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Within a few minutes of each other, two puzzling yet unconnected cases are presented to The Honourable Richard Rollison (aka ‘The Toff’), with requests for help. The beautiful Isabel Cole’s fiancée is accused of murder and she needs to save him from what seems an unjust fate, whilst Cedric Dwight is being pursued by a gang of murderous hoodlums. Both are urgent and complex cases and for a moment it seems that ‘The Toff’ will have to choose between them. There is absolutely no connection between the cases and yet ….
John Creasey
Born in Surrey, England, into a poor family as seventh of nine children, John Creasey attended a primary school in Fulham, London, followed by The Sloane School. He did not follow his father as a coach maker, but pursued various low-level careers as a clerk, in factories, and sales. His ambition was to write full time and by 1935 he achieved this, some three years after the appearance of his first crime novel ‘Seven Times Seven’. From the outset, he was an astonishingly prolific and fast writer, and it was not unusual for him to have a score, or more, novels published in any one year. Because of this, he ended up using twenty eight pseudonyms, both male and female, once explaining that booksellers otherwise complained about him totally dominating the ‘C’ section in bookstores. They included: Gordon Ashe, M E Cooke, Norman Deane, Robert Caine Frazer, Patrick Gill, Michael Halliday, Charles Hogarth, Brian Hope, Colin Hughes, Kyle Hunt, Abel Mann, Peter Manton, JJ Marric, Richard Martin, Rodney Mattheson, Anthony Morton and Jeremy York. As well as crime, he wrote westerns, fantasy, historical fiction and standalone novels in many other genres. It is for crime, though, that he is best known, particularly the various detective ‘series’, including Gideon of Scotland Yard, The Baron, The Toff, and Inspector Roger West, although his other characters and series should not be dismissed as secondary, as the likes of Department ‘Z’ and Dr. Palfrey have considerable followings amongst readers, as do many of the ‘one off’ titles, such as the historical novel ‘Masters of Bow Street’ about the founding of the modern police force. With over five hundred books to his credit and worldwide sales approaching one hundred million, and translations into over twenty-five languages, Creasey grew to be an international sensation. He travelled widely, promoting his books in places as far apart as Russia and Australia, and virtually commuted between the UK and USA, visiting in all some forty seven states. As if this were not enough, he also stood for Parliament several times as a Liberal in the 1940’s and 50’s, and an Independent throughout the 1960’s. In 1966, he founded the ‘All Party Alliance’, which promoted the idea of government by a coalition of the best minds from across the political spectrum, and was also involved with the National Savings movement; United Europe; various road safety campaigns, and famine relief. In 1953 Creasey founded the British Crime Writers’ Association, which to this day celebrates outstanding crime writing. He won the Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for his novel ‘Gideon’s Fire’ and in 1969 was given the ultimate Grand Master Award. There have been many TV and big screen adaptations of his work, including major series centred upon Gideon, The Baron, Roger West and others. His stories are as compelling today as ever, with one of the major factors in his success being the ability to portray characters as living – his undoubted talent being to understand and observe accurately human behaviour. John Creasey died at Salisbury, Wiltshire in 1973. 'He leads a field in which Agatha Christie is also a runner.' - Sunday Times.
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Double for the Toff - John Creasey
Chapter One
The First Appeal
But he didn’t do it,
said the woman.
I’m positive he wouldn’t kill a man,
declared the girl. You will try to help him, won’t you, Mr. Rollison?
It would have been easy for the Honourable Richard Rollison, known to so many as the Toff, to promise that he would help, and so soothe and comfort the woman, who was the accused man’s mother, as well as the girl, his sweetheart. He could have sent them away easier in their minds if not reassured, made some perfunctory inquiries of the police, and forgotten the whole matter. If the girl had been as ugly as proverbial sin and the mother a hag, however, he would not have promised help and failed to give it. As it was, the girl was attractive enough to make him want to help her, in spite of rather too heavy make-up, and the mother sufficiently forthright for him to think that her faith in her son might be justified.
He knew nothing of the women, except their names: Mrs. Benning and Isobel Cole. They had arrived at his house in Mayfair in a taxi, and on arrival at his top-floor flat had been a little on edge and embarrassed; and beneath all this, desperately frightened. Within minutes of being greeted in his large room, their embarrassment had vanished. Now they sat in front of Rollison’s large, figured walnut desk, facing him. Each was sitting on the edge of her chair, each eyeing him with great intentness, as if he could save her man. The girl was dark-haired, blue-eyed, comely – or, in modern parlance, she was easy on the eye, and her statistics were undeniably vital. Her hands were clasped in her lap, and the way she sat, absolutely upright, made it obvious that she was terribly upset. She wasn’t really young – in the middle twenties, perhaps – she wore a linen two-piece suit, obviously bought from a low-price departmental store, and a little too smart
and a little too loud a red. The older woman was smaller, much bigger at the bosom, yet with thinner features, a small and pointed nose, and thick grey hair. She wore her Sunday best: a navy blue suit and a white silk blouse, spotless and immaculate.
You must help Bob,
the mother said, pleading. He’s all I’ve got left.
She was not near tears. She did not appear to know how often that kind of phrase had been used and how hackneyed it seemed. She simply stated a fact: her son was all she had left. That stirred both compassion and curiosity in Rollison, who sat looking very grave – no other expression would have been kind – with his back to his Trophy Wall. He realised that neither of his visitors had noticed that remarkable wall. All they cared about was whether he would help them to prove that Robert Charles Benning was not a murderer, in spite of the evidence piled high against him.
Rollison looked from the mother to the sweetheart, and back again; and then he asked: Supposing you’re both wrong, and that he did kill this girl?
But he didn’t!
cried Isobel.
You can’t prove what isn’t true,
said the mother, more calmly. My boy may have done some silly things—what boys haven’t? But he wouldn’t have killed this girl, and I don’t believe he even knew her well.
He wouldn’t go around with another girl,
declared Isobel, tautvoiced. Everyone who knows him knows that. I would trust him anywhere, with—with anybody.
Her eyes were sparking with her faith and loyalty, and Rollison wasn’t surprised when she could sit still no longer. She jumped up and leaned over the desk, pressing against it, very close to him, obviously seeing him as a saviour instead of, simply, a remarkably handsome man.
Rollison glanced at Mrs. Benning, and wondered whether she shared that identical faith. Both felt positive that Bob was no murderer, but it would do no harm to talk to the mother on her own. That would have to come later, if at all.
What makes you think I might be able to help?
asked Rollison, to ease the tension.
He succeeded, for the girl moved back to her chair and sat down again. He pressed a bell underneath the ledge of the desk – a signal to his man, Jolly, to bring in tea. Neither of the women noticed the movement, and it was the mother who spoke next. The mother was the thinker and the stronger personality of these two; at the moment the girl seemed younger than her years, naïve and simple despite the sophistication her suit and make-up tried to show.
That was why he thought sweetheart
, and not girl-friend
. There was something refreshingly old-fashioned about her.
We couldn’t think of anyone else who might believe us and who might have some influence with the police,
Mrs. Benning answered. Everyone’s heard of the Toff, and everyone knows that you’re as good a detective as anyone at Scotland Yard.
She was looking at him straightly. You’re supposed to be a good man, too.
This was so naïve that it might almost be a kind of simple cunning.
Mother said she was sure you would help, and she absolutely made me come, although I’ve almost given up hope,
said Isobel. The police just wouldn’t listen to us.
She jumped up again. I’ve been round to our police station a dozen times, I actually went to Scotland Yard yesterday, but they’re all the same. Oh, they’re ever so polite, I don’t say they’re rude, but they simply won’t do anything. After all, they want to get the murderer, and they think it’s Bob.
Do you know why they’re so sure?
They can’t be sure!
Isobel cried.
Isobel, do sit down,
ordered Mrs. Benning, and the girl obeyed at once. If Rollison was any judge, the truth about Isobel Cole was that she was suffering very badly from shock. I know a little about it, Mr. Rollison, but not much—the police don’t tell you much if they don’t want to,
Mrs. Benning went on. They say that Bob had seen this Fryer girl two or three nights a week for the last month, and that he was with her on the night she was murdered. That’s last Monday. It’s Thursday now,
she added, and closed her eyes. They were glassy bright, and it was easy to believe that she had not slept since Tuesday morning, when her son had been arrested on his way to work. Everything was quite normal, as far as I was aware. Bob got up on Tuesday morning at a quarter to seven, the same as usual, and an hour later a police car came with some detectives who wanted to search his room. They searched the whole flat, too,
she added, bitterly. I’m not complaining about that. I just say that whatever else he did, my boy would not kill anyone.
"And he wouldn’t go about with a girl like her," declared Isobel.
Here was an excess of simple innocence, and it was hard to believe it was all natural. But then, Isobel would want to lay it on thick, so as to save her boy friend.
Rollison had read about the murder in the newspapers. It had not rated large headlines, except in one or two editions, for it seemed an ordinary and sordid enough crime. The murdered woman, Marjorie Fryer, had known a dozen boy-friends in a dozen weeks – a butterfly type to whom every man with money in his pocket was an attraction. According to report, she had been promiscuous and attractive. The official story, so far as it had appeared in the papers, was that Bob Benning had murdered her because she had threatened to tell Isobel of the association. Sordid was the obvious word; yet there was nothing remotely sordid about the devotion of these two women.
The door opened; both girl and woman turned, startled, and Jolly brought in a laden silver tray. He was a man of medium height, dressed in black coat, striped trousers, a grey cravat with a single diamond pin. His hair was grey and sparse, brushed to cover as much of his cranium as it could. He had a lined face, appeared to have a tendency towards dyspepsia, and moved with accomplished ease.
All right, Jolly. I’ll pour out,
Rollison said, and stood up from his desk. Doing so, he touched the noose of a hempen rope which had once hanged a man and looked as if it could be used for that again; but although it swung to and fro, neither of Bob Benning’s champions seemed to notice. As Jolly went out, Rollison picked up the milk-jug. If I agree to find out the truth, and it proves that you’re both wrong, what will you feel about it?
he asked, and in the same breath inquired. Do you take milk?
You can’t prove what isn’t true,
insisted Mrs. Benning. She hesitated, and then seemed to have to force herself to add: It couldn’t be any worse, anyhow. But—
Isobel seemed to know what she was going to say, and interrupted swiftly: I don’t care what it costs!
Isobel, it’s no use letting your heart run away with your head,
reproved Mrs. Benning. "I was going to say, sir, that we haven’t a lot of money, but everyone who reads the papers knows that you’re a professional detective these days, and we don’t need telling that your fee will be high. We can’t pay more than a hundred pounds now, but we both have good jobs, and we don’t want to skimp on this. How much will it cost, though?"
Money only comes into a case if I’m helping to make or to save money for someone else,
Rollison said easily. Expenses needn’t be very high.
Usually he referred anyone who talked of fees to Jolly, but that would place this matter on too formal a footing. He proffered a plate of wafer-thin brown bread-and-butter, and, after a moment’s hesitation, each of his visitors took a piece. Now, I want a list of the names and addresses of Bob’s friends and acquaintances, details of where he worked, any club he belonged to—anything which might help me to find out where he was on Monday night. Unless you already know,
he added, mildly.
I only wish we did,
said Isobel. I was at my art tutor’s—I go to him Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. If it weren’t for that I would have been with Bob all the evening. On Mondays I always try to get my washing done; I never see him on Mondays; the other nights he’s always waiting for me when I’ve finished my lesson. I wish I’d never started. I wish—
Isobel, it’s no use getting hysterical,
Mrs. Benning said sharply, and obviously she was more sensitive to over-pleading the case than Isobel. Mr. Rollison will think he’s wasting his time if you go on like that. I thought Bob had gone to the pictures, Mr. Rollison. He said he was going, but he was late in, and I didn’t ask him if he’d seen a good picture, so I’m not sure where he was.
All I know is, he wasn’t with Marjorie Fryer,
Isobel declared, more calmly. She sat back in her chair as if grimly determined to take the older woman’s advice. Mr. Rollison, I can’t tell you how grateful I am, and I’ll do anything at all to help.
"Anything, echoed Mrs. Benning.
Shall we start making out that list while we’re here?"
They had made the list, after much discussion and comparing of notes; there were ten names and addresses, only one of them even remotely familiar to Rollison, as himself or the Toff. The name was of a Captain Maude, whom he knew as a Salvation Army worker. The Army usually judged people well. There were also the details of the furniture factory in Shoreditch where Bob had worked as a carpenter apprentice for three years and a fully qualified carpenter for five; that showed steadiness and dependability. Bob Benning belonged to the Park Street Youth Club, which was Salvation Army sponsored, and he and Isobel spent many of their evenings together there. It was a normal record, and nothing at all suggested that the Bob of this record would ever become a murderer.
But his mother wasn’t really sure that he was wholly faithful to Isobel.
Would Isobel’s over-earnest manner tend to weary even a young lover?
Would a girl like Marjorie Fryer, who haunted pubs and drinking-clubs frequented by sailors, who made up skilfully, and who had the glitter and appeal of hard-bitten sophistication, have attracted Bob and made him lose his head? Was this simply a case of a young man sowing wild oats and trying to avoid reaping them? There was no reason in the world why it should not be. No mother would admit that her son might be a killer, and Mrs. Benning’s determination to come and see Rollison had probably been a last desperate effort to justify her faith.
As he saw them out, Rollison sensed the desperation in the older woman, and in a way he was more anxious for her than for Isobel, who would fall in love again.
It was probably all a waste of time, for the police might have positive proof that Bob Benning was a murderer. At least that should be fairly easy to find out. Rollison pressed the bell under his desk again, and when Jolly came in, said briskly: Telephone Mr. Grice and tell him I’m on my way to see him, will you? If he’s out, find out what time he’s expected, but if he’s in, let him think I’m really on my way.
Very good, sir,
Jolly said, and picked up the telephone receiver and began to dial Whitehall 1212. He knew, as Rollison did, that if Grice believed that Rollison was on the way he would make time to see him.
Jolly was waiting for a response, and Rollison was filling his cigarette-case from a box on his desk and trying to decide what Isobel Cole did at her lessons, when there was a squeal of brakes out in the street. That was not uncommon for Gresham Terrace lent itself to speed, and many drivers reached the corner before they realised it. But the sound had the customary effect on Rollison, who stepped across to the window to look out. Jolly said into the telephone: Superintendent Grice, please,
as Rollison reached the window.
At first glance he knew that this was no accident.
A small car was drawn up on the other side of the road, front wheels on the pavement. A man was climbing out, and looked as if he were desperately frightened. A motorcyclist was halfway along the street, swinging round in the road; he had just passed the little car, and would soon be heading back for it.
And the man getting out of it turned and dived towards the porch of a house nearly opposite the Toff’s.
The Toff flung up the window, leaned out, saw the gun in the motorcyclist’s hand, and bellowed: "Drop that gun!"
At least he might startle the motorcyclist long enough to make sure that he didn’t shoot at the man who now crouched in the doorway.
Chapter Two
The Second Appeal
There was hardly a moment to think.
Rollison saw the motorcyclist slowing down, and knew that he was preparing to take aim. The small car had covered its driver for a few yards, but now the motorcyclist had a clear view of the target. Two people were at the far end of the street and a Jaguar was parked nearer the scene of the attack; but that was all.
"Drop that gun!" roared the Toff again.
He saw the motorcyclist glance up, and the front wheel wobbled. If the man in the doorway had any sense he would run close to the car and save himself now; but he had no sense, and looked as if he were paralysed with fear. Rollison saw all this, and knew that Jolly had put down the receiver without talking to Grice and was crossing the room swiftly.
Get me something to throw,
called Rollison, and heard the flurried movements as the man turned round.
Below, the motor-cycle was almost at a standstill. The driver was no longer looking up, but steadying his machine. The gun was plain to see in his right hand. The two people had stopped, and were staring; nervous. Nothing else moved. Given a second to shoot in, the motorcyclist could hardly miss his man, and this was no moment to marvel at the fact that cold-blooded murder was being attempted in broad daylight in a Mayfair street.
Then Rollison, arm stretched out behind him, felt something cold and heavy being put into his hand: a glass paper-weight. Bless Jolly! He judged the distance, and shouted again. He saw a yellow flash and heard the sharp report of a shot as he hurled the paper-weight. He missed the motorcyclist by an inch or two, but the glass smashed on to the hard surface of the road. It seemed to burst, like a hand grenade, and showered the motorcyclist with tiny pieces of glass. He flung up his right arm to protect his eyes.
"Run for it!" Rollison bellowed to the man in