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Hunt The Toff
Hunt The Toff
Hunt The Toff
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Hunt The Toff

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Richard Rollison (aka ‘The Toff) is ordinarily used to helping solve crimes and injustices perpetrated on others. Upon this occasion, however, he find himself in hiding and faced with a charge of murder he didn’t commit. Whilst on holiday, he had befriended a girl who is not all she appears to be at first sight. A man who has been following her was then found murdered. All the evidence points to her, yet she was with ‘The Toff’ at the time and so he must be her accomplice …

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 1, 2014
ISBN9780755134274
Hunt The Toff
Author

John Creasey

Born in Surrey, England, into a poor family as seventh of nine children, John Creasey attended a primary school in Fulham, London, followed by The Sloane School. He did not follow his father as a coach maker, but pursued various low-level careers as a clerk, in factories, and sales. His ambition was to write full time and by 1935 he achieved this, some three years after the appearance of his first crime novel ‘Seven Times Seven’. From the outset, he was an astonishingly prolific and fast writer, and it was not unusual for him to have a score, or more, novels published in any one year. Because of this, he ended up using twenty eight pseudonyms, both male and female, once explaining that booksellers otherwise complained about him totally dominating the ‘C’ section in bookstores. They included: Gordon Ashe, M E Cooke, Norman Deane, Robert Caine Frazer, Patrick Gill, Michael Halliday, Charles Hogarth, Brian Hope, Colin Hughes, Kyle Hunt, Abel Mann, Peter Manton, JJ Marric, Richard Martin, Rodney Mattheson, Anthony Morton and Jeremy York. As well as crime, he wrote westerns, fantasy, historical fiction and standalone novels in many other genres. It is for crime, though, that he is best known, particularly the various detective ‘series’, including Gideon of Scotland Yard, The Baron, The Toff, and Inspector Roger West, although his other characters and series should not be dismissed as secondary, as the likes of Department ‘Z’ and Dr. Palfrey have considerable followings amongst readers, as do many of the ‘one off’ titles, such as the historical novel ‘Masters of Bow Street’ about the founding of the modern police force. With over five hundred books to his credit and worldwide sales approaching one hundred million, and translations into over twenty-five languages, Creasey grew to be an international sensation. He travelled widely, promoting his books in places as far apart as Russia and Australia, and virtually commuted between the UK and USA, visiting in all some forty seven states. As if this were not enough, he also stood for Parliament several times as a Liberal in the 1940’s and 50’s, and an Independent throughout the 1960’s. In 1966, he founded the ‘All Party Alliance’, which promoted the idea of government by a coalition of the best minds from across the political spectrum, and was also involved with the National Savings movement; United Europe; various road safety campaigns, and famine relief. In 1953 Creasey founded the British Crime Writers’ Association, which to this day celebrates outstanding crime writing. He won the Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for his novel ‘Gideon’s Fire’ and in 1969 was given the ultimate Grand Master Award. There have been many TV and big screen adaptations of his work, including major series centred upon Gideon, The Baron, Roger West and others. His stories are as compelling today as ever, with one of the major factors in his success being the ability to portray characters as living – his undoubted talent being to understand and observe accurately human behaviour. John Creasey died at Salisbury, Wiltshire in 1973. 'He leads a field in which Agatha Christie is also a runner.' - Sunday Times.

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    Hunt The Toff - John Creasey

    II

    LIZ

    Rollison pushed his scepticism far away, but not out of sight, watched her tense face, and smiled, as if she’d said that she had come here for a quiet holiday.

    ‘Didn’t you hear? I came here to rob you.’

    Rollison’s smile broadened.

    ‘Did you, Liz?’ he asked.

    She started, dropped his arm as if it had suddenly become red hot, and actually gaped.

    He chuckled.

    ‘Liz,’ she breathed. ‘You knew.’

    ‘It’s a day for shocks, isn’t it?’

    ‘How did you know?’

    ‘I heard you talking with Eddie-Harry.’

    ‘Oh,’ she said, and coloured. ‘When?’

    ‘Friday night.’

    ‘So you heard us quarrelling.’

    ‘Just the tail-end.’

    ‘Did you know why we quarrelled?’

    ‘I was too late for that.’

    ‘You may as well know,’ she said. ‘Harry really began it. He’s always wanted to have a go at you. I think he thought that if he could rob the Toff, it would be the talk of London. But – I’m tired of Harry.’

    Rollison didn’t speak.

    She said, ‘I mean, I’m tired of working with him. We had a quarrel in London. I told him I was going to work on my own in future, and the partnership was finished. I had the shock of my life when he arrived a few hours after me.’

    ‘I can imagine,’ murmured Rollison.

    ‘I’d found out that you were here – all Harry knew was that you had left London. But he probably guessed what I was up to, followed me, and – well, that’s all there is to it.’

    ‘Except that there’s no partnership, and Harry’s an angry man. I don’t blame you so much, but Harry ought to have known better,’ said Rollison. ‘We’ve never actually met face to face, but he should have known that the moment I set eyes on Harry Keller I’d know that he was one of London’s most successful con-men. I wouldn’t have known you from Eve, so you would have got off to a better start. Ever thought of reforming?’

    She began to laugh, a little chuckle which grew into deep laughter. At last she groped for her cigarettes, then dabbed at her eyes. Throughout it all, Rollison had leaned against a rock and looked at her.

    ‘Better?’ he asked.

    ‘Much!’

    ‘That’s good. Hungry?’

    ‘Not yet. So you really knew Harry.’

    ‘The moment I set eyes on him, I knew I’d seen that freckly face and the round and innocent eyes before. When you called him Harry, I placed him. I was at Great Marlborough Street three years ago, when he was sent for trial for a very neat confidence trick indeed. He can’t have been out long.’

    ‘A year.’

    ‘They didn’t give him a long enough sentence.’

    She narrowed her eyes and looked at Rollison through a faint film of smoke. For a while she had been young and natural and, in spite of what they’d said, almost gay. She changed, and seemed to become older, more sophisticated. There was even a change in her voice.

    ‘You must be almost as good as they say you are.’

    ‘Who are they?’

    ‘Oh – everyone.’

    ‘We’ll pass that – but how good do they say I am?’

    She considered.

    ‘I’ve never believed them, and nor has Harry, we had that in common. I’ve refused to believe that any man could do the things you’re supposed to have done, and get away with it. You’ve a tremendous reputation in the East End, too.’

    ‘What’s my reputation about?’

    ‘As if you didn’t know! The Honourable Richard Rollison, otherwise known as the Toff, England’s one great amateur detective, even consulted by Scotland Yard. You’re almost a legend among—’

    Again she checked herself.

    ‘Everyone?’ he asked lazily.

    ‘All—my friends.’

    ‘Pity – nice people don’t know me.’

    ‘You’re not at all what I expected,’ said Marion-Liz. ‘You weren’t, even at the hotel. I expected you to be a modern Don Juan, and to throw your weight about everywhere, instead—’

    ‘Spare my blushes!’ begged Rollison.

    ‘You were just a good-looking, pleasant man.’ She hesitated; then: ‘Well – now you know, what are you going to do?’ Shadows touched her eyes again. ‘And please, don’t give me any of that stuff about reforming. I know exactly what I’m doing, and I shall go on doing it. I don’t need men like Harry Keller any longer. I’m—I’m going places alone.’

    Rollison’s eyes gleamed.

    ‘I know. The Country House by the Sea, for a good luncheon, and after that, if you’re not careful, Holloway, or one of the prisons which isn’t so nicely situated.’

    He jumped up and held out his hands; she took them and sprang to her feet with little help from him. He didn’t let go, but pulled; their lips met, lightly.

    ‘See how I live up to my reputation,’ said Rollison.

    She didn’t answer; she seemed puzzled, and kept looking at him, glancing away whenever he returned her gaze. They walked up a narrow, stony path to grass nibbled short and smooth by rabbits, then through a copse of beech. On the far side of the copse they turned into the well-kept grounds of the hotel.

    Marion-Liz went upstairs.

    Rollison made discreet enquiries about Eddie-Harry.

    Marion-Liz came down again, lightly but perfectly made-up, exactly the right vision to sit at the window-table which had been given to Rollison from the first, and which he hadn’t shared before. The other guests, most of them finishing the meal, for Rollison had been right about the time, glanced at them and at each other.

    When they were alone but for the waiter, Rollison looked into the fresh gaiety of Marion-Liz’s eyes.

    ‘Have you seen Eddie-Harry?’

    ‘No,’ she said. ‘Don’t talk about him.’

    ‘He’s flown.’

    ‘What?’ cried Marion-Liz.

    ‘He paid his bill, which makes the hotel lucky, and left half an hour before we arrived,’ said Rollison. ‘You can have a carefree holiday, and teach me how to swim. And things. Unless you think I’d be reforming you.’

    She touched his hand.

    ‘Rolly,’ she said. ‘May I call you Rolly?’

    ‘Provided you keep the O short and not long.’

    ‘Rolly,’ she said, ‘let’s strike a bargain. Pretend that nothing happened this morning, that I didn’t make a confession. I can afford to stay until the end of the week, and I think it will be fun, but not if—’

    ‘Not if I’m full of reforming zeal. It’s a deal, Liz!’

    All went according to plan, until Thursday. Rollison’s scepticism remained at a distance, but in sight. Occasionally he allowed himself to think about the missing buoy – which was found in one of the inlets on the Wednesday, and apparently mystified no one else – and the watchfulness of Eddie-Harry.

    They danced at a nearby roadhouse on the Wednesday evening, it was half past two before he turned the sleek nose of his Rolls-Bentley into the garage of the hotel. He left a ‘Do Not Disturb’ notice outside the door, and went to sleep – and woke, when it was bright day, to a loud cry.

    He had the trick of waking to complete wakefulness, slid out of bed and reached the window as the cry was repeated.

    At the end of the long garden, partly hidden by a yew-hedge of great renown, stood Marion-Liz and a red-headed youth. A big youth. He had a hand on each of Marion-Liz’s shoulders, and was shaking her. She cried out again, but made a sound like gug-gug-gug. The red-head shook her more violently and her head went to and fro, she raised her hands as if to fend him off, but couldn’t manage it. At last he pushed her away, and she fell against the hedge.

    The red-head dusted his hands.

    Rollison heard his words clearly.

    ‘Now perhaps that’ll shake some sense into you. You’re going to do what I tell you.’

    Marion-Liz was too breathless to answer.

    ‘So go pack your bags,’ said the red-head.

    By then a gardener and an elderly woman guest who seldom left the grounds appeared beneath the window. Both were in a hurry. As they reached the yew-hedge Marion-Liz straightened up and the red-head took her arm. They walked towards the hotel, ignoring the couple, who stood and watched them pass. Rollison put on his dressing-gown. He was on the landing when Marion-Liz came up the stairs. She wore a cream-coloured linen dress, simple and sweet; her hair was ruffled.

    He blocked the passage.

    ‘One of your friends, Liz?’

    ‘He—oh, please.’

    She made to push past again. Footsteps sounded on the stairs, soft and light.

    ‘Please,’ she repeated.

    ‘Obeying orders?’ asked Rollison.

    She closed her eyes and leaned against the wall, as if she hadn’t any strength left. Next moment, a hand clasped Rollison’s shoulder, a muscular arm pulled him round, and a pugnacious face, topped by the red hair of the young man, was thrust into his.

    ‘None of your business,’ he said. ‘Hurry, Marion.’

    She went obediently along to her room. The red-head had not released Rollison, but did so when the girl’s door closed. He had an attractive, homely face – some would have called him ugly – a milky complexion, a few freckles, and green eyes; fine green eyes. His lips were full.

    ‘Don’t get in her way again,’ he said. ‘You might get hurt.’

    Rollison smiled gently and murmured that he was sorry, and held out his hand. The red-head was surprised into taking it. Rollison gripped and twisted. The red-head drew in a hissing breath. He stood with one knee bent and his arm turned upwards and had the sense not to move.

    Rollison let him go.

    ‘I am sorry, really. I should hate you to get rough with me. Marion isn’t coming with you, she’d much rather rest here. Good morning.’

    The red-head’s eyes blazed angrily, and he bunched sizeable fists. Rollison prepared for trouble – but didn’t need to. The youth dropped his arms, backed a pace, opened his mouth in a wide ‘O’. He looked into Rollison’s with an expression normally found on a bamboozled child’s face.

    ‘Good lord!’ breathed the red-head. ‘You’re Rollison. The Rollison. Great Scott! You’re just the man to help knock some sense into Marion. This couldn’t be better!’

    III

    REFORMER’S ZEAL

    The young man gripped Rollison’s hand and shook it vigorously, glanced at an open door and led the way towards it, words bubbling out of him.

    ‘Trust me to put my foot in it. I’ll bet nothing like that’s happened to Marion for twenty years! Which is your room?’

    ‘Next door,’ said Rollison.

    ‘You could have told me.’

    ‘You could have let me get a word in edgeways.’

    ‘Oh, lor’,’ said the red-haired young man with a most attractive grimace. ‘I’m always talking too much, it’s the Irish blood in me, I suppose. May I go in?’ He thrust open Rollison’s door and stepped inside, swept his gaze round, and went across to the window. ‘Sea view and everything, eh? Nice pub, this. I say, you’re up a bit sluggish, aren’t you? It’s after nine.’

    ‘I was out late last night.’

    ‘You old dog!’ The young man winked and then became earnest, gripping Rollison’s arm again. ‘I say, you can do me a heck of a favour. You’re just the man she might listen to. Marion, I mean. I can talk in absolute confidence, can’t I? I mean, a man like you wouldn’t go talking to the police and all that kind of thing, or let a girl down, would you?’

    ‘Try me,’ suggested Rollison, and lit a cigarette.

    ‘Sure. Well, it’s like this.’ The young man’s expression might have been that of his grandfather. ‘I’m in love with Marion Lane. I don’t give a damn what she’s done in the past, I want to steer her on to the straight and narrow. But she takes some steering! I’ve argued and reasoned and pleaded, done everything except go down on my knees to her, but it was n.b.g. So I’ve changed tactics and I’m getting tough.’

    ‘So I’ve noticed,’ said Rollison dryly.

    ‘I say, did you see it? Look here, don’t you think the rough tactics might work where everything else has failed?’

    ‘It would be a help if I knew what you were talking about,’ said Rollison.

    ‘But hang it, I—’

    ‘And who you are.’

    The young man raised his hands and let them fall heavily, gave his attractive grin again, and went to a chair and sat down. At the same moment there was a tap at the door. A chamber-maid, smart and pretty, came in with tea; there were two cups.

    ‘I heard you were up, sir, and I know how you like your morning tea.’

    ‘Gertrude, you’re a gem,’ said Rollison. ‘Magnificent! Do you think I could have breakfast up here, too? In half an hour, say.’

    ‘Of course, sir.’

    Gertrude beamed and went out.

    ‘They look after you, don’t they?’ said the young man.

    ‘You were going to tell me who you are and what this is all about.’ Rollison started to pour out. ‘Like a cup?’

    ‘Well, I don’t mind if I do. No sugar. As a matter of fact, I haven’t had any breakfast. I didn’t find out where Marion was until late last night, and started off at dawn. Drove like stink to get down here, too. She hasn’t been up to anything, has she?’

    Rollison took him his tea, but didn’t answer.

    ‘Thanks. I see what you mean. Well, I’m just an ordinary cove, by the name of Reginald Rowse. Run my own little business and make quite a good thing of it. Family don’t like it much, they thought I ought to have gone into the family show – the law. Not on your life! I—great Scott!’

    He gaped.

    ‘Now what?’

    ‘Reginald Rowse – Richard Rollison. R.R. We’re almost twins!’

    ‘Not quite,’ said Rollison solemnly. ‘What’s your business?’

    ‘Cigarettes and tobacco. I’ve several London shops, and a few in the provinces. Side lines too, of course. I do very nicely, thank you. The thing is …’ He gulped down his tea. ‘Oh, heck! I suppose you met Marion down here, just by chance.’

    ‘That’s right.’

    ‘What do you think of her?’

    ‘What would most men think of her?’

    ‘That’s the trouble,’ said Reginald Rowse, with sudden descent to misery. ‘She isn’t what she seems. Oh, she’s lovely to look at, and she has

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