India Black and the Gentleman Thief

SEVENTEEN


Our search for Welch and provisioning at Lotus House had eaten up a good part of the day and it was midafternoon before we were back on a train to Redhill. We were both feeling a bit disheartened for fear that we’d let Welch slip through our fingers, or that Dudley might have murdered the captain under our noses.

“What shall we do when we arrive?” I asked.

“We’ll call in at the Duke of Wellington to be sure that Vincent hasn’t tried to reach us. Then we’ll go back to Hilltop Farm to find Homer and see if he had any luck in getting into the house and searching Vasapoulis’s case.”

“If he had, wouldn’t we have heard from him?”

“Perhaps. But it’s several miles from the farm to the nearest telegraph, which is at the station, and I doubt he’d trust anyone to send a message for him. He’d want to keep Vasapoulis in sight. I anticipate that he’ll be waiting for us somewhere in the vicinity of the house.”

As the train slid into the station, French leaned forward to peer intently out the window.

“Damn and blast, India. Something’s happened.”

The platform was abuzz with activity of the official sort. Two blue-coated constables with bewildered expressions watched as bowler-hatted men with notebooks in hand debated strenuously. The press had arrived in the person of an alert little chap in a garish tweed suit, brandishing his own notebook. A half-dozen spectators had gathered to watch the show.

“You don’t suppose it’s Homer . . .” I left my question unfinished.

French’s jaw was clenched. “I hope not. When we get off the train, I’ll talk to the man in charge and see what I can learn.”

“Your curiosity may arouse his interest.”

“I’ve a story to tell him. Just follow my lead.”

“I will,” I said. “This time.”

We disembarked and French tucked my hand into the crook of his elbow. He steered us in the direction of a harried-looking chap with a pock-marked face, a Roman nose and grey eyes that narrowed sharply when we appeared in his field of vision.

“Pardon me,” said French, doffing his hat. “I’m Major French and this is my wife, India. We have come down from London for a quiet country outing, but your presence at the station, needless to say, has alarmed us. Has something occurred in the neighborhood? We had planned to walk to the Duke of Wellington and enjoy the countryside for a few days.” He gestured toward the basket we carried containing food and drink and my other necessaries.

At French’s introduction, the fellow had touched the brim of his hat and nodded to us. “Very pleased to meet you, sir, ma’am. I’m Inspector Cole. As you’ve ascertained, we’ve had a situation develop here and I do believe it would be best if you reconsidered your plans for the day.”

“What a shame,” said French. “Can you tell us what has happened?”

The inspector glanced at me, and I could see he was eager to spare my feelings.

I squeezed French’s arm. “I’ll wait by the ticket office, dear. From the inspector’s face, I can see that his information may be too indelicate for a lady to hear.” God, it chapped me to say that, but I reckoned French would get more out of the inspector if I weren’t around to inhibit the conversation. I dutifully retreated and spent the next few minutes gazing around the station with the petulant expression of a vacuous wench who’s just had her holiday ruined.

French and the inspector held a brief discussion, with French listening more than speaking but occasionally asking a question. When they’d finished, French thanked the law officer and came to join me.

“What’s happened?” I demanded when French was within speaking distance.


“A man’s body was discovered this morning in a field not far from the station. From the description, it would appear to be Welch.”

“The poor fool. He was in over his head. Did the inspector say how he died?”

“Strangled, with his own tie.”

“At least they didn’t slash him to ribbons.”

“Unlike Mayhew, they did not need information from Welch. Only silence.”

“We need to find Homer.”

“Granted. The inspector does not think it wise for us to dally here. He urged me to take seats on the next train back to London. I informed him that we should be perfectly safe if we travel to the Duke of Wellington as we’ll be there long before dark.”

“Does the inspector know that it’s Welch who’s been murdered?”

“No, and I did not inform him of that fact.”

“Do you plan to?”

“Not yet. It would be deuced hard to explain how I know the victim without going into some detail about the matter. And I want to talk to Homer first. We shall certainly have to tell the prime minister and devise a plan, but until we know what Homer has found, it would be premature for us to share information with the local constabulary.”

“Who found the body? And when?”

“A farmer, who went out to check his crop and found a man’s body shoved under a pile of leaves in a covert. That was around four hours ago. The inspector has just arrived and has barely had time to start his investigation.”

“Bloody hell,” I said. “You know the ticketmaster and Isaac the carriage driver will remember us from yesterday, enquiring about Welch. We left a trail a mile wide.”

“Yes, we did. And the inspector is going to be on it, but not for a while yet. He’s a garrulous chap, the inspector, and he was pleased to inform me that he is waiting for the ticketmaster who was on duty yesterday to be located and questioned. The inspector has also been told that if the captain was looking for transportation he would have hired old Isaac, who is presently delivering a load of provisions to a local village and won’t be back for several hours.”

“We’d better cut out of here before the ticketmaster or Isaac returns and describes us to Inspector Cole.”

“I told the man that the Duke of Wellington was our destination. We’ll head in that direction, and get off the main road at the first opportunity.”

We sauntered out of the station and down the road in the direction of Salfords. When we came to the nearest copse of trees we glanced around surreptitiously but the station still bustled with activity as the inspector and his fellow policemen planned their campaign. No one was looking in our direction. We plunged into the thicket and dropped to the ground. I fumbled with my skirt.

“What the devil are you doing?” asked French.

“Removing my skirt. Fleeing from the law will be much easier in trousers.”

“When you’re ready, let’s move. I won’t feel comfortable until we’re miles from that station.”

When I hear the word “miles” I automatically associate the distance with a hansom cab or a carriage. I can assure you, I am not one of those hearty types who thinks a hike of several furlongs is a reasonable way to spend an afternoon. Nevertheless, that is how we occupied the rest of that afternoon. You could not describe our physical exertion as even a vigorous walk. It was more like an army training exercise: dashing from cover to cover, crawling beneath fence rails, leaping stone boundaries, creeping on our bellies through open fields of rye and wheat. Boys are said to enjoy this sort of thing and I expect Vincent would have found it great fun, but within a quarter hour all the flesh had been scraped from my elbows and knees. My hairpins had come loose and my hands were as filthy as any street urchin’s. I seriously considered surrendering myself to Inspector Cole and his minions, on the off chance that the nearest gaol would offer at least a jug of water and some soap.

French forced a grueling pace, his long strides eating up the ground. I had to trot along to stay up with him. I am not used to trotting. It is undignified, not to mention debilitating. By the time the sun had fallen to the horizon and French deemed it safe enough for us to rest, I was jolly well wrung out. If I’d been a horse, the glue factory would have been in my immediate future. I believe I emitted a quiet moan when I collapsed to the ground, for French suppressed a smile and fished out the flask of rum from our basket.

“That was hard going. Can you carry on after a rest?”

“Don’t worry about me.” I chugged rum and coughed. “I can walk all the way to London if it’s necessary. Will it be necessary?”

“No. We’re not far from the farm.” French munched on a roll from the basket and scanned the sky. “It will be dark soon, and we’ll be able to approach the house.”

“We may find Inspector Cole and his men waiting for us. If he’s talked to either the ticketmaster or Isaac, then he’ll know that we were here last night.”

“I’m not concerned about us. We can easily prove our innocence. But if Cole appears at Hilltop Farm, Vasapoulis will either fight or flee. Neither he nor Dudley will be apprehended easily. I doubt the inspector has ever encountered anyone as ruthless as those two. I doubt that he or his constables are armed. They may walk right into a death trap. Perhaps I should have warned the fellow.”

“Cole may prove to be made of sterner stuff than you think. For all we know, the inspector may have Vasapoulis in custody already.”

“If he does, the Greek won’t be there long,” said French. “The man’s an international arms dealer. He slips across borders like we cross the street. He’ll have powerful connections. And I doubt that he’ll use his real name when he announces himself to Inspector Cole. Vasapoulis will be hiding behind a web of identities. In fact, Vasapoulis probably isn’t his real name either. In any event, Inspector Cole is playing out of his league. Vasapoulis will be free almost as soon as he’s gaoled. If he’s gaoled.”

“If that’s the situation, then we will need to be there when Vasapoulis is granted bail and walks out a free man. It may be time to call in more of Dizzy’s agents to help us shadow him.”

A second, more tempting thought struck me. “If Cole arrests Vasapoulis, then we’ll have the perfect opportunity to look in that case of his. Either he’ll leave it behind at the house or he’ll take it with him to gaol. If he does the latter, then we merely have to inform Cole of our identity and have a good look through the contents.”

“First, we must find Homer and see if he’s gained any evidence against Vasapoulis. Then we’ll plan for all contingencies.”

It was dark now, and the lights from the farmhouses glowed warm and inviting in the distance. A full moon had risen and a soft silver light blanketed the countryside. There was hardly a breath of wind, and noises carried far in the still night air. I heard the sound of a cart on a nearby lane, the tuneless whistling of the driver and the weary footsteps of the nag.

“Are you ready, India?”

We gathered our things and cautiously made for the farmhouse, taking a circuitous route that led across pasture and field. Once a humpbacked bull raised his head as we skirted past and a calf shied away from us, his hooves thundering across the ground. I’ll tell you, I’d rather be accosted by a gang of cutthroats than thread my way through a field of cattle. Oh, they look nice enough, with those sad brown eyes and those docile expressions, but they’re ruddy great beasts who could knock you down with one swish of a tail, and they seem rather territorial to boot. That bull was far too interested in our passage for my liking. By the time we’d cleared the pasture my heart was racing like a locomotive.


We found shelter behind a hedge and French softly whistled a series of notes. A moment later his signal was answered by a muted trill. Homer joined us, emerging so quietly from the darkness that I nearly fainted when his stocky frame dropped to the ground next to me.

“What news?” he asked.

I handed him bread and meat and offered the flask of rum while French briefed him in low tones. At the news of Welch’s death, Homer gave a start.

“Good God. These fellows are callous.”

“All the more reason for us to proceed carefully. Were you able to get into the house?”

Homer sighed. “I was halfway through that window you’d so thoughtfully left open when I heard a noise from the other side of the building. I shot out of there and it’s a good thing I did, for that Dudley fellow came out of the house and patrolled the area. He did it twice more before dawn. I hid in the rhododendrons and watched.”

“Didn’t Dudley notice the broken window frame?” I asked in alarm.

“No. I closed the window and jammed the lock back in the frame as best I could. Then I smeared a bit of dirt around the casing. It won’t fool anyone under close inspection, but from a distance you wouldn’t notice anything amiss. And Dudley didn’t bother to inspect the windows, though he did try the back door to see that it was locked.”

“You’ve been here all day?” French asked.

“Most of it. I walked down to the Duke of Wellington for a bite to eat around midday, and to see if I could pick up any gossip. I learned that Vasapoulis and Dudley have been here for a little over a month. They call themselves Se?or Gomez and Mister Blake, and they claim to be businessmen who are here for a short holiday. They never seem to leave the house, but in the time they’ve been here, there’s been a steady stream of men coming to see them.”

“I suppose Vasapoulis is posing as a Spaniard to explain his complexion and accent,” observed French.

“I should imagine. Anyway, Vasapoulis and Dudley have steered clear of the locals. When the two of them require food or drink, the grocer from Salfords or the landlord at the Duke of Wellington drives out to the house with provisions. And that is all I could learn over a pint.”

“Have the police been to the house today?” French whispered.

“I don’t think so. They might have come while I was at the pub, but Vasapoulis and Dudley are still in the house and I don’t think they would be there if the police had come sniffing around.”

“Then the inspector hasn’t talked to the ticketmaster or Isaac yet.”

“Who?”

“The man who drove Welch, and us, to the farm last night. As soon as Isaac or the ticketmaster tells Cole about that, he’ll be on the doorstep. I’m afraid we haven’t covered our tracks very well, Homer.”

“It makes no difference. Now that those men have disposed of Welch, I should think they’ll be leaving. In fact, I’m surprised they haven’t gone already. It was damned risky, leaving Welch’s body so close to the house.”

“The inspector said it was well concealed. Our friends might have thought they’d have more time to get away.”

“All this palaver is getting us nowhere,” I said. “Any minute Cole will show up with a couple of plump constables. I doubt they’ll pose a challenge to Vasapoulis and Dudley. If we don’t want a trio of dead policemen, we’ve got to do something. There’s two of them and three of us. Are you armed, Homer?”

“Always.”

“Then into the house we go. French and I will enter through the window as we did last night. You give us ten minutes and then kick in the front door.”

I sat back, pleased with my plan. It was simple and direct and if an arms dealer and his henchman died in the firefight, who would care? I said as much, to be greeted with a chuckle from Homer and the familiar horrified silence from his nibs that comes whenever an idea is floated that doesn’t comport with his Etonian ideals. But it was imperative that we tackle Vasapoulis and Dudley before the police arrived and so French reluctantly agreed to the plan, though he spent several precious minutes tamping down my enthusiasm for gunplay and affirming the value of taking Vasapoulis alive so as to extract useful information. I let him finish his sermon uninterrupted. It was a great strain on me, but as time was wasting I refrained from squandering more of it by arguing with French. In the end I vowed to do my best to capture Vasapoulis rather than kill him and that seemed to satisfy the poncy bastard.

“I’d feel better about this if we had any idea where the men were sleeping,” French fretted.

“I’ve only seen lights in two rooms,” said Homer. “I think that Vasapoulis sleeps in the room at the front of the house, the one where he met with Welch. I believe Dudley sleeps in a room at the northwest corner of the house. I’ve noticed a light there the two nights I’ve been watching.”

“So there are French doors from the verandah into the room where Vasapoulis sleeps?” I asked. “Then don’t bother with the front door, Homer. Smash in the French doors. You’ll gain a few seconds and Vasapoulis will have less time to arm himself.”

“Quite right,” agreed Homer.

“As India and I are entering the rear of the house, we’ll head for Dudley’s room. Can you take Vasapoulis on your own?” French asked.

“Of course.” Homer sounded offended.

“I should have stopped by the prime minister’s office when we were in London,” said French. “It would be useful to have more men.”

“Well, you didn’t and that’s that,” I said. “The odds are in our favour. We have the numerical advantage and we have the element of surprise.”

“I shouldn’t count on surprise. These chaps live in a dangerous world and they’re always on the alert.”

As if to demonstrate the truth of his assertion, we heard the front door of the house open and a figure appeared.

“Dudley,” whispered Homer and the three of us dove to the ground. “He’ll have a look round the grounds and then go back inside.”

“This is a perfect opportunity,” I whispered. “If we can eliminate him, we’ll have a clear path to Vasapoulis. He’ll just assume that it is Dudley returning to the house when we enter, and we’ll catch the Greek off guard.”

“Excellent idea,” said French. “What’s Dudley’s route, Homer?”

“He’ll walk down the drive fifty feet or so, then check that the stable is secure and complete a circuit around the house until he’s at the front door again.”

Indeed, Dudley had already set off down the drive.

“I’ll take him now.” French eased his truncheon from his coat pocket. “The trees will provide cover and he won’t hear me coming through the pasture. If I wait until he returns to the house, he’ll hear my footsteps on the gravel.”

“I’ll come with you,” said Homer.

“It will be easier for one of us to get close to him than for two of us to try to hide our approach. I won’t be a minute.”

French slipped away into the dark and Homer occupied himself by slipping off his belt and flexing it gently, careful not to make a sound as he did so. “Have you anything else we can use to tie him? And we’ll need a gag.”

“You can keep your belt. French has a set of handcuffs and I’ve a scarf. That should work admirably.” I used the knife from my boot to cut off a portion of the scarf sufficient to fit inside Dudley’s mouth, then sliced the remainder into long strips that I wove together to hold the gag in place. Our preparations complete, we had nothing to do but wait.


Now I have every confidence in French, except when I don’t. I know he’s a soldier and has seen some action (not that he’d been the one to inform me of that, but I’d winkle the story out of him soon), and of course he’s one of Dizzy’s most trusted agents, so he must be competent at sneaking up on fellows and bashing them on the head. I’d have felt much better if I’d been allowed to go along, primarily because I suspect French would use the minimum force necessary to render Dudley unconscious while I would have ensured that Vasapoulis’s henchman didn’t wake up until next week, if at all. French likes to portray me as a savage, but one man’s savage is another man’s realist.

I was about to suggest to Homer that perhaps we should meander over and see how the ambush was developing when French loomed up out of the shadows with the inert figure of Dudley over his shoulder. He lowered the fellow carefully at our feet, straightened one of Dudley’s arms, which had been pinned beneath his body (I told you French was too bloody solicitous) and sat down with a grunt. Homer and I busied ourselves trussing Dudley like a Christmas goose.

French massaged his fist. “That fellow has a head like a blacksmith’s forge.”

“Did he give you any trouble?” asked Homer.

“Not a bit. I was on him before he knew it. He heard my footsteps just before I reached him and started to turn round, but I clipped him behind the ear and he toppled over and that was that.”

I could hear the satisfaction in French’s voice. Felling Dudley was small recompense for the beating French had received at the hands of Vasapoulis’s gang, but it must have felt fine to strike at least one blow in retaliation. I was looking forward to some of the same.

When Dudley was bound and we’d all had a swallow of brandy to fortify us for the assault on the house, we checked our weapons and made sure our extra cartridges were at hand. We’d held a quick debate while we prepared and decided that since Vasapoulis was now alone in the house, Homer would bash in the French doors of the room where we thought the Greek was sleeping, as planned, but now French would join him in this activity and I would cut off Vasapoulis’s retreat by guarding the back of the house. Frankly, I did not regard this as a suitable plan as it left me far from the action but as much as it pains me to admit this, I have neither the strength nor the experience to plant a boot on a door and break it open. I slithered off to circle behind the house. I proceeded cautiously, keeping an eye open for armed scoundrels, until I came to the stone drinking trough and crouched down behind it. From here I had a clear view of the rear entry to the house, and I’d have the drop on Vasapoulis if he managed to evade French and Homer and tried to escape.

I had just settled into position when I heard the ruckus begin. The sound of boots thudding against wood broke the silence as Homer and French struck at precisely the same moment. Glass shattered as the French door from the verandah gave way, and I heard the lock crack and wood splinter. The house seemed to quiver from the attack.

“Hands up!” Homer shouted. A revolver boomed and someone yelled. Footsteps thundered through the house and suddenly there was the crackle of sustained gunfire. Unless Vasapoulis had a Gatling gun in there, he was not alone. I raced for the back door, Bulldog in hand. I may not be able to open a door with a flying leap, but I could blast open the lock with my pistol.

This plan, however, proved unnecessary. I was twenty feet from the door when it sprang open and two men rushed out. I flung up the Bulldog, cocking the hammer as I did so. It was too dark to see clearly and these two could be Homer and French exiting a firefight they hadn’t anticipated, but it was better to have my weapon at the ready while we sorted that out.

“Halt!” I cried. I sounded dashed calm under the circumstances.

One of the men skidded to a stop, shocked into compliance. The other swung deliberately in my direction and raised his hand. I assumed he had a weapon in it and I hit the ground, rolling frantically through the gravel in the vain hope of finding shelter somewhere in this exposed courtyard. The fellow pulled the trigger and the gun in his hand barked. The gravel where I’d been standing a moment before exploded and I ducked my head to shield my face. I yelped as a quantity of gravel pellets slammed into my body. It hurt like blazes, as if I’d been stung by a dozen wasps or hit by a load of buckshot. By God, if that chap had damaged my goods, I’d make him pay. I propped myself up on my elbows and took aim. In the moonlight I could see his pale face turning this way and that as he searched for me. He’d been blinded by his own muzzle blast and his night vision had not returned. I suffered from no such impairment. I squeezed the trigger.

I hit him well. His body jerked backward from the force of the bullet and his arms flailed. The revolver in his hand went flying, and then he collapsed. I turned my gun in the direction of the second fellow, but now my vision was obscured by the flash from my Bulldog’s muzzle and I couldn’t locate the man. I blinked and scrambled to my knees. The chap I’d shot was keening softly, clutching his stomach. Of the other, there was no sign. I held the Bulldog at chest level and swept the courtyard. Either the second man had gone back inside the house or he’d hared off into the night. I sincerely hoped he’d chosen the latter course. Otherwise he might be inside waiting for me or, even worse, about to take a potshot at me from one of the windows. I dropped to a crouch and scuttled to the side of the house, where I leaned against the brick and took stock of my situation. My wounds were slight and not especially painful, though I could feel blood trickling down my legs where the gravel had struck me. But I was still on my feet and I needed to get inside the house. From the front rooms I could hear an occasional gunshot and ragged shouts. I had no idea what I’d find when I got there, but I had to reach French. And Homer, of course.

I wasn’t about to enter the building without a bit of reconnaissance, though. I leaned well back out of sight and thrust one hand into the open doorway, waving it ostentatiously. Nothing happened. I took a deep breath and blew it out, then swung the Bulldog up and darted through the doorway, tucking my shoulder as I went through the opening and hitting the floor in a roll that brought me to my feet inside the room. An excellent maneuver and damned well executed, if I may say so myself.

The moment I regained my feet I brought up the Bulldog and lunged sideways. I hit the wall and hunkered down, my shoulders tensed, waiting for a blast of lead. Again, nothing. Either the second villain was a cool fellow and was laying a trap for me or he had run like a rabbit to join his friends in the house or through the fields away from the skirmish. Since he’d scampered off without offering even token resistance and left his compatriot bleeding to death in the courtyard, I reckoned he’d concluded that discretion was the better part of valour and was now headed into the distance at speed.

Nevertheless, I moved forward cautiously, peering quickly around door frames and then drawing back to avoid offering an easy target. It took some time to navigate through the dark house and I did it with my heart in my throat. The gunshots had subsided now and the house was eerily quiet. What the devil was happening? Where was French?

I reached the dining room that opened onto the entry hall and paused here to collect myself. I remembered that if I walked into the hall I’d be facing the side of the set of stairs that ran from the ground floor to the first, and that if I turned to the left I would see the dresser in the hall and beyond it, to the right, the room Vasapoulis occupied. There was also, I recalled, a room directly across from Vasapoulis’s. It had been closed off behind a set of double doors when French and I had slipped into the house, so I had no idea what purpose it served.


I was chewing my lip and wondering what in blazes I was going to do when I heard snatches of a whispered conversation. I inched forward with the Bulldog at the ready and ventured a peek into the hall. I drew back in alarm. A hulking figure was stooped down behind the great chest in the hall, not ten feet from me. I could clearly see his body outlined against the white sheet that covered the chest. That certainly wasn’t French, and though Homer was stocky, this lout looked like a gorilla compared to him.

I heard stealthy footsteps from overhead and risked another quick glance. The light was dim, but I could just make out a figure crouched at the top of the stairs. I couldn’t tell if the second figure was Vasapoulis, but it didn’t matter. A scheme was forming in my head. I was busy calculating distances and trajectories and which of the men out there should get the first bullet when a throaty voice with a distinct Mediterranean accent called out.

“Major French? I assume you are across the hall from me, in the parlour. You are outnumbered, my friend. It would be best for you if you surrendered now. Otherwise you will try my patience and that is not wise, as Colonel Mayhew learned.”

The voice had not come from the top of the stairs, but from the room where French and I had seen Vasapoulis and Welch meeting. That meant there were at least three men in the house I would have to eliminate or capture. The order of those options was not unintentional. If you have been assaulted in your own home and intended to be shark bait, you tend not to worry about such details. I did however have to recalibrate my plans, and while I was contemplating whether to go for the cove behind the dresser and then spin round and take out the chap upstairs or vice versa, I heard glass break and wood splinter as the window in the parlour exploded. French’s .577 Boxer roared, followed by a barrage of shots. I confess my mind took a split-second holiday while I tried to absorb this new information. Had French and Homer elected to break out the window and make a run for it (in which case my own position had just become more precarious)? Or had the bloke who’d scampered off outside (and the friend I’d shot) been ordered by Vasapoulis to circle around to the front of the house and attack French and Homer in the parlour?

Well, he who hesitates is prone to get a bullet through the head and besides that, the fellow behind the dresser had stepped out from behind its shelter and was advancing down the hallway as Vasapoulis emerged from his lair with a revolver in his hand. There was no more time to think, so I stepped out into the hallway, leveled my Bulldog and pulled the trigger. Now if you’re the effeminate type who thinks the lions should lie down with the lambs, I must inform you that such action is merely a prelude to the lions dining heartily. Consequently, I did not hesitate to shoot the chap in the back on the theory that had he the opportunity, he’d have done the same to me. He went sprawling, the gun flying from his hand and skittering across the floor to Vasapoulis’s feet.

The Greek hesitated a moment, and I thought it best to deal with the chap upstairs before bagging my first international arms dealer. I whipped round and detected a dark shadow crouched behind the balusters of the staircase. I knew my shot would have to be quick; my back was to Vasapoulis and any moment I reckoned he’d snap out of his stupor and unload on me. I fired and then fired again. The first shot shredded a baluster, and the second whistled past the head of the crouching man. I heard his exclamation of surprise. Then he collapsed backward, out of my line of sight. From the parlour I could hear a fusillade of gunshots. It sounded like the Battle of Inkerman in there.

I whirled round to find Vasapoulis drawing a bead on me. I dove into the dining room as a bullet whined past my ear and buried itself in the door frame. I scrambled back to the doorway and peeked round, my head just a foot off the floor. Vasapoulis was wheeling in a half circle, pointing his gun alternately in my direction and then into the parlour. I took aim and squeezed the trigger and my bullet caught Vasapoulis in the thigh. He spun round and crashed to the floor, uttering a guttural cry as he fell. I’d used every bullet in the revolver. I extracted the empty casings and fumbled in my pocket for my extra cartridges. I reloaded with trembling fingers.

There was one more exchange of fire from the parlour, then a single shot.

“Got him!” I heard Homer shout.

“French?” I called.

“India? Where are you?” My knees almost buckled with relief at the sound of the poncy bastard’s voice.

“In the dining room. There are two men down in the hall, including Vasapoulis.”

“Dead?”

“One is, I think. I’ve only wounded Vasapoulis, though.”

“Homer and I are coming out. Cover us.”

“French, there’s another man, up on the first floor. I shot at him, but I’m not sure I hit him.”

“Alright. We’ll watch for him. You keep an eye on Vasapoulis until we can be sure he’s unarmed.”

My gaze was fixed on the Greek, but I heard the creak of the wooden doors to the parlour as they swung open and a moment later French and Homer crept into view. French advanced on Vasapoulis, his Boxer in his hand, while Homer covered the hall. It did occur to me that if the chap on the floor was playing dead and suddenly reared up, Homer and I might end up shooting each other, but there was nothing to be done about it but hope that I had shot the chap thoroughly. I heard a scuffling noise as French kicked Vasapoulis’s gun out of reach and jerked him upright by his collar.

“Bastard,” said French. “You’re lucky my associate didn’t kill you.”

“Like this one,” said Homer, bending over my first victim. “He’s dead.”

I charged out of the room and trained my Bulldog on the stairs. “There’s another one up there. I’m going after him.”

“India, wait!” French shouted, but my blood was up and I was going to get that last chap. I’d spotted him, so I had first dibs.

Dimly, I heard French calling to Homer to guard Vasapoulis. I knew it. His nibs was about to horn in on my capture. I lunged up the stairs with my Bulldog in hand. Now I’m not a complete idiot. I did have the foresight to stoop down and poke my head around the corner. The hall was clear in both directions.

French rushed up behind me, panting heavily.

“You go right,” I told him. “I’ll go left.”

“I suppose that means you know the man went left.”

“I’ve no idea which way he went. He may have jumped out a window by now.”

“I suppose there’s no point in telling you to be careful.”

“I suppose you’re right. Bloody hell, French, if not for me, you and Homer would still be pinned down in that parlour.”

“I only suggest that you be careful so that I can enjoy more of these debates in the future. I wouldn’t dream of impugning your ability to deal death and destruction to our enemies.”

“To the right, French.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

I crept slowly down the hallway, alert to every movement and sound. A plank squeaked under my foot and I shuffled hastily to one side, but the sound did not draw fire. I came to the first room on my right. The door stood open and I could see that this was a bedroom. The furniture was recognizable under the drapery of white sheets. I ducked in for a quick look, my heart hammering, but the room was quiet as a tomb. Not, in retrospect, a well-chosen comparison.

The door across the hall was closed. I knelt down against the wall and warily tried the knob. Locked. Was the villain in there? I must remember to have French show me the trick of kicking open a door sometime. At the moment, I did not trust myself to pull this off. I tiptoed past the door. I’d clear the remainder of the unlocked rooms and then fetch French to act as strongman.


The second door on the right was open, and it too appeared to be a bedroom. This one had been occupied, however, for the covers had been flung off the bed. I inched through the door, the Bulldog at the ready. I swept the room with my revolver, staring into the dark shadows at the corners of the room, kneeling down to look under the bed, cautiously opening the wardrobe and darting back out of the way to give myself a clear shot. But the room was empty and silent.

I felt as weak as a kitten suddenly. I suppose in all the excitement I’d forgotten that I’d had very little sleep for two nights, not to mention that hiking over the country is damned tiring and that popping a couple of thugs is hard going. The bed looked tempting. All I wanted to do was collapse on it and let French and Homer clean up the mess. I steeled myself to finish my work, though, shaking my head in an attempt to clear the cobwebs before I set off again.

One last room to clear before I summoned French to deal with the locked room down the hall. The door into this room was closed so I knelt with my back against the wall and reached up for the knob. I rotated it slowly and felt it turn. I pushed the door gently with two fingers and gripped the Bulldog firmly. No sound emanated from the room. Down the hall I could hear French opening and closing doors. I could feel the drumbeat of my pulse in my throat. I stood up and squeezed through the door, aiming right, then left. It was dark as pitch in there, for the room was bare. No ghostly shapes of sheet-covered furniture shone in the moonlight. The room smelled of dust and dry wood. There was only one place I hadn’t searched. I risked a quick look behind the door. And came face-to-face with the barrel of a revolver.





Carol K. Carr's books