Web of Discord (4 page)

Read Web of Discord Online

Authors: Norman Russell

‘Was there nothing going forward in the Baltic? This Meshed business could be a sign that Russia’s on the move in an old and unwelcome direction, but in that case, I’d expect all parts of that great body politic to move at once.’

‘I’ve heard nothing untoward so far, sir. Nothing in the way of troop movements, at least. But we have a man in Vilna who reported only last week that the Russian Government has been setting up some kind of secret establishment in the pine forest near the coastline of their province of Lithuania. Some kind of experimental weapons station, he says.’

‘Ah! Interesting. And who do you suppose would feel
threatened
by that, Napier?’

‘The German Empire, sir. The land they call Lithuania is perilously close to the East Prussian wilderness around Königsberg. All the more reason, I suppose, to hope that Goldsmith has invited some of our better class of Prussian to Arlington Street. Meanwhile, I’ll ensure that we continue to
keep a wary eye on these places.’

‘Do so. You’ll be accounted wise. The Caspian and the Baltic – both more or less inland seas, both firmly in the skirts of Holy Russia, which has been cautiously slithering down the Baltic coast for years – there are sinister possibilities in both areas. We live in interesting times, Napier.’

‘We do, sir. Thank you very much for calling on me. I’ll follow your advice, and ask Sir Abraham Goldsmith to invite Captain Andropov to that exotic house of his in Arlington Street. For a merchant banker, I believe he’s very
accommodating
.’

‘He is – so make sure that
you
are invited, as well! Get the Russians into a corner, where they can’t wriggle away from a bit of clever questioning. But don’t angle an invitation for
me
,
if you please – I’m going down to Hatfield for a week or two, and there, Napier, I intend to stay. Meanwhile, the best of luck to you!’

When Lord Salisbury had gone, Sir Charles Napier stood at one of the windows of his spacious office, looking down on to St James’s Park. Only a few weeks had passed since a most hideous conspiracy, centred in Germany, had been exposed, and its proponents utterly crushed. Now, it would seem, it was the turn of the great Empire of Russia to muddy the waters. Any move by Russia into Afghanistan could only be aimed at
violation
of the Indian borders. Salisbury had counselled caution, but he knew as well as Napier that any attack on India from that quarter would lead to war.

Those agents – ‘correspondents’, as they called themselves – were very difficult to control or contact. They were
independent
operators, well paid, but with a genuine regard for Britain. Both Abu Daria and Piotr Casimir had sent their reports via telegraph from Petrovosk. What about the man in Vilna, Jacob Kroll? He, too, had sent a telegraphic message. It had been relayed from Vilna via Königsberg.

Cables…. A magical web of global communication, one of the glories of the nineteenth century! But that great
electrical
wonder, apparently, had its dangerous weaknesses.
Earlier that year he had been visited by a man called Dangerfield, one of the directors of the Eastern Telegraph Company, who had suspected that all was not well with the cables coming into Britain at Porthcurno, on the Cornish coast.

Napier moved uneasily. Was it any longer a prudent thing to trust to cabled messages? They came in the anonymity of code, so that one couldn’t say, for instance, ‘Ah! Abu Daria’s
handwriting
gets no better!’ It would as well to check by other means that the three agents remained free from harm.

 

Killer Kitely crouched beside the window in the unfurnished room and listened to the shouts and curses of the mob in the narrow street outside. What light there was glinted on the shards of glass on the bare wooden floor. One piece of brick had drawn blood just below his left eye.

Curse it! Curse them! Why had he turned round when that cringing skivvy of a butler had appeared on the scene? They’d got that cocky little jackanapes Box on the trail, and he was there, outside, in East Dock Street with a pack of bobbies and a gin-sodden mob from the alehouses and the rows of flea-ridden brick cottages.

What was that? A vibrant groan from outside in the street –
crash
!
They were trying to break the front door down. Well, it was a very special front door, lined with sheets of iron. He’d quit this cursed place as soon as he was ready. It had been worth it. A hundred pounds in gold, the gaffer had given him.

Someone was shouting. Shouting through a megaphone. What was he saying?

‘Kitely! This is Detective Inspector Box of Scotland Yard. Come out, with your hands above your head. We’ll give you five minutes only!’

What’s that? A cheer? A cheer for Box from those
half-starved
, consumptive labourers and dockers? What had that busy little bantam ever done for them, or for their thin wives and barefoot children? But they were all after his blood, curse
them, just because he’d blasted their favourite toff to kingdom come. Well, before he made himself scarce, perhaps they’d like a dose of the same medicine….

Box, standing with Sergeant Knollys among a knot of uniformed policeman on the opposite side of East Dock Street, looked critically at the blank windows of the mean house where Killer Kitely lay hidden. This row of houses down near Shadwell Basin contained Joseph Kitely’s lair. Box had ringed the whole side of the street with police, so that all normal exits were covered. But there was more to this warren of derelict houses than met the eye. He turned to a stolid, bearded man of thirty or so who was standing motionless beside him, surveying Kitely’s lair through field-glasses.

‘I don’t like the feel of this, Sergeant Porter,’ said Box. ‘Kitely’s taking too much time to come out. He’s up to
something
. I know all about these houses. They’re joined by tunnels through the cellars, and they go right down to the docks. I want you to go now, Sergeant, to Old Field Court. There are gratings there, in the area of number six. Take Sergeant Knollys here with you. See if you can find Sergeant Ruskin – he’s here, somewhere – and tell him to go with four constables to Connaught Lane, just past Samuelson’s warehouses. There’s a tunnel entrance there. Kitely might emerge through either of those exits.’

Sergeant Porter saluted, and he and Knollys disappeared down an alley. There was no point in waiting any longer, thought Box. It was time to storm Kitely’s citadel. He put the megaphone to his lips.

‘Joseph Kitely—’

His words were immediately drowned by a deafening report that echoed along the narrow street. A bright flash of flame lit up one of the shattered ground-floor windows of the besieged house. At the same time one of the bystanders screamed and spun grotesquely off the pavement into the carriageway. Kitely had fired into the crowd from his lair.

In the beleaguered house, Killer Kitely crawled across the floor of the bare room and out into the passage. Best to leave
the double-barrelled shotgun behind him. He stood up, and tiptoed through the dust and debris into the dim rear quarters of the house. There was a strong smell of escaping gas, and a menacing hissing sound coming from the back scullery. Time to go.

In a dark corner of the pantry was a trap door, under which a ladder led down to a tunnel that would take him into the area of a house in Old Field Court. Box and his clodhoppers would be left laying siege to an empty house. Curse this gas! They’d hear him coughing. He seized the handle of the trap door, and pulled.

The trap door remained firmly shut. Kitely rattled the handle in fury, and felt the rigid resistance of bolts that had been shot closed under the trap. Someone had cut off his way of escape. Had the police got down there, too? Coughing and wheezing, Killer Kitely stumbled into the dark kitchen. There would be a hatchet there—

Kitely saw the hissing slow-match when it was too late to prevent it igniting the marine flare to which it had been attached.

 

Outside in East Dock Street it had started to rain. The crowd was now screaming with rage. A further volley of bricks and stones showered into the empty house, and the clatter of uprooted cobbles turned to thunder as they rolled down the steep slate roof. Thank goodness that Mackharness had
assembled
such a large force of men to accompany him on his mission! It was time to curb the enthusiasm of the mob, and Old Growler’s men could do that task admirably. He’d make one last attempt to make Kitely see sense. He cupped his hands, and shouted across the street.

‘Joseph Kitely—’

As though in reply, the house in East Dock Street erupted in a ball of orange flame. Two men on the roof shrieked, and
slithered
down into the road. The crowd cried out in alarm and pushed desperately back away from the inferno. The windows of the house became six bright orange rectangles darting out
wicked tongues of flame.

Box heard footsteps behind him, and saw that Knollys had returned. Both men were silent for a moment, watching the burning house. A number of policemen, their serge uniforms smoking, emerged from the alley beside the houses, dragging a burning bundle between them. The crowd, which had fallen silent, began to disperse.

‘Sir,’ said Sergeant Knollys, ‘you were right about Connaught Lane. Sergeant Ruskin found the tunnel opening you mentioned. It’s got a battered iron gate covering it. He and his men had staked it out. I was present when the gate was pushed open from inside. A man’s face peered out for a moment – a pale, cadaverous face it was – and then drew back into the tunnel. I thought you’d want to come back and take a look, sir.’

‘I do, Sergeant Knollys, because whoever it was, it wasn’t our friend Kitely. Let’s start walking. I’ll be very interested to see who comes out of that tunnel.’

As Box and Knollys walked away from East Dock Street, some of the policemen upended a rainwater butt on to the wet pavement, and doused the smouldering remains of Killer Kitely.

 

It was now late in the afternoon, and the March sky was
darkening
. Box and Knollys threaded their way through a maze of bleak, wet streets rising in huddled squalor from the bustling docks bordering the Thames.

As they turned the corner from Green’s Basin, the stocky, bearded figure of Sergeant Porter appeared beside them as though by magic. He checked them with a warning hand, and jerked his head towards Connaught Lane. They shrank back against the blank wall of a warehouse and looked out across the half-demolished site towards the concealed tunnel entrance. There was nobody in sight.

‘Sergeant Ruskin’s done well,’ Box whispered.

‘He has, sir. There’s six of them there, all watching that tunnel. They – look, sir!’

The battered iron gate closing the tunnel had been cautiously pushed aside, and a figure was emerging. It was a man in a long black overcoat, with a peaked cap pulled well down over his eyes. It was an incongruous sight to see anyone emerging from what Box knew to be a disused ventilation shaft belonging to a long-replaced deep sewer.

‘Nimble enough, but not in the first flush of youth,’ muttered Box. ‘Five foot ten or thereabouts. I wonder who he is? Are you trained in surveillance, Sergeant Porter? If you’re not, tell me honestly.’

‘I am trained, sir. I can tail that cove with the best of them.’

‘Very well. He’s moving off down the lane towards the river. Split from me now, Sergeant, but don’t lose sight of Sergeant Knollys and me. Remember the golden rules: no footfall, no shadows, move only when your quarry’s just out of sight.’

The man walked swiftly through the lanes and alleys of the docklands, bearing steadily downhill towards the river. After ten minutes or so, pursuers and pursued emerged on to the dockside. The sky above the river had grown surly and
threatening
, and a few gas lanterns were flaring along the quays, where several cargo ships were moored.

‘St Thomas’s Stairs,’ Box muttered. ‘What’s he up to? Is he going to cross the river? Come on, we’ll lose him if we’re not careful!’

Box broke cover, and the two sergeants followed him. The river was alive with ships and boats of all kinds. Winking mast lights crossed and recrossed each other in the growing gloom. Their quarry had disappeared under a cast-iron arch, and was clattering down a flight of steps. Evidently the man suddenly realized that he was being pursued, for he all but jumped into a steam launch that had evidently been waiting with steam up for his arrival.

Box stood on the end of the pier, watching the launch as it moved rapidly into mid-stream, where it was lost among the maze of shipping. It was now raining heavily, but Box seemed not to notice. Sergeant Porter shaded his eyes with his hand, and tried to follow the progress of the launch.

‘No identity marks, sir,’ he said. ‘It was a grimy little craft, but a swift one for all that. Well, we’ve lost him. I don’t suppose we’ll ever know who he was.’

‘Maybe not, Sergeant Porter,’ said Box, ‘but at least we can assume that he was involved in that gruesome funeral pyre back at East Dock Street. I reckon he was the man who hired Kitely, and then made sure that he couldn’t escape from his lair. So we know something about our cadaverous friend. Perhaps a bit of gentle probing in certain quarters will reveal a bit more. Time will tell.’

The gas lamps were glowing in Edgerton Square when Box called at Sir John Courteline’s house early that evening. As he stepped over the threshold, he fancied that the hallway still echoed to the screams of the frantic widow, although in reality it was enveloped in a brooding calm.

Lady Courteline received Box in her private sitting-room on the first floor. She lay on a sofa drawn up to the fireplace, where a low fire was burning. An open door in the room led into a kind of miniature study, where, Box had been informed, the family’s physician was waiting in case he was needed.

‘No, Mr Box,’ Lady Courteline was saying, ‘I was not present when my husband was shot. It was, I think, just before twelve o’clock – some minutes before – and I was here upstairs, talking to my daughter Olga. My husband was downstairs in his study. He said he was going to smoke a cigar.’

Box looked gravely at the handsome, dark-haired woman reclining on the sofa. Her quiet voice held the faintest hint of a foreign accent. Whatever her earlier emotional state, she had regained her natural poise, and her delivery, though low, was firm in tone. But she looked like a woman completely crushed by sorrow, and the dark shadows beneath her haunted eyes told Box of almost unendurable pain.

‘Was Sir John about to go out, Lady Courteline? Although
he’d not yet put on a topcoat, he seemed dressed for a foray out of doors.’

‘Yes, he was on his way out to one of his numerous daily engagements. It was his habit to smoke a cigar in the study before leaving. He smoked those thin, dark little things that don’t last for hours – what do you call them?’

‘Cheroots.’

‘Yes, that’s right. My husband, Mr Box, was a public figure: I may say, a national figure. He had enormous philanthropic interests, and was fiercely concerned for the welfare of the poor, as these demonstrations outside his house today will have shown you. As to the manner of his death, I am at a loss to account for it. I cannot help you in the least. Sir John was universally esteemed.’

‘Do you by any chance know, ma’am, where your husband was going today?’

‘What? No. I’ve no idea. My husband is frequently away from the house in the afternoons. At one time, years ago, he’d tell me where he was going, but with the passing of the years we both felt that it was a useless courtesy. If there were any grand evening engagements, then, of course, I would accompany him. But these daytime things – no.’

The widowed woman seemed to lose sight of Box for a moment. He could see her anxious eyes fill with vacancy as her mind moved away somewhere far from Edgerton Square. Box felt suddenly uneasy. If Sir John Courteline had been due at a public function somewhere that afternoon, why had no one connected with that function responded to his very public death?

‘I will have been left very comfortably off,’ said Lady Courteline, ‘and Olga, too. Perhaps I shall return to Odessa….’ She was speaking to herself, in her inner world, not to Box. She caught sight of him waiting attentively for her to speak, and burst back into the present with a start. She looked at Box for a moment as though she could not recognize him.

‘My husband, Mr Box,’ she said, ‘belonged to many clubs and
societies – debating clubs, dining clubs, coteries of like-minded men who would meet together for mutual congratulation and bonhomie. Like all men, he revelled in secret societies and exclusive gatherings. Sir John rather liked being inscrutable over these activities of his, and we pretended to be overawed. He was very much in the world, was my husband.’

Lady Courteline suddenly sat up on the sofa. She bit her lip in vexation. Box saw a guarded expression come to her face, and her voice, which had started to rise imperiously, subsided to what he imagined was its usual refined, quiet tone.

‘I think that is all I can tell you, Inspector Box. You may wish to talk with my daughter Olga, who is downstairs. It remains for me to thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for your success in running to earth the foul assassin of my dear husband.’

There was an unmistakable tone of dismissal. Box rose from his chair. At the door he turned, and asked one final question.

‘Lady Courteline, did you or your husband ever know a Dr Nikolai Ivanovich Karenin?’

Lady Courteline’s body convulsed, and she collapsed on to the sofa, crying out, as though in pain, ‘Karenin? No! I
recollect
no such name!’ The physician appeared immediately from the adjoining room. He took the widow’s hand in his, and shook his head as a sign to Box that his interview should go no further. Box stepped out on to the landing, and the doctor firmly closed the door of Lady Courteline’s room.

 

As Box came down the stairs, a fair-haired young woman emerged into the hall from a room near the front door of the house. She was wearing a simple black evening dress, and had thrown a light cashmere shawl across her shoulders. She looked at Box with what seemed like hauteur, but he recognized it as a special kind of nervous shyness that some girls betrayed when confronted by authority.

‘You will be Inspector Box,’ said the young woman. ‘I am Olga Courteline. Come into the morning-room, please. I should like to talk to you.’

They entered a small, candle-lit room, where Olga motioned Box to sit beside a round mahogany table near the fireplace. Although she had called it the morning-room, Box thought that it was probably a kind of household office. Olga Courteline sat opposite him at the table.

‘Inspector Box,’ said Olga, ‘you have just come from seeing my mother. She will have told you what happened today, but she is in a very emotional state, and I thought a few words from me would give you a more accurate view of events.’

A cool customer, thought Box, fully in control of herself. Whatever her private feelings, this young lady was expert at concealing them. He took a notebook from his pocket. Olga Courteline wouldn’t quail at the sight of him taking a few
shorthand
notes.

‘What happened, Mr Box, was this. Mother and I heard the sound of a shot downstairs. It was unbelievably loud, like a great clap of thunder. People were shouting and running. Mother and I sat transfixed with fear. I said: “Something has happened to Father”. Mother said nothing. She just sat quite still and frozen.’

‘But in the end, I believe, she went downstairs?’ asked Box gently.

‘She did. “Let me see him”, Mother said. I tried to dissuade her, but she insisted. I yielded to her entreaty, and that, I may say, was a great mistake. Mervyn and I helped her downstairs and into the study. Mother knelt by Father’s body, and touched his neck. She looked at her fingers – I think she expected to see blood on them, but there was none.’

For the first time, the girl’s voice faltered. Conjuring up the morning’s horrors was beginning to have its effect.

‘What happened next, Miss Courteline?’ asked Box. ‘Your evidence is very valuable to me.’

‘Mother saw the cigar smouldering on the carpet near Father’s hand. “It’s still lit”, she said, and then she touched his hand. Suddenly, she started to scream. We should not have brought her down there. She screamed without ceasing. I half dragged her into the domestic quarters of the house where the
cook and I attempted to calm her. It was useless. She screamed until she collapsed.’

Box was quiet for a moment. He was wondering why this girl had decided to talk freely about her father’s murder, and her mother’s reaction to it. Most people did not volunteer that kind of information. They waited to be asked. Olga seemed to sense what was passing through his mind.

‘I’m telling you all this, Mr Box, because I know that Mother will have spoken dismissively of my father. She’d got into the habit of ridiculing his liking for clubs and coteries, and all the rest of it. But as you can see from her reaction to his murder, she loved him dearly. That isn’t hard to understand. My father was a great benefactor of mankind. In time, perhaps, he will be seen as a saint. So don’t set too much store on Mother’s slighting remarks. They are merely a mask for a lifetime of devotion.’

When Box left the room, Mervyn was waiting to open the front door. Box took the bloodstained visiting card from his pocket, and handed it to the butler.

‘Do you recollect this calling-card being left at the house today, Mervyn?’ he asked.

The butler viewed it with evident distaste, turning it over to look at the Russian characters on its reverse. He handed it back to Box.

‘No, indeed, sir,’ he said. ‘No such card was left here today.’ Mervyn hesitated for a little before adding, ‘It was very clever of you, sir, if I may say so, to identify the assassin so quickly, and then bring him to book.’

‘It’s very kind of you to say so, Mr Mervyn,’ said Box. ‘But I’ve still got to find who it was who hired Killer Kitely to do the murder. I’m only halfway there, you see, and maybe this
calling-card
will take me a bit further along the path.’

He accepted his hat and gloves from Mervyn, and stepped out into Edgerton Square.

 

It was quite dark when Box got back to King James’s Rents. Sergeant Knollys was sitting at the long table, writing carefully
in a notebook. He looked up from his task as Box pushed open the swing doors and came into the warm office. He sank down in his chair with a sigh, and threw his hat and gloves on the table.

‘I’ve been to see Lady Courteline,’ he said. ‘She tells an
interesting
tale, Sergeant, but there’s something about her manner that I can’t quite fathom. I met her daughter, too. But never mind them for the moment. How did you get on at East Dock Street?’

‘Well, sir, there’s not much left of that side of the street where Kitely’s hideout was, but they’d set up gas flares in the ruins, and – well, guess who was there, sitting on top of a pile of wet debris?’

‘Not Mr Mack? Surely they wouldn’t send a Home Office explosives expert to a place like that?’

‘Mr Mack it was, sir. Maybe someone high up told the Home Office to show some interest over Sir John Courteline’s murder. There he was, in the ruins of Kitely’s house, with his umbrella up, and smoking that clay pipe of his. He was holding a length of gas-pipe.’

‘What did he say?’

‘He said it was a very nice piece of work, simple and
effective
. The gas-pipe had been severed with a hacksaw. He’d found that, too, and told me the name of the tool shop where it must have been bought.’

Box laughed. The past year had brought him into close contact with the old expert from the Home Office Explosives Inspectorate, and there had grown up between him and Box a mutual regard. Mr Mack was no stranger to King James’s Rents.

‘But there was more to it than that, sir,’ Knollys continued. ‘He told me that he’d found the remains of a marine flare, and part of the metal mechanism used to hold a slow-match. Our murderous friend had arranged for Killer Kitely to be blown to pieces.’

Arnold Box lit a thin cigar, flicked the wax vesta into the grate, and smoked in silence for a while. Knollys was content to wait. He listened to the coal settling in the grate, and the gas
mantle spluttering and hissing.

‘Our murderous friend,’ said Box at length. ‘Perhaps he was the man whose name is printed on that card: Dr N.I. Karenin.’

‘We can’t be sure about that, sir.’

‘No; but there’s such a thing as being too cautious, Sergeant. That card…. I thought at first that Sir John Courteline had been holding it when he was shot, but I’ve changed my mind about that. I’ve just spoken to Mervyn, the butler, and he was positive that no such card had been handed in at the house today.’

‘You said that the card was lying near his hand?’

‘Yes, but not
in
his hand, Sergeant. He wasn’t clutching it. I rather think that it was Killer Kitely who placed that card there after he shot his victim. This Dr Karenin told him to do it, as much as to say, “Here’s my master’s calling card. Please accept a bullet through the heart, with his compliments”. It’s just a thought.’

‘It sounds as though there’s politics involved somewhere, sir.’

‘Perhaps; but that’s none of our business, Sergeant. Dr Karenin’s name isn’t in any of the medical registers, by the way, which doesn’t surprise me. Nobody I’ve asked seems to have heard of him.’

Box sighed, stretched his arms, and stood up. He retrieved his curly-brimmed bowler from the table, and settled it carefully on his head, using the mirror to check that he’s got the tilt just right He picked up his gloves.

‘I’m going home, Sergeant,’ he said. ‘It’s half past eight, and I’ve been running around since eight this morning. I’m going to my digs in Cardinal Court, where Mrs Peach has promised me a plate of steak and kidney pie, to be washed down with a pint of porter. I’m leaving you here to hold the fort. Remember, the teeming millions are seething all around you, and much sin and wickedness is being plotted by countless villains. Keep your weather eye open.’

Sergeant Knollys laughed, and turned back to his work. Box hovered near the swing door for a moment, then came back to the table.

‘I’m going out to Finchley tomorrow, Jack, to have tea with Louise – Miss Whittaker. I’m going to tell her all about Lady Courteline. There was something about her reaction to her husband’s murder that I can’t quite fathom. And there were things her daughter Olga said that puzzle me a bit. I want to hear a female slant on the matter. It’s time for me to have a word with Louise.’

 

Detective Inspector Box stood on the narrow strip of lawn in the long, brick-walled garden of Miss Louise Whittaker’s
semi-detached
house in Finchley. He had been sent out of the neat modern villa to smoke one of his slim cigars in the chill light of the March afternoon.

Ethel, Miss Whittaker’s little maid, demure in cap and apron, appeared at the back door.

‘Tea’s served, Mr Box. Missus says to come in when you’re ready.’

Arnold Box threw the butt of his cigar behind a convenient bush, and walked into the house.

‘Well, Ethel,’ said Box, ‘you’re very solemn today! Usually the very sight of me sends you into a fit of the giggles.’

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