Read Maxwell's Crossing Online
Authors: M.J. Trow
Pansy Donaldson pointed with a trembling finger to a printed notice on the wall, exhorting staff to only print things out when necessary. The irony pleased Maxwell, but seemed to pass the woman by. This was, in fact, the third notice that Pansy had pinned there, the other two having been scrawled on by Peter Maxwell with the words âBig Brother is watching you. G. Orwell'.
âI will send it, Mr Maxwell, but it must be on your head if anything goes wrong. What is Mrs Maxwell's email address?'
âI have it here,' Maxwell said, proudly, and fished it out of his wallet. âShe is jay dot carpenter at leighford police, all one word, all lower case, dot gov dot you
kay.' He watched as she wrote it down. âExcellent. I can leave that with you, then, can I? I'll ring her from Mr Moss's office. Thank you for helping me on this, Mrs Donaldson. And remember â not a soul.'
Sweeping through the outer office, he enquired about Thingee One's hamster, which was thriving after a slight case of bumblefoot. She offered a Hobnob which he gratefully accepted and he was soon off down the corridor, in search of Hector Gold. A little bit of forewarning was on the menu, and it would need some delicacy.
Even so, there were other fish to fry. âIf that's a football in your grubby little mitt, Callaghan, I'm going to hang you from the school flagpole. If we had a flagpole, of course.'
Jeff O'Malley had finally gone to sleep at around three-thirty that morning, at almost the exact moment that his wife was waking Jacquie and Peter Maxwell. He was still asleep as the day shift started to arrive and Jacquie for one hoped that would remain the case for a while. She thought she had better bring Henry Hall up to date and went up to his office. She was about to knock on the door when it flew open and Bob Thorogood barrelled out, red in the face, with a vein throbbing threateningly at his temple.
âMorning, Bob,' she said, stepping back.
âOh, yes, morning to you as well,
Inspector
,' he spat and headed down the stairs. As he reached the half landing, he shouted, âBastard,' and was gone.
Tentatively, Jacquie went into Hall's office, half expecting him to be lying unconscious on the floor, but no. He was sitting in his usual imperturbability
behind his desk, signing a pile of letters. He looked up.
âGood morning,' he said. âSorry about that. Just had to give Bob a bit of bad news.'
âRedundancy?' Jacquie asked. Bob was a bit of an idiot, a dinosaur but not in a good way, but he was harmless enough.
âNo, no. Redeployment. Traffic. Quite high up, actually. Desk job, of course. No night stuff. No on call.' His words were fairly heavily laden, but his face betrayed nothing. âHe seems to prefer that kind of job, so I made sure he had it.' He clicked his pen to retract the nib. No patches of ink on his shirt for Henry Hall when a little forethought could prevent it.
Jacquie sat down. âTraffic, though. He'll miss the overtime.'
âWill he?' Hall was dubious.
âWell, the overtime
money
, then. He always seems quite strapped for cash.'
âIndeed. Well. I'm sure he'll soon have all those traffic wardens on full alert. His department budget will soar, I'm sure. Teach them a few tricks, I shouldn't wonder. But that's enough of Bob Thorogood. More than enough. Any updates for me?'
âYes, guv, I have to tell youâ' The âFlight of the Bumblebee' filled the room. âSorry, guv. Do you mind if I take this? It's Max and we had a funny start this morning â¦'
Hall nodded and turned back to his signing.
âHello. DI Carpenter Maxwell.' This greeting was
their personal code for âI'm in Henry's hearing'. They didn't need a code for when Jacquie phoned Maxwell, because he never had his phone with him.
âAre you near a computer?' Maxwell sounded hurried and harried, an unusual situation for him, but he was bouncing a confiscated football on one foot as he spoke, to his own amazement. Well, if David Beckham could do it, how hard could it be?
âAre you all right? You soundâ'
âNot a good time. I'm waiting in Paul's office for Hector and when he gets here it's not going to be pretty. Are you near a computer?' He lost control of the football and it ricocheted off a bookcase and disappeared behind a pile of boxes. He decided to let it go; ball skills were not for everyone and if young Callaghan came calling for it at the end of the day, Maxwell would just deny all knowledge.
âMax, you know what it's like here. I'm never more than a few yards from one.'
âWell, log on or whatever it is you young people do. Pansy has forwarded an email to you. When you've read it, phone me back. I'm in the History Suite, tell Thingee.'
âMax, Iâ'
âHe's here. Must go. Speak in a minute.' And the phone went down with a clunk.
Jacquie put her phone back in her pocket, looking thoughtful.
Hall looked up. âProblem?'
âI don't know. He says that Pansy Donaldson has sent
me an email. Can I log on over here?' She pointed to the computer in the corner.
âHelp yourself,' he said. âDo you know what it's about?'
âNo. It seems to involve Hector, but I don't know how.' She pressed the âon' button and the computer wheezed into reluctant life. âOh, why are these things so slow?'
âMonday morning, or so I'm told when I complain. Or Tuesday, or whatever day it happens to be.'
The blue screen inviting her to log on appeared and eventually she was in her emails. âHere it is. Hang on ⦠Guv, you'd better read this.' She scrolled back up to the top and leant sideways while he leant on the back of her chair to read over her shoulder.
âWell,' he said, when he was done. âThis puts a bit of a different complexion on it, I suppose. Does Paul Moss know exactly why they wanted Jeff O'Malley, do you suppose?'
âHe doesn't say so, and he has said everything else. I was going to try and find out a bit about him anyway. This is even more reason to do it, don't you think?'
âAt least you've got something to ask about directly, rather than just random suspicions.' He glanced up at the clock. âHow far behind us are they? Six hours, is it?'
âEight,' Jacquie said. âIt's only half one in the morning there. I'd only get the night staff if I rang now.'
âTry all the same. You might get more out of the night staff. They usually have more time. Do you have the address?'
âYes, I do. Down to the zip code. Paul's wife is a bit of a tidy freak and with that goes all sorts of control stuff. She had cards done before she went. I've got one in my purse. Hold on.' She rummaged in her bag and came out with a small card. âHere we are. It's in Long Beach, zip code 90999. That's ironic, but not to them, of course. They use 911, don't they?'
Henry Hall was not a xenophobe like Maxwell. He just pretended that the rest of the world didn't really exist. âWell, find out the nearest ⦠precinct, is it, they call them? Give them a call anyway, you might come up with something. Don't worry about coming to the meeting today; get on with that. There's nothing much to add since last night. We've tracked down the other two at the card school. One is a personal trainer with so much muscle between his ears I can't believe he understands poker at all. The other one is a bit brighter, a bit mouthy. O'Malley was almost right about his job. He's a traffic warden. Bit of a keen one, apparently. There is a rumour that he ticketed a pram while the mother was unloading the baby from the car. Obviously only a story, but stories like that don't start for no reason. He was on duty yesterday, checking the machines were all working, so he's off today. He's coming in later. The bodybuilder is coming in in his lunch hour. He could certainly have thrown her, no problem. The other one is not so certain. He's got some kind of back problem, or so I gather. He might not have been able to do it. We'll see.' He walked over to the door. âI'll let you get on, then.'
âHold on, guv. I came in to tell you; we've got Alana O'Malley staying at ours. Well, not strictly at ours. She's with Mrs Troubridge. She had to go to casualty last night, out cold, according to Hector. He brought her to us, because Camille was making it difficult at home.'
âWhat a family!' Hall really had had just about as much as he could take of the O'Malleys. âShe's next door, you say?'
âYes. Mrs Troubridge was delighted.'
âAs long as she doesn't come back to stay at yours, that's probably all right. What about the son-in-law?'
âWe haven't discussed him. This email rather changes things, don't you think?'
âTrue. Anyway, let me know as soon as you know anything. I'll be in the big conference room if you need me before I get back.'
âRight, guv. I'll just ring Max back to see if he has got any more information from Hector, then I'll get right on it.'
Hall lifted a hand in agreement and was gone.
Jacquie dialled the number for Leighford High School and was put on hold. The music was a recording of the Leighford High School string quartet playing, ironically, âFlight of the Bumblebee', but rather slower than she was used to, more like the flight of the dodo.
Finally, the phone was answered.
âLeighford High School. How may I direct your call?'
âEmma. Hello. Mrs Maxwell here.'
âOh, hello, Mrs Maxwell. Do you want to speak to Mr Maxwell?'
âYes. He'sâ'
But before she could tell Thingee One where her husband was, she had been put through to his office, up on the Mezzanine, where the vultures, Maxwell told the new Year Sevens every September, picked clean the bones of those who had âforgotten' their homework.
âHello. Helen Maitland, Sixth Form.'
Helen Maitland was known as âThe Fridge' on account of her always wearing white and being eight-feet wide. On the plus side, she had been Mad Max's Number Two now for so long they'd all forgotten when she'd started and she had a heart the size of the great outdoors.
âHelen. Hello. It's Jacquie Maxwell here.'
âJacquie. Hello. He's not here, I'm afraid. Can I take a message?'
âNo, I need to speak to him. He's in the History Suite. Can you transfer me?'
âNot from here, I'm afraid. We're on a different loop. Can I put you back to switchboard?'
âNo, look, Helen. I'll ring off and perhaps you could then get him to ring me. Tell him I'm in Henry's office.'
âOK, Jacquie. Will do. Nolan well?'
âBlooming. A chip off the old block.'
âWell, never mind,' Maxwell's deputy laughed. âYou can't have everything. I'll pass on the message. Bye.'
Jacquie put down the phone and waited for it to ring. Maybe Maxwell was right when he said that before phones made everything so easy, people took more care with plans before doing anything, and also that ignorance was bliss. If all this had had to be done
by letter, it would have all been resolved before anyone knew there was a problem. The phone rang.
âDI Carpenter.'
âWas it something I said?'
âDI Carpenter
Maxwell
, I beg your pardon, Mr Maxwell.'
âAll rightie, then. Thanks for ringing back, heart. What do you think of the email?'
âI'd like to say I'm shocked, but I can't, because I'm not. Manda is right to worry about her lovely house. When we got there last night there was quite literally cheese stuck to the wall.'
âI can quite see why you wanted to palm Alana off onto Mrs Troubridge, then. We don't want cheese on
our
wall, do we? But what about the police raid?' He sounded like a man with the phone tucked well in and an eye on the door behind him, because that was what he was.
âI was rather hoping that you might enlighten
me
, if you've had a chance to speak to Hector,' she said.
âI have spoken with him ⦠did you hear that? I mean, spoken
to
him.' Maxwell toyed with putting a bullet through his brain then and there, because he had just kissed goodbye to all that was sacred, civilised and grammatical. âHe doesn't know anything specific, but thought that Jeff was keener to come with them to England than he would have expected, so he may have known it was a possibility at least. He doesn't know the details of how he came to leave the police, because it was before his time, but it is odd that he hasn't had some
cushy security number; most ex-cops do. The studios lap them up, apparently.'
âWhat about money? Does he know anything about O'Malley's finances?'
âAgain, only that they are a tad ropey. Camille's nail bar does very well, not that Hector sees much of the proceeds. He thinks she bails her father out from time to time, but on the few occasions he has mentioned it to her, she has flown off the handle and said that her father put the money up in the first place, so it's only right.'
âThat is fair enough, I suppose, if he was the original investor. It may be money laundering, though. Hmm ⦠well, thank you for that. Have you given any more thought to Mrs Whatmough?'
âI try not to, on general principles. General “principals”, get it? Never mind. I digress. Oh, hang on, there's
la
damn bell
sans
mercy. I can't hear you.'
Jacquie could hear the electronic jangle and beneath it Maxwell singing a little song to fill the time. It was the stereotypical, but already unseasonal âJingle Bells'. Then he was back.
âSorry about that. I'm sure the bells are getting louder as I get older.'
âThat's good news. At least you aren't going deaf. Oh, hang on. Now it's me getting a noise. There's a call on the other line. Hold on.'
She put the phone down on the desk and stretched across to pick up the one on Hall's desk. He could only hear her faintly, but it sounded important, whatever it was. Then, suddenly, her voice was back in his ear.
âSorry, Max. I've got to go. Bit of a scramble. There's been another one.'
âAnother one? So this is a series, then?'
âSorry, Max. Got to go.' And his ear was full of buzzing.
Â
The screaming had stopped by the time the police got there, but it had been going on for so long that it seemed to have left an imprint on the air. The girl who had been screaming could feel another in her throat and was only keeping it at bay with extreme concentration, so that she had to bend over, hugging herself, to keep the hysteria in. First, no one had come. Then, finally, the old man who kept the jeweller's downstairs had come toiling up the stairs to the office. Then, suddenly, from just him coming in, the world seemed piled into the tiny room and the scream got nearer and nearer her mouth.
Jacquie got there just in time to prevent another outburst. As luck would have it, she was the first woman on the scene and the girl ran and clung to her as if she was the last lifeboat off the
Titanic
. Jacquie just patted her for a moment, and gradually the secretary started to relax.
Jacquie looked over her head at one of the SOCOs. âIs there another room we can use?'
âWouldn't recommend it,' he said, dryly. âThere's only the office and I don't think she'll be up for going back in there, somehow.'