Andrew Martin - Murder At Deviation Junction

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From the author of The Necropolis Railway, The Blackpool Highflyer, and The Lost Luggage Porter comes another thrilling mystery featuring railway detective Jim Stringer. It is winter 1909, and Jim desperately needs his anticipated New Year’s promotion in order to pay for a nurse for his ailing son.
Jumping at any opportunity to impress his supervisor, Jim agrees to investigate a standard assault in a nearby town. But when his train home hits a snowdrift and a body is discovered buried in the snow, Jim finds himself tracking another dangerous killer. Soon he is on a mad chase to find the suspect, trailing him to the furnaces of Ironopolis and across the country on a dangerous ride to the Highlands. As pursuer becomes pursued, Jim begins to doubt he will ever get his promotion— or that he will survive this case at all.

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He muttered a little to himself as he started us away, but did not seem too downhearted. He'd lost that particular round of the match, that was all. And we did not gallop; instead, the horse trotted along the track, as Marriott swabbed his wounds with a handkerchief, and Richie sat with head in hands, watching the bags belonging to the three rolling against his boots. There was more of blue in the Highland greyness now, and the tops of the hills were becoming clearer, just as though they had lately taken up their habitual place around us.

It was an alteration that passed for dawn on that day.

Bowman sat over opposite Small David; I in the same relation to Richie. We were going back the way we'd come the day before. Every turn of the wheels brought us nearer the railway station, and I was glad of that until I remembered that it would most likely not be working on such a day, and that it was not manned in any case. When we'd been riding for ten minutes, the lawyer spoke directly to his son for the first time in my hearing.

'Richard,' he said, 'you have the key, I take it?'

Richie removed his gloves and began hunting through the pockets of his topcoat, but he was shaking his head even as he did so.

'I don't believe so,' he said.

'But I told you to bring it.'

Richie shook his head very sadly.

'Nothing was said about it, father.'

Marriot was hunting through his pockets as he drove the cart.

'It's all right,' he said presently. 'I have it here.'

As I wondered what the key was for, Small David turned about, and I saw that he was grinning, even though the gun was on him.

Chapter Twenty-eight

We drove on through that white world, until the stone house with the antlers on the walls floated into view, and then I understood the talk of a key. The snow had drifted against the house's walls, and I could not make out the door. It looked the part of a prison, and that is what it would become.

Marriott ordered Small David down from the carriage, and he passed him the key.

Small David approached the house with the gun on him. On the way, he kicked a heather bush, shaking off the snow and disclosing a small yellow flower, which set him cursing anew.

He found the door, and opened it while looking in my direction.

'Polis!' he called. 'Dree yer ain weird.'

That's what it sounded like at any rate.

The gun in the lawyer's hand wavered my way, and I climbed down.

Small David called again, 'Ye'll bide here too, bottle man,' and Bowman followed me through the door, which Small David clapped shut behind us without further speech. I could not hear the cart rattle away, for the stone of the walls was too thick.

'Had a moment of alarm back there,' said Bowman. I could hear him but not see him in that freezing tank, for there was no light at all.

'Came within half an ace of being shot.'

'It's one bloody turn-about after another,' I said, not over- kindly. 'Where are you?'

'I don't know,' he said.

There was a strong, sweet smell of old hay - the place was something between a barn and a house. I crouched down. The floor was made of stone flags, horribly cold to the touch. As the darkness began to resolve, I made out a low line of whiteness to my right.

'Well, I've found the door again,' I said, making towards it.

'Always a useful preliminary to making an exit,' said Bowman, and I could somehow tell from his voice that he was sitting down. He spoke in a level voice - he was even amused by the fix we were in. Before, he'd been as nervous as a cat. Now he was a new man.

'Are we "o'er the burran"?' I asked him.

'No, no, that was Small David's scheme. This is Marriott's doing.'

'What is "o'er the burran"?'

'A stream in Scots is a burn. There's one near the cottage. Beyond it is a black bog. He meant to put you in there.'

'I wouldn't have liked that,' I said.

'I hardly think that would have influenced him one way or another - and there'd have been a bullet in your head in any case.'

'But Marriott stopped him, not having the stomach for a murder.'

'He doesn't have the stomach for another murder. It's a point of pride with him that he can achieve his ends without further killing.'

'And now they're off.'

'The object is to go to France. Dieppe. Do you know it? And then on. They have a passage booked for tomorrow night.'

'But first they have to get to Inverness.'

'You have found the flaw in the scheme.'

'Why doesn't Marriott see it?'

'He's living on hope. He thinks there might yet be a train that way today.'

'I'm going to have a run at this door,' I said.

'I doubt you'll succeed.'

I charged, shoulder first. The door barely gave an inch.

I did it again; and again.

I sat down on the stone flags, nursing a sore shoulder.

'They build a good ruin, these Scots,' said Bowman.

We sat in silence for a space, listening out for any passing cart or pedestrian.

'How do the Club come to have the key to this place?' I said, after a few minutes of frozen silence.

Bowman sighed.

'I'm going to tell you everything I know,' he said, and as we listened out for any passing cart, he disclosed most of the remaining mysteries, the tale beginning December last in Saltburn, the model seaside town that lies between Whitby and Middlesbrough. As Bowman began, I pictured the place in winter: the sea wind blowing through the wide streets; the few people about looking like so many tin miniatures, positioned about the place to show how the amenities of the town worked.

Bowman and Peters had booked into the Station Hotel - being required by the limited expenses available to share a double room - in late November 1908. Bowman had then taken up residence in the hotel bar, made miserable by the weather, and the failure of some plans he'd entertained to turn novelist. On 1 December Peters had made his breakaway, darting off in all directions in search of artistic interpretations of railway scenes. He'd been very taken by Middlesbrough railway station, and by the passing loop-cum-marshalling yard at Stone Farm, which had lately been illuminated, creating many interesting effects of light and shade.

He made his first visit to Stone Farm on the 2nd and there met the lad porter, who'd tipped him off about the Club train. He'd shot back to Middlesbrough, but missed the Club.

That night, back at Saltburn, he'd explained to Bowman the fascination of the lamps at Stone Farm and mentioned his pursuit of the Travelling Club. He'd discovered that they would be coming through Saltburn the next morning - the 3rd - and woke early on that day to take the photograph, about which the Club were quite happy, for the row over the window lay ten minutes in the future and a couple of miles down the line.

Peters was a dead man after that, for Marriott's story would be that Falconer had never boarded the train at his customary boarding place of Saltburn or anywhere else. But the photograph - and the newspaper in Richie Marriott's hand - told a different story.

The lie Marriott attempted was not as wild as it seemed, for Theodore Falconer generally walked alone from his house to the station, which was all but deserted on that bitter day. The Club did not use the services of a porter, and were not troubled by ticket inspections; no steward served their tea or champagne - they helped themselves from the supplies laid on. It was quite possible for their journeyings to go unnoticed by any railway servant, or by anyone save the other Club members.

That afternoon Peters was robbed of his camera by two station loungers of Middlesbrough. They did not want the photographs the camera held; they wanted to get bread. Peters reported the theft and returned to Saltburn, where he told Bowman of the day's occurrences.

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