and asked, âSo what do you reckon youâve found out?â
âThereâs a strong suggestion that Bennie Logan was behind all the robberies. He wasnât directly involved in any of them, but all of the likely perpetrators had links with him at some level. Everything seems to lead back to Chastaigne Varleigh.â
âMaybe,â said the Inspector. âYes, that is a possible interpretation of the facts.â He drummed his fingers on the cigarette-scarred surface of his desk. âIt must have taken you some time to go through all those files, Hughes.â
âYes, sir.â The Sergeant yawned. âI have been putting in the hours, actually. Up pretty late last couple of nights.â
âHmm. Youâre very
keen,
arenât you?â Wilkinson was unable to keep the distaste out of his voice.
âYes, I am, sir. Iâm not ashamed of that. I want to get ahead in the Force, sir. I want to be the kind of detective who makes his mark.â
It could have been Wilkinsonâs younger self speaking. Of latter years he had kept quiet about such aspirations; they tended only to prompt ribaldry from his colleagues. Yes, he remembered when he had been full of ambition, just as Sergeant Hughes was now. But Wilkinson had been kept down, had his ambitions thwarted by the jealousy of older, less gifted officers.
And he was determined now to see to it that exactly the same thing happened to Sergeant Hughes.
âYou havenât done any follow-up interviews with any of the witnesses, have you, Hughes?â
âNo, sir. I havenât had time yet. But I was planning to talk to them whenââ
Suddenly Wilkinson, moustache bristling, was on his feet and bellowing across his desk, âYou will do nothing of the kind! You will do nothing more connected with the case without telling me beforehand precisely what action you propose to take. And you will only then do it if you have my express permission. You have no idea, Hughes, of the delicacy of this operation. Its outcome can only be successful if it is conducted in absolute secrecy. If you imagine, Hughes, that I have kept the facts from you out of some kind of dog-in-the-manger selfishness, then you have a very inaccurate notion of what makes a good copper. I have kept you in the dark because I know how easily rumours can spread. The very walls have ears, you know, Hughes â even inside a police station. I am very close to tying up this case once and for all â and if the whole elaborate mechanism gets destroyed at this stage by some wet-behind-the-ears, newly promoted sergeant who fancies himself as Sherlock Holmes, Iâll . . . well, I wonât be responsible for my actions!â
Hughes hadnât seen his boss speaking in this vein before, and it was undeniably impressive. Most of the time Inspector Wilkinson came across as an ineffectual old fuddy-duddy, a dinosaur in the Police Force, whose retirement could not come soon enough. But now, he had a certain magnificence. Here was a man who knew what he was doing, a man who was well ahead of the game, and who had all the details of the case at his fingertips. Hughes was properly subdued by the outburst.
Wilkinson sank slowly back into his chair. âDo you take my point?â
âYes, sir,â the Sergeant mumbled.
âGood.â The Inspector gave him a bleak smile. âSo . . . since youâve got as far as you have in the case, what would be your next step, Sergeant Hughes?â
âIâd apply for a search warrant and have a look around Chastaigne Varleigh.â
âWould you?â
âYes, sir.â
âAnd do you imagine for a moment that I havenât thought of that?â Wilkinson reached into his desk drawer and pulled out a folded document. âOne search warrant, all duly signed and authorized.â
âYes, sir,â the chastened Sergeant repeated.
âThe only important thing now is
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