The banging continued beyond the barricade of the king’s mail.
‘All right, all right.’ Pooley clutched at his temples and fought his way towards the front door. Pushing envelopes to left and right with great difficulty, he opened it.
‘Mail,’ said a sweating postman, thumbing over his shoulder towards a dozen or so bulging sacks which lay in an unruly line along the pavement. ‘Your ruddy birthday is it then, pal?’
Pooley shrugged, dislodging an avalanche of letters which momentarily buried him.
‘I’ve been sticking these through your letter-box for the better part of an hour and I can’t get any more through. Do pardon this departure from the norm, but I must insist that you post the rest yourself. I am here on relief from Chiswick as the local bloke hasn’t turned in. What is this, some kind of joke? Candid Camera, is it, or that Game for a Laugh crap?’
Pooley hunched his shoulders beneath the pressing load. ‘What are they?’ he asked. ‘Who has sent them?’
‘From those which unaccountably fell open in my hands, they would seem to be begging letters to a man. What did you do then, come up on the frigging pools?’
‘Something like that.’ Jim made an attempt to close the door.
The postman’s contorted face suddenly sweetened. ‘Is that a fact?’ he said thoughtfully. ‘Then let me be the first to congratulate you.’
‘You are not the first,’ Jim replied, ‘but thanks all the same. Now if you will excuse me.’ He fought with the front door but posty’s foot was now firmly in it. Pooley relaxed his grip. ‘Your foot is caught,’ he observed.
‘It must be a wonderful thing to have money,’ said the postman, edging forward. ‘I have always been a poor man myself, not that I have ever resented the rich their wealth, you understand, but I have often had cause to wonder why fate chose to deal with me and mine in so shabby a way.’
‘Really?’ said Jim without interest.
‘Oh yes. Not that I complain, soldiering on in all weathers, crippled to the fingertips with arthritis, simply so the mail should get through.’
‘Very noble.’ Jim applied more pressure to the door but it was getting him nowhere.
‘And my wife,’ the postman continued, ‘a holy martyr that woman. If I only had the money to pay for the operation I am certain that she could be relieved of her daily misery.’
‘Let us hope so.’
‘And my poor blind son, Kevin!’
‘Get your damned foot out of my door.’
Knowing a lost cause when he saw one, the postman withdrew his boot and swung it at the nearest sack. The contents spilled out to flutter away upon
the breeze. ‘Privileged turd,’ he called after the retreating Pooley. ‘Come the revolution, you and your kind will be first up against the wall. Capitalist Pig!’
Pooley slammed fast the door and stood engulfed in the flood tide of mail. He had sent out a few begging letters himself in the past, but now he knew what it felt like to be on the receiving end. Jim Pooley did not like it one little bit. His mail unread and his bed-mate un-awakened, Jim left the house that morning by the rear entrance.
Now he sat alone upon the Library bench. The sun had long arisen and all the makings of a great day ahead looked in the offing. Jim sighed mournfully and at intervals studied the palm of his right hand.
He was not a happy man. He was a gentleman of substance now and it pained him greatly. A terrible feeling of responsibility, one he had never before experienced, gnawed away at his innards. It was all just too much. The total sum of his wealth was too large even to contemplate and with the passing of the night and the current bank rate it had already grown alarmingly.
Jim made a dismal groaning sound and buried his face in his hands. It was all just too much. He had never owned before what one might actually call ‘money’ and certainly not what the ‘swells’ refer to as the current account. He had had an overdraft once but that hadn’t proved to be up to much. And the manner in which he had acquired the fortune, also drastically wrong. No betting shop could ever have had that amount of readies waiting under the counter. And even if it had, it would be hardly likely to simply push them across the counter without a life or death struggle at the very least. Guns would have been toted and knee-caps an endangered species. He and Omally had transferred no fewer than twenty-six wheelbarrow loads from there to the bank. It was simply ridiculous.
And the bank? Pooley moaned pitifully. They had taken the entire thing for granted, as if he had been merely bunging in a couple of quid out of his wages. It was almost as if they had been expecting him. Through the bullet-proof glass of the office Pooley had seen the manager sitting at his desk, a pair of minuscule headphones clasped about his ears, nodding his head and popping his fingers.
And as for this, Pooley held up his right hand and examined the palm. The bank had refused to give him either a receipt or a cheque-book. With unveiled condescension they had explained that such methods of personal finance were now obsolete and that for security’s sake they must insist upon the new personalized identification system. They had then stamped his right palm with a pattern of eighteen little computer lines in three rows of six. Six six six. Pooley spat on to his palm and rubbed away at the marking; it would not budge. He eased up on the moaning and groaning and took to a bit of soulful sighing. He had become involved in something which was very much bigger than he was. He really should have listened to Professor Slocombe and torn up the slip.
A sudden screeching of white-walled tyres upon tarmac announced the arrival of Antoine with Pooley’s car. Jim distantly recalled a deal he had struck the night before.
‘Your carriage awaits,’ said the chauffeur of fortune, springing from the automobile and holding open the door.
Jim was entranced. The car, a silver-grey Morris Minor, although of a model some fifteen years out of date, had all the makings of one fresh from the showroom. ‘Where did you get it?’ he asked, rising from his gloom and strolling over to the automotive gem.
‘Purchased with the money you advanced, sir,’ Antoine replied politely. ‘Has a few tricks under the hood.’
Pooley circled the car approvingly and ran his unsoiled hand along the spanking paintwork.
‘Big Boda,’ said he. ‘It’s a corker.’
‘And what about the number plates?’ Antoine indicated the same, JP 1.
‘Double Boda,’ said Jim Pooley.
‘Would sir care to be taken for a spin?’
‘Absolutely.’ Jim clapped his hands together and chuckled. Maybe this being wealthy did have its compensations after all. Antoine swung forward the driver’s seat and Jim clambered aboard. The chauffeur sat himself down before the wheel and closed the door. ‘What is all that?’ Pooley asked, spying out the Morris’ dashboard; it was far from conventional.
‘Customized,’ said Antoine. ‘By Lateinos and Romiith, who bought out the old Morris patent. This car will do nought to sixty in three point four seconds. It has weather-eye air-conditioning, fuel consumption down to near zero by merit of its improved plasma-drive system. Are you acquainted with quantum mechanics?’
‘I get by,’ said Jim.
‘Solar pod power-retention headlights, underpinned macro-pleasure full-glide suspension. Sub-lift non-drift gravitational thrust plates . . .’
‘Drive please,’ said Jim, ‘I will tell you when to stop.’
‘Where to, sir?’ Antoine put the preposterous vehicle into instant overdrive and tore it away at Mach ten.
Pooley slewed back in his seat, cheeks drawn up towards his ears, his face suddenly resembling the now legendary Gwynplaine, of Victor Hugo’s Man who Laughs. ‘Steady on,’ winced Jim.
‘Gravitational acclimatization auxiliary forward modifications engaged.’ Antoine touched a lighted sensor on the dash and Pooley slumped forward. ‘A quick tour of the parish, taking in the more desirable residences on the "For Sale" list, would it be, sir?’
‘Come again?’
‘My previous employer
s always liked the grand tour.’
‘I thought you worked for Bob?’
‘Only at lunch times, I am a freelance.’
‘Very commendable.’
The car screamed into Mafeking Avenue on two wheels, narrowly avoiding Old Pete, who raised two eloquent fingers towards its receding rear end.
‘How many clients have you then?’
‘Only you,’ said Antoine. ‘I have attended to all those who came by the big payouts. One after another.’
The Morris roared past the Memorial Park, gathering speed.
‘One after another. How many have come up recently then?’
‘Twenty-five, although they were never in your league.’ The chauffeur cleared his throat with a curiously mechanical coughing sound.
Pooley scratched at his head. He had heard of no recent big winners hereabouts. Jim suddenly smelt the great-grandaddy of all big rats. ‘Stop the car,’ he demanded.
Antoine crouched low over the computerized controls, his toe edged nearer to the floor, and the modified family saloon performed another impossible feat of acceleration.
‘Stop this car!’ shouted Jim. ‘There is a stitch-up here and I’ll have no part of it.’
‘Stitch-up?’ leered Antoine. Pooley could just make out his face reflected in the driving mirror. It was not a face Jim would wish to recall in his dreams. The chauffeur’s normally amiable visage had become contorted into a death-mask of inhuman cruelty. The eyes glowed between hooded slits, the mouth was drawn down, exposing a row of wicked metallic-looking teeth. The face was no longer human, it was atavistic, something beyond and before humanity, compelling and vibrant with dark evil power. The flying Morris cannoned through the short cobbled alleyway between the Police Station and the Beehive and swerved right through the red lights and out into the High Road. It should surely have been forced to a standstill amidst the hubbub of mid-morning traffic, but to Pooley’s increasing horror the High Street was empty, the pavements deserted.
‘Stop, I say!’ screamed Jim. ‘I will pay you anything you want, name the sum.’ Antoine laughed hideously, the sounds issuing from his throat being those of sharp stones rattled in a tin can. Pooley shook his brain into gear; ‘knobble the mad driver’, it told him. Climbing forward, Jim lashed out towards the driver’s neck. ‘AAAAAGH!’ went Pooley, as his lunging fingers piled into a barrier of empty air, splintering nails, and dislocating thumbs.
‘Safety-shield anti-whiplash modification,’ sneered the demonic driver as Pooley sank back into his seat, his wounded hands jammed beneath his armpits. The car swung into a side-road Jim did not clearly remember and thundered on towards . . . Jim suddenly stiffened in his seat . . . towards the rim of the old quarry. Jim recalled that place well enough, he used to go ferreting there when a lad. The walls were fifty-foot sheer to a man. He was heading for an appointment with none other than good old Nemesis himself. Now was the time to do some pretty nifty fast thinking. Pooley thrust his brain into overdrive. Accelerating Morris, mad driver, two doors only, invisible force-field before. No sun-roof and Nemesis five hundred yards distant. Jim chewed upon his lip, worry beads of perspiration upon his brow. No way out before, above, but possibly. . .
The mighty Morris has to its credit many an endearing feature. Ask any driver and he will mention such things as comfort, luxury, fuel economy, or the obvious prestige of ownership. But stand that man in front of his locked car to view the spectacle of his ignition keys dangling in the steering column and he will then address his praise towards the inevitably faulty boot-lock and the detachable rear seat.
Pooley had crawled into more than a few Morris Minors on drunken evenings past, when further staggering home looked out of the question. Now he was hardly backward in going that very direction.
Nemesis was yet two hundred and fifty yards to the fore. As the car ploughed on relentlessly towards the yawning chasm ahead, Jim clawed at the rear seat with his maimed fingers. With the kind of superhuman effort which would have done credit to any one of a dozen Boy’s Own Paper heroes, he plunged into the boot and fought it open.
With one bound he was free.
As the car breasted the rim of the chasm and dashed itself down towards oblivion, Jim tumbled out into the roadway, bowling over and over like a rag doll, to the accompaniment of many a sickening, bone-shattering report. He came to a final dislocated standstill a few short yards from doom. A loud explosion beneath, a column of flame, and a rising black mushroom cloud of oily smoke signalled the sorry end of a fine car. Pooley made a feeble attempt to rise, but to no avail. Every bone in his body seemed broken several times over. His head was pointing the wrong way round for a start. A flood tide of darkness engulfed the fallen hero and Jim lapsed away into a dark oblivion of unconsciousness.
14
John Omally pressed his way through Professor Slocombe’s ever-open French windows. The old scholar sat in a fireside chair earnestly conversing with the hawk-nosed man from another time. He waved his hand in familiar fashion towards the whisky decanter.
‘So where is lucky Jim?’ Sherlock Holmes asked. ‘Putting in his bid for the brewery?’
Omally shook his head and his face showed more than just a trace of bitterness. ‘I was to meet Jim at the bench. We were planning a Nile cruise.’ John flung the bundle of holiday brochures he had acquired the night before into the Professor’s fire. ‘I missed him. No doubt he is lying even now in the arms of some avaricious female. Oh, cruel fate.’
‘Cruel fate indeed,’ said Holmes darkly. ‘Lucky Jim may not be quite so lucky as he thinks himself to be.’
Omally pinched at the top of his nose. ‘We sank a few last night and that is a fact. Jim wisely kept back a wheelbarrow-load for expenses. He was more than generous.’
‘So I understand. I regret that we were unable to attend the festivities. Tell me now, would I be right in assuming that Jim was wearing gloves last night?’
Omally nodded. ‘Said that the money had given him a rash. I didn’t give it a lot of thought, you know what these millionaires are like, walking round in Kleenex boxes and drinking Campbells soup from tins, it’s quite regular to those lads.’
Sherlock Holmes leant forward in his seat. ‘Might I ask you to show me your hands?’ Omally thrust them hurriedly behind his back.
‘As I deduced,’ said the great detective. ‘Both door and window was it?’
Omally bit at his lip and nodded ruefully. ‘Until but a few minutes since.’
Professor Slocombe cast Holmes a questioning glance.
‘Purely a matter of deduction,’ that man explained. ‘Let me see if I can set the scene, as it were. Mr Omally here has seen his dearest friend become a multimillionaire in the matter of an hour and a half. He helps him transport these riches to the bank and the two spend the night in revelry, finally returning to their respective abodes. But our friend cannot sleep, he paces the floor, he is assailed with doubts. Will the money change his companion, will it destroy their long and enduring friendship? Will he turn his back upon him? At last he can stand it no longer, his mind is made up. He will set out at once to his friend’s house and knock him up. But this is not to be. He tries to open his door but it will not move. After many vain attempts to secure his freedom he tries the window, this proves similarly unrewarding, the glass cannot even be broken.’
Professor Slocombe looked quizzically towards Omally who was catching flies with his mouth. ‘Is this true?’ he asked.
‘In most respects; it fair put the fear of the Almighty into me I can tell you.’
‘We are indeed dealing with mighty forces here,’ said Sherlock Holmes, springing to his feet. ‘And now I think that should we wish to entertain any hope of saving your friend we had best move with some expediency. Let us pray that the trail is not yet cold.’ Without uttering another word he whisked on his tweedy jacket and plunged out through the French windows, followed by Professor Slocombe. Omally shook his head in total disbelief at it all, tossed back his drink, and followe
d in hot pursuit.
Holmes strode ahead up the sweeping tree-lined drive of the Butts Estate and crossed the road towards the Memorial Library. Before Pooley’s bench he halted and threw himself to his hands and knees. ‘Aha,’ he said, taking up the spent butt of an expensive cigarette. ‘He’s been here and he walked towards the kerb.’ Omally and the Professor looked at one another. Omally shrugged.
Holmes scrutinized the roadway. ‘He entered a roadster here and was driven off at some speed in that direction.’
‘Can you make out the licence plate number?’ Omally said cynically.
Holmes looked him up and down coldly. ‘I can tell you that he was helped into the car by a gentleman of foreign extraction, who parts his hair on the left side and has his shoes hand-made, size seven and a half.’
Omally’s eyes widened. ‘Antoine, Bob the bookie’s chauffeur.’
‘Such was my conclusion. Now, unless you wish to waste more valuable time in fruitless badinage, I would suggest that we make haste. Time is of the essence.’
‘Lead on,’ said John Omally.
It is a goodly jog from the Memorial Library to the old quarry, but Holmes led the way without faltering once upon his course. Here and there along the route he dropped once more to his knees and examined the road surface. Each time Omally felt certain that he had lost his way, but each time the detective rose again and pointed the way ahead. At length the three men turned into the old quarry road. Ahead in the distance lay the crumpled wreckage which had been Jim Pooley. With a small cry Omally bounded forward and came to a standstill over the disaster area. ‘Oh, no,’ said he, sinking to his knees. ‘Oh no, it wasn’t worth this.’
Sherlock Holmes and the Professor slowly approached, the old man supporting himself upon his stick and wheezing terribly. ‘Is he . . . ?’ the words stuck in the Professor’s throat.
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