“We — we ought to send for the police,” called the middle-aged woman, staring at Rollison defiantly. “That’s what I’m going to do.”
“I certainly should,” urged Rollison, forcing a smile.
“I—”
His voice was drowned by the roar of an explosion above their heads. The floor shook, a picture crashed down, the roar went on and pieces of the ceiling fell in, a door banged, then another. There was a split second of uncanny silence followed by a roaring sound.
“Oh, my God!” cried the woman in the doorway.
“He did it, he did it,” gasped Effie, still pointing at Rollison. “He’s blown the place up!”
Someone had obviously blown the flat up, and the roaring sound was unmistakable; that of fire. Rollison turned and ran upstairs, for the evidence he so badly needed was there, but he saw a red glow at the foot of the door and knew that the Kings’ rooms were an inferno. If he opened the door the fire would get out of control so he went back, calling to the man :
“Telephone the police and the fire service.
Flames were showing at a window of Rubicon House, people were already in the street, a police siren sounded not far off. Rollison could make himself scarce, or stay and talk; he ‘decided that the sensible course was to stay and talk. That way, he would be less likely to anger the police.
* * *
He told part of his story to a divisional detective-sergeant, who telephoned the Division, who telephoned Grice at the Yard, who asked Rollison to go and see him.
“Gladly,” Rollison said, the ringing of fire engine bells almost drowning his words. “If one of your chaps can give me a lift. My car —”
“I’ve heard what happened to your car,” said Grice, grimly.
His office was high in the new building at Broadway and Victoria Street, not far from its old site. Rollison had not quite got used to the acres of glass and the similarity of each floor plan. Grice, a tall, spare and angular man with a sallow complexion, was good-looking in a rather severe way. The bridge of his nose was sharp so that the skin at it showed white. On one side of his face was a large, discoloured scar, the aftermath of an explosion which had nearly killed him. At the time he had been opening a box addressed to the Toff. They never referred to that, these days, but it had forged a bond between them which was often strained to breaking point, but never actually snapped.
“Well,” Grice said as they shook hands, “it looks as if they mean to get you, Rolly.”
“Even I’m beginning to think that,” Rollison confessed.
“Did this bomb thrower think you were in the flat?”
“No,” Rollison answered. “I think I was an incidental — he wanted to destroy the evidence.”
“Oh,” said Grice heavily. “What evidence did you find?”
“Notes and tapes which show that a certain actor, Alec George King, has been learning the part of Thomas G. Loman, with a view to impersonating him,” answered Rollison. “It was there, Bill.”
“How do you know?”
“Must I incriminate myself ?” demanded Rollison, and Grice smiled faintly:
“Did you actually see it?” he demanded.
“Yes,” answered Rollison. “And if I really had to I’d say so in court. The certain thing is that we need to talk to the actor named King and to his wife Effie. Is the fact that their flat was set on fire enough to justify a search for them?”
“We don’t need to search for the woman,” Grice told him. “I’ve just had a telephone call from Chelsea. Appar-ently labour pains started just after you left and she was rushed to Chelsea Hospital to have her baby. There was a rumour that it might be a miscarriage, another that the child was born dead. And in either case a lot of people are going to say that it was your visit to her home which really brought things on.”
11
AFTER A LONG PAUSE, Rollison said: “That’s what they’re going to say, are they Bill?”
“You know perfectly well that they are.”
“Some of them may but you know as well as I do that most of them won’t,” Rollison said with forced lightness.
“Was the house destroyed?”
“The upper part was gutted, and the downstairs flats are uninhabitable.”
“Are your chaps searching the wreckage?”
“The place is still burning.”
“One tape from a bundle in the front room would be enough to prove my point,” Rollison said.
“There isn’t likely to be even the remains of a tape,” Grice told him. “They say the upper part went up in no time, and the roof has fallen in.”
“Is there a call out for King?”