The Toff Breaks In Read online

Page 12


  Meer waited in the doorway of his shop and watched the car disappear. Then he turned back into the gloom, while from the other side of the road a man of medium height, dressed in black, and with a dyspeptic expression on his pale face, showed a surprising interest in an off-licence until both Lowerby and Meer were out of sight.

  Immediately he turned to a telephone kiosk and put through a call to London.

  ‘Yes, Jolly?’ responded the Toff amiably.

  ‘You might be interested to hear, sir, that Dr. Lowerby has purchased a faked’ – Jolly uttered the ‘faked’ with superb contempt – ‘Sheraton table from a Mr. Meer, and has taken it home with him.’

  ‘Yes?’ said the Toff. ‘I once bought a faked assegai and brought it home. I was very young at the time, but—’

  ‘You believed it genuine, sir, and you bought it because of your interest in weapons. Dr. Lowerby, sir, is not interested in antiques. At least, there are none visible from any of the downstairs windows of his house.’

  ‘A point,’ said the Toff slowly. ‘Follow Lowerby, Jolly.’

  ‘Very good, sir.’

  At the Gresham Terrace flat Rollison turned to Brendon, who was sitting near him. Brendon knew that Jolly had left early that morning for an unknown destination, and realised it was in connection with the quest for proof of Chamberlain’s illegal activities. He showed a praiseworthy restraint, and to reward him the Toff gave him a brief resume of Lowerby’s part – as far as it was known – in the affair.

  ‘It’s all bits and pieces,’ Brendon said irritably.

  ‘Yes, of course,’ said Rollison. ‘Our job’s to fit the bits into the pieces. And eventually we will. Sylvia didn’t give you any particulars of this house, did she?’

  ‘No—it was only being vaguely talked about.’

  ‘No district?’

  ‘No. What’s in your mind?’

  ‘They might have left the New Piccadilly to look for the house,’ said Rollison. ‘But as Chamberlain is probably the only one who knows which house it was, that doesn’t help much.’

  ‘Nothing helps much,’ said Brendon dispiritedly.

  ‘You’d be surprised,’ Rollison said.

  He did not add that it seemed at least possible that the house – if the Sandersons had gone to look at one – would be somewhere near Hersham. To have intimated that would have been associating the disappearance of Bren-don’s friends too clearly with the murder. He thought it, none the less.

  And he had a keen desire to talk with Arnold Chamberlain.

  Putting his head into the lion’s den was an occupation at which the Toff showed to advantage. Nothing, he claimed, was dangerous if it were done openly. He telephoned the Oxford Street showrooms, to learn that Chamberlain was out, but was expected that afternoon soon after four o’clock.

  Rollison gave his name and promised to call at four-thirty.

  That at least would give Chamberlain an opportunity for avoiding the meeting if he wanted to. Also it gave the Toff time to slip to the East End and to visit several friends, including the woman who had offered him hospitality on the night of the ‘Steam Packet’ fracas.

  His quest was simple: he wanted to find if there was much traffic reported in ‘snow’ – the vernacular for cocaine.

  There was no unusual activity, as far as he was able to discover, but there were rumours that there was a lot of the stuff about. He could get no further than that, and he turned his questions to the recent open activities of Dougall and Hi Ling. That odd association of aliens was known but not liked by some East Londoners, but reluctantly the several whom Rollison questioned were compelled to admit there were no outward signs of illegal activity.

  The small cargo boats – little more than coast craft, although they travelled frequently to and from Holland, France and Belgium – which Hi Ling owned were doing their normal trading, although neither the negro nor the Chinaman had been seen in person for some days. For that matter, they always kept in the background; few people knew them as the Controllers of the shipping line.

  Rollison wrinkled his forehead.

  There was a distinct possibility that through the shipping end of the business he would learn something useful about Hi Ling. And at the back of his mind was the uncomfortable thought that in Australia James Sanderson ran several ships, mostly for coastal work.

  ‘There could be a connection,’ admitted the Toff. ‘We’ll see whether Uncle Arnold will talk about it.’

  Chamberlain – not wholly to the Toff ’s surprise-received him precisely at four-thirty.

  The big, squarely built American, with the clean-shaven face, luxuriant black hair, and the thick horn-rimmed glasses, sat back in his swivel chair and eyed Rollison keenly, if warily. He looked what he made himself out to be – the Big Business man with no time to waste.

  ‘Well, Rollison, what’s on your mind?’

  ‘You,’ said the Toff, and had an irritating feeling that he had seen the man before. He pushed that aside as he tapped a cigarette on his thumb-nail. ‘We needn’t beat about the bush, need we?’

  ‘I’m not beating anything.’

  ‘Unless it’s the law,’ said the Toff gently. ‘But we won’t go into that. The real purpose of my visit, one might say, is to try to find a really charming country house—’

  The words came so casually that he was able to study their effect on Chamberlain thoroughly. He saw the man’s start of surprise, he saw Chamberlain put both clenched fists on the table – and he remembered that the grey-haired man at the ‘Steam Packet’ had done exactly the same thing.

  That had been Chamberlain!

  He had no doubt in his mind, and the discovery gave him deep satisfaction after the first surprise – but no more than the fact that Chamberlain was startled out of his equanimity by the mention of a country house.

  For that, to say the least, was interesting. Brendon certainly would have jumped to conclusions.

  Chapter Thirteen

  Shock For Brendon

  The Toff would have been the first to acknowledge that there was nothing normal or straightforward about the murder of the tramp – assuming it had been a tramp – and the case which followed it. The development which had come through Brendon had done nothing to make the affair more orthodox. Instead of starting at the beginning of a hunt and going on to the end, with sundry interferences, he was approaching the mystery from both ends, anticipating the solution somewhere in the middle.

  The Chamberlain angle was equally unusual.

  Despite the fact that McNab had Chamberlain under some kind of supervision, the fur importer was outwardly possessed of an unblemished reputation. Yet the Toff knew that as a consort of men like Dougall and Hi Ling he was a dangerous criminal. The only previous communication he had had with the man was the affair of the visiting-card. Chamberlain’s attitude suggested that he was not going to pretend that he did not know what Rollison was after, but was going to bluff.

  He sat and stared at the Toff, his hands clenched in characteristic position, although he did not realise that it gave him away. The Toff was smiling, and smoke was curling from his lips. In silver greys, he was immaculate; and the sun striking through an open window shone on his sleek, black hair.

  ‘What are you drivelling about?’ demanded Chamberlain at last.

  ‘Not bad,’ said Rollison cheerfully. ‘In fact you might put it across with some people, Chamberlain. Country houses or no country houses, you’re heading for a nasty fall in the very near future.’

  ‘Don’t talk nonsense. If anyone’s going to fall it’s you.’

  ‘Oh, I have. Underneath a car,’ retorted the Toff. ‘Strange how things won’t work according to plan, isn’t it? Actually I’ve never been impressed by Nigger and Hi Ling. Certainly not in the first flight, and they’re somewhat too easily scared. Like other people I know.’

  Chamberlain drew a deep breath.

  ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about, Rollison. If there’s anything you’ve got to sa
y with any sense in it, I’ll listen. If there isn’t, I’m too busy to waste time. I had some silly card with your name on—I suppose you are the same man?’

  ‘Yes, I’m the same man,’ said Rollison, and chuckled. ‘Chamberlain, you may be a bad crook, but you’re a fair actor. A pity I’m not in much doubt about you, isn’t it?’

  Chamberlain straightened his glasses.

  ‘I think it’s time you went.’

  ‘Oh, not yet,’ said the Toff. ‘I’ve several other things to say. A word of warning to start with—you should be more careful when you go to the “Steam Packet”.’

  Chamberlain’s hands clenched.

  ‘What on earth—’

  ‘Suppose you stop fooling?’ asked Rollison, and his voice hardened. ‘If you’re running away with the idea that I don’t know what you do and what you’re doing, you can lose it. All I’m looking for is enough evidence to make a police charge advisable, and that’s not going to be long in coming.’ His eyes were hard as he spoke, and he could see the effort Chamberlain was making to keep his self-control. He knew that he was frightening the fur importer. Psychological terrorism would always be the Toff ’s best weapon.

  ‘I—I’ve never broken a law in my life!’ snapped Chamberlain.

  ‘Then you don’t know much about the law,’ said the Toff gently. ‘Get a nodding acquaintance with it, it might save your neck. Not that I think that’s likely. Chamberlain, it was a foolish thing to mutilate the hands. There’s just one reason why hands should be mutilated and that’s to prevent identification. You told the world as well as me and the police that the man you killed was known on police records, and—’

  Chamberlain cracked.

  He pushed his chair back, sending it crashing to the floor, and rounded his desk quickly, his hands clenched.

  ‘Get out of here, get out! Come to my office talking a lot of nonsense like this—I’ll smash your ruddy face in! I’ll—’

  He struck out wildly.

  The Toff, who seemed to be in his chair one moment and on his feet the next, side-stepped with ease, and delivered a short-arm jab to the side of Chamberlain’s ribs. Enough to sting but not to damage. Chamberlain stopped himself and swung round to deliver another punch. It hummed past the Toff ’s head, and the Toff rapped a sharp blow to the solar plexus. Chamberlain gasped and doubled up.

  The Toff stepped back a pace and watched silently, waited until he was sure that Chamberlain could hear, and said gently: ‘Very foolish, Chamberlain, from start to finish. That’s a little indication of how badly hurt you’re going to be, particularly if Sylvia Sanderson meets trouble.’

  He spoke slowly, so that each word impinged itself on Chamberlain’s ears. And then he backed towards the door, moving silently and with a speed that seemed unnatural. One moment Chamberlain saw him, lean-faced and with his eyes agleam with mockery. The next he was gone, the door closed.

  On the face of Arnold Chamberlain there were varying emotions. Of pain and hatred – and fear.

  Primarily fear.

  Rollison walked slowly down the stairs of the building, through the showrooms, where there was evidence of a considerable and thriving business. But not a business enough to make Chamberlain really wealthy.

  As he reached the thronged pavements of Oxford Street Rollison saw two things: the man with the squint, whom he did not yet know as Jaggers, and the two plain-clothes men, who made a great point of neither seeing nor recognising the Toff.

  Rollison smiled as he walked towards Gresham Terrace.

  It was less what he had seen in Oxford Street than what he was seeing in his mind that concerned him then, however. For it had come with a quite surprising suddenness – a factor that might be the common denominator of this mystery.

  Sanderson ran a small Australasian shipping line.

  Hi Ling and Dougall ran a similar one in England.

  Chamberlain would have to ship most of his furs from abroad, and might easily run one or two ships. There were dozens – in fact hundreds – of small firms operating a virtual ‘pirate’ service of cargo boats, with the idea of cutting their own transport costs and making a side-profit from the carrying of other goods.

  How to find out?

  Rollison was reluctant at the time to consult further with McNab. The Scotsman had, so far, been very obliging, but he might easily contrive to do something which would complicate matters for the Toff. By putting the plain-clothes men to watch Chamberlain he had done precisely what the Toff wanted – added a reason for Chamberlain to lose his nerve. He wanted Chamberlain to do that, very badly.

  But for the rest he preferred to carry on alone.

  He turned into Gresham Terrace at about half-past five, and as he entered his flat he heard the telephone ringing. He lifted it, wondering as he did so where Brendon was, and hoping that the youngster had not gone far.

  Jolly’s voice came.

  ‘About Lowerby, sir. He has gone in the London direction. I have been trying to call you for nearly an hour.’

  ‘Right,’ said Rollison. ‘Nothing more?’

  ‘Nothing, sir. I understand’ – Jolly paused, with a nicety of judgment – ‘that Sir George Manering’s XI is in a bad way, sir—nearly two hundred behind with only five wickets to fall.’

  Rollison chuckled.

  ‘A sad week, my Jolly. All right, come back to town.’

  ‘Are you sure it won’t be advisable for me to wait for the return of the doctor, sir?’

  ‘No, I’m not. But I’ve got a job for you here, Jolly, and even you can’t be in two places at once.’

  ‘I will start immediately, sir.’

  ‘Do,’ said the Toff.

  He closed down, made sure that Brendon was not in one of the other rooms, and then went out again. He took a taxi this time, but went again to the showrooms of Arnold Chamberlain. He was prepared to wait, if necessary, for an hour. He needed less than half.

  Dr. Vincent Lowerby drove up, parked his Morris in a side-turning, and then stopped for some minutes while getting something from the back seats. Rollison watched without appearing to, and saw the doctor take out a small table, with the legs and surface covered in brown paper. Lowerby carried it quickly towards Chamberlain’s shop and disappeared.

  Rollison rubbed his chin.

  ‘Jolly,’ he said aloud, ‘you found more than you know. A visit to Hersham and Mr. Meer is indicated. Meer—odd name. I wonder if Mannering knows him?’ Rollison chuckled. ‘George won’t be in the best of moods if they’ve lost today.’

  The affair of the faked Sheraton table – faked, if Jolly was right, and it was not a matter on which Jolly was likely to fall down – was of considerable interest, although so far its importance could not be estimated. But here was a direct connection between Meer – so far unknown in the affair – Lowerby, and Chamberlain.

  Chamberlain was not a man to buy fakes.

  There was, therefore, something more than intrinsic value – or worthlessness – in the deal in antiques.

  Was it the first of such deals?

  That being a point on which there was no available evidence, the Toff wasted little time on it as he returned to the flat. He thought more of young Brendon, who had, after all, left the flat and could hardly be blamed for it. With a youth of Brendon’s type, and one so obviously anxious to be up and doing, the present inactivity would be unbearable.

  Had he gone to try something on his own?

  Rollison sighed.

  He stopped thinking as he reached the landing outside his flat. For it was occupied not by Brendon but by the tall and chunky figure of Chief Inspector McNab, whose sandy eyebrows were drawn together as he scowled.

  ‘Why, Mac, pleasures do come sometimes.’

  ‘Pleasures?’ grunted McNab. ‘Dinna waste ye’re words on me, Rollison. I know well what ye’re thinking. I’d like a word or two with you.’

  ‘Have I ever been known to refuse you yet?’ asked the Toff.

  McNab, who did not appear to be in
a good humour, grunted a non-committal reply. A whisky-and-soda, a comfortable chair and a cigarette did little to thaw him, and he lost no time in getting down to business.

  ‘About this Hersham murder, Rolleeson. Have ye learned anything worth the knowing?’

  ‘I wouldn’t say so; no. Have you?’

  ‘It’s time there were some results,’ McNab said, and the Toff knew in that moment that Higher Powers had been urging the Scotsman to greater endeavours. Without admitting that in so many words, McNab pointed out glumly that there had been no developments whatsoever. He even admitted that he had questioned Dougall and Hi Ling, but that they had presented excellent alibis.

  ‘They’d be good at that,’ said the Toff. ‘What have you come for, Mac, apart from just to swop stories?’

  McNab glowered.

  ‘I’m not swopping stories, Rolleeson. Ye’ve been active, I know that, and I’d like to know why.’

  ‘Finding dead ends while looking for clues,’ smiled the Toff. ‘I can’t give you anything in the way of evidence. All I can offer is a hunch, and I’m not going to do that—you don’t like hunches, and no decent policeman admits they exist. I—’

  The telephone rang sharply.

  Rollison excused himself and lifted the receiver. He heard Brendon’s voice at the other end of the wire, and judging from it Brendon was excited. If the Toff ’s expression remained inscrutable for McNab’s benefit, he felt his heart jump.

  ‘It’s true, I tell you!’ snapped Brendon. ‘I saw him not ten minutes ago, and I’m outside the place he went into now. Jim Sanderson’s in London!’

  Chapter Fourteen

  Fast Work

  If it were true – and the Toff could not say that it was not – it was the first real break that had come his way since the start of the affair, even if it smashed one theory. He said easily: ‘All right, old man—what’s the address?’

  ‘I’m at the corner of Queen’s Road and Bayswater Road, near the station,’ said Brendon. ‘I checked up on that before ringing through, Jim went into a house not two minutes’ walk away.’

 

    Feathers for the Toff Read onlineFeathers for the ToffThe Unfinished Portrait Read onlineThe Unfinished PortraitThe Case of the Innocent Victims Read onlineThe Case of the Innocent VictimsLove for the Baron Read onlineLove for the BaronDeath of a Postman Read onlineDeath of a PostmanThe Department of Death Read onlineThe Department of DeathA Note From the Accused? Read onlineA Note From the Accused?If Anything Happens to Hester Read onlineIf Anything Happens to HesterThe Stolen Legacy Read onlineThe Stolen LegacyThe Doorway to Death Read onlineThe Doorway to DeathInto the Trap Read onlineInto the TrapLook Three Ways At Murder Read onlineLook Three Ways At MurderA Part for a Policeman Read onlineA Part for a PolicemanThe Terror Trap Read onlineThe Terror TrapA Good Read Read onlineA Good ReadThe Legion of the Lost Read onlineThe Legion of the LostSport For Inspector West Read onlineSport For Inspector WestDouble for the Toff Read onlineDouble for the ToffNest-Egg for the Baron Read onlineNest-Egg for the BaronThe League of Dark Men Read onlineThe League of Dark MenThe Executioners Read onlineThe ExecutionersBlood Red Read onlineBlood RedLast Laugh for the Baron Read onlineLast Laugh for the BaronThe Toff and the Runaway Bride Read onlineThe Toff and the Runaway BrideModel for the Toff Read onlineModel for the ToffThe Warning Read onlineThe WarningTraitor's Doom Read onlineTraitor's DoomThe Arrogant Artist Read onlineThe Arrogant ArtistThe Chinese Puzzle Read onlineThe Chinese PuzzleDarkness and Confusion Read onlineDarkness and ConfusionSabotage Read onlineSabotageThe Toff Breaks In Read onlineThe Toff Breaks InHunt the Toff Read onlineHunt the ToffThunder in Europe (Department Z Book 6) Read onlineThunder in Europe (Department Z Book 6)The Extortioners Read onlineThe ExtortionersMurder, London--Miami Read onlineMurder, London--MiamiThe Scene of the Crime Read onlineThe Scene of the CrimeSport For The Baron Read onlineSport For The BaronDeath in Cold Print Read onlineDeath in Cold PrintInspector West At Home iw-3 Read onlineInspector West At Home iw-3Murder, London--Australia Read onlineMurder, London--AustraliaThe Toff and The Lady t-15 Read onlineThe Toff and The Lady t-15Give a Man a Gun Read onlineGive a Man a GunHeld At Bay Read onlineHeld At BayThe Man Who Stayed Alive Read onlineThe Man Who Stayed AliveInspector West Takes Charge Read onlineInspector West Takes ChargeThe Toff and the Fallen Angels Read onlineThe Toff and the Fallen AngelsRedhead (Department Z Book 2) Read onlineRedhead (Department Z Book 2)Help From The Baron Read onlineHelp From The BaronAlibi iw-39 Read onlineAlibi iw-39Go Away to Murder Read onlineGo Away to MurderAttack and Defence Read onlineAttack and DefenceThe Baron Goes East Read onlineThe Baron Goes EastInspector West Regrets Read onlineInspector West RegretsGideon's Art Read onlineGideon's ArtSeven Days to Death Read onlineSeven Days to DeathHammer the Toff Read onlineHammer the ToffGood and Justice Read onlineGood and JusticeTaking the Blame Read onlineTaking the BlameThe Island of Peril (Department Z) Read onlineThe Island of Peril (Department Z)The Toff and the Terrified Taxman Read onlineThe Toff and the Terrified TaxmanStars For The Toff Read onlineStars For The ToffThe Toff and the Deep Blue Sea Read onlineThe Toff and the Deep Blue SeaThe Blood Diamond Read onlineThe Blood DiamondGo Away Death Read onlineGo Away DeathThe Touch of Death Read onlineThe Touch of DeathSport, Heat, & Scotland Yard Read onlineSport, Heat, & Scotland YardGideon's Fire Read onlineGideon's FireJohn Creasey Box Set 1: First Came a Murder, Death Round the Corner, The Mark of the Crescent (Department Z) Read onlineJohn Creasey Box Set 1: First Came a Murder, Death Round the Corner, The Mark of the Crescent (Department Z)Send Superintendent West Read onlineSend Superintendent WestThe Unbegotten Read onlineThe UnbegottenThe Baron Returns Read onlineThe Baron ReturnsThe Figure in the Dusk Read onlineThe Figure in the DuskTriumph For Inspector West iw-7 Read onlineTriumph For Inspector West iw-7The Toff on The Farm t-39 Read onlineThe Toff on The Farm t-39The Plague of Silence Read onlineThe Plague of SilenceA Rope For the Baron Read onlineA Rope For the BaronStars For The Toff t-51 Read onlineStars For The Toff t-51So Young, So Cold, So Fair Read onlineSo Young, So Cold, So FairTriumph For Inspector West Read onlineTriumph For Inspector WestMenace (Department Z) Read onlineMenace (Department Z)Inspector West At Home Read onlineInspector West At HomeThe Toff In Town Read onlineThe Toff In TownMurder: One, Two, Three Read onlineMurder: One, Two, ThreeMurder Must Wait (Department Z) Read onlineMurder Must Wait (Department Z)The Toff In New York Read onlineThe Toff In New YorkThe Case Against Paul Raeburn Read onlineThe Case Against Paul RaeburnAn Uncivilised Election Read onlineAn Uncivilised ElectionThe Missing Old Masters Read onlineThe Missing Old MastersTraitor's Doom (Dr. Palfrey) Read onlineTraitor's Doom (Dr. Palfrey)The Toff on Fire Read onlineThe Toff on FireThe Toff And The Stolen Tresses Read onlineThe Toff And The Stolen TressesMeet The Baron tbs-1 Read onlineMeet The Baron tbs-1Gideon’s Sport g-1 Read onlineGideon’s Sport g-1Shadow of Doom Read onlineShadow of DoomAccuse the Toff Read onlineAccuse the ToffThe Terror Trap (Department Z Book 7) Read onlineThe Terror Trap (Department Z Book 7)Gideon's Day Read onlineGideon's DayDead or Alive (Department Z) Read onlineDead or Alive (Department Z)Death Stands By (Department Z) Read onlineDeath Stands By (Department Z)Death by Night Read onlineDeath by NightGideon's River Read onlineGideon's RiverCall for the Baron Read onlineCall for the BaronThe Toff And The Stolen Tresses t-38 Read onlineThe Toff And The Stolen Tresses t-38A Sharp Rise in Crime Read onlineA Sharp Rise in CrimeMurder, London--South Africa Read onlineMurder, London--South AfricaDeath by Night (Department Z) Read onlineDeath by Night (Department Z)Prepare for Action Read onlinePrepare for ActionStrike for Death Read onlineStrike for DeathPoison For the Toff Read onlinePoison For the ToffThe Toff on The Farm Read onlineThe Toff on The FarmThe Toff and The Sleepy Cowboy Read onlineThe Toff and The Sleepy CowboyShadow of Doom (Dr. Palfrey) Read onlineShadow of Doom (Dr. Palfrey)Thugs and Economies (Gideon of Scotland Yard) Read onlineThugs and Economies (Gideon of Scotland Yard)The House Of The Bears Read onlineThe House Of The BearsCriminal Imports Read onlineCriminal ImportsHang The Little Man Read onlineHang The Little ManThe Toff And The Curate Read onlineThe Toff And The CurateAn Affair For the Baron Read onlineAn Affair For the BaronGideon's Night Read onlineGideon's NightA Sword For the Baron Read onlineA Sword For the BaronMeet The Baron Read onlineMeet The BaronKill The Toff Read onlineKill The ToffPanic! (Department Z) Read onlinePanic! (Department Z)Inspector West Alone Read onlineInspector West AloneFrom Murder To A Cathedral Read onlineFrom Murder To A CathedralShadow The Baron Read onlineShadow The BaronThe Toff and the Deadly Priest Read onlineThe Toff and the Deadly PriestIntroducing The Toff Read onlineIntroducing The ToffThe Day of Disaster Read onlineThe Day of DisasterThe Baron Again Read onlineThe Baron AgainThe Theft of Magna Carta Read onlineThe Theft of Magna CartaThe Toff and the Fallen Angels t-53 Read onlineThe Toff and the Fallen Angels t-53Salute the Toff Read onlineSalute the ToffMurder, London-New York Read onlineMurder, London-New YorkVigilantes & Biscuits Read onlineVigilantes & BiscuitsInspector West Alone iw-9 Read onlineInspector West Alone iw-9The Toff and the Great Illusion Read onlineThe Toff and the Great IllusionBattle for Inspector West Read onlineBattle for Inspector WestImpartiality Against the Mob Read onlineImpartiality Against the MobA Mask for the Toff Read onlineA Mask for the ToffCry For the Baron Read onlineCry For the BaronThe Depths Read onlineThe DepthsA Case for the Baron Read onlineA Case for the BaronThe Toff at Camp Read onlineThe Toff at CampGideon Combats Influence Read onlineGideon Combats InfluenceThe Toff and The Sleepy Cowboy t-57 Read onlineThe Toff and The Sleepy Cowboy t-57Carriers of Death (Department Z) Read onlineCarriers of Death (Department Z)Kill The Toff t-23 Read onlineKill The Toff t-23A Backwards Jump Read onlineA Backwards JumpReward For the Baron Read onlineReward For the BaronThe Smog Read onlineThe SmogFamine Read onlineFamineSend Superintendent West iw-7 Read onlineSend Superintendent West iw-7The Toff And The Curate t-12 Read onlineThe Toff And The Curate t-12Hide the Baron Read onlineHide the BaronThe Masters of Bow Street Read onlineThe Masters of Bow StreetAn Apostle of Gloom Read onlineAn Apostle of GloomThe Death Miser (Department Z Book 1) Read onlineThe Death Miser (Department Z Book 1)The Insulators Read onlineThe InsulatorsNot Hidden by the Fog Read onlineNot Hidden by the FogNo Relaxation At Scotland Yard Read onlineNo Relaxation At Scotland YardA Conference For Assassins Read onlineA Conference For AssassinsGideon’s Sport Read onlineGideon’s SportThe Flood Read onlineThe FloodThe Black Spiders Read onlineThe Black SpidersThe Baron at Large Read onlineThe Baron at LargeThe Mask of Sumi Read onlineThe Mask of SumiThe Riviera Connection Read onlineThe Riviera ConnectionThe Toff and The Lady Read onlineThe Toff and The LadyHere Comes the Toff Read onlineHere Comes the ToffThe Toff and the Kidnapped Child Read onlineThe Toff and the Kidnapped ChildAlibi for Inspector West Read onlineAlibi for Inspector West