The Consequences of Fear Jacqueline Winspear (i can read book club .txt) đ
- Author: Jacqueline Winspear
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Maisie detected a certain nervousness in Caldwellâs demeanor. He doesnât want to tell me what heâs discovered, she thought. She leaned forward.
âWell, Freddieâs stories are all very vivid, according to the teacher, and amount to something horrible happening to a man with a scar on his face,â said Caldwell, his words hurried, as if he were in a race, trying to outrun the truth in his pronouncement. âNot all the time, mind you, but it turns out heâs quite the little storyteller and can weave a yarn about anything. The teacher usually gives the class the first sentence and then they write what they want. Apparently she started a story a couple of weeks ago, along the lines of âYouâre walking along the road and a dog goes running by with a string of sausages in its mouth, andââ She said Freddie even turned that opening into a story about a man with a scar on his face chasing the dog, and he ends up nabbed and put away, and the dogâs a hero!â
âSo what youâre telling me is that Freddie could have been spinning a tale about seeing a man murdered by another man witha scar on his face.â Maisie sighed. âWhich is all very well, but I have reason to believe there is sufficient evidence inhand to see at least some element of truth in Freddieâs claims. Let me tell you why.â Maisie went on to describe, again, theground where Freddie had seen the murder take place, about finding the wallet and the end of a French cigarette.
âAnything else, Miss Dobbs?â
Maisie sighed. âWell, yes, there is. Itâs to do with the house where Freddie had to deliver the envelopeâand as you mightimagine, that is where I must zip my lips or have the full weight of the Official Secrets Act tied to my feet as Iâm thrownfrom the ramparts of the Tower of London. Suffice it to say that there was enough there for me to have doubt.â
Caldwell leaned back in his chair again. âIâll accept that.â He sighed. âItâs bloody scary out there for a lad like Freddie. Running the streets when bombs are falling. I donât hold with mollycoddling children, but thereâs the other extreme and thatâs expecting too much of them. My two have to pull their weightâas I tell them, theyâre big enough and ugly enough now and all grown upâbut at night when itâs raining bombs and god knows what else, I want them down the bloody shelter with their mum.â Caldwell pushed back his chair and stood up, pressing his hands against the small of his back. âTo be honest with you, I feel sorry for the ladâhard blimminâ life, if you ask me. But given what Iâve heard, Iâm advising you to let this whole thing drop. Thatâs what Iâm doing. Iâve got to close the case.â
âThereâs the question of a dead body and a boy who might be in danger because a killer knows he could likely identify himâandyouâre closing the case?â
âMiss Dobbs, what makes you think heâs in danger?â
âApparently a man was asking for him at the schoolâand the caretaker has corroborated the story.â
âProbably the school board inspector, wondering why Freddieâs absent so much.â
âCaldwellââ
âAll right, all rightâI know youâre worried about the lad, Miss Dobbs. But as far as Iâm concerned, this case is as cold asice and I donât have the manpower for it. Youâd be advised to let it go tooâitâs not as if youâre being paid by Freddie Hackettto prove he had all his faculties about him, and was not scared witless running messages just to keep his dad in drink.â
âIf itâs all the same to you, Iâm going to continue. I believe Freddieâand I donât like letting people down.â
âOh, I believe him, Miss DobbsâI do believe he thinks he saw something, just like a man fearful heâll expire in the desert will see a blimminâ great pond in the distance. Thereâsno accounting for whatâs going on in that boyâs head.â
âFair warning, Detective Chief Superintendent.â Maisie stood up, and though she was disappointed, she softened when she took account of Caldwellâs gray, tired pallor, and the deep purple circles under his eyes. âThank you for taking me into your confidenceâand for at least going to the school. I know how stretched you are here, and rest assured I appreciate your looking into the case.â Maisie stood up to leave. âIâll keep you apprised of anything I can find out.â
âIâd be much obliged if you would, Miss Dobbs.â Caldwell seemed subdued in his response. He put the file to one side and pickedup another sheet of paper. âThis might interest you too, while youâre about your investigation.â
âWhat is it?â Maisie reached for the paper.
âInformation from the birth certificate of one Frederick Bartholomew Trantor.â
âTrantor?â
âHis motherâs maiden name. I asked one of the new blokes to do a bit more digging on the matterânice little job to see what heâs made of, seeing as his flat feet kept him out of the army and he ended up moved from uniform over to my doorstep. Itâs surprising what he found out. Turns out Grace Trantor was a governess at one of those nice country homesâyou know, the sort you were talking about, with dining rooms where they find a body or two. Well, at least they do in those cheap books people are taking down the shelters.â He gave a half-laugh. âAnyway, you know the storyâall very predictable, I suppose. Thereâs a widower with two children who needs a nice young woman to care for the nippers because heâs been left alone. Governess falls in love with widower, one thing leads to another . . . and he no more wants to marry the lowly governess when she gets into trouble than
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