Dead Letters
Page 1
Acknowledgements
My thanks to the staff at the Islington Public Library, London Metropolitan Archives, the Guildhall Library, the Metropolitan Police Service Library and Museum, the Theatre Museum in Covent Garden, the Crystal Palace Museum, the British Library, but, most particularly, Haringey Archives. These are housed at the excellent Bruce Castle Museum in Tottenham and contain marvellous material on the locality and Alexandra Palace, including daily programmes, some of which feature the extraordinary Police Fêtes which used to be held there.
Individuals to whom I am indebted are: Pains’ Chairman, John Deeker, for his identification of the fireworks and descriptions of their dazzling effects; Peter Lane, Executive Librarian of the Magic Circle, for information regarding the magician, Dr Holden – although I confess to filling in a small gap with a little fictional magic of my own; Ted Crocombe for getting me online; and my husband, Bob, for editorial assistance.
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
Contents
Title
Acknowledgements
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
About the Author
By the Same Author
Copyright
Chapter One
Several people saw what happened. At least, said they did. Indeed, thought they had.
But, as commonly occurs at suddenly momentous moments, their attention was drawn by an alert which then caused them to witness the immediate aftermath – not the event itself.
In this case, the alert was the long and terrible scream which pierced through the music and happy laughter – and halted both.
Detective Inspector Ernest Best surveyed the scene and admitted that it was beguiling. The warm August sunshine glinted off the brass instruments and silver tunic buttons as bandsmen hurried towards their appointed places. Flower garlands were draped over the terrace railings and around the lamp posts. Pretty dairy maids caught the eyes of rugged soldiers come to demonstrate their fighting skills. Chalk lines were being drawn and hurdles erected down on the sports field below him, and circus hands glanced up gratefully at the clear sky as they busied themselves fastening back the flaps of the cheerful red circus tent.
No doubt about it, Best decided, the day was going to be a corker. The feeling of excitement and expectancy was growing.
He raised his eyes to the longer view, to the distant domes and spires of the City of London and well beyond. Could that even be the rival Crystal Palace he could glimpse in faraway Sydenham?
He had been furious when told to report for duty that day at the Alexandra Palace.
‘You can’t mean it,’ he’d exclaimed.
‘Oh yes I can,’ Detective Chief Inspector Cheadle had retorted belligerently, and fixed Best with his implacably baleful stare. ‘That’s just what I does mean.’
‘But what about the Chancel case?’ Best had pleaded. ‘It’s near to breaking. If I leave it now …’
‘You’re going,’ said Cheadle, ‘whether you wants to or not. What’s more, you’re taking six of the others as well.’
‘But the place will be swamped with police and the divisional detectives will be there,’ Best insisted, pointing to that day’s copy of Police Orders.
Cheadle stared at him stonily, refusing even to glance at the paragraph which required that two inspectors, five sergeants and fifty-seven constables (three mounted and four in plain clothes) be supplied by E, G, N and Y divisions to parade at the Alexandra Palace at ten thirty in the morning on the 19th August 1880.
‘Why would they also need seven of us from the Yard just to catch a few pickpockets? The place will be thick with off-duty coppers anyway.’
‘Shut up, Best,’ Cheadle commanded suddenly. ‘If you’ll just shut up I’ll tell you why.’ He paused, took a deep breath, leaned forward and whispered conspiratorially, ‘We’ve ’ad a warning.’
Oh God, it was worse than he had thought. The chief’s mind was going. They shouldn’t threaten to retire him like that.
The DCI slid a piece of blue writing paper across the desk. In large, loopy black writing it announced:
PEOPLE’S PALACE DISASTER – 19 AUGUST 1880! The Hensworth explosion will be as NOTHING compared with this tragedy! But you stupid bluebottles CAN’T STOP ME! Want a clue?
You would know me if you saw me but DARKNESS WILL HIDE MY FACE. Ha Ha. Catch me if you can!! Quicksilver
Best glanced up at Cheadle. ‘You’re taking this seriously?’
‘Ain’t got no choice, ’ave I?’
‘But the Hensworth explosion wasn’t deliberate, was it?’
‘Weren’t much left to show ’ow it happened, so everyone just supposed it was just another steam boiler accident.’
Best nodded. ‘Well, they are commonplace.’
‘Oh, “commonplace” are they?’ Cheadle mocked. ‘Anyways –’ he emphasized his words with more sharp jabs at Quicksilver’s note – ‘he never says that he done the Hensworth, does ’e – just that he’ll do something worse.’
Right again. No, his mind wasn’t going. Sharp as a razor as always.
Cheadle took a deep breath and held up his huge left hand.
Best knew what was coming – the pictures.
‘The way I sees it is, we got three possible pictures.’ He pointed to his knobbly forefinger. ‘Picture One: somebody wants to get back at the palace management – mebbe some ’ard feelings over the latest shenanigans.’
He held up his second finger. ‘Picture Two: them Fenians ’ave got goin’ again sooner than we expected – or they’re just tryin’ to confuse us.’
He extended his third finger. ‘Picture Three: there’s some old lag that ’ates police an’ wants to see us runnin’ about like ’eadless monkeys.’
Which we are going to do, Best thought with some irritation.
But it was true that the business doings at the palace were in flux – as usual. As usual, North London’s answer to Crystal Palace was being handed on like a parcel bomb in a grown-up game of musical chairs.
‘Could be some dodgy dealings goin’ on,’ said Cheadle, who had a poor view of human nature. ‘As for the Fenians, well –’ he shook his head – ‘bit out of the way for them, ain’t it?’
Cheadle sucked his teeth and twisted the ends of his once luxurious moustache. Stopped dyeing it, Best noticed. Mrs Cheadle’s sensible influence, no doubt.
Best nodded. The Irish American Brotherhood had not caused the Yard trouble for some time, but they had information that a London bombing campaign was in the early planning stage. ‘Doesn’t seem their style,’ Best agreed.
‘My money’s on an old lag who ’ates coppers.’
‘An Irish old lag who hates the English and coppers?’ suggested Best.
�
��Mebbe, mebbe,’ grinned the Chief Inspector. ‘One thing’s sure, ’e ain’t given us much time to prepare – tomorrow’s the day. An’ let’s face it, ’e couldn’t pick a better place to get his revenge on coppers than at the Metropolitan and City Police Annual Fête, now could ’e?’
Chapter Two
There were several ways for those bent on pleasure to approach the Alexandra Palace, which was perched majestically on Muswell Hill in North London.
The quickest and pleasantest was in the manner chosen by Inspector Best – from the west, by rail – right up to the building itself on the Alexandra Palace branch line of the Great Northern Railway. He was on the first special excursion train to arrive just as the People’s Palace opened at nine. There was much to be done.
Already the weather looked promising. A pleasant warmth was beginning to dispel the chill early morning mists and the still-low sun glinted off the necklace of ornamental lakes to the north – diamonds peeping through wispy cotton wool.
Good news for the organizing committee who were anxious for funds for the orphanage’s new wing. Last year’s fête had been a dismal washout. The rain had been relentless. Bad news for the likes of Best needing to thwart Quicksilver’s aims.
Good weather would bring an estimated 40,000 visitors and more, making the catching of him more difficult and his possible target larger.
Best glanced back at the steam train now noisily tooting and puffing its way back to collect its second load of passengers.
Just one example, he thought, of how to bring in an infernal device. One which could be tucked among the picnic hampers, sunshades, umbrellas and wraps, and delivered right into the very heart of the building.
Best contemplated the palace’s internal map and sighed. He’d forgotten there were quite so many rooms and converging and interlocking passages and corridors – all which could provide endless hidey-holes and escape routes for Quicksilver. The man shouldn’t boast that he was smarter than the police. He didn’t need to be. It was an unfair contest.
Slicing right through the building from north to south was the well-named Great Central Hall. This concert hall, cum theatre, cum meeting place, was immense.
‘Holds twelve thousand,’ murmured Chief Inspector Billings when they went to have a look. He was the uniformed officer in overall charge and was looking worried.
Best gazed up at the multicoloured early Renaissance arched ceiling and along to the gabled ends where brick mosaics garlanded huge rose windows. At the south end a magical rainbow glow was already lighting up the flagstones.
The north end was dominated by the spectacular Willis pipe organ, quite the largest, newest and most advanced pipe organ in the country.
‘Powered by two massive, steam-driven bellows,’ said Billings. ‘They’re down there in the basement.’ He pointed to the spot at the foot of the organ.
Best groaned. Steam. And in just the place for Quicksilver to make maximum impact.
‘The engineer says that these steam boiler accidents are caused by bad maintenance, not explosives. This steam boiler is kept tip-top.’
‘Yes, but it could be tampered with, couldn’t it?’ retorted Best testily. That basement could provide the requisite ‘darkness to hide his face’, he thought to himself.
Above them, stagehands were already stringing high wires and lowering trapezes and a revolving globe.
‘Performances begin at two thirty,’ said Billings, reading Best’s mind. ‘An orchestral concert followed by the circus aerial items, then alternating concerts and indoor circus until eight thirty this evening.’
‘There’ll be police bands in here?’
Billings shook his greying head. ‘No. They’re all spread around the grounds.’ He showed Best the Great Police Fête programme.
A Division would be leading off at one with waltzes, gavottes, marches and quadrilles on the terrace; the premier spot for the premier police band. Divisions S and E would take over from them until seven.
H and R divisions were to present a brisk selection of waltzes, polkas and schottisches in the Banqueting Hall from two until seven, while T, V and L would provide suitably sylvan music in The Grove from one to seven. Two more were to keep the crowds jolly on the cricket ground during the afternoon. Ten divisional police bands in all. A static resource too useful to waste.
‘I think we should tell them,’ Best said.
Billings raised his grizzled and wayward eyebrows.
‘On pain of death if they pass it on.’
Billings nodded soberly. ‘Very well.’
With wives and children among the throng that would be a tall order, they knew. They had already decided, in conference with a frantic management, that the customers and performers, even though many were police officers, should not be told in case there was a panic like at the Liverpool Coliseum eighteen months ago.
There had been a bit of a fracas in the theatre bar and, perhaps to break it up, someone had shouted ‘Fire! Fire!’ The whole audience in that 3,000-seat theatre had rushed for the door at once. Thirty-two had died and many more were horribly injured.
Another reason for not alerting all policemen present was that, in Best’s experience, when too many became involved each imagined he wouldn’t have to bother so much because the others would notice anything untoward. However, in this case, he reckoned more would be better.
Best and Billings continued their tour of inspection which included two theatres, a concert hall, billiard room, reading room, rest rooms, retiring rooms, an Italian garden, a palm court and an exhibition hall furnished with ebony and glass showcases containing examples of British artefacts.
The men looked at each other. Flying shards could cause some awful injuries. As might the glass and crockery in the bank of refreshment rooms along the north side of the building.
As Best and Billings nodded and smiled at friends and acquaintances, a sense of uneasiness grew.
Maybe, thought Best, an attempt should have been made to call off the fête after all, despite the opinion that it would be impossible at so short notice and that such a move would only make matters worse. Maybe when the posse of superintendents arrived to hand out prizes and show the flag, they would change the strategy.
The spectre of all these senior men appearing to take responsibility was less than comforting to Best, who knew that the same principle applied to them as to the junior ranks – but even more so. More chiefs meant more pandemonium, less coherence.
Orders would be issued by one, countermanded by another, the men would become confused … He’d seen it all before at ceremonial events and riots. Some chiefs would jockey for supremacy, others to avoid overall responsibility. There’d be more of the latter in a case like this, he suspected.
‘What ho? What roguishness is afoot here!’ Best instantly recognized the cheerful voice and turned to see the ebullient Detective Inspector Littlechild decked out in splendid blazer, boater and necktie: one of the extra men he had been allotted.
‘Was coming anyway of course – to make my bow before the footlights – but I received a telegraph last night instructing me to arrive earlier.’ He rubbed his hands together. ‘What mysteries must we unravel here?’
Best explained. He was relieved to see the man. He might have a sometimes embarrassing relish for adventure and excitement but he was also keen and a hard worker.
‘Cheadle not coming?’
‘Not till later. Thinks an early arrival might start people wondering – same with the superintendents.’
‘Bothered about panic?’
Best nodded. ‘So, anyway, it’s all low-key.’
‘Right,’ said Littlechild, his eyes glistening. He was a handsome man around 5ft 9in, and in his early thirties but looked younger. Indeed, it was his boyish looks which had helped him get into the branch in the first place. They were a good cover. No one believed the young joker was a police officer. Best didn’t sometimes.
Littlechild’s moustaches and whiskers were now full and
dark and he delighted in combing them into different styles for different characters from his favourite disguises: lugubrious for clergyman, close and smarmed down for a butcher and rather wild for a soapbox orator.
‘Keep a look out for any old lags who could have a grievance,’ Best warned. Littlechild, a very active officer, knew more of them than most.
‘Right,’ he said. ‘And this darkness thing, what do you reckon to that?’
Best shrugged. ‘Could be that he’ll do his deed in some dark corner, there’s plenty of those. Or after dark – but there won’t be much of that. Any other ideas?’
He shook his head. ‘Sounds familiar though.’ He knitted his bushy eyebrows in thought and pursed his lips dramatically. ‘Might come to mind.’ He grinned. ‘One thing’s certain. It’s not Dickens, Thackeray or Bulwer-Lytton!’
It was no secret that Littlechild not only swore by these three authors but thought no man need read any other. Indeed, he claimed that Lytton’s tales of derring-do had made him become a detective.
‘How about fire?’ put in Detective Sergeant 3rd class John George Smith, who had just joined them.
Sometimes, thought Best, the lad had a tendency to state the obvious.
Fire had been the curse of the Alexandra Palace. Only two weeks after its opening in 1873, the palace had burned down. The management, encouraged by the initial public response, had found heart and money to rebuild the gutted building. This time, four water towers and extra water storage tanks by the Great Hall were included in the plans.
‘It’s a possibility, of course,’ nodded Best kindly. ‘Anyway, we’ve got the palace brigade on standby.’ He paused. ‘I’m just off around the grounds. Shall I take Smith here,’ he asked Littlechild, ‘while you keep an eye out for the rest of our lot and a special watch on the comings and goings in the theatres and concert hall?’
Littlechild grinned and twirled his moustache like the evil Sir Jasper. ‘Righto. I could think of harder tasks than keeping an eye out for Little Dolly Daydream and a few rogues and vagabonds.’