeon of this parish, whose regular full-time receptionist had been called away to look after a sick mother (90, if she was a day, but still managing on her own down in Broadstairs: marvellous, really).
Estelle had come highly recommended from an agency, and a girl like that, with such obvious good breeding, well, she just strolled into the job, didn't she, starting tomorrow.
âThey just told you all that?' asked Veronica Blugden.
âNot me, really,' I said modestly. âIt was gossip with a cab driver. Who remembers cab drivers? Where's the harm in telling them anything?'
Heaven knows the real ones got told lots more interesting stuff, whether they wanted to hear it or not.
âOh, and one other thing,' I offered at no extra charge. âHer name was on a fax from a company called the Office Cavalry. It was in the Appointments Diary.'
âYes, that fits, she's registered with them. It's a temping agency in Holborn. I've been watching it for two days.'
I cut up a chauffeur-driven Mercedes just for the hell of it, then readjusted the rear-view mirror so I could get a better look at her in the back.
âYou
knew
she was registered as a temp secretary, receptionist, whatever?'
âYeah, and I knew she'd get offered a job and have to come ⦠have to turn up at the office. They always like to check you for appearance and deportment and stuff like that before they send you out for an interview.'
Deportment? I wondered if they'd placed anyone since word-processing, but Veronica had read my mind.
âThey test you on skills as well,' she added defensively. âCheck your shorthand, though nobody uses that much these days, and which programs you're familiar with, whether you can mail-merge. That sort of thing.'
She'd been there, but I didn't say it.
âAnd you've had the place staked out for two days?'
She looked puzzled, then rather pleased with the thought of âstake out'.
âI've had it under observation. Yes.'
âAnd all you wanted to do is find out where this Stella person lives?'
âYes. So?'
âSo why didn't you ring for the Office Cavalry and say you had a job going for a bright young girl, preferably one called Stella?'
She thought about this and made to answer at least twice, but the words wouldn't come. The brain just wouldn't let them.
âDo you think that is what I should have done?' she burbled.
âWell, it's one way. You could have rung the agency and said it was a temporary job, a stand-in, just like the job she's got in Wimpole Street. Agencies always send out new girls on jobs like that just to try them out at the client's expense. And the girls think it's good; they get some work straight off. I take it she is new to the agency?'
âYes.' She chewed something over in her mind before asking: âSo if I'd said I had work, they would have sent me her home address ... I mean the place she's living?'