Inspector French: Man Overboard!
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To mark the publishing centenary of Freeman Wills Crofts, ‘The King of Detective Story Writers’, this is one of six classic crime novels being issued in 2020 featuring Inspector French, coming soon to television.
A new chemical process that will make millions: that’s the glittering promise held out to Jack Penrose and his fiancée, Pam Grey, when they’re invited to join a team of inventors in Belfast. But Pam is wary. She doesn’t trust the inventors or Mr Reginald Platt, who comes to assess the viability of the new process – or to steal it? When Platt’s body is washed up on the Irish coast, it looks like an accident, maybe suicide, but Inspector French suspects murder and must find the vital clues to lead him to the truth.
Freeman Wills Crofts
Freeman Wills Crofts (1879–1957) was an Irish author of detective fiction. Born in Dublin, he spent decades as a railroad engineer in Northern Ireland. When a long illness kept him away from work, he wrote The Cask (1920), a mystery novel that launched him to immediate popularity. He continued writing after he returned to work, finally leaving the railroad in 1929 to write full time. His best-known novels include The Starvel Hollow Tragedy (1927) and The 12:30 from Croydon (1934).
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Reviews for Inspector French
6 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A young engaged couple get involved with some scientists who are supposedly making remarkable discoveries. Another young man (who had displayed some interest in the engaged young woman) vanishes on a sea trip --an earlier, fuller version of this story was published as Man Overboard. This is an abridged edition. Personally I have a prejudice against abridged editions, but I inherited this from my parents. In general, I like Inspector French novels as solid police cases, often involving time table alibis.
Book preview
Inspector French - Freeman Wills Crofts
1
As Pamela Grey Saw It
From the drive outside Pam’s window there came a sudden crunching of car wheels on gravel, the squeak of a too forcibly applied brake, and a toot—in code—on the horn.
Pam started up, called ‘Coming!’ through the open window, glanced hastily at herself in the crooked little wooden mirror, hurriedly smoothed an errant curl, and ran down the steep winding stairs and through the narrow hall to the car standing in front of the door.
Though her expression had not indicated what she thought of her reflection, she had every reason to be satisfied with it. Pam was not exactly pretty, and she was not beautiful at all. All the same she was a sight to gladden tired eyes. The overwhelming impression she gave was of what used to be called wholesome. She was young, little more than twenty, with a small, finely formed body and movements graceful as a faun’s. In her face there was character; intelligence in the broad forehead and the grey eyes which looked so steadfastly out on the world, a fastidious humour in the small mouth with its delicately twisted lips, strength in the firmly rounded chin. The glow of health shone in her creamy complexion and her expression radiated good humour and the joy of life.
At that moment indeed Pam was looking her best. An eager excitement had brought colour to her cheeks and a flash to her eyes. It was evident that something thrilling as well as delightful was about to happen.
One cause, though by no means the chief, was that waiting for her in the car was her fiancé, Jack Penrose. For a year or more they had been engaged. At first it had looked as if marriage was very far off. Jack was not yet earning anything like enough to set up house on, and Pam’s people were poor and could allow her nothing. But Jack’s prospects were good and the couple had perforce to wait.
Jack Penrose, tall, fair and typically Nordic, was a budding solicitor. At present he was a clerk in his father’s office in the neighbouring town of Lisburn, but he was soon to be taken into partnership and then a marriage would be arranged. Old Mr Penrose’s business was prosperous enough, and there would be sufficient for the moderate establishment the two young people wanted.
All this had been the idea at the time of the engagement, but recently a wonderful vista had opened out before them, a vista so marvellous that at first it seemed wholly incredible. Indeed even now it still appeared infinitely too good to be true. Suddenly and unexpectedly there had come a promise of money. Not a little money—not even a competence. What was dazzling their bewildered gaze was the prospect of a vast fortune: wealth almost infinite: utterly beyond ordinary limits: staggering in its magnitude. And now the journey they were about to take would bring that wealth appreciably nearer.
Pam climbed into the rather elderly Vauxhall. ‘When did you hear?’ she asked as Primrose let in his clutch.
‘Rang up half an hour ago. Said he was ready any time, but I couldn’t get away before.’
‘What did he sound like?’
‘Oh, I don’t know. Can’t tell much about a chap from half a dozen words on the telephone.’
‘Oh, yes, you can! What did he say?’
‘Why just that: he’d done his other business and could come down when I was ready.’
‘Sounds all right if that was the way he put it.’ She paused, and then gave an ecstatic little wriggle. ‘Oh, Jack, I’m so excited! I shall simply faint when I see him!’
‘Nice way for an engaged young woman to talk about a strange man.’
‘I’ll just throw myself at him. I’ll make love to him without stopping, all the time he’s here.’
‘If I see you as much as throw an eye in his direction I’ll cut both your throats.’
‘To think of all that’s happened in the last six months! Isn’t it just incredible? There we were and not a bean anywhere. And now! I can’t believe it even now.’
‘Haven’t got it yet.’
‘Fancy enough money to do anything we want! Just fancy! Anything!’
‘Only money? What about a spot of matrimony?’
‘Money of course! You don’t imagine you matter, do you?’
Pam was intoxicated with the amazing prospect of wealth. But Pam could not foresee the future. She didn’t realise that very often Fate offers her benefactions with her tongue in her cheek. They come as promised, but not alone. Some ingredient is added which robs them of their value. Pam didn’t know that a day was coming—was even then on them—when she would have given everything she had if only she had never heard of the fortune or of any person or thing connected with it. She didn’t know that instead of bringing joy and freedom to herself and Jack, the whole affair should grow into a ghastly horror whose memories threatened to stay with them during every remaining moment of their lives.
Jack Penrose and Pamela Grey lived in the little town of Hillsborough in the County of Down, that county which forms the south-eastern corner of Northern Ireland. It is scarcely a town as the word is understood in England, being little more than a collection of grey slate-covered houses fronting both sides of a single steeply falling street, with the church in the middle and the castle at the top. But though small, it is a town of honour in the province, for in the castle lives no less a personage than the Governor—or lived, till a recent fire necessitated his removal. Its street moreover is no mere village street; it is part of the main highway from Belfast to Dublin, and though the unhappy division of the country has reduced the flow of traffic between the two cities, Hillsborough still rumbles by day and night with cars and buses and great lorries grinding their way north or south.
Hillsborough is some dozen miles from Belfast, to which city Jack and Pam were now bound. The road is good, comparatively straight and level, broad and with an excellent surface. At that time, five o’clock in the afternoon, traffic was not heavy, the evening homeward rush having scarcely started. Jack made good speed and they expected to pick up their visitor and be back at Hillsborough well within the hour.
It was early in September and had been a day of gorgeous sunshine: if anything too hot. Now as they drove swiftly along Pam subconsciously feasted her eyes on the colours of the great trees beneath which they passed, dark with the full maturity of summer, but not yet beginning to turn to the reds and browns of autumn. The air through the open roof blew cool and pleasant on her face as she thought over the coming meeting or exchanged a word, half chaff, half earnest, with her companion.
How well she remembered that marvellous evening when ‘the affair’ had begun! As Jack threaded through the traffic of the Lisburn Road she pictured again the scene.
It was almost exactly six months earlier, at the end of February. She was sitting with her father and mother after supper, her father reading the paper, her mother knitting silently and herself with a book. She could remember every detail of the scene, her father sitting crosswise in his chair to get the light more directly on his page, the rubbed patches on the old brown velvet jacket he wore in the evenings, his two sticks placed within easy reach of his hand. She could see again the steel grey of the wool her mother was using, the dancing blue flames from the beech log on the fire, the luxurious abandon with which the large tabby lay extended on the hearthrug. And she remembered her own feelings of unrest and expectancy, of disappointment and of hope—not that she would have admitted these to any living soul.
Her worry was that Jack was overdue. He had promised to come in about eight, and it was now getting on towards nine and there was still no sign of him. Some question of amateur theatricals was to be talked over. They were doing The Yeomen of the Guard in aid of local charities, and she and Jack were taking part. The affair required a lot of discussion. Almost every night some point arose which had to be thrashed out. And until now Jack had never failed to turn up to do it.
Nine came and half-past nine, and then Mr Grey went to bed. He had been in the linen business, owning his own mill and being at one time quite well off. But he had met with an accident. His car had been run into by a lorry and he had been left crippled and an invalid. He had had to retire, and as the depression was then beginning, he had not sold his business to much advantage. The slump had played havoc with his investments, and now the family was tightly pressed for money. Had it not been for Mrs Grey they would have fared badly indeed. She took their financial cares on her shoulders and her unfailing cheerfulness made things run comparatively smoothly. She went to help her husband to bed and Pam was left alone.
Annoyed as Pam was by Jack’s defection, she could not refrain from putting down her book and letting her thoughts centre on him. How splendid he really was, so straight and decent, and in spite of his being late tonight, how utterly dependable! Not too brilliantly clever perhaps, but such a dear! He was like a great dog, strong and brave as a lion, though perhaps none the worse for a little gentle suggestion as to the direction his energies should take. Pam smiled dreamily as she told herself that in future she should be the person to provide that suggestion. She could indeed make him do anything she liked, except where his ‘not done’ code was involved: then he could be as pigheaded as anyone. Never mind! She loved him the better for it.
Then at last at nearly ten o’clock came the quick step on the gravel and the ring on the front door bell. Pam had an urge to rush out, snatch open the door and fling her arms round Jack. But she restrained herself, deliberately even sat for a few moments before going to the hall. Jack must not be spoiled. He must make proper explanations and apologies before he could be received into full favour.
But Jack, when at last the door opened, was evidently thinking of neither of the one nor the other. Without ceremony he caught her in his arms and squeezed her to him, then planted a rather hasty kiss on her lips, put her down, and pushed his way in as if taking her joy at seeing him for granted.
‘I thought you were coming at eight o’clock,’ Pam said rather primly.
He brushed the suggestion airily aside. ‘I know. Couldn’t get away. Look here, Pam, I’ve something to tell you. Come out for a walk, will you? I can’t talk here in the hall.’
She looked at him more critically. He was unduly excited. Something had certainly happened.
‘You can come into the sitting room, I suppose?’ she suggested coolly. The apology she considered inadequate.
He looked in and saw it was empty. ‘Yes, I suppose so. Your father gone to bed?’
‘Yes. Is it the costumes? Have they not turned up?’
He made a gesture relegating costumes to the limbo of the forgotten. ‘Of course it’s not the costumes,’ he declared. ‘Costumes!’ he repeated in a voice of ineffable scorn. ‘I’ve got something more interesting to talk about.’
‘You’re very mysterious,’ she said thawing.
‘It’s nothing now,’ he returned as he dropped into Mr Grey’s arm chair and pulled out his cigarette case. ‘But it’s what it might become.’ He held out the case. ‘There seems to be no end to the possibilities.’
‘Incidentally you might mention what you’re talking about.’
‘Isn’t that what I’m doing? I don’t think I told you, but two or three days ago I met M‘Morris. As a rule, you know, I haven’t much use for M‘Morris, but this time he stopped and began to talk. Said he’d just been coming to see me to know whether he could interest me in a scheme that he was pretty much interested in himself and that he wanted some help with. He said if the thing was a success there would be pretty big money in it for all concerned.’
Pam looked doubtful. ‘I never cared much for Ned M‘Morris,’ she declared. ‘What’s the scheme?’
‘Something chemical: I haven’t got the details yet. They think they’ve made some discovery that’ll simply ooze money. But they want to do some more working out first to make sure everything’s O.K.’
‘They?’
‘Yes, M‘Morris and his friend Ferris. I’ve just been seeing them. That’s what kept me.’
‘And what do they want you to do?’
‘Us.’
‘Us?’
‘Yes, it’s you they want particularly. I’m only a cog: you’re the mainspring that everything depends on.’
Pam was getting annoyed. ‘For pity’s sake will you explain the thing so that I’ll know what you’re talking about. What under the sun have I to do with it?’
‘Well, you’re a chemist, aren’t you?’
‘I’ve done some chemistry at Queen’s, if that’s what you mean.’
‘They want a chemist to help with the experiments.’
‘And what are you going to do? You’re no chemist.’
‘I’m to look after the legal side and the correspondence and so on. And I can give a hand with the experiments too if I’m shown what to do.’
Pam gurgled happily. ‘A fat lot of use you’d be. What’s this muck in this jug? Well, let’s shove in some of this bottle and see what happens,
and the whole thing goes up in the air. I can just see you in a lab.’
‘My legal advice is what is really wanted,’ Jack said with dignity.
This time Pam fairly hooted. ‘They may be fools, but they couldn’t be as bad as that. Go on; tell me some more.’
‘I don’t consider your conversation at all seemly. It’ll have to be dealt with.’
The discussion was interrupted while Jack took his tribute with kisses and Pam retaliated by boxing his ears.
‘You were saying?’ Pam suggested when the interlude was past.
‘They want us to lunch with them tomorrow. At the Station Hotel. They’re doing the thing in style. At this lunch they’ll tell us the whole story. You’ll come, Pam, won’t you? Do be a sport and come.’
‘Of course I’ll come.’
So the fateful meeting was arranged.
Next day shortly after one o’clock Jack called with the car and drove Pam into Belfast to the L.M.S. Station. In the lounge of the hotel two young men awaited them with an air of subdued excitement.
Edward M‘Morris and his friend, whom he introduced as Fred Ferris from the city of Newry, were contrasts in almost every particular. M‘Morris was tall and thin, taciturn and of gloomy disposition: Ferris was short, stout and jolly. M‘Morris was pale with long lank yellow hair and normal though undistinguished features: Ferris was swarthy of skin with thick dark hair and unusual ears, which had small well-formed upper portions and quite disproportionately long lobes. M‘Morris if anything looked rather stupid and was evidently considerably under his friend’s influence: in Ferris’s little black eyes the sharp twinkle indicated a particularly wide awake and dominating mind. Both seemed a trifle ill at ease and were obviously on their best behaviour.
Though M‘Morris had never been a special friend of Pam or Jack, they had known him for years. He lived about a mile from Hillsborough in the direction of Glenavy. He was, like them, a member of several of the local organisations, the tennis and badminton clubs and the dramatic society, and they had met at the houses of mutual friends. He was a technical assistant on the staff of Messrs Currie & M‘Master, the analytical chemists, of Howard Street, Belfast. So much Pam knew, and after what Jack had told her, she was not greatly surprised when Ferris was introduced as another technical assistant in the same firm. He, it came out in the course of conversation, was unmarried and lived in rooms in Belfast.
After cocktails they went in to lunch. The brunt of the conversation fell on Ferris and Jack. M‘Morris had not much to say, and what he did say had rather the effect of bringing the efforts of the others to a standstill. Pam was not quite at her ease. She felt a little distrustful of the whole affair, and she feared she might be let in for something she would dislike.
The business of the meeting was not mentioned till lunch was over and they were sitting over coffee in a corner of the deserted upstairs writing room. Then M‘Morris opened the ball.
‘I told Penrose last night, Miss Grey, that Ferris had made a chemical discovery and we think it is one of the most important made in this century. But I think he could tell you about it better himself, so I suggest he does so.’
‘Lazy pig,’ said Ferris with a slightly deprecating smile and his black eyes snapped with excitement, ‘you might occasionally do something for your keep.’ Then to Pam. ‘Well, if he won’t tell you, Miss Grey, I will. But that’s right, what he says. We’ve made a discovery and we think it’s a very big thing. For the matter of that, we know it’s a very big thing. I don’t want you to think it’s complete, for it isn’t, but if we could complete it, it would be one of the biggest things ever anyone got hold of.’
He paused, watching them shrewdly. Then as neither spoke, he went on.
‘You’ll be thinking I’m putting it on the high side. Well, I’m not, as you’ll see when I tell you what it is. If we could get it properly completed there’d be more money in it than all the lot of us together could handle. More money than we could estimate. A fortune for everyone connected with it. Now see, here’s what we want.’
Again he paused and again neither Jack nor Pam spoke.
‘What we want,’ he continued, ‘is to work at the thing and see if we can’t get it completed. But as things are, we can’t, and you’ll see why easily enough. We’re not millionaires and we’ve got to live on what we earn. We’d like to get some help. We wondered if you, Miss Grey, and Penrose would come into the thing and help us on a share the profits basis?’
‘How could we help you if we did?’ Pam asked.
Ferris looked at M‘Morris as if for inspiration. ‘We thought if we could raise the necessary cash that M‘Morris and I would devote our whole time to the thing,’ he went on. ‘There would be too much for two, and so we wondered if you would agree to work with us. We know of course you’ve done chemistry.’
‘Not enough for that, I’m afraid.’
‘Oh, yes, quite enough. I would fix up a programme of work.’
‘And what about the spot of cash?’ Jack put in.
Again Ferris looked as for help to his silent friend. ‘We think that might be met. We think there might be someone found who would finance us, of course on the share the profits basis. However, let’s leave that for the moment. Might I—eh—ask if you would feel disposed to come in?’
Pam looked at Jack. ‘We couldn’t say, could we, without knowing something more about it?’
‘Ah, sure that has answered my question,’ Ferris interposed swiftly, ‘or anyway I hope it has. Certainly you’d want all details, and it was to give these we suggested this meeting.’
He paused while a waiter came in, glanced about him, and then disappeared with the coffee cups. It was very silent in the room, which they still had to themselves. The bulk of the hotel lay between them and the trains, and on a Saturday afternoon there was little more than an occasional tram passing outside the windows in Whitla Street. Pam glanced at the three men’s expressions; Jack stolidly expectant, M‘Morris anxious rather than sanguine, Ferris, master of himself and the situation and with his eyes twinkling more shrewdly than ever.
Whatever the result of the afternoon’s deliberations, Pam was enjoying herself. Whatever she was to hear, it couldn’t fail to be interesting. And the prospect held out was alluring. She was fond of chemical work, particularly of research, and there was nothing she would have liked better than to join in perfecting some process, particularly if there was a chance of money at the end of it. She hesitated because—she didn’t like to admit it even to herself, but she wondered whether she entirely trusted those two? Ferris’s eye was very sharp, and he was very polite. Almost oily. Was he too polite to be quite wholesome? Then his voice interrupted her thoughts.
‘There’s just one preliminary,’ he was saying with some slight appearance of embarrassment. ‘You’ll understand that the story is confidential. If a whisper got about as to what we’re after, chemists over all the world would be tumbling over each other to forestall us. We’re not wanting to risk that. I’m afraid I’ll have to ask you to keep what I’m telling you to your two selves.’
‘I promise, of course.’
‘Thanks. And you, Penrose?’
‘Wouldn’t think of mentioning it.’
‘Sure I know I needn’t have asked. Still maybe it was as well. Right then, I can go ahead.’
He settled himself more comfortably in his chair and began his story, speaking with a certain amount of gesture and in a way that compelled interest and attention.
2
As Pamela Grey Saw It
‘It was six months or more ago,’ Ferris went on, ‘that Currie, one of our respected principals, was reading a paper before some society and he asked me to do some experiments to illustrate his remarks. It was on polymorphism and he had—’
‘Sorry to interrupt,’ Pam broke in, ‘but if you’re going to be understood, you must translate. Jack knows nothing of chemistry.’
‘I’m not a chemistry fiend,’ Penrose admitted judicially, ‘but if you can talk English, I’ll understand it.’
‘Right-o. I’ll talk in words of one syllable. Polymorphism means that certain substances can exist in more than one form. We have, for example, water, steam and ice. Speaking roughly, all three forms are composed of the same elements in the same proportions, but some people think that the atoms of each have a different arrangement.’
‘I can understand that,’ said Jack.
‘I wish I could,’ Ferris answered. ‘Anyway, several substances besides water occur in different forms, having different properties. Many of these are due to different crystalline arrangement, when they are called allotropic modifications. I needn’t go into it. There’s red and yellow sulphur, for example, and many others.
‘Going back to water, there’s a fourth form, besides water as we know it, steam and ice. There’s what has been called heavy water: water of the same elements as ordinary water, but with some of the elements in their heavy form. This liquid is heavier than ordinary water bulk for bulk. Its properties are different in other ways from ordinary water. Again I needn’t go into it?’
‘We’ll take it as read,’ said Jack.
‘All I’m trying to make clear is that polymorphism or this change in the form of a substance is a common thing in nature and every year they’re finding out more instances of it.’
‘I did a little of that in my chemistry course,’ said Pam.
‘That’s great. Then you won’t have any difficulty in following what I’m going to tell you. Well, Currie had a theory about heavy water that he wanted to put up in his paper, and I was working on it. I needn’t describe my experiments, but they were connected with passing various radiations through the water. I was working with a small quantity of water, about a tablespoonful, I should say. Ordinary water, I mean: not heavy water. I had the water in a test tube before I went for lunch, ready for me to begin work on it when I got back.
‘It happened that day M‘Morris had met some friends for lunch and they had got a bit jolly. You wouldn’t think it to look at M‘Morris, but it did happen. When he got back to the lab the idiot side of him was uppermost: and there’s a good deal of it, though again you mightn’t think it.’
‘Shut up, you silly ass,’ M‘Morris grunted. ‘Don’t mind him, Miss Grey. There’s not a word of truth in it.’
‘All right, you were perfectly normal and serious in what you did. Not through any joke but in perfect seriousness, as he now tells you, it occurred to him that it would be a wise and intelligent act to remove the water from my test tube and substitute petrol, which he happened to be using to fill a lighter. You wouldn’t believe it, but that’s what he did. Might have blown the whole place sky high.’
‘Rot! It couldn’t have done any harm at all, that little quantity. I’m not saying it was a very high type of humour, but some of us thought it would be interesting to see what Ferris would do when he didn’t get his reaction. Great new discovery in physical science made by Mr Fred Ferris and all that. Besides, see what the result has been.’
‘No thanks to you that any of us are alive. However, we needn’t pursue that side of it.’
‘Take it as read too,’ put in Jack.
‘Well, I don’t mind telling you that I was altogether done down by it. I got back from lunch and started on what I thought was water. And then I got the shock of my life.
‘It didn’t react as water should, but a pretty queer thing did happen. When the rays passed through it began to shrink. The volume decreased. It decreased till it was about two-thirds its former size.
‘I couldn’t make head nor tail of it. I kept the radiation on till all the shrinking seemed to be done. I thought I had somehow vaporised part of the water, but I hadn’t seen any steam. Then I wondered if I’d got some new form of heavy water. You understand I’d never carried out the experiment in quite the same way before. Certain unusual features were present which I needn’t go into. I can tell you I was fairly excited, but I decided to keep the thing to myself till I would find out more about it.
‘I next took the liquid from the apparatus and began to test it to see whether it really was heavy water. I found it extraordinarily inert. It had neither smell, taste nor colour, nor could I get any reaction from it of any kind or sort. It was clearly not ordinary water, nor the usual form of heavy water, and I thought I had come on still another polymorphic form.
‘Then I tried to repeat the experiment, and I was bothered worse than ever. I couldn’t repeat it. I couldn’t get the new liquid again.
‘I puzzled and puzzled, but couldn’t get any light. Then M‘Morris’s questions made me suspicious. He seemed to know too much. I pressed him till he admitted what he’d done.’
This story was quite unlike anything Pam had expected to hear. She was listening with immense interest, but still she couldn’t see what was coming or where the tale was leading. Jack was obviously interested, too. The others were clearly delighted with the way the tale was going.
‘You can imagine my next step. I tried again with the petrol and I got the same result as before. I was able to turn petrol into a new form, a new liquid I might say, a heavier liquid of smaller bulk, and so far as I could find, completely inert. Certainly it had lost all the properties of ordinary petrol.
‘Though I didn’t see then what this might involve, I swore M‘Morris to silence, and when we could, both of us worked at the affair. We learnt a good deal about the stuff, its atomic weight, and things like that, but nothing more of real interest. Except this—that I was able to prove that what I had was a dimorphic modification and not a new chemical form.’
‘By which,’ Pam added for Jack’s benefit, ‘I presume you mean that what you had was still petrol, though in another form, and not some other chemical compound?’
‘That’s putting it absolutely correctly. Well, by