by Austin Mitchell
Clayton Collins looked at his wife and secretary, Opal. She was a petite woman whom he had married seven years ago. They had three children, two boys and a girl. Both of them were in a quandary.
Lascelles Ingram, the mathematics and woodwork teacher for the lower school, had suddenly disappeared. Actually, he had announced that his father had died. When Clayton suggested that the staff would like to attend his father’s funeral he had promptly refused.
“I tell you Opal, I just don’t understand the man. Why wouldn’t he want us to attend his father’s funeral?”
“Maybe he just likes his privacy and wanted a private funeral for his dad,” she replied. She had never liked Lascelles. This was, especially after he had slapped fifth former Natalie Holmes for arriving late for one of his classes. Her parents had warned him that if he did it again, they would sue him.
“His room is locked and has been that way for the past three weeks. I’ve tried to contact his wife, but to no avail.”
“Aren’t they divorced dear and neither of us knows her or for that matter anything about her.”
Lascelles had come to the school as a single man, stating on his resume that he was separated from his wife. They had two children. He had told his interviewers that they still got support from him. Of course Clayton and the chairman of the school board, Isaiah Mc Pherson, had been his main interviewers. His references had been checked. They were found to be outstanding persons in their own fields.
“I’m going to give him one more week to turn up and then I’m going to call in the police. The students are suffering. It’s a good thing that it’s just two weeks to the end of the term,” Clayton finished.
The school was a private high school with some three hundred students on roll. Kempton High was ten years old and had a good reputation for turning out excellent students. Clayton had been with the school for six years now and felt that he was doing a good job. He was fearful that Lascelles could damage the school’s reputation. His work at previous schools where he had taught was okay. So what could the matter be that he was hiding?
***
Detective Inspector Fred Reidle sat opposite Clayton in his office.
“Why would he just disappear like that? It seems strange, after all funerals these days are hardly private affairs. I tell you, Mr. Collins, that it would be better for you to get a search warrant and go through his apartment. There must be some clues there about him.”
Kempton High had built cottages to accommodate some of its teachers at a reasonable rent, although no boarding was done. The rent was deducted from a teacher’s pay before he or she received it so that the school had no late payments for that and other utilities. There were some teachers who complained unceasingly about their utilities, but never Lascelles.
“Do you know where he is from? At least we could start there, probably check his high school and college as a background check on him. I’ll assign one of my men to it. You never know what we may come up with.”
“I’ll appreciate that very much Inspector. Any help we can get would be most welcome. It’s quite embarrassing not being able to inform the students as to his whereabouts.”
The two men talked briefly some more before Reidle left.
Clayton returned to his own work. The holidays were just around the corner. There would be a two week break before summer school would start. Summer school would be for one month and was compulsory for all those students in danger of not moving on to a higher grade in September. Based on the student’s reports and meetings with teachers about seventy five students would have to attend this year. It wasn’t free and many parents had protested against it, but he felt that it was necessary.
Clayton was going through copies of some school reports that Saturday morning when he heard loud noises. He went outside and observed that they were coming from the guard post. When he went there he found a removal truck parked near the guard post. The driver was remonstrating with the guard.
“Here is the principal. Talk to him, maybe he can help you,” the guard said.
The man, a slim six footer turned his attention to Clayton. The school gate was still locked. The guard had returned to his post.
“Yes sir, what can I do for you?” Clayton asked the man.
“My name is Aston Duffus. Mr. Ingram, who used to teach at this school, sent me for his possessions. This guard doesn’t want to open the gate for me to get the man’s belongings and he desperately needs them.”
“Where is Mr. Ingram now, Mr. Duffus? I’d like to know that before I let you into his apartment. I don’t think it would be right for me to let you take his things like that. You tell him that if he wants his belongings he should come for them,” Clayton told an angry and bewildered Aston Duffus.
“I can’t tell you where he is. All he did was give me the address of this school and sent me for his things.”
“Just like that, not even a letter of introduction. How was his father’s funeral?”
For a moment Duffus was dumfounded and Clayton knew he was trying to make up something.
“It went okay.”
“I still feel sad that he didn’t see it fit to invite the staff.”
“I don’t know why he didn’t invite you and your staff to his father’s funeral. Look, all he did was send me for his things. Since you’re in charge here and don’t want to give them to me, I think I’d better leave,” Duffus said and went to his truck.
“Tell him he can come for his things anytime he wants them and we have two months pay for him too,” Clayton shouted after Duffus as the man jumped into his truck and started reversing it towards the main road. He made sure that he took the license number of Duffus’ truck just in case.
Two weeks later, Clayton was at a seminar in Ocho Rios when he got a call late in the evening. Lascelles had come for his things. He had brought the police from Kingston and took his belongings out of his apartment. It was a Friday evening. Opal and the children had come down too. He was caught in a quandary.
He called Inspector Reidle and related to him what had happened. He said he’d try to find out which police station the men came from who had accompanied Ingram to take his things from his apartment.
Clayton drove his family home from Ocho Rios that Monday evening. Opal and the children said that they were tired and went to bed. He was watching television when his telephone rang. He went and picked it up.
“Is this Mr. Clayton Collins, the principal of Kempton High. Listen boss, Lascelles Ingram came for his things and got them. He doesn’t owe you any money and the two checks you have for him you can keep them. If I were you I would forget about him,” the man at the other end of the line said before hanging up.
Clayton stood there staring at the receiver in shock. He knew that it was a threat. He didn’t wake up Opal to tell her about it that night.
“A man called me last night and told me to back off the Lascelles’ case,” he related to her as they had breakfast that morning minus the children.
“You’ll have to report it to the police, dear. Would you be able to identify the voice?”
“It wasn’t Lascelles and it wasn’t that man, Duffus.”
“Well, report it to the police, dear. We have to be careful. Have they come up with anything yet?”
“No, they haven’t, but they’re still working on it.”
The summer school was two weeks on and everything was going on quite well. During the third week a Detective Sergeant, Patrick Dennis, called on Clayton. It was a Tuesday morning.
“Do you want us to continue the case? After all, you haven’t brought any charges against him. For all we know he could be in another part of the country.”
Clayton knew that the policeman was telling him that they were getting nowhere and that he should leave it as is.
“Sergeant, I can’t tell the police how to operate. If you feel that there is nothing more to it then that’s it then.”
“There is just one thing I’d like and that is photocopies of all his certificates and his recommendations. I guess that’s where we should have started.”
Clayton called one of the clerks and she got busy on the photocopy machine while he filled in the Sergeant about the school. When the clerk was finished, she put the photocopies in an envelope and the policeman took it and left. Clayton thought that maybe that was the last they were seeing of Sergeant Dennis or Inspector Reidle for that matter.
Finally summer school was over and he was glad for the break, although he was still at school during the holidays.
Clayton was in his office that Tuesday afternoon when he got a call. It was Opal, she couldn’t find Carl, their eldest son.
“Have you called the police, Opal?” he asked. When she replied in the negative he told her to call them and that he was on his way.
He practically ran from his office, telling Alrick Atland, the school’s dean of discipline to lock up for him. He told him that something was wrong with one of his sons.
As he turned a corner, he saw a parked car. He continued driving, he saw the car coming up behind him and he realized that something was wrong. He turned on an unpaved road and thought maybe he’d made a mistake. Then he remembered that Stanford Daley lived up here and he was sure to be at home. Stanford was the chemistry teacher at Kempton High. The car was still following him. He continued driving until he saw the man’s driveway coming up. He saw that the man’s car was parked on the roadside and he pulled into the driveway. The car, that was following him, went past him. It went up the road, stopped, but nobody came out.
Then, before Clayton could get out of his car, the car reversed back up the road.
“Clayton, if you pull the police off the case we’ll return your son to you,” a man in the car shouted. The car spun around and shot past him. He saw one of the men in the car pointed at him in a threatening manner. He stared the man squarely between the eyes. The man stared back at him and the car was soon gone.
Stanford and his wife, Selma, rushed out of their house. “What’s the matter, Clayton?” the man asked.
“Opal just told me that they’ve taken away Carl. I was just on my way home when I saw a car following me. I took this road leading to your house, saw your driveway empty and pulled into it. Before I could get out of the car they shouted at me to pull the police off Lascelles’ case or else I’ll never see Carl again.”
“I never trusted that guy, Ingram. I always felt that he was up to something dishonest, especially after he slapped the Holmes’ girl and boxed Milton Samuels. Those two students were always questioning his teaching methods,” Stanford stated.
“I have to go and see how Opal and the children are doing. I told her to call the police. Only hope that she did.”
“We’ll go with you, Clayton. Wait until we lock up the house,” Stanford told him.
They were on their way in two minutes time. They came off the road to Stanford’s home and were on the main road now. They turned a corner and there was the car that had been following Clayton’s car. But the men seeing the two cars so closely together didn’t follow. Instead a sheet of paper was thrown at his car. Clayton stopped and picked it up.
‘So you’ve got company. Ditch the company because we want to talk to you about your son.’
He knew that this note had been written by the man who had first threatened him.
Stanford had also stopped his car. Clayton went over to him. “They say they want to talk to me about my son.”
“I think this is now a police matter,” Stanford said and Clayton returned to his car.
A harried looking Opal greeted him when he reached home.
“He went to the shop to get some sweets. When I didn’t see him return I went in search of him, but he wasn’t at the shop. The shopkeeper told me that he got into a blue car.”
That was the car that had been following him, Clayton realized. He wondered where it was now and if the men had Carl in it with them.
A police car came up and Sergeant Dennis came out. Opal told him about Carl’s disappearance. Clayton told him about the car and the policeman said he had seen a car fitting that description in the area this morning. He was on his radio for two minutes or so. Stanford and his wife left for their home.
“Lascelles Ingram’s teacher’s certificate is a fake. It’s not genuine. He had it made somewhere. We had the college check their records and he never graduated from there,” Dennis explained.
Clayton was surprised at what the Sergeant was telling him. From all reports Ingram was a pretty good teacher of all the subjects he taught. Maybe there had been a few dissenting students as Stanford had earlier related.
“That’s surprising. I never would have thought of that,” Clayton declared.
“I think his wife is the missing link. You said that he had a lot of friends. Know any of them?”
“I don’t remember any of their names,” Clayton replied as the Sergeant got a call on his radio.
He answered it before ending the call. He started for his car.
“They sighted the car with your boy in it,” he shouted and got into his car.
Clayton got into his car and started after him. When they reached Davisville, he saw some policemen holding a young boy. It was Carl! He stopped the car and ran up to them.
“That’s my son.”
“We found him wandering on the road. We’ll have to take him to the hospital to ensure that he’s okay. Who are you?” one of the policemen asked.
Before he could answer, Sergeant Dennis rushed over.
“Take the boy down to Doctor Ximines, Orville and let his father go with you. If he’s okay then his father can take him home. We are going after them.”
Carl had not been hurt. He told the policemen who came to the house that evening everything he knew which wasn’t much. The police said that they would assign a patrol car to the neighborhood.
Clayton went to the office late that morning. He was greeted by the presence of a very beautiful woman.
“I’m Jeneva Ingram, Lascelles’ wife. I came to see you after I heard the news about that little boy that was kidnapped,” she said as she stood up to greet him.
Clayton came and shook her hand.
“I’m pleased to meet you. You know all the while Lascelles was here we’ve been trying to find out about you, but he didn’t say much.”
“We’ve been separated for some time now.”
“Do you mind if Sergeant Dennis joins us? He’s been working on the case and he came to see me.”
“Sure, let him come in. I have nothing to hide.”
Sergeant Dennis came in and was introduced to Mrs. Ingram.
“Lascelles is running a fraud ring. He took my teacher’s college certificate and refused to return it. He took it abroad and made copies of it. There are many professionals working in Jamaica and even in other Caribbean islands on fraudulent certificates and even in other person’s names. He runs a gang that specializes in certificates and identity theft.”
“Do you know where your husband is right now?” Sergeant Dennis asked.
“I have no idea where he is. I have to be in hiding after he threatened to kill me because I said I was going to expose him.”
“It seems that he has a friend who has a management consultancy firm. Dozens of professionals applied for some of the lucrative positions advertised. Somehow or other he got to copy their certificates which he then got these forgers abroad to make and sell to people,” Sergeant Dennis stated.
They talked some more before both Sergeant Dennis and Mrs. Ingram left.
Just as Clayton was leaving the office that Thursday evening his telephone rang.
“Clayton, this is Lascelles. I don’t know what my wife told you, but it’s a pack of lies. I’m in a billion dollar business. We want you to join us as a partner. It’s nothing like what she told you. Can I come to see you this evening before you leave?”
“I’ll only see you with the police present. You had your friends kidnap my son. Now you want to appease me and bring me into your scheme. You go to hell man,” he shouted and hung up.
Nothing happened for some time. It was now September and school began with a replacement teacher for Lascelles. Clayton didn’t hear from Jeneva but one afternoon he got an urgent call from Inspector Reidle. They had caught Lascelles and wanted him to identify the man. Apparently a man, Simon Wellington, was hired on as a manager at this private sector firm. He had qualifications from prestigious universities in the United States. It didn’t take long, however, for the staff and later the management to realize that he had no qualifications or expertise in his chosen field. It took almost a week for him to confess to the police as to how he came by his certificates, thus implicating Lascelles as the mastermind behind the fraudulent certificate granting scheme.
Clayton went and sure enough, it was the man, although he was now growing a large beard. He was defiant that he had done nothing wrong. His house was searched and the fraudulent certificates found. He admitted to the charges and told the police that he had left the school when his wife found out where he was and threatened to expose him. At the moment he is still in jail awaiting trial.
The End.