Troubled Blood: A Cormoran Strike Novel

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Troubled Blood: A Cormoran Strike Novel Page 47

by Galbraith, Robert


  Strike seemed to remember he’d asked both Irene and Janice whether they had any idea where Douthwaite had gone after he left Clerkenwell, and that both had said they didn’t know.

  “How did you know he went to work in Clacton-on-Sea?” he asked.

  “Jan told me,” said Irene, after a tiny pause. “Yes, Jan would’ve told me. She was his neighbor, you know, she was the one who knew him. Yes, I think she tried to find out where he’d gone after he left Percival Road, because she was worried about him.”

  “But this was eleven years later,” said Strike.

  “What was?”

  “He didn’t go to Clacton-on-Sea until eleven years after he left Percival Road,” said Strike. “When I asked you both if you knew where he’d gone—”

  “Well, you meant now, didn’t you?” said Irene, “where he is now? I’ve no idea. Have you looked into that Leamington Spa business, by the way?” Then she laughed, and said, “All these seaside places! No, wait—it isn’t seaside, is it, not Leamington Spa? But you know what I mean —water—I do love water, it’s—Greenwich, Eddie knew I’d love this house when he spotted it for sale —was there anything in that Leamington Spa thing, or was Jan making it up?”

  “Mrs. Beattie wasn’t making it up,” said Strike. “Mr. Ramage definitely saw a missing—”

  “Oh, I didn’t mean Jan would make it up, no, I don’t mean that,” said Irene, instantly contradicting herself. “I just mean, you know, odd place for Margot to turn up, Leamington—have you found any connection,” she asked airily, “or—?”

  “Not yet,” said Strike. “You haven’t remembered anything about Margot and Leamington Spa, have you?”

  “Me? Goodness, no, how should I know why she’d go there?”

  “Well, sometimes people do remember things after we’ve talked to—”

  “Have you spoken to Jan since?”

  “No,” said Strike. “D’you know when she’s back from Dubai?”

  “No,” said Irene. “All right for some, isn’t it? I wouldn’t mind some sunshine, the winter we’re—but it’s wasted on Jan, she doesn’t sunbathe, and I wouldn’t fancy the flight all that way in Economy, which is how she has to—I wonder how she’s getting on, six weeks with her daughter-in-law! Doesn’t matter how well you get on, that’s a long—”

  “Well, I’d better let you get on, Mrs. Hickson.”

  “Oh, all right,” she said. “Yes, well. Best of luck with everything.”

  “Thank you,” he said, and hung up.

  The rain pattered on the window. With a sigh, Strike retired to the café bathroom for a long overdue pee.

  He was just paying his bill when he spotted the man in the Sonic the Hedgehog sweatshirt walking past the window, now on the same side of the street as the café. He was heading back the way he’d come, two bulging bags of Tesco shopping hanging from his hands, moving with that same odd, rocking, side-to-side gait, his soaking hair flat to his skull, his mouth slightly open. Strike’s eyes followed him as he passed, watching the rain drip off the bottom of his shopping bags and from the lobes of his particularly large ears.

  38

  So long in secret cabin there he held

  Her captive to his sensual desire;

  Till that with timely fruit her belly swell’d,

  And bore a boy unto that salvage sire…

  Edmund Spenser

  The Faerie Queene

  Asking himself whether he could possibly have got as lucky as he hoped, Strike threw a tip on the table and hurried outside into the driving rain, pulling on his coat as he went.

  If the mentally impaired adult in the sopping Sonic sweatshirt was indeed the big-eared child once marched around these streets by his eccentric parent, he’d have been living in this corner of Clerkenwell for forty years. Well, people did that, of course, Strike reflected, particularly if they had support there and if their whole world was a few familiar streets. The man was still within sight, heading stolidly toward Clerkenwell Road in the pelting rain, neither speeding up, nor making any attempt to prevent himself becoming progressively more sodden. Strike turned up his coat collar and followed.

  A short distance down St. John Street, Strike’s target turned right past a small ironmonger’s on the corner, and headed into Albemarle Way, the short street with an old red telephone box at the other end, and tall, unbroken buildings on either side. Strike’s interest quickened.

  Just past the ironmonger’s, the man set down both of his shopping bags on the wet pavement and took out a door key. Strike kept walking, because there was nowhere to hide, but made a note of the door number as he passed. Was it possible that the late Applethorpe had lived in this very flat? Hadn’t Strike thought that Albemarle Way presented a promising place to lie in wait for a victim? Not, perhaps, as good as Passing Alley, nor as convenient as the flats along Jerusalem Passage, but better by far than busy Clerkenwell Green, where Talbot had been convinced that Margot had struggled with a disguised Dennis Creed.

  Strike heard the front door close behind the large-eared man and doubled back. The dark blue door needed painting. A small push-button bell was beside it, beneath which was stuck the printed name “Athorn.” Could this be the name Irene had misremembered as Applethorpe, Appleton or Apton? Then Strike noticed that the man had left the key in the lock.

  With a feeling that he might have been far too dismissive of the mysterious ways of the universe, Strike pulled out the key and pressed the doorbell, which rang loudly inside. For a moment or two, nothing happened, then the door opened again and there stood the man in the wet Sonic sweatshirt.

  “You left this in the lock,” said Strike, holding out the key.

  The man addressed the third button of Strike’s overcoat rather than look him in eye.

  “I did that before and Clare said not to again,” he mumbled, holding out his hand for the key, which Strike gave him. The man began to close the door.

  “My name’s Cormoran Strike. I wonder whether I could come in and talk to you about your father?” Strike said, not quite putting his foot in the door, but preparing to do so should it be required.

  The other’s big-eared face stood out, pale, against the dark hall.

  “My-Dad-Gwilherm’s dead.”

  “Yes,” said Strike, “I know.”

  “He carried me on his shoulders.”

  “Did he?”

  “Yeah. Mum told me.”

  “D’you live alone?”

  “I live with Mum.”

  “Is her name Clare?”

  “No. Deborah.”

  “I’m a detective,” said Strike, pulling a card out of his pocket. “My name’s Cormoran Strike and I’d really like to talk to your mum, if that’s OK.”

  The man didn’t take the card, but looked at it out of the corner of his eye. Strike suspected that he couldn’t read.

  “Would that be all right?” Strike asked, as the cold rain continued to fall.

  “Yer, OK. You can come in,” said the other, still addressing Strike’s coat button, and he opened the door fully to admit the detective. Without waiting to see whether Strike was following, he headed up the dark staircase inside.

  Strike felt some qualms about capitalizing on the vulnerabilities of a man like Athorn, but the prospect of looking around what he now strongly suspected was the flat in which the self-proclaimed killer of Margot Bamborough had been living in 1974 was irresistible. After wiping his feet carefully on the doormat, Strike closed the door behind him, spotting as he did so a couple of letters lying on the floor, which the son of the house had simply walked over; one of them carried a wet footprint. Strike picked up the letters, then climbed the bare wooden stairs, over which hung a naked, non-functioning lightbulb.

  As he climbed, Strike indulged himself with the fantasy of a flat which nobody other than the inhabitants had entered for forty years, with locked cupboards and rooms, or even—it had been known to happen—a skeleton lying in open view. For a split-second, as he stepped out
onto the landing, his hopes surged: the oven in the tiny kitchen straight ahead looked as though it dated from the seventies, as did the brown wall tiles, but unfortunately, from a detective point of view, the flat looked neat and smelled fresh and clean. There were even recent Hoover marks on the old carpet, which was patterned in orange and brown swirls. The Tesco bags sat waiting to be unpacked on lino that was scuffed, but that had been recently washed.

  To Strike’s right stood an open door onto a small sitting room. The man he’d followed was standing there, facing a much older woman, who was sitting crocheting in an armchair beside the window. She looked, as well she might, shocked to see a large stranger standing in her hall.

  “He wants to talk to you,” announced the man.

  “Only if you’re comfortable with that, Mrs. Athorn,” Strike called from the landing. He wished Robin was with him. She was particularly good at putting nervous women at their ease. He remembered that Janice had said that this woman was agoraphobic. “My name’s Cormoran Strike and I wanted to ask a few questions about your husband. But if you’re not happy, of course, I’ll leave immediately.”

  “I’m cold,” said the man loudly.

  “Change your clothes,” his mother advised him. “You’ve got wet. Why don’t you wear your coat?”

  “Too tight,” he said, “you silly woman.”

  He turned and walked out of the room past Strike, who stood back to let him pass. Gwilherm’s son disappeared into a room opposite, on the door of which the name “Samhain” appeared in painted wooden letters.

  Samhain’s mother didn’t appear to enjoy eye contact any more than her son did. At last, addressing Strike’s knees, she said,

  “All right. Come in, then.”

  “Thanks very much.”

  Two budgerigars, one blue, one green, chirruped in a cage in the corner of the sitting room. Samhain’s mother had been crocheting a patchwork blanket. A number of completed woolen squares were piled on the wide windowsill beside her and a basket of wools sat at her feet. A huge jigsaw mat was spread out on a large ottoman in front of the sofa. It bore a two-thirds completed puzzle of unicorns. As far as tidiness went, the sitting room compared very favorably with Gregory Talbot’s.

  “You’ve got some letters,” Strike said, and he held up the damp envelopes to show her.

  “You open them,” she said.

  “I don’t think—”

  “You open them,” she repeated.

  She had the same big ears as Samhain and the same slight underbite. These imperfections notwithstanding, there was a prettiness in her soft face and in her dark eyes. Her long, neatly plaited hair was white. She had to be at least sixty, but her smooth skin was that of a much younger woman. There was a strangely otherworldly air about her as she sat, plying her crochet hook beside the rainy window, shut away from the world. Strike wondered whether she could read. He felt safe to open the envelopes that were clearly junk mail, and did so.

  “You’ve been sent a seed catalog,” he said, showing her, “and a letter from a furniture shop.”

  “I don’t want them,” said the woman beside the window, still talking to Strike’s legs. “You can sit down,” she added.

  He sidled carefully between the sofa and the ottoman which, like Strike himself, was far too big for this small room. Having successfully avoided nudging the enormous jigsaw, he took a seat at a respectful distance from the crocheting woman.

  “This one,” said Strike, referring to the last letter, “is for Clare Spencer. Do you know her?”

  The letter didn’t have a stamp. Judging by the address on the back, the letter was from the ironmonger downstairs.

  “Clare’s our social worker,” she said. “You can open it.”

  “I don’t think I should do that,” said Strike. “I’ll leave it for Clare. You’re Deborah, is that right?”

  “Yes,” she murmured.

  Samhain reappeared in the door. He was now barefoot but wearing dry jeans and a fresh sweatshirt with Spider-Man on the front.

  “I’m going to put things in the fridge,” he announced, and disap­peared again.

  “Samhain does the shopping now,” Deborah said, with a glance at Strike’s shoes. Though timid, she didn’t seem averse to talking to him.

  “Deborah, I’m here to ask you about Gwilherm,” Strike said.

  “He’s not here.”

  “No, I—”

  “He died.”

  “Yes,” said Strike. “I’m sorry. I’m really here because of a doctor who used to work—”

  “Dr. Brenner,” she said at once.

  “You remember Dr. Brenner?” said Strike, surprised.

  “I didn’t like him,” she said.

  “Well, I wanted to ask you about a different doc—”

  Samhain reappeared at the sitting room door and said loudly to his mother,

  “D’you want a hot chocolate, or not?”

  “Yes,” she said.

  “Do you want a hot chocolate, or not?” Samhain demanded of Strike.

  “Yes please,” Strike said, on the principle that all friendly gestures should be accepted in such situations.

  Samhain lumbered out of sight. Pausing in her crocheting, Deborah pointed at something straight ahead of her and said,

  “That’s Gwilherm, there.”

  Strike looked around. An Egyptian ankh, the symbol of eternal life, had been drawn on the wall behind the old TV. The walls were pale yellow everywhere except behind the ankh, where a patch of dirty green survived. In front of the ankh, on top of the flat-topped television set, was a black object which Strike at first glance took for a vase. Then he spotted the stylized dove on it, realized that it was an urn and understood, finally, what he was being told.

  “Ah,” said Strike. “Those are Gwilherm’s ashes, are they?”

  “I told Tudor to get the one with the bird, because I like birds.”

  One of the budgerigars fluttered suddenly across the cage in a blur of bright green and yellow.

  “Who painted that?” asked Strike, pointing at the ankh.

  “Gwilherm,” said Deborah, continuing to dextrously ply her crochet hook.

  Samhain re-entered the room, holding a tin tray.

  “Not on my jigsaw,” his mother warned him, but there was no other free surface.

  “Should I—?” offered Strike, gesturing toward the puzzle, but there was no space anywhere on the floor to accommodate it.

  “You close it,” Deborah told him, with a hint of reproach, and Strike saw that the jigsaw mat had wings, which could be fastened to protect the puzzle. He did so, and Samhain laid the tray on top. Deborah stuck her crochet hook carefully in the ball of wool and accepted a mug of instant hot chocolate and a Penguin biscuit from her son. Samhain kept the Batman mug for himself. Strike sipped his drink and said, “Very nice,” not entirely dishonestly.

  “I make good hot chocolate, don’t I, Deborah?” said Samhain, unwrapping a biscuit.

  “Yes,” said Deborah, blowing on the surface of the hot liquid.

  “I know this was a long time ago,” Strike began again, “but there was another doctor, who worked with Dr. Brenner—”

  “Old Joe Brenner was a dirty old man,” said Samhain Athorn, with a cackle.

  Strike looked at him in surprise. Samhain directed his smirk at the closed jigsaw.

  “Why was he a dirty old man?” asked the detective.

  “My Uncle Tudor told me,” said Samhain. “Dirty old man. Hahahaha. Is this mine?” he asked, picking up the envelope addressed to Clare Spencer.

  “No,” said his mother. “That’s Clare’s.”

  “Why is it?”

  “I think,” said Strike, “it’s from your downstairs neighbor.”

  “He’s a bastard,” said Samhain, putting the letter back down. “He made us throw everything away, didn’t he, Deborah?”

  “I like it better now,” said Deborah mildly. “It’s good now.”

  Strike allowed a moment or tw
o to pass, in case Samhain had more to add, then asked,

  “Why did Uncle Tudor say Joseph Brenner was a dirty old man?”

  “Tudor knew everything about everyone,” said Deborah placidly.

  “Who was Tudor?” Strike asked her.

  “Gwilherm’s brother,” said Deborah. “He always knew about people round here.”

  “Does he still visit you?” asked Strike, suspecting the answer.

  “Passed-away-to-the-other side,” said Deborah, as though it was one long word. “He used to buy our shopping. He took Sammy to play football and to the swimming.”

  “I do all the shopping now,” piped up Samhain. “Sometimes I don’t want to do the shopping but if I don’t, I get hungry, and Deborah says, ‘It’s your fault there’s nothing to eat.’ So then I go shopping.”

  “Good move,” said Strike.

  The three of them drank their hot chocolate.

  “Dirty old man, Joe Brenner,” repeated Samhain, more loudly. “Uncle Tudor used to tell me some stories. Old Betty and the one who wouldn’t pay, hahahaha. Dirty old Joe Brenner.”

  “I didn’t like him,” said Deborah quietly. “He wanted me to take my pants off.”

  “Really?” said Strike.

  While this had surely been a question of a medical examination, he felt uncomfortable.

  “Yes, to look at me,” said Deborah. “I didn’t want it. Gwilherm wanted it, but I don’t like men I don’t know looking at me.”

  “No, well, I can understand that,” said Strike. “You were ill, were you?”

  “Gwilherm said I had to,” was her only response.

  If he’d still been in the Special Investigation Branch, there would have been a female officer with him for this interview. Strike wondered what her IQ was.

  “Did you ever meet Dr. Bamborough?” he asked. “She was,” he hesitated, “a lady doctor.”

  “I’ve never seen a lady doctor,” said Deborah, with what sounded like regret.

  “D’you know whether Gwilherm ever met Dr. Bamborough?”

  “She died,” said Deborah.

  “Yes,” said Strike, surprised. “People think she died, but no one knows for s—”

  One of the budgerigars made the little bell hanging from the top of its cage tinkle. Both Deborah and Samhain looked around, smiling.

 

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