CONSTABLE AROUND THE HOUSES a perfect feel-good read from one of Britain’s best-loved authors

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CONSTABLE AROUND THE HOUSES a perfect feel-good read from one of Britain’s best-loved authors Page 22

by Nicholas Rhea


  ‘So, what did he do?’

  ‘He said he was going to arrest me! Him arrest me! And him a fake . . . God, he had a nerve. I said no way am I going to be treated like that, I told him I knew he was a fake and I was going to drive away and circulate his description, and that of his “police” car, to my mobile colleagues. I told him I had my certificate of service in the car if he wanted proof of my claim, but at that he pulled a knife, which he’d got hidden up his sleeve, and before I could react it was at my throat and he was marching me towards his car. He made me get into the rear seat and lie down, then he handcuffed my hands behind my back, slammed the doors, removed the blue light with its police sign from the roof and put it in the boot, then drove away.’

  ‘Where to?’ I asked.

  ‘I had no idea. I was face down on the back seat with my hands handcuffed behind me and my legs jammed sideways down the front of the rear seat and trapped in that position when he moved the front seat backwards. There was no way I could sit up and do anything except shout like hell, and I couldn’t see where I was being taken. It wasn’t far, though; we drove for only a very short time and the next thing I knew we were entering a barn or a garage and when we were inside, he got out, locked the car doors and then closed the barn door. He left me where I was. It was dark inside, and try as I might, I couldn’t budge. And my legs were aching like hell, they were twisted, you see, and jammed . . . I’ll tell you what, Nick, I was getting pretty worried by this time. The man was a maniac, I was sure of that, I had no idea what he was going to do to me.’

  ‘And that’s when Claude Jeremiah Greengrass came to your rescue?’

  ‘It seems I had been incarcerated in an outbuilding of a former stately home. The entire complex has been transformed into a caravan and camping site, as well as sporting some holiday cottages and a pond for water sports. Claude goes there regularly selling eggs and vegetables and so on to the tourists. He’d been leaving the complex in that old truck of his when he’d seen the “policeman” rushing away from the barn, pulling off his tie as he ran, and then removing his jacket while trying to carry his cap. All most ungainly! Claude thought it odd and let’s face it, he can recognize a genuine policeman even if he’s miles away. He thought something was fishy but decided not to interfere, but as he left the complex he saw my car parked outside the entrance to the site, with the door standing open and the engine still running. He knows my private car, of course — so instead of alerting the fake copper by rushing back to rescue me, he had the good sense to telephone Force Headquarters from that kiosk near the entrance. They told him to wait there and do nothing further until the police arrived. They did arrive — within about ten minutes — and caught the imposter as he was packing his things. He was using a cottage in the grounds and had rented the garage, but he had another plain car in which he proposed to get away. I think he was going to leave me there, although he did say he would have telephoned someone to release me, once he was safely away. I’d panicked him. All he wanted to do was to get away before he was caught.’

  ‘Thank God for Greengrass!’ I smiled.

  ‘I never thought I’d have to thank that old rogue, Nick, but I do have to thank him now. Then, of course, I heard that our chaps had been looking for this fake copper for months — it seems he left the Zephyr in that lock-up at the caravan site while he was away from the place and then came back from time to time to conduct his blitz on erring drivers.’

  ‘He’s been doing it for years, I believe?’

  ‘No one knows for certain how long he’s been at it, but we think he’s been doing similar scams in other parts of Britain. He’s a fanatic of some kind, it seems he’s been turned down by the recruiting departments of regular Forces on several occasions. He’s applied to lots of Forces up and down the country, always without success. Not even the Metropolitan Police would take him! His name is Edwin Juggins and he hails from Wolverhampton. He’s got no previous criminal record, though. A weird chap. I’m glad he’s been caught.’

  ‘Your last big case then?’

  ‘I claim no credit for the arrest, and the real hero was Claude. He could have ignored my car . . . but he didn’t.’

  ‘So, both of you were late for your party?’

  ‘We had to stay and give statements and be interviewed by the team who were seeking that fake policeman. I couldn’t alert anyone for ages, it was all hush-hush at the time but, as you know, I did ask Control Room to ring you the moment we were given the all-clear.’

  And that’s how it was. As I was beginning to think we would have to raise a search party for Sergeant Blaketon, the chief inspector in charge of the Control Room rang me at the pub to explain what had happened. He gave me a good account of the incident so that I could acquaint the party guests and said that both Blaketon and Greengrass were on their way home. After freshening themselves they would soon be joining us. I told Mrs Blaketon about it and she said something to the effect that Oscar couldn’t leave the job alone, even in the final minutes of his career, but she did seem very proud of him. She said he was a copper to the bitter end but hoped he’d change in retirement.

  With this knowledge I asked Inspector Breckon to inform the gathering of the drama. It goes without saying that when Sergeant Blaketon and Claude Jeremiah Greengrass walked into that party side by side the place erupted in a huge cheer and more than a few of us had tears in our eyes.

  THE END

  ALSO BY NICHOLAS RHEA

  CONSTABLE NICK MYSTERIES

  Book 1: CONSTABLE ON THE HILL

  Book 2: CONSTABLE ON THE PROWL

  Book 3: CONSTABLE AROUND THE VILLAGE

  Book 4: CONSTABLE ACROSS THE MOORS

  Book 5: CONSTABLE IN THE DALE

  Book 6: CONSTABLE BY THE SEA

  Book 7: CONSTABLE ALONG THE LANE

  Book 8: CONSTABLE THROUGH THE MEADOW

  Book 9: CONSTABLE IN DISGUISE

  Book 10: CONSTABLE AMONG THE HEATHER

  Book 11: CONSTABLE BY THE STREAM

  Book 12: CONSTABLE AROUND THE GREEN

  Book 13: CONSTABLE BENEATH THE TREES

  Book 14: CONSTABLE IN CONTROL

  Book 15: CONSTABLE IN THE SHRUBBERY

  Book 16: CONSTABLE VERSUS GREENGRASS

  Book 17: CONSTABLE ABOUT THE PARISH

  Book 18: CONSTABLE AT THE GATE

  Book 19: CONSTABLE AT THE DAM

  Book 20: CONSTABLE OVER THE STILE

  Book 21: CONSTABLE UNDER THE GOOSEBERRY BUSH

  Book 22: CONSTABLE IN THE FARMYARD

  Book 23: CONSTABLE AROUND THE HOUSES

  Book 24: CONSTABLE ALONG THE HIGHWAY

  Book 25: CONSTABLE OVER THE BRIDGE

  Book 26: CONSTABLE GOES TO MARKET

  Book 27: CONSTABLE ALONG THE RIVERBANK

  Book 28: CONSTABLE IN THE WILDERNESS

  Book 29: CONSTABLE AROUND THE PARK

  Book 30: CONSTABLE ALONG THE TRAIL

  Book 31: CONSTABLE IN THE COUNTRY

  Book 32: CONSTABLE ON THE COAST

  Book 33: CONSTABLE ON VIEW

  Book 34: CONSTABLE BEATS THE BOUNDS

  Book 35: CONSTABLE AT THE FAIR

  Book 36: CONSTABLE OVER THE HILL

  Book 37: CONSTABLE ON TRIAL

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  A SELECTION OF BOOKS YOU MAY ENJOY

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  BY JOY ELLIS

  UK www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01LWY0PUJ

  US www.amazon.com/dp/B01LWY0PUJ

  What if your mother was a serial killer?

  A BLOODY KILLER SEEMS TO HAVE RETURNED TO THE LINCOLNSHIRE FENS.

  A gripping crime thriller by the bestselling author of the Nikki Galena series.

  Twenty years ago: a farmer and his wife are cut to pieces by a ruthless serial killer. Now: a woman is viciously stabbed to death in the upmarket kitchen of her beautiful house on the edge of the marshes.

  Then a man called Daniel Kinder walks into Saltern police station and confesses to the murder.

  But DI Rowan Jackman and DS Marie Evans of the Fenland police soon discover that there is a lot more to Daniel than meets the eye. He has no memory of the first five years of his life and is obsessed with who his real mother is.

  With no evidence to hold him, Jackman and Evans are forced to let him go, and in a matter of days Daniel has disappeared and the lonely Lincolnshire Fens become the stage for more killings.

  In a breathtaking finale, the truth about Daniel’s mother comes to light and DI Jackman and DS Evans race against time to stop more lives being destroyed.

  Full of twists and turns, this is a crime thriller that will keep you turning the pages until the shocking ending.

  MURDER ON THE OXFORD CANAL

  BY FAITH MARTIN

  UK www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0763RXLRV

  US www.amazon.com/dp/B0763RXLRV

  DISCOVER THE MILLION-SELLING SERIES NOW.

  MEET DI HILLARY GREENE, A POLICEWOMAN FIGHTING TO SAVE HER CAREER.

  Not only has she lost her husband, but his actions have put her under investigation for corruption.

  Then a bashed and broken body is found floating in the Oxford Canal. It looks like the victim fell off a boat, but Hillary is not so sure. Her investigation exposes a dark background to the death.

  Can Hillary clear her name and get to the bottom of a fiendish conspiracy on the water?

  This crime mystery will have you gripped from beginning to end.

  MURDER ON THE OXFORD CANAL is the first in a series of page-turning crime thrillers set in Oxfordshire.

  HE IS WATCHING YOU

  BY CHARLIE GALLAGHER

  UK www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07KKK5N7W

  US www.amazon.com/dp/B07KKK5N7W

  DISCOVER AN ABSOLUTELY GRIPPING RACE-AGAINST-TIME THRILLER FROM BESTSELLING AUTHOR CHARLIE GALLAGHER.

  A young woman’s body is left in a metal container in a remote location. The killer is careful to position her under a camera that links to his smartphone. He likes to look back at his work.

  HE IS WATCHING HER. BUT SHE ISN’T DEAD.

  So he will return to finish the job.

  Detective Maddie Ives is new to the area. She is handed a missing person report: a young woman with a drink problem who’s been reported missing fifteen times. It looks like a waste of time. But DS Ives has a bad feeling about the woman’s disappearance.

  DI Harry Blaker is called to the hit-and-run of an elderly man left to die on a quiet country road. There is no motive and it looks like a tragic accident. But he’s been working Major Crime long enough to know that something isn’t quite right. The two officers find their investigations intertwine and they will need to work together.

  BUT THEY MUST WORK FAST. TIME IS RUNNING OUT FOR THE WOMAN IN THE CONTAINER.

  GLOSSARY OF ENGLISH USAGE FOR US READERS

  A & E: accident and emergency department in a hospital

  Aggro: violent behaviour, aggression

  Air raid: attack in which bombs are dropped from aircraft on ground targets

  Allotment: a plot of land rented by an individual for growing fruit, vegetables or flowers

  Anorak: nerd (it also means a waterproof jacket)

  Artex: textured plaster finish for walls and ceilings

  A level: exams taken between 16 and 18

  Auld Reekie: Edinburgh

  Au pair: live-in childcare helper, often a young woman

  Barm: bread roll

  Barney: argument

  Beaker: glass or cup for holding liquids

  Beemer: BMW car or motorcycle

  Benefits: social security

  Bent: corrupt

  Bin: wastebasket (noun), or throw in rubbish (verb)

  Biscuit: cookie

  Blackpool Lights: gaudy illuminations in a seaside town

  Bloke: guy

  Blow: cocaine

  Blower: telephone

  Blues and twos: emergency vehicles

  Bob: money, e.g. ‘That must have cost a few bob.’

  Bobby: policeman

  Broadsheet: quality newspaper (New York Times would be a US example)

  Brown bread: rhyming slang for dead

  Bun: small cake

  Bunk: escape, e.g. ‘do a bunk’

  Burger bar: hamburger fast-food restaurant

  Buy-to-let: buying a house/apartment to rent it out for profit

  Charity shop: thrift store

  Carrier bag: plastic bag from supermarket

  Care home: an institution where old people are cared for

  Car park: parking lot

  CBeebies: kids TV

  Chat-up: flirt, trying to pick up someone with witty banter or compliments

  Chemist: pharmacy

  Chinwag: conversation

  Chippie: fast-food place selling chips, battered fish and other fried food

  Chips: French fries but thicker

  CID: Criminal Investigation Department

  Civvy Street: civilian life (as opposed to army)

  Clock: punch (in an altercation) or register

  Cock-up: mess up, make a mistake

  Cockney: a native of East London

  Common: an area of park land or lower class

  Comprehensive school (comp.): a public (re state-run) high school

  Cop hold of: grab

  Copper: police officer

  Coverall: coveralls, or boiler suit

  CPS: Crown Prosecution Service, who decide whether police cases go forward

  Childminder: someone paid to look after children

  Council: local government

  Dan Dare: hero from Eagle comic

  DC: detective constable

  Deck: one of the landings on a floor of a tower block

  Deck: hit (verb)

  Desperate Dan: very strong comic book character

  DI: detective inspector

  Digestive biscuit: plain cookie

  Digs: student lodgings

  Do a runner: disappear

  Do one: go away

  Doc Martens: heavy boots with an air-cushioned sole, also DMs, Docs

  Donkey’s years: long time

  Drum: house

  DS: detective sergeant

  ED: emergency department of a hospital

  Eagle: children’s comic, marketed at boys

  Early dart: to leave work early

  Eggy soldiers: strips of toast with a boiled, runny egg

  Enforcer: police battering ram

  Estate: public/social housing estate (similar to housing projects)

  Estate agent: realtor

  Falklands War: war between Britain and Argentina in 1982

  Fag: cigarette

  Father Christmas: Santa Claus

  Filth: police (insulting)

  Forces: army, navy and air force

  FMO: force medical officer

  Fried slice: fried bread

  Fuzz: police

  Garda: Irish police

  GCSEs: exams taken between age 14 and 16, replaced O level
s in 1988

  Gendarmerie: French national police force

  Geordie: from Newcastle

  Garden centre: a business where plants and gardening equipment are sold

  Gob: mouth, can also mean phlegm or spit

  GP: general practitioner, a doctor based in the community

  Graft: hard work

  Gran: grandmother

  Hancock: Tony Hancock, English comedian popular in 1950s

  Hard nut: tough person

  HGV: heavy goods vehicle, truck

  HOLMES: UK police computer system used during investigation of major incidents

  Home: care home for elderly or sick people

  Hoover: vacuum cleaner

  I’ll be blowed: expression of surprise

  In care: refers to a child taken away from their family by the social services

  Inne: isn’t he

  Interpol: international police organisation

  Iron Lady: Margaret Thatcher, applied to any strong woman

  ITU: intensive therapy unit in hospital

  Jane/John Doe: a person whose identity is unknown/anonymous

  JCB: a manufacturer of construction machinery, like mechanical excavators

  Jerry-built: badly made

  Jungle: nickname given to migrant camp near Calais

  Lad: young man

  Lass: young woman

  Lift: elevator

  Lord Lucan: famous British aristocrat who allegedly killed his children’s nanny and disappeared in 1974 and was never found

  Lorry: truck

  Lovely jubbly: said when someone is pleased

  Luftwaffe: German air force

  M&S: Marks and Spencer, a food and clothes shop

  Miss Marple: detective in a series of books by Agatha Christie, often used to imply a busybody, especially of older women

 

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