The Consequences of Fear by Jacqueline Winspear (the best electronic book reader TXT) š
- Author: Jacqueline Winspear
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āThatās the trouble, missāhe went to the Yard, and apparently they sent a copper out to the spot where he said he saw it happen and the copper laughed at him. Told him heād been seeing thingsāthere was nothing there. Apparently there was some checking of records, but the only confirmed dead were from the air raids. And one drunk. Mind you, we know theyāre short-staffed at the Yard, what with the number of police in the services now and no one to nab all them criminals on the streets. Anyway, young Freddie remembered being sent over here with a message and seeing your sign at the front, so he thought heād come back to tell us about it. I always gave him an extra shilling for his trouble, so I reckon he trusts us. Poor kid, running all over London in shoes more holey than righteous.ā
āBillyāyou believe him, donāt you?ā Maisie twisted the receiver cord around her fingers.
āI do, miss. Youāll see him, wonāt you?ā
āOf course I will.ā Maisie looked upāa knock at the front door signaled that George, the Comptonsā chauffeur, had arrivedto take her to the station. āChildren should always be believed until proven otherwise,ā she added. āTell him to come backat a quarter past eleven. Iām leaving for the station nowāsee you in a while.ā
As she left the house, her document case in hand, Brenda came to the door. āDonāt forget this,ā she called out, handing Maisieher gas mask. āAnd think about what I said. Itās time. You deserve more than a bunch of flowers and a box of American chocolatesonce a week.ā
Maisie leaned forward and kissed her stepmother on the cheek. āSee you on Wednesday, Brenda. Iāll telephone this evening,but it might be a bit later than usual. Iāve promised to pop over and see Gabriella Hunter after work. Remember Miss Hunter?Mauriceās old friend? She wrote last week for the first time in ages, and she sounded a bit lonely so I thought Iād call onher.ā She didnāt give Brenda a chance to respond, but ran toward the motor car, where George was standing with the passengerdoor open. āAnd I think we all like those chocolates, donāt you?ā she called over her shoulder.
Yet as George closed the door and Maisie waved one last time from the back seat, she wondered if perhaps she should haveconfided in Brenda regarding Mark Scott. But no, that would never do. Even if she had understood Maisieās concerns, Brendawould only have worried.
Maisie arrived at the first-floor Fitzroy Square office just before eleven oāclock. As she unpinned her hat and ran her fingers through her short black hair, layered in a way that enhanced the natural waves that curled around her ears, Billy brought her up to date with events at the office.
āThereās two cases of theftāIām not sure we can do much about it, but Iām talking to the people about getting their lockschanged and securing their windows. I tell you, this looting is terribleāand according to a couple of the coppers I know,they say itās all getting worse and the government bods are keeping it on the q.t. because they donāt want it in the pressthat crime is getting out of hand. They just want everyone to carry on thinking that weāre all working together against blimmināHitler over there, and not against each other.ā He paused. āAnd thereās another case come in for usāa bloke who reckons hiswife is having an affair with an Australian officer assigned to the RAF.ā
āOh dear,ā said Maisie. āI donāt like those cases. Nine times out of ten, whatever we find out, it seems the couple who wereso unhappy end up happy again and we are the bringers of good news or bad who are vilified for doing our job and being themessengers.ā
āBread-and-butter work, though, miss. Itās bread-and-butter work, and weāve still got another three small jobs, you know,basic security worries, that sort of thing. Nothing I canāt look after by myselfāmainly itās a case of settling people whoāvegot themselves a bit worked up about what might happen to their houses while theyāre down the shelter, or a bit of directionabout what to do with their valuables. Of course, theyāre the well-heeled people who can pay for the likes of us to make themfeel better.ā
Maisie and Billy pored over papers for another ten minutes, with Maisie claiming tasks that she could fit in with her āotherā workāa role that Billy would never inquire about, though he knew his employer was now involved in war service with a government connection.
Maisie glanced at the clock. āFreddie should be here in a minute, so best we put away these files. If I remember correctly,heās an observant chapāhe was looking everywhere last time he came with a message.ā
āOh, heās a quick study, missābut I reckon heās scared too.ā
The doorbell rang, two sharp, shrill bursts.
āThatāll be him, missāIāll go down.ā
Maisie finished putting files in a drawer, but instead of going through the folding doors that led into her own office, shepulled up two chairs in front of Billyās desk, then changed her mind and positioned three chairs in front of the floor-to-ceilingwindows, so they could all enjoy a view to the outside world. Maurice had often observed that to give someone another aspectas a backdrop to conversationāperhaps a more pleasing landscape to look out uponāencouraged a broadening of perspective. Itcould slow down the heart rate, stimulate memory and temper the nerves, allowing the interview subject to open both heartand mind. And there was something about Freddie Hackett that Maisie rememberedāa feeling that the boy had a good heart anda wounded soul. She had felt it as their hands touched when he passed her the manila envelope from Robbie MacFarlane; a sensationacross her chest that almost caused her to gasp.
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