Read Off the Record Online

Authors: Dolores Gordon-Smith

Tags: #cozy, #detective, #mystery, #historical

Off the Record

The Jack Haldean Mysteries
by Dolores Gordon-Smith
A FETE WORSE THAN DEATH
MAD ABOUT THE BOY
AS IF BY MAGIC
A HUNDRED THOUSAND DRAGONS
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OFF THE RECORD
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available from Severn House
OFF THE RECORD
A Jack Haldean Mystery
Dolores Gordon-Smith
This first world edition published 2010
in Great Britain and in 2011 in the USA by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
9–15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
Copyright © 2010 by Dolores Gordon-Smith.
All rights reserved.
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Gordon-Smith, Dolores.
Off the record.
1. Haldean, Jack (Fictitious character) – Fiction.
2. Murder – Investigation – Fiction. 3. Detective and mystery stories.
I. Title
823.9’2-dc22
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-6974-6 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-8475-1304-5 (trade paper)
ISBN-13: 978-1-7801-0001-2 (e-book)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
To Peter, with love
AUTHOR’S NOTE
In 1877, the thirty-year-old American genius, Thomas Edison, recited the nursery rhyme,
Mary Had A Little Lamb
, into a mouthpiece attached to his new invention, a tinfoil covered cylinder he called a ‘phonograph’. He finished the nursery rhyme, rotated the cylinder – and his own voice spoke back to him. Edison had invented recorded sound.
The early tinfoil phonographs had many limitations. The foil ripped easily and was impossible to copy. What
could
be copied – what, in fact, started the recorded music industry – was the gramophone and record, invented in 1887 by Emil Berliner. Berliner’s gramophone records were simple to play, cheaper to make and much louder than Edison’s cylinders.
Oddly enough, had Berliner’s gramophones not been so spectacularly successful, tape recording might have become the norm much earlier. Valdemar Poulsen, a Danish inventor, made the first ‘tape’ machine (he actually recorded on to fine wire) in the 1890s, but it was the gramophone, with its box, wind-up handle and horn, that became one of the iconic objects of the early twentieth century.
The gramophone was seized on by literally hundreds of manufacturers and it’s virtually impossible to say how many different types, from the tiny Mikiphone, the size of a large pocket watch, to luxury models in lavishly-made wooden cabinets, were produced. It seemed impossible that anything could replace the gramophone in the home.
Then, in the early 1920s, came radio. Records, which were recorded by a refined version of the method Edison had worked out forty-odd years earlier, suddenly sounded flat, tired and outdated. To survive at all, gramophone manufacturers had to face the challenge and radically improve the sound. The challenge was met by electrical recording and reproduction, and the race to produce a workable electrical recording system is what lies behind the story of
Off the Record.
ONE
I
t was the summer of 1899 when Charles Otterbourne first came to Stoke Horam. Charles Otterbourne was thirty-six years old, an earnest, if rather humourless man, with a great deal of money and a strong philanthropic urge.
He walked through Horam Woods, crossed the stepping-stones over the river Lynn at the bottom of the valley and up the gentle slope to the unremarkable Hertfordshire hamlet of Stoke Horam. Neither the village, with its twenty-two agricultural labourers’ cottages, or the green with its grazing geese pecking beneath the washing hung out to dry, had anything to detain him, so Charles continued up the slope to the thirteenth century and mercifully unrestored church of St Joseph of Arimathea.
The church itself made little appeal to him; Charles had strict Evangelical views and found no pleasure in ancient stones, but the view from the churchyard changed his life.
St Joseph’s stood on a knoll, some distance from Stoke Horam, commanding a view of hedged-in rolling fields of grain and pasture and stands of trees. An occasional line of smoke and a distant whoosh of steam marked out the line of the Eastern Counties Railway.
Sitting on that windswept gravestone, sandwiches from his knapsack uneaten in his hand, Charles Otterbourne had a vision. He had visited Thomas Edison’s famous Invention Factory in New Jersey, a vast scientific complex of laboratories, factories and buildings. He couldn’t do anything on that scale, of course, but he could do
something.
His own village supported by his own factory, could easily be connected to the world by a branch line to that railway. New century, new railways, new roads, new beginnings . . .
By 1924, Charles Otterbourne’s transformation of Stoke Horam was so complete, it was difficult to remember life before he arrived.
Otterbourne’s New Century Works produced scientific and optical instruments, typewriters, telephones, dictating machines and gramophones but, perhaps dearer to Charles Otterbourne’s heart than the factory, was the village.
The farm labourers’ cottages – picturesque but insanitary – were hemmed in by Ideal Homes, complete with plumbing, gardens and – a stunning innovation – electricity from the Otterbourne generator. The tiny post office which, in Stoke Horam’s previous incarnation, had also acted as a general store, tobacconists and sweet-shop, had expanded into separate establishments in a new parade of shops along the High Street and had been joined by a grocer’s, a butcher’s, an ironmonger’s, a haberdasher’s, a draper’s and a fishmonger’s.
There were allotments and a non-conformist chapel. There were tennis courts, a sports field, a Workman’s Institute for lectures and concerts and the Otterbourne library. The library boasted a marble bust of Charles Otterbourne himself, complete with laurel leaves and an off-the-shoulder toga, erected, so the plaque underneath it said, by his grateful employees. If the gift of the bust was not quite as spontaneous as the plaque indicated, it was, nevertheless, sincere.
An innovation Charles Otterbourne had not planned was the War Memorial, listing, among the dead, his two sons, Alfred and Robert. A tombstone in the chapel graveyard covered the grave of his wife, Edith, who had died soon after her sons.
If life in Stoke Horam under Charles Otterbourne’s benevolent rule had a fault it was, perhaps, that all this undoubted well-being came at the expense of a certain amount of liberty. Charles Otterbourne saw this as a virtue, not a failing. People needed to be organized. He applied this rule impartially to his own family and his employees alike.
When his daughter, Molly, had shown a worrying interest in an unsuitable man (Justin Verewood, a workshy Bloomsbury poet) he had organized her marriage by forbidding Verewood and heavily approving of Stephen Lewis, a fair-haired, grey-eyed, intelligent man with an engaging smile and a wicked sense of humour. Mr Otterbourne, who hadn’t registered the smile and was oblivious to humour, only knew that Captain Lewis, lately of the Queen’s Royal West Surrey’s, had an outstanding war record and good grasp of business. The marriage was, of course, a success. Molly said as much when he asked her.
One common feature of English village life – the local pub – was missing. Charles Otterbourne had, very early on, identified betting and alcohol as twin evils. Drink and any form of gambling earned instant dismissal. There was no redress. For those workers who did conform to his philanthropic tyranny, there was a well-paid job, a decent home, a doctor on call and provision, in the form of the compulsory pension fund, for their old age.
The pension fund. Hugo Ragnall, Charles Otterbourne’s secretary, looked uneasily at the eggs and bacon on his plate. Why on earth he had taken eggs and bacon from the dishes on the sideboard, he didn’t know. Habit, he presumed. Fried bread, too, he realized with a twist of revulsion. The smell made his stomach churn and he abruptly pushed his plate away.
‘Are you all right, Hugo?’ asked Molly. ‘You don’t seem quite yourself this morning.’
Not quite himself? That wasn’t a surprise.
She doesn’t know about the pension fund.
‘I’m fine,’ he lied, forcing himself to drink his coffee. Molly heard the break in his voice and her puzzled look changed to concern.
She was a kindly soul, thought Ragnall, seeing the look. His heart sank as he thought of Molly. She would be caught up in the whole stinking mess and there was absolutely nothing he could do. ‘I didn’t sleep very well last night,’ he said, knowing he had to respond somehow or other.
And that was true. It had been past one o’clock before he had finished work last night and what he found hadn’t made for a restful night.
Steve Lewis, Molly’s husband, rustled the newspaper. ‘That’s too bad,’ he remarked over the top of the
Daily Telegraph
. ‘Mr Otterbourne wants you to enthuse to this Dunbar chap today. Tell him how wonderful we are and all that sort of thing. I still think Dunbar’s someone to treat with caution,’ he added.
Oh, good God! Ragnall had forgotten about Dunbar. It could have been the war or increased taxes or cheap foreign imports or simply the fact that philanthropy on a grand scale cost far more than it used to, but the stark fact was that Otterbourne’s New Century products weren’t the money-spinners they once were. They needed to expand and Charles Otterbourne had approached Andrew Dunbar, a gramophone manufacturer from Falkirk, with useful connections in Scotland and the north of England. It made good commercial sense for the two companies to come together and Dunbar, as far as Ragnall could make out, was interested. The price he had quoted though was pretty hefty, far more than the size of his firm justified. He had, to summarize his letter, something up his sleeve, something that would change the whole future of recorded sound. Steve’s advice had been to look elsewhere. Dunbar, he said, had a reputation as a very tough customer indeed.
Charles Otterbourne was intrigued, however, and asked for more details. The something up Dunbar’s sleeve turned out to be Professor Alan Carrington.
And that, tantalizingly, was as much information as Andrew Dunbar was willing to commit to a letter. He was arriving that morning, complete with Professor Carrington and the Professor’s son, Gerard.
‘Professor Carrington?’ Steve Lewis had said with interest, when he had been told of the proposed visit. ‘Dunbar may be on to something after all. Professor Carrington’s a relative of mine. Our families quarrelled years ago, so I’ve never actually met him, but he’s something fairly fruity in the science line. As far as I can gather, the Professor’s a genius, or next door to it, at any rate. I’ve run across his son, Gerry, a few times. He’s a scientific type too, but quite human. I don’t know what either of them are doing, tied up with a second-rate outfit like Dunbar’s.’
Lewis folded up his newspaper, scraped his chair back, and felt in his pocket for his pipe.
‘Not in here, Steve,’ pleaded Molly. ‘It makes the room smell so.’
Lewis laughed. ‘All right.’ He inclined his head towards Ragnall. ‘D’you fancy a pipe outside, old man?’
Ragnall stood up, grateful for a chance to escape the breakfast table. The two men walked out on to the terrace and down the steps into the garden.
‘What’s wrong?’ asked Lewis quietly, taking out his tobacco pouch. ‘You look done in.’ He hesitated. ‘You haven’t come unstuck on the horses again, have you? You needn’t worry, Ragnall. I’ll see you’re all right. You know I’ll always give you a hand.’
Ragnall very nearly smiled. ‘No, it’s nothing like that. It’s damn good of you though, Lewis. I do appreciate your help, but it’s nothing to do with horses or cards or anything like that.’ He swallowed. ‘It’s a lot more serious than that.’

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