Concrete Crime
103 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
103 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

It started the night a safe-cracker was shot on a Stepney street by a soft-spoken killer. Through an ingenious piece of detection - and with the help of his underworld friends - Tommy Hambledon succeeded in identifying the killer as the notorious Louis Magid. The problem was to find a man so vicious and so feared that even the criminals let him walk alone. The trail led to a small French village, an old castle and a mysterious woman. And, as Hambledon discovered in crime the female of the species is indeed deadlier than the male.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 12 avril 2023
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781774641156
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0050€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Concrete Crime
by Manninjg Coles

First published in 1960
This edition published by Rare Treasures
Trava2909@gmail.com
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, except in the case of excerpts by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.























CONCRETE CRIME

by Manning Coles

To
Debbie Walter of West Covina

Marthe Perrain
Dr. Marcel Petiot
scene: London, Paris, and Beaune
time: 1958

I. The Singing Bird
It was a wet dark night and the Stepney streets were running with water which reflected light in greasy streaks upon the ground and made every shadowed doorway and narrow entry a pit of darkness. The streets were almost deserted since it was that dead quarter of an hour before closing time when it is too late to be worth turning in and, once inside, one might as well stay in the dry for as long as possible. Perhaps, in another ten minutes, it will have left off raining. There was a public house at the corner of a side turning; its lighted windows laid shining golden squares upon the wet pavement and the racing gutter beyond; inside there came the sound of not very musical song while, outside, a leaking downpipe threw a blatter of drops against the window panes as the wind caught the thin stream or let it fall unsteadily to the muddy flagstones below.
A man came along the main street, walking fast but surprisingly quietly; he wore a mackintosh buttoned up round his neck and a felt hat pulled down over his eyes, as was natural on such a night. He had almost reached the side turning when he was overtaken by a tall man walking faster still, who took the first man by the arm and spoke confidentially in his ear in a soft and even kindly voice.
“George, it is George, yes? I thought it was, yes. I am so sorry, I am truly, I am most sad about it but you must realize you know too much—”
There was a sharp crack which might have been a motorcycle engine backfiring and George fell to the ground with a queer noise between a yelp and a grunt. The soft-spoken man, still holding his gun, bent over him to see if a second shot were necessary.
But the door of the public house had opened at the moment of the first shot and a soldier in the doorway saw what was happening.
“Here,” he bellowed, “this ain’t Cyprus. Murder!” He made a rush at the man with the gun, who promptly turned it upon him and fired again.
As though the name of Murder were a releasing spell, the street awoke to life. Windows were flung up, the public house customers rushed out by both doors, women screamed, and a police constable who had just turned a corner fifty yards away put his whistle to his lips and blew as he ran and the shrill sound overtopped all the rest.
The gunman turned and ran the way he had come, easily outstripping the Anchor’s customers who were taken by surprise and delayed by falling over the soldier who had been brought low by a bullet in the leg. But ahead of the fugitive and coming to meet him were other men who had appeared from nowhere, after the manner of onlookers when anything happens, and among them another policeman with another shrilling whistle.
Mrs. Morgan on her way upstairs to bed heard the excitement and was rash enough to open her front door to see what was happening. There were cries of “Murder! Stop him!” and people running; the next second a man flung her out of his way and ran down her passage into her kitchen at the back. There were crashes and sounds of breaking glass, followed by silence until she began to scream like a steam whistle.
Ten minutes later she was sitting in her front room drinking Guinness with Mrs. Duxworthy from next door and telling the police all about it.
“Burst in like a wild bull and throwed me back against the stairs and it’s a mercy my back ain’t broken, and away down my passage into my kitchen and wouldn’t stop to open the door like a Christian but crashes straight through the window, glass and all, and my aspidistra I’ve had ever since I married all smashed on tie floor and my lace curtains tore, and out into the yard—‘as ’e gorn? You’re sure ‘e’s gorn? ‘Ow d’you know as ’e won’t come back? Where’s my ‘usband?”
The police went through the back door like Christians and examined the yard outside. The fugitive had cut himself, if not very badly; drops of blood across the yard and upon the wall at the end showed which way he had gone until the rain came on harder than ever and washed them away.
Three days later, Chief-Superintendent Bagshott rang up Thomas Elphinstone Hambledon at the Foreign Office.
“I’ve heard a rather odd story,” said Bagshott, “and it seems as if it might be more your business than mine. Do you know Tranter? George Tranter, the safebreaker.”
“I’ve met him, yes. Why?”
“Because someone tried to kill him in Stepney three nights ago and he’s willing to talk.”
“Oh no,” said Hambledon incisively, “you must be wrong. They never ‘sing’ on these occasions; you know that as well as I do or, to stretch a point in the interests of courtesy, even better.”
“This time is different. I’m at the hospital now, can you come? We’ve got him in a private room.” Bagshott named the hospital and added, “He’s not desperately ill now. The man walked up behind Tranter, took him by the arm, and shot him at point-blank range. Tranter, however, was carrying one of the nicest kits of safebreaking tools I’ve ever seen in my life in a neat little wallet no bigger than a cigar case and the bullet was deflected off these tools and did not penetrate too deeply. It finished up in his left forearm. He’s more pained about losing his tools than his injuries. Oh, no, I’m not charging him with carrying them but I couldn’t let him keep them, could I?”
“I suppose not, poor man. I refer to Tranter. All right, I’ll come.”
Tranter was lying in an excessively tidy bed in. an austere little room with a large pink constable sitting by his side to keep him company. When Bagshott and Hambledon came in the constable tried to stand smartly to attention and fold a newspaper at the same time with the result that his pencil fell and rolled across the floor.
“All right, Wilcox,” said Bagshott.
“We’ll finish that crossword later,” said Tranter, grinning widely. “Good afternoon, gentlemen. Wilcox and me were just practising to improve our word power, as they say.”
“Splendid,” said Hambledon. “I’ve always wondered why Clapton should be Orient and Plymouth call themselves Argyle, it’s a long long way away, isn’t it? Tranter, I’m sorry to see you in hospital, I hope you’re not badly hurt.”
“Believe me, sir, I’m so busy thinking ’ow lucky I am to be ’ere instead of in the mortuary I don’t ‘ardly notice what I ’ave got. Please sit down, gentlemen, it’s so unusual to ’ave you coming to see me instead of me driving up in a car to call on you it’s quite embarrassing, it is really, I only wish I could offer you a drink but this hotel is what they call dry.”
“Have a cigarette,” said Hambledon, and gave him one. “Bagshott, you’ll have one and so will I. Now we’re all comfortable, Tranter—”
“That nurse’ll come in and open all the windows,” said Tranter. “Fresh-air fiends they are, one an1 all, though nice girls when you get to know them. There’s a red-’aired one as is quite a lass, believe me.”
“About what happened on Monday night,” prompted Bagshott.
“Monday night, yes. You know, gentlemen both, it’s such a new idea for me to start singing to the police if you’ll pardon my mentioning your profession, Mr. Bagshott, sir, that I ‘ardly know ’ow to begin.” Tranter shifter awkwardly in bed and his lips tightened with pain. “I’m that stiff I can’t ‘ardly move. Well, it’s like this. I come on something as I reckon should be stopped and you’ve always dealt very fair with me, Mr. Bagshott, when we ’ave met before on matters of business, and it come into my ’ead lying ’ere as the right thing to do was to ask for you. I’m glad you brought Mr. ‘Ambledon along, it’s more in what I understand ’is line to be, too.”
“Why not begin at the beginning?” suggested Hambledon. “What started all this?”
“Well, the first I ’eard was that two men was asking about for someone as could open a safe when the keys was not to be come by and someone ’ad mentioned my name as a tradesman in that line. So I met these two and they told me a story about some commercial designs as had been pinched from the inventor so as someone else could make a fortune out of it and the pore inventor be frozen out and not get a penny for all ’is ’ard work. I was to open a safe and get these designs out so as the real inventor could rush ’em off to the Patents Office, file ’is claim, and get ’is rights. Excuse me, could I ’ave a drink, so to dignify the liquid in that glass?”
“Barley water, by the look of it,” said Hambledon, and helped him to sit up and drink it. “Did you believe all that?”
“Well, no, being naturally the unbelieving kind, but it didn’t seem much of my business. I was offered a job and the rate of pay was quite astonishing to me. Quite out of this world as they say. ‘Owever, I put that down to them being foreigners and not knowing the rate for the job in this country. So I said all right and where was it? They’d certainly got all the dope; plan of the ’ouse, plan of the grounds, details of the ‘ouse’old, ;ow to get in, everything Type of safe an’ all. It was one of those big rich ‘ouses down at Windlesham where all the nobs live. It ’ad to be done on a certain night, last Monday in fact.” Tranter grinned at Bagshott. “I don’t mind telling you all this because, you see, I didn’t do it. On the very morning of the night I was to do the job I read in the paper about an American atomic guided missile or self-aiming missile—one of them things—anyway, the paper said this American gent was bringing the gen over ’ere

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents