The Consequences of Fear Jacqueline Winspear (i can read book club .txt) đ
- Author: Jacqueline Winspear
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âThat wonât amount to much,â said Billy.
âI donât want anyone going round there to see my dad, miss. Please donât turn up at our gaff or anywhere looking for himâand donât you, Mr. Beale. Iâve got to consider my mum and Iris.â
âDonât worry, Freddie,â said Maisie. âWe wonât be going to see your dad, but I will be popping into Scotland Yard a bit lateron, to have a word with a detective I know, and heâll ask for more information, just in case he wants to talk to you. ButIâll make sure he doesnât go off to see your mum and dad without you knowing.â
The boy seemed relieved as he stood up. âIâd better go now.â
âRight you are, son. Letâs be on our way.â Billy pushed back his chair and put his arm on the boyâs shoulder as he turnedto Maisie. âWeâll go and get a taxicab while you lock up, miss.â
Chapter 2
âThis is it,â said the boy.
Maisie tapped on the glass, instructing the taxicab driver to stop. Freddie Hackett clambered out of the cab, followed byBilly, who held out his hand to Maisie.
âWatch them puddles, missâthere was a shower or two last night,â said Billy.
Maisie turned to the driver. âWould you mind waiting here, please? Weâll only be a few minutes.â
She paused to look at the bomb sites around them, where a few remaining houses stood like solitary teeth. Mounds of rubblewere piled along the side of the street and between homes, enabling the thoroughfare to remain open for horse-drawn cartsand other vehicular trafficâa sign that life was carrying on in a city under siege.
âOver here, miss,â said Billy, who had found a long, thin piece of discarded iron and was poking away at granulated cementseveral inches thick that was covering the pavement. Freddie Hackett knelt at his feet.
Maisie joined them. âIt didnât take you long to find it, Billyâthe victim was definitely a âbleeder,â wasnât he?â
âAll I can say is, the copper who came out with young Freddie here couldnât see to the end of his nose.â Billy stopped moving the sand around and rested on his haunches next to Freddie Hackett. âLook at this. Big old puddle of blood. I donât know where the constableâs head was, but it wasnât on the job.â
He stood up and continued to prod with the iron rod, revealing more of the dark brown stain that was expanding as he clearedaway sand and dust.
âThereâs no doubt that someone made sure this was well disguised with cement dust,â said Maisie. She leaned over and touchedthe stain, then stood up and looked around her. She began to walk backward and forward, peering down while expanding the breadthof ground covered.
âWhatâs she doing?â asked Freddie.
âItâs what they call a âgrid search,â sonâinstead of just wandering around looking for something when you donât know whatyouâre looking for, you sort of mark out a grid in your mind so you donât miss anything within a certain distance to and froma central pointâthis here is the central point.â
âSort of like geometry at school.â
âYeah, son, sort of like that. But then you look for something that just doesnât seem right, something that stands out oris a bit odd, as if it doesnât belong.â
Maisie continued her search until she had walked every inch of a twenty-foot square around Billy and the messenger boy, whichentailed negotiating a good deal of rubble. She looked up toward the bombed-out buildings and piles of masonry and squinted,standing for a few minutes before beginning to make her way back, adhering to the grid she had just walked while still concentratingon the ground. Then she stopped, and reached down.
âWhat is it, miss?â asked Billy. Freddie stepped toward Maisie, but Billy stopped him. âHang on, mateâwe donât want to disturbanything.â
Maisie felt for the small drawstring cloth bag in her pocket, and drew out a pair of tweezers. She leaned forward with the tool and picked up half a cigarette.
âLooks like someoneâs old smoke to meâand I donât know whoâd have a mind to throw away half a ciggie. Itâs hard enough gettingthem on the black market,â said Billy.
Maisie nodded. âAnd thatâs exactly what this isâa half-smoked cigarette.â She drew her attention to the boy. âFreddie, wasthe murderer smoking?â
The boy closed his eyes tight, furrowing his brow so that at once he seemed like an old man in a youthâs body. He nodded andopened his eyes. âI was just rememberingâand I reckon he was smoking when him and the other bloke started having a barney,and then he flung his smoke down before he started on him.â
Maisie turned to Billy. âItâs a French cigarette.â
âBlimey.â
âAnd thereâs something over there, on that pile of rubbleâdo you think you can reach it for me, Billy?â
âRight you are,â said Billy, walking to the edge of the pavement, where mounds of broken bricks, cement and the remains ofwhat were once homes had been shoveled away from the road.
âCan you see it?â Maisie watched as her assistant scanned the area sheâd indicated.
Billy smiled. âGot it, missâitâs a wallet.â He stepped down and handed the old, worn wallet to Maisie.
As she suspected, there was nothing inside; no identification, no money, no photographs. She closed the wallet and brushedsand away from the back and front.
âThere it is,â said Maisie.
âWhat?â said Freddie Hackett.
âItâs a bit damp, but you can see the words âFabriquĂ© en Franceâ embossed into the leather on the back. It was made in France.âShe took a handkerchief from her bag and wrapped it around the wallet, along with the somewhat soggy half-smoked cigarette.âOf course, it could have been bought in London or anywhere else, but itâs an interesting discovery. I would imagine thateither it dropped from the victimâs jacket in the struggle or was thrown there. Did you see the men on that pile of rubbleat any point, Freddie?â
Freddie shrugged. âThey were all over the place, going for each other, so they couldâve stumbled up there.â He closed hiseyes. âI was so scared, Miss Dobbs,
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