Murder Offstage (10 page)

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Authors: L. B. Hathaway

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Cozy, #Action & Adventure, #Women's Adventure, #Culinary, #Nonfiction

BOOK: Murder Offstage
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By now Posie was really worried about Dolly. She was halfway
to turning back towards the main clubroom when the lights went off again. She
froze in the total blackout, as did Len ahead of her.

A sharp volley of gunfire close by punctured the darkness.
People dived for cover. Silence followed. Then a further stream of bullets came
frighteningly close, whizzing down the corridor and ricocheting off the metal
walls in a dangerous flurry, as if whoever was shooting was purposefully
clearing the tunnel up ahead of them.

‘Quick, get inside.’

Posie felt an arm pushing her urgently and a slamming sound.
Len had shoved her through one of the small metal doors with the moon-shaped
windows, and they waited hunched up together in what was a very small space
indeed. A store cupboard really. Outside the window everything was dark and
silent. They peered out and held their breath.

‘Someone’s coming,’ Len whispered.

Two men were whispering to each other as they walked along,
guided by the light of a burning match, and as they passed the store cupboard
Posie recognised the honeyed foreign burr of Caspian della Rosa’s melodious
voice, even if she couldn’t see his face. Her stomach lurched. Were they
looking for her? Were they going to hunt her down? Did they know she was here?

‘Everything is out, thank God,’ an unidentified second man
muttered, also in a slightly foreign accent.

‘Yes, it is. And those fools Blake and Reggie won’t talk.
The police can clear this mess up – it’s no great loss anyhow. We needed a new
location anyway: this one was getting stale. We’ll open up somewhere else next
time. We’ve got the prize anyway.’

‘You stored it out of harm’s way?’

‘Of course I did! I’m a professional! Not like that fool of
a girl.’

‘Shh.Be careful what you say,’ hissed the other voice
petulantly.

‘Why should I be? At least we got a little extra prize into
the bargain too. Shall we keep it up our sleeves for now, save it as a reserve?’

And then their voices tailed away. After a few minutes
people could be heard picking themselves up off the floor and running for the
exit.

Len exhaled loudly. They both felt nervous, sick and
claustrophobic. They had had enough of feeling like they were trapped in a
closed, pitch-black submarine. Len struck a match.

‘Come on. Let’s go,’ Posie insisted. ‘I’m sure Inspector
Lovelace has sorted things out by now. He’ll be wondering where we are.’

‘That’s what
I’m
doing,’ said Len softly, moving his
light around carefully. ‘I’m wondering where on earth we are...’

His voice took on a panicked note:

‘I just reached out and touched a stone-cold leg, complete
with a high-heeled shoe stuffed on the end of it. I thought at first it must be
my imagination so I felt again. Then I thought it must be a mannequin, or some
sort of prop for the stage. But now I’m not so sure.’

By the light of the match, he illuminated the tiny cupboard
space and they both gasped in horror as the body of a girl was revealed to
them, a girl they were familiar with from only one photograph.

It was unmistakeably Lucy Gibson: shot through at the
temple, vacant eyes staring, a gun clasped loosely in her right hand, a pale
blue colour spread patchily over her face and lips.

As beautiful in death as in life, perhaps. But certainly not
as lucky.

****

 

 

Ten

‘Come on. Really
look
. It’s the size of a
quail’s egg. You can’t miss it. Whoever finds it will get a reward.’

Posie was trying her best to encourage Inspector Lovelace’s
men to search the whole club for the Maharajah diamond, but they were tired and
wanting to go home. The Inspector had given her ten minutes of their precious
time. It was now up.

‘It’s a mare’s nest, Posie,’ he said, running his hands
through his gingery hair. ‘Lucky Lucy has been killed in cold blood, probably
for
that diamond. The last place the killer would have left it would be here.
Accept that.’

Len, who never agreed with the police on principle, nodded
wholeheartedly.

‘Fine,’ she said in defeat, knowing in her heart of hearts
that both spoke the truth.

The nightclub was flooded with the bright electric light
again, and there was a sense of disappointment and failure hanging palpably in
the air. The raid had not gone well: despite having finally prised the
plate-glass mirror behind the bar open and found a series of empty rooms and a
warren of many twisting corridors, the police had recovered little other than a
few empty instrument cases, oboe cases mainly, hastily abandoned by their
fleeing owners. And the body of Lucy Gibson, of course.

Posie stared down at the body of the girl, which had been
moved out of the cupboard into the garish light of the corridor, and she felt a
giddying rush of tiredness and sadness. Poor creature: whatever her faults, of
which she supposed there were many, Lucky Lucy hadn’t deserved to die like that
– shot and dumped in a store cupboard. All for the sake of this one wretched
diamond. Or was there more to this than met the eye? Who had wanted to kill
such a lovely creature?

Inspector Lovelace looked tired, and was giving muttered
instructions to Sergeant Rainbird who wrote frantically in a notepad. Sergeant
Binny was directing a team of police photographers who were dancing around the
body, jumping in and out for a better picture. The pale blue-flushed face of
Lucy Gibson, a faint touch of grey greasy glitter still visible on her eyelids,
was brought into sharp focus again and again by their flashbulbs, and the smell
of what Posie now knew to be zirconium, sulphury-sweet, hung in the air.

Len was interested in the photographer’s methods, and he
leant in carefully to observe, paying little interest in the team of forensic
scene-of-crime officers who had also appeared. They were scraping inside the
cupboard for clues, spraying a fine inky powder on Lucy’s hands and pressing
her poor dead fingers up against carbon paper to retrieve prints. A police
pathologist was staring through a magnifying glass at the gunshot wound.

‘Here, photographer! This is odd, but important.’

‘How close do you want the picture, doc?’

All of that technical blarney was very good, but Posie
needed
real clues
. She needed the body to tell her a story: the dead
could only speak through the clues they left behind. Posie scanned Lucy, taking
in the details. Posie sank down on her high heels, squatting next to the body.

She observed the strange blue flush across the face. Hadn’t
she heard somewhere that that was usually caused by poison, but
which one
exactly? She studied the vivid purple bruising on the ring-finger of Lucy’s
left hand, and the badly scratched crimson nail-polish on the fingers.

She noted too the expensive but surprisingly demure black
woollen dress paired with smart leather day shoes. So then, she could be pretty
sure that Lucy hadn’t been dressed for a night out dancing at the club; the
other girls at
La Luna
had all been wearing a uniform of short spangled
dancing-dresses, and heaps of jewellery. Instead, Lucy was dressed respectably
for an afternoon in smart London society; primly really, considering she was an
actress and a glamorous gangster’s moll.

Posie was just struggling to her feet when she thought she
heard it again: the second voice which had accompanied Caspian della Rosa
earlier along the dark corridor, when she and Len had been hiding out in the
metal cupboard. She reeled, momentarily dizzy, searching all around her for the
speaker’s face, but the bright lights flashed in and out of focus and the world
seemed to tilt. A darkness threatened to engulf her. Was she going crazy?
Hearing imaginary voices? She decided she
must
be: those men would be
long gone by now.

‘Posie? You all right?’ she heard Inspector Lovelace saying,
as if from a distance of two hundred miles away. She felt two sets of strong
arms hauling her up.

‘Maybe she’s not so great with dead bodies, guv?’ said
Sergeant Binny, helping her to her feet, together with a photographer.

‘No. That’s not it. I bet she hasn’t eaten anything all day,
have you Posie? You can’t live your life on just biscuits, you know. You need
to eat dinner now and then. Len!’

Len darted through the crowd.

‘Take Posie for a good square meal somewhere. I’m sure
you’ll know a place open at one-thirty in the morning. I’d love to join you,
I’m starving actually, but I’ve got to sign off on all of this. Oh, hello! Here
comes trouble. I
had
to call him in. Technically, it is
his
body,
after all.’

Through the corridor swung the familiar, unwelcome figure of
Inspector Oats. He looked at the body of Lucky Lucy Gibson for a brief second,
before sniffing disdainfully and indicating it could be covered up and carried
off. He looked around with a distinctly scornful expression:

‘Quite a mess on your hands here, Lovelace,’ he muttered
towards the Inspector. ‘What’s all this? A failed raid?’

‘And who’s this?’ he nodded at Posie with a deeply
suspicious air. She suddenly remembered her disguise and whipped off her black
wig, shaking her own shingled bob out carefully.

‘Oh, no. Not
you
again,’ Oats growled. ‘The
proverbial bad penny. And where’s your pal, Lord Hoity-Toity? Is he here as well?’

‘Rufus?’ Posie exclaimed in surprise. ‘No, of course he’s
not here. He’s at his father’s club in St James.’

‘Aha! Well, that’s where I’m heading to now then,’ Oats
snapped angrily, making to turn on his heel. ‘Now your pal’s got
two
unexplained deaths on his hands, and bail or no bail I’ll have him back in for
questioning before the hour’s up.’

‘Hang on a minute…’ cut in Len as Posie gasped in horror at
the sheer stupidity of Oat’s reasoning.

‘I say!’ shouted Inspector Lovelace at Inspector Oats’ retreating
back. ‘You’ve got this all wrong, old fellow. Don’t make a blundering fool of
yourself. The person who murdered Lucky Lucy has probably got something to do
with this wretched underground nightclub we’re all standing in. The answer lies
here, not with Rufus Cardigeon!’

But Oats had disappeared out into the dark night, trudging
along with a clear, if misguided, purpose.

****

Posie ate two fried eggs, several rashers of bacon, a
sausage and a side portion of potato cakes. When the waitress came around to
refill her mug from the big metal tea-pot, she ordered the same again.

She ate in silence, and Len watched her quietly. He smoked a
Turkish cigarette and leant back against the grease-smeared red plastic
banquette, discreetly seeing if he knew anyone in the place.

It was a dive of a caff really, he supposed. It was nestled
between Fleet Street and the Inner Temple, tucked into a side alley which the
law clerks used as a lazy shortcut. Open twenty-four hours a day, it was
frequented by nervy journalists, late-night printers, and a whole raft of
people who didn’t seem to fit in anywhere else, but needed to kill time for one
reason or another. There was no sign or advert outside the caff, just a
white-painted scrawl on the sooty window, which had been there forever,
announcing
NO KIPPERS TODAY

SORRY
.

Sal ran the place. And Len had spent many hours there over
the last few years, waiting for a punter to emerge so he could begin tailing
him, or waiting for a tip-off from one of his lawyer clients. But there was no-one
he knew in tonight: just a couple of poor souls who looked like they had served
in the trenches, and in the far corner a young journalist, his half-moon
spectacles pushed down low on his nose, hurriedly writing copy for his
newspaper. As Len watched, the journalist rubbed his ink-stained hands over his
forehead in worry, smearing his pimply face. He looked new to the job.

Sal appeared beside their table, huge and resplendent in an
oil-cloth overall.

‘Thought yer might enjoy this, Mister Irving,’ she announced
grandly, and placed a steaming spotted dick pudding in front of Len, who smiled
gratefully. It looked magnificent and Sal dolloped a ladle of custard over the
plate, giving Posie just a flicker of interest before stomping off.

‘Don’t eat it,’ hissed Posie suddenly, as Len moved to pick
up his fork.

‘Why ever not?’

‘I need it.’

Quick as a flash she had grabbed the pudding and moved to
the table in the corner where the young journalist was fretting with his copy.
She put the pudding down carefully next to him.

‘Hello!’ she said cheerfully, and placed one of her business
cards next to the pudding. She looked at him expectantly. He squinted up at
her, as if surprised to see another living breathing soul awake at this time of
night.

‘Hmm?’ he said, nervously, inky fingers ruining her card.

‘Which paper do you work for?’


Associated Press
. Why do you want to know? Miss,
er…Parker?’

‘Spotted dick? Here, have it. It’s all yours. What’s your
name?’

‘Sam Stubbs, junior journalist. Here’s my press badge.’

Sam Stubbs eyed the cake eagerly, as if just remembering his
hunger. He took up a fork and ate greedily. Posie watched in satisfaction: she
was always secretly amused at how easy it was to win over some men,
particularly with old-fashioned puddings which reminded them of their
childhoods.

‘I’ve a scoop for you, Mr Stubbs. And no, I don’t want
money. I’m certain this will blow whatever you’re writing there right out of
the water. It might just make your career. But it
must
go to press
tomorrow. It should make the lunchtime edition. And you
must
name me as
your source.’

Sam Stubbs gasped, and pushed his spectacles back up onto
his nose.

‘Go on,’ he nodded, chewing the end of his pen.

Posie outlined the details of the evening’s events: the
discovery of the infamous
La Luna
club; the police raid; the discovery
of the body of Lucky Lucy. She spelled out Caspian della Rosa’s name carefully.
Sam Stubbs wrote everything down in a nervous shorthand which looked nothing
like Babe Sinclair’s.

‘Are we done here?’ she asked after a few minutes. Sam
scanned his notepad, checking the detail. He nodded and looked up:

‘One thing I’m not clear on, Miss Parker,’ he asked,
frowning, as he gathered up a cheap-looking tweed overcoat and hat. ‘What’s in
this for
you
, if not money?’

Posie smiled sweetly.

‘Let’s just say I’m hoping for a particular outcome. And
also, I’m hoping that you may be able to help me out in the next couple of
days. The
Associated Press
is one of the best papers in town: it must
have a very good archive of clippings. I think I’m going to need access to
them. And I think
you
are just the man to help me.’

****

‘What did you go and do
that
for?’ said Len
angrily, kicking the snow. They were walking along the Strand together, taking
care to avoid a man and his little boy leading a horse and trap, liberally
sprinkling the road with salt from a bucket at the back of the cart.

‘Inspector Lovelace will be mad at you, you idiot! The raid
was supposed to be hush-hush. It didn’t exactly go very well, either. Now all
of London will know about it! And why choose that spotty nincompoop, just out
of school? I have loads of contacts at newspapers if you wanted to blow the
thing right up in our faces. Good grief, Po! I almost wonder if you haven’t
lost your wits!’

Posie smiled, taking his arm and crossing over to the
Aldwych. The bell of St Clement Danes Church was just tolling three a.m.

‘I know you have contacts, Len. But none of them happened to
be
right there
, tonight. So much in life comes down to timing, doesn’t
it? Sam Stubbs was the right man for the job, at just the right time. I need
this news to break tomorrow, in the lunchtime edition, latest.’


Why
, might I ask?’ Len said, his tone heavy with
sarcasm.

‘We need to flush out Caspian della Rosa. Expose him. So far
he’s managed to remain under the radar. No-one even knows about him. Not even
the police! But all that will change. He needs to know we’ve got him cornered.’

‘Jeepers. I know he might be up to his neck in all manner of
dodgy goings-on, but so far you have no
direct
evidence linking him to
anything, let alone two murders or stealing that wretched diamond. What do you
hope to achieve?’

‘We’ll just have to wait and see,’ Posie said with
conviction. ‘But sure as bread is bread I’m not going to let Rufus hang for
this. I’m going to solve this.’

Len looked at her and decided he had said enough.

A cold wind was blowing along the dark street. He groaned
inwardly to think of the long and expensive cab ride back to Leytonstone. As if
she could read his mind Posie turned to him and smiled:

‘I thought we could sleep over at the office tonight. It’s
so close by. Besides, it’s only five hours until we need to start work again.
No point trekking home, is there? I can’t think why I haven’t done it more
often!’

Len gasped. ‘What will people say? We can’t
both
stay
over!’

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