Galloway faded into the recess which contained his desk, and the three in charge of the case were to all intents and purposes alone in a matter of seconds.
Oates took off his ancient raincoat and folded it carefully over the back of a chair.
âSuperintendent Yeo is tied to his telephone, all his telephones,â he said, his cold eyes resting on Luke for a moment, âso I thought Iâd slip down and see you myself, Charles.â He had a sad voice. The words came slowly, like an old schoolmasterâs. âYou may have a little more on your plate than you realize. How far have you got?â
Luke told him, reeling out the essential details with a minimum of gesture and the precision his training had taught him. The Assistant Commissioner listened, nodding gently from time to time as if he were hearing a well-learned lesson. When it was done he picked up the envelope and turned it over.
âHumph,â he said. âHe must have been waiting for Duds outside here. Probably kept an eye on the doors from the foyer of the hotel opposite.â Mr Campion spoke thoughtfully. âWhen we let Duds go, he must have followed him, taken him into the first pub, tried to get the tale out of him, failed, given him his office address, and then â what?â
âDuds was windy because he wasnât on his own â wasnât working on his own, that is,â Luke supplemented, âso as soon as he got a chance he hooked it. Levett went after him, pausing to pay his score, which argues he wasnât fighting mad, and missed him because Duds doubled back up Pump Path. We know where Duds finished, but what happened to Levett? Where is he now?â
âYour Superintendent would like to know that, because that apparently is what three-quarters of the people who are still influential in this bedevilled old town keep telephoning and asking him.â Oates made the announcement with a sour little smile. âMr Levett seems to have planned quite an old-style evening: telephone calls half over the world, an after-dinner speech at a banquet, and a business interview with a gentleman from the French government in his flat after that. None of his friends can find him and they want to know why we canât.â He glanced at the clock over the desk. âHeâs staying out late, isnât he, for such a busy chap?â
Mr Campion slid off the table where he had been sitting, his hands in his pockets, his foot swinging.
âMedical opinion, for what itâs worth, is that Duds was kicked,â he said. âI donât see Levett doing that, you know, I really donât.â
Old Oates looked up. âDo you see him killing at all, Mr Campion?â
âFrankly, no.â
âBut on the other hand, do you see him cutting all his appointments like this? Theyâre important appointments, every one of them.â
âItâs odd.â Campion was frowning. âGeoffrey is a punctilious, solid sort of chap, I should have said. On the sober, stolid side. Unadventurous, even.â
âThatâs what most people think.â The Assistant Commissionerâs grey face was puckered into the faint smile which showed he was enjoying himself. âBut heâs not, you know. Iâve been hearing about him. Heâs Levettâs Ball Bearings and one or two other very sound old-fashioned little companies, and heâs a very rich man. But we donât like riches in this country these days, and what we donât like we get rid of. Iâve been making some inquiries tonight and I hear that when Levett came back from the war he found that after he had provided for all the people whom he felt had a genuine claim on his family and estate â his pensioners and so on â he found he had thirty-seven pounds five shillings and threepence per annum to live on himself after taxation had been paid. There were two courses open to him. He could spiv around with an army
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