King and Joker

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King and Joker Page 18

by Peter Dickinson


  “How is Fatty?”

  “I don’t know. I’ve given him an anaesthetic—killed him very likely. But if he comes through that and the wound doesn’t get infected I think he might do. Hell, I’ll try d’Arcy.”

  He picked up the telephone and dialled a house number. Louise heard the whine of the engaged tone. After three tries Albert put the handset down with a snap.

  “He’s keeping all lines permanently open to Caracas, I bet,” he said.

  “Father said he was going to ask Mr Theale to see what he could find out about the joker.”

  “Damned Saturday,” said Albert. “There won’t be anybody about I can ask to go and find Theale. I daren’t leave Fatty.”

  “I’ll go. I suppose I’d better ring up Aunt Tim and tell her we’re not coming.”

  “D’you mind? Sorry, Lulu … Fatty’s going to have the hell of a scar if he does heal. He’ll look like a mobile hot cross bun.”

  Aunt Tim was a marvellous old dear. She was clearly glad not to have to cope with runaway princesses on top of three hundred bee-keepers, but managed to sound disappointed. Sergeant Theale was working with three other policemen in the outer office of the suite which had been assigned to the police. Louise explained what had happened in the zoo. He shook his head.

  “I’d like to come, Ma’am,” he said. “I think it could be important. But I don’t know as I could persuade Superintendent d’Arcy. He’s run out of leads, you see, and now we’re cross-checking all the guests at the reception, to see that none of them was an impostor.

  “Bloody waste of time is you ask me,” said one of the other policemen. “Inside job if ever I bloody saw one.”

  “Do you think the Superintendent could see me for a few minutes?” asked Louise, smiling at him, public face (for reassuring subjects who have committed gaffes).

  “He’s pretty busy, Ma’am. I’ll ask.”

  In the inner office Louise sensed a different sort of frustration. It took the story princess, distressed and serious but quite coherent, to persuade Mr d’Arcy even to listen.

  “What d’you think, Jack?” he said to the officer at the other desk.

  “Better have it checked out, sir. Two things: it sounds a bit violent, which the other jokes His Majesty told us about didn’t; I’m not saying that means it’s got anything to do with the murder, but it does make more of a pattern. Chappie plays a series of practical jokes—he’s a bit unbalanced anyway—does his nut—kills McGivan, then this. And I suppose you’ve got to reckon on what His Majesty might say to you if he was here.”

  He might have been more tactful, but it did the trick. For an instant Mr d’Arcy looked furious, then he nodded and smiled bleakly at Louise. The other officer fetched Theale, who stood to attention in front of Mr d’Arcy’s desk.

  “Her Royal Highness has told me about the incident in the zoo, sir,” he said.

  “Well, nip along there and check it out. How are you going to tackle it?”

  “I’ll do a thorough search of the zoo, sir, though if it’s the same chappie as before he’ll have worn gloves and left no traces, except what he meant to leave. But it being Saturday makes a difference, sir. A lot of the Palace staff goes off, Friday night; we have a different staff weekends. I’ve made a chart of the other incidents, sir, but because they all occurred weekdays there was a lot of staff I couldn’t eliminate. With a bit of luck this incident should bring it down to not more than half a dozen, and I can concentrate on them.”

  “All right,” said Mr d’Arcy. “Only don’t take longer about it than you have to.”

  “I think you’re making a mistake, sir,” said the other officer. “OK, suppose these jokes are a red herring, they’ve still got to be cleared up or they’ll go on messing around with our main investigation. In fact it sounds to me as though this chappie was sufficiently unbalanced to start deliberately trying to muck around with us.”

  “All right, all right!” said Mr d’Arcy. “You look into it, Theale. See what you come up with. Report back to me if you need help. Don’t waste time, but do a thorough job.”

  “Very good, sir.”

  Albert was at his work-bench, very carefully weaving of strips of tape across the wounds on Fatty’s back. The Toad looked like one of those parcels which often arrived at the Palace—a loyal gift of a Lancashire black pudding, say, wrapped with more fervour than skill, delayed in the post and now bulging or oozing from a dozen seams.

  “Won’t be a sec,” he said.

  “Go get ’em, you two,” said the mynah, swirling overhead.

  Louise had never seen a man as startled as Sergeant Theale. For a moment he had the look of someone shot in the back in a Mafia film.

  “It’s all right,” she said. “It’s only the mynah.”

  “I wish to God he was better at voices,” said Albert. “My guess he’s picked that up from whoever put the cats in here. Good of you to come, Sergeant. I gather you couldn’t interest the Superintendent.”

  “He’s a bit tied up at the moment, Sir.”

  Louise saw Albert suppress a little flare of temper with just the same quick smile that Father would have used.

  “Fine,” he said. “The point is that I don’t want to touch anything till you’ve seen it and I don’t want to hang around doing nothing while my animals die. That’s the scalpel he used to slash the toad with, I think. I haven’t touched it.”

  “Right, Sir, I’ll get on to that at once. I suppose there’s no question of the cats having got in by mistake.”

  “Just possible. But I don’t see them bringing a mouse with them, slashing poor Fatty, opening cages and teaching the mynah a new sentence.”

  The mynah, delighted by the stir it felt it was causing, chuckled to itself as it tried to perch on the central light.

  “George the Third ought never to have occurred,” it said. “One can only wonder at so grotesque a blunder.”

  “You see,” said Albert. “That’s supposed to be my voice. Not very close, I hope.”

  “Pity, Sir. That would have been really useful. Now, can you give me any sort of estimate of when the incident might have occurred?”

  “Early this morning, I think. It was all OK when I locked up at ten last night …”

  “The zoo’s kept locked, Sir?”

  “Of course.”

  “Who has access to keys?”

  “I keep one on my ring. There’s a spare for the family to use if they want to come down—hangs on the key-board in the lobby outside the breakfast-room. Jack Jakowski looks after the animals when I’m not here so he has one. I’m pretty certain he keeps it on his key-ring.”

  “I’ll look into that, Sir. The one in the private apartments sounds the most accessible. Now, about the time …”

  “Well, it wouldn’t have been safe to try anything in the dark because the animals would have been bound to kick up a racket. But they always shout a bit around dawn—I daresay you’ve heard ’em—so that’d have been a possible time. Much after that and there’d have been people about. I don’t know how fast Blomberg toads bleed, but at a guess I’d say Fatty was knifed not less than four or more than eight hours ago.”

  “Then that ties in,” said Theale.

  (Dawn, thought Louise. The parents left at seven thirty. Father. Could he be mad? Were they wrong about McGivan being the joker? Could McGivan have told somebody else what he’d found out? Or if McGivan knew nothing, Father could still have thought …) That feeling, like cold slime, was beginning to stir again when a yellow creature skipped chattering across the floor and hid under the work-bench.

  “See if you can catch him, Lulu,” said Albert. “He bites, but he’s tough as old boots, so you can be rough with him if you have to.”

  Louise spent the morning on hands and knees because in the course of capturing the yellow biter—it turned out to be a squirrel from J
ava, and to have neither fear nor manners—she unearthed a hysterical family of long-eared jerboas which scuttled and gibbered and cowered in impossible corners. There were several more bodies, some half-eaten, including the remains of another house mouse. The cats appeared to have gone berserk, like a fox in a hen-run, striking out at anything that moved in a frenzy of blood-lust. Albert worked steadily and dispassionately, examining the maimed animals as they came to light and usually putting them to sleep without even a sigh. Sometimes he was able to patch a wound or set a limb.

  Sergeant Theale too worked methodically, powdering for finger-prints and taking photographs of the results. He seemed excited by a thread of black cotton caught on a splinter by one of the latches.

  “Bloke wore gloves,” he said. “Not rubber but cloth—I’ve got a place where you can see the weave. Now, if this comes off one of them gloves …”

  “Perhaps he nicked a pair of Pilfer’s,” said Albert. “He’s got drawersful.”

  “That’s one possibility, Sir,” said Theale, in the tone of somebody who is thinking things out as he speaks. “There’s something else ties in, from what His Majesty told me, and there’s points here which support it, like knowing where you kept the spare key. Whoever’s been playing these tricks is pretty intimate with things in the Private Apartments.”

  “I’d begun to think it was McGivan,” said Albert. “But he couldn’t have done this, could he?”

  “No, Sir.”

  Just before lunch Mr d’Arcy and one of the sergeants from his outer office turned up.

  “Found anything, Theale?” he said.

  “Yes, sir. We’ve made a bit of progress and come to certain conclusions. With your permission I’d like to spend the afternoon interviewing staff.”

  “Show me.”

  Sergeant Theale took him on a conducted tour. He stared at the toad parcel, and then at the dead tamarin lying farther along the bench.

  “Jesus Christ!” he whispered. “Jesus Ho—”

  He must have seen much more horrible things in his life, but the extraordinary appeal of the tamarin, even in death, cracked the smooth shell of Palace officialdom he’d been growing. Then he pulled himself up and spoke in a different voice.

  “You’ve got a nut case here, Theale,” he said authoritatively, just as though nobody had thought of the idea before.

  “Yes, sir.”

  “I think we’re going to have to take this seriously, whether it’s got anything to do with McGivan’s death or not.”

  “I think it has, sir. I think it’s part of the series.”

  d’Arcy’s reply was cut short by a cry from the other sergeant. Louise had just managed to dislodge a bright blue lizard from under a radiator, and as it flashed across the floor the sergeant thoughtlessly brought his foot down like a man trying to stop a rolling coin. The lizard gave a wrench and darted on, leaving three inches of tail twitching violently beneath the leather sole. The sergeant—a young man in a flash blue suit, very well endowed with teeth—started to grin with embarrassment, but at the same time his face turned to a whitish green, and Louise thought he was going to faint like Pilfer.

  “That wasn’t very clever,” said Albert in a restrained voice. “Never mind—you haven’t done much harm. It’s an escape mechanism. They do it quite often, and a new tail grows.”

  He picked the jerking tail up and tossed it into a waste paper basket, where it continued to thresh against the metal side.

  “All right,” said Mr d’Arcy. “We’ll put a forensic team in here this afternoon. You’ve done well, Theale. I’ll second a couple of officers to you for the afternoon and you can see how you get on with eliminating members of the staff.”

  “Very good, sir.”

  “Excuse me, Superintendent,” said Albert. “I’m sure my father would insist on the Family being included in the elimination process. It really wouldn’t look good to leave us out.”

  “If you wish, Sir,” said Mr d’Arcy coldly.

  “Yes please.”

  After lunch Louise decided that she’d be in the way in the zoo, with a whole forensic team mucking around. She settled down to break the back of the extra homework which the school had sent for her, and managed to keep Father and McGivan out of her mind until the sergeant who’d trodden on the lizard knocked on the Library door. His name was Bannerman, and he took Louise through the whole series of “incidents”, making ticks and crosses according to whether she could or could not have been responsible for any of them.

  “Waste of time, really,” he said when he’d finished. “We kept you to the end, seeing you’re in the clear for the first two. And the pianos, of course. That’s number five. You’re about average. Funny how it works out—you don’t get anybody who’s in the clear for the whole lot, then there’s a couple for all but one, a few twos, a lot of threes, fours and fives, and then you’re back in the low numbers—half a dozen who could have done all but two, and four who could have done all but one.”

  “There ought to be at least one person who could have done the whole lot,” said Louise.

  He looked at her, hesitating and running the butt of his pen along his fabulous teeth like a boy running a stick along railings. The story princess smiled back at him and found, as she had guessed, that detective-­sergeants do not keep secrets from story princesses.

  “Just a couple so far,” he said. “A Mr Pilfer …”

  “Oh, it couldn’t be him!”

  “You never can tell, this sort of thing, Ma’am.”

  “Well … who else?”

  “We haven’t been able to question her about this morning’s incident, but there’s a Miss Fellowes.”

  “It couldn’t be her, either.”

  The story Princess’s voice came out quite calm and even. Behind the screen Louise’s mind said Nonny! That would explain about Father! He knows! He’s trying to protect her. Nonny going mad. She never wanted to be Queen. She still hates the Royalty scene, but she can’t show what she feels because she doesn’t know how. Like me, like me.

  Sergeant Bannerman looked up from making a few more marks on his chart.

  “We ought to get him next time, whoever it is,” he said.

  Next time! There mustn’t be a next time.

  Chapter 13

  Next time Louise saw what happened.

  She had managed to insist on going back to school on Monday, compromising by allowing herself to be driven right up to the gates. The extraordinary thing was that quite a lot of the GBP had turned out to see her arrive and a few had even cheered in a subdued and sympathetic way, as if she’d just recovered from a serious operation. School itself had been a bit like the horrible first weeks of her first term, with people glancing at her and away all the time, as though she’d been a strange but repulsive kind of goldfish. But Julie had been really nice, and Jerry was recovering from being let down by his new girl. So it was better than another day in the Palace.

  She didn’t usually visit Durdy on Mondays, but when she’d done her homework there was still forty minutes till the supper gong; supper was going to be edgy; she decided to go and see Durdy after all—though it wouldn’t be fair to worry her with the nightmare suspicions that kept creeping in and out of Louise’s mind, at least she’d be amused to hear the gossip about Jerry.

  “Julie keeps telling me we’ve got to find him somebody really nice,” she said, nudging the rocking-horse to and fro. “I don’t see how. The trouble with Jerry is he’s so precocious, and he’s a baby at the same time. Most of the other boys in my year are still really interested in football and things, and only make an occasional play for a girl because they think it’s time they did so, but Jerry really likes girls. What’s more he likes them at least two years older than he is, all bust and smothered with make-up and loud-voiced and thick. One after another. You can spot a Jerry-type girl at a hundred yards. And he’s got
a good line to start with—a sort of junior Paul Newman—so the girl doesn’t see what a baby he is and he’s in his seventh heaven for a week which is perfectly ghastly for Julie and me. And then something turns up with its own motor-scooter, and wearing one of those moustaches, and the girl drops Jerry flat. He never learns, never. So then he’s miserable, which is a bit better than when he’s moony but not much. Julie says we’re lucky to have known him because all men are like that underneath so he’s an object-lesson, sort of. But I don’t see how they can be or the human race would have died out long ago. What’s the answer, Durdy?”

  “I don’t know much about men, Your Highness. In my experience they cry for the moon and when they get it they find they don’t want it.”

  Louise had done all the talking, prattling away mostly to occupy her own mind. She knew Durdy was tired, but this weary bitterness was new.

  “Don’t Highness me, Durdy darling, or I’ll start Durdoning you and you won’t like that one bit. What’s up? What’s the matter? What do you mean by pretending not to know anything about men. Half your babies must have turned into men, roughly. Look, there’s Father, and Bert, and Uncle Bill. They’re all right, aren’t they? I mean it’s not their fault if …”

  Sniff. An upsettingly feeble signal, like the growl of a dying dog. Louise longed to cry, not just for the dog, or Durdy, dying, but for the island of love and happiness which she’d inhabited a week ago and now would never find again. She let the rumble of the rockers still. The clock whirred. Its little door opened and the wooden bird began its idiotic call. Eight! She leapt from the horse.

  “Drat that clock,” squeaked Durdy in her proper voice. “It’s fast again.”

  “Thank heavens! How fast? Oh, you’ve got the Mickey Mouse going. Is that right?”

  “Of course.”

  “Twenty minutes fast! Still five minutes to the gong. Durdy, that clock’s gone mad. Why did you tell me it never gained, it only lost?”

  “Didn’t hear is own brother to Won’t listen, Your Highness.”

 

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