The Hogarth Conspiracy

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The Hogarth Conspiracy Page 24

by Alex Connor


  She put down the paper. “What?”

  “I didn’t mean it. It came out wrong, and he jumped down my throat.” Christian flushed under his wife’s scrutiny and wondered what to say next.

  She saved him the trouble. “It’s funny, but in all this time we’ve never actually talked about Victor being guilty or innocent. You never wondered about it?”

  “What?”

  “The case. The fakes, all of it.” She paused, eager to hear what her husband really thought. “We presumed Victor was innocent, of course, but did you never wonder?”

  Angrily, Christian rounded on her. “My brother did nothing wrong!”

  “I know that. You know that. We care about him, of course, and we believed in him, but he was found guilty. There was so much evidence, so many witnesses.”

  Astonished, Christian could hardly believe what he was hearing, yet he felt a kind of giddy relief. In the past Ingola would never have doubted Victor, never have said a negative word about him. But time had gone on, and obviously her affection had waned. The fierce love had dwindled. Now she had reservations, and to his shame, the thought pleased him.

  “Are you saying that you think Victor did it?”

  She shook her head impatiently. “No, I’m just wondering. Oh, it doesn’t matter.”

  “It does matter,” Christian persisted. “You were in love with Victor; you knew him better than anyone. Do you think … do you really think he did something wrong?”

  Pausing, Ingola wondered how she would sleep that night. How she could rest with a quiet conscience, having manipulated her husband so deftly. By intimating that she had doubts about Victor, she was suggesting that her feelings for him had cooled, a suggestion that would certainly throw off any suspicion that there was still a bond between them.

  “I could never suspect you of doing anything wrong, Christian,” she said gently. “But Victor? To be honest, I’m not sure.”

  Picking up the paper again, she began to read, but the words buzzed in front of her eyes and she knew with terrible certainty that Christian was watching her and counting his blessings. It would never occur to him that she had recently slept with his brother—or that she now longed for Victor Ballam more than she ever had.

  Cursing, Tully got out of bed and walked over to the table, flicking on the lamp. Sleep was being capricious. He would doze, then wake suddenly, his heart hammering, his skin sweaty. Wondering if he was coming down with flu, he took two aspirins and sat at the table, pulling his notes toward him. He had to admit that he had been enjoying his detective work; it appealed to him, and he found it easy to draw confidences out of people. But since Victor had returned from New York, the atmosphere had altered, and Tully realized that the part he had so readily assumed was not for evenings and matinees only. As the death count rose, grim reality had set in, and the headline on the Evening Standard that afternoon had unnerved him to the point of panic:

  MURDER VICTIM FOUND IN HYDE PARK

  The name of Lim Chang had reverberated from the page as Tully read the details of the killing, his unease growing when he couldn’t contact Victor on his cell phone. Finally, around seven, he had received a text from him. It was simple and to the point:

  Coming back to London.

  Will call and see you tomorrow. Don’t

  talk to Charlene Fleet.

  Rubbing his forehead, an already nervous Tully jumped when the phone rang next to him.

  “Yes?”

  “Is that Tully Harcourt?”

  “Who’s this?”

  “A friend.”

  “It’s two in the morning. Who rings at two in the morning?” he said warily. “No friend of mine—”

  “You have dangerous friends, Mr. Harcourt. Like Victor Ballam.” The voice paused and then went on. “Friends like that could get you into a lot of trouble, but a friend like me could help you.

  Although uneasy, Tully affected a nonchalant tone. “I don’t think so, old boy. Thanks for calling—”

  “Stop fucking around!”

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “You help me, and I’ll help you when things get rough. And they will get very rough. Where’s Victor Ballam?”

  “What business is that of yours?”

  “Where’s Victor Ballam?”

  From below, Tully could hear the main door close softly at the street entrance. Still holding the phone, he moved to the front door of his apartment and checked that the locks were bolted, peering through the peephole into the corridor outside. He could hear footsteps but see no one. The space was empty. Silent.

  Suddenly the voice came over the phone again. “I can see you, Mr. Harcourt.”

  Unnerved, Tully spun around, looking at the windows. But the curtains were closed.

  Calmly the voice continued. “Just tell me where Victor Ballam is.”

  There was a long pause, then Tully—to his horror—smelled gasoline. Glancing across the room, he could see a thin trickle coming under his door, the odor intensifying by the second.

  “Jesus!”

  “I can just walk away,” the voice went on, “or I can put a match to this, Mr. Harcourt. The choice is yours. Where’s Victor Ballam?”

  Sweating, Tully shouted into the phone. “In New York.”

  There was a long silence, then Tully caught the unmistakable sound of someone striking a match. A moment later, he could smell fire as smoke began to leak under the door. Crossing the room and throwing open the patio windows, Tully gulped in the fresh air and stared down into the street below. A figure was just leaving the building. A huddled figure who paused on the opposite side of the road and pointed to the cell phone in his hand.

  Snatching up his own phone again, Tully listened.

  “That was the wrong answer, Mr. Harcourt. You and I both know that Mr. Ballam’s no longer in New York. I was just trying to find out which side you were really on.” The voice sighed. “People burn in their beds all the time, Mr. Harcourt. They say fire is the most painful way to go. Back off now. While you still can.”

  Forty-Three

  EVEN ON SUCH A COOL DAY, THERE WAS SWEAT ON HER TOP LIP AS SHE caught Victor’s eye, and for a moment she looked as though she might bolt. Victor moved quickly across the concourse of Euston Station toward her.

  “Liza Frith?”

  She nodded, recognizing his voice and looking around nervously. “The train was late. I kept thinking all sorts of crazy things, like someone was holding it up deliberately. I was hoping you’d wait for me.”

  Taking her bag, Victor guided her toward the taxi rank.

  “Are you okay?”

  “Yeah. Where are we going?”

  “Somewhere safe,” he assured her, helping her into the cab and sitting beside her. She smelled faintly of apples, the scent curious and out of place. “I’ve got a friend who’s got a flat in Little Venice. He doesn’t use it much, just rents it out in the summer for tourists. But it’s quiet and surrounded by neighbors.”

  She smiled, shrugging. “Thanks.”

  “You’ll be safe, I promise,” Victor reassured her, checking that the partition between them and the driver was closed. “Now tell me about Malcolm Jenner. You said it was he that picked up Annette’s phone?”

  “Yeah, but why did he have it?” she asked urgently. “Why him of all people?”

  “I don’t know.”

  Suddenly suspicious, Liza studied Victor. “Why are you helping me? You work for Mrs. Fleet. Did she send you to find me?”

  “No; I sent myself.”

  Her expression was lost, then troubled. “Annette’s dead, isn’t she? I knew it the moment that man picked up her phone. She’s dead, isn’t she?”

  He didn’t deny it. “Yes.”

  “Did Malcolm Jenner kill her?”

  “I don’t know yet.”

  Liza’s tone hovered between panic and resignation. “Ma Fleet thinks I don’t know about Bernie Freeland’s death. She thinks I’m stupid. Well, maybe I’m not that interested in
most things, but the murder of my fellow passengers certainly caught my attention.” Her tone edged on bitterness. “I bought a paper on the train, and I saw Lim Chang’s photograph. One more of the dealers dead. How many does that leave, Mr. Ballam?”

  “Oliver Peters.”

  “And Kit Wilkes?”

  “In the hospital.”

  She sighed. “Dying?”

  “Probably.”

  “And out of the working girls, there’s just me.” She sighed raggedly. “Well, I don’t want to die, Mr. Ballam; I don’t want to be next.” She pressed her hands together, her suitcase at her feet. “I don’t want to die because of some painting. I don’t see why I should; it’s got nothing to do with me. I was just working on that flight. I’m not involved. I don’t care about any picture!”

  “Liza—”

  She brushed him off. “I’m not going to let anyone kill me. You hear me? No one’s going to kill me.”

  He touched the back of her hand. Its coldness startled him.

  “The paper said that a dog attack was involved,” she went on, “that Lim Chang had been mauled by an animal,” Liza paused. “Mrs. Fleet has a dog.”

  “I know.”

  “I wouldn’t put it past that bitch. She was sending me out on a job when I bolted. I didn’t trust her, didn’t want to end up with some stranger at the Hilton. Didn’t want to end up like Marian Miller in a hotel or on the front page of the Evening Standard like Lim Chang. I think Ma Fleet’s capable of murder.” Liza stared out of the window a while, then turned back to Victor. Her pupils were dilated.

  Shock or drugs? he wondered.

  “What d’you know about Charlene Fleet?”

  “Nothing,” she replied. “No one does.”

  “She has no family? No man in her life?”

  “Not that any of us know about. She isn’t the confiding type. If Ma Fleet’s got a private life, she keeps it under wraps.”

  Victor nodded. “Okay. So what d’you know about Malcolm Jenner?”

  “He was a steward on the flight.”

  “He had no connection to Annette?”

  “No.”

  “They didn’t seem particularly friendly or act as though they knew each other?”

  “No,” Liza repeated, shaking her head. “I don’t remember them even talking. She never said she knew him or recognized him, so why did he end up with Annette’s phone?”

  “Perhaps she left it on the plane and he found it.”

  “Why wouldn’t he have given it back to her?”

  “Maybe he tried to.”

  “But she was already dead?” Liza asked softly.

  Victor skirted the question. “Did Malcolm Jenner overhear the talk about the Hogarth painting?”

  “I don’t think so. The stewards were moving about a lot, and when they weren’t busy, they were in the galley. The copilot only came into the cabin briefly, the chief pilot even less. He spoke to Bernie a couple of times, but he kept away from us. Bernie doesn’t—didn’t—like any of the staff near the bedroom.” She tapped the side of her suitcase with the toe of her left shoe. “I left Park Street with only the clothes I was wearing. I bought this case in Manchester and some cheap stuff from Peacocks. The kind I used to despise. Funnily enough, I don’t care anymore. Fashion doesn’t matter so much if you’re going to get murdered.”

  Victor could sense she was close to panic. “I’m surprised you didn’t leave the country, Liza.”

  “I would have, only Ma Fleet’s got my passport. I told you: I left everything at Park Street.” She turned to him, her voice soft, childlike. “Is she after the painting?”

  “She says not.”

  “Have you got it?”

  The question caught him off guard. “Why d’you want to know?”

  “I was on that flight, Mr. Ballam. I have a right to know.”

  “No; I don’t have the Hogarth.”

  “D’you know where it is?”

  “If I did, do you think I’d tell you and put you in even more danger?”

  She shook her head. “All right, let me put it this way. If you know where that painting is, can’t you give it to the person who wants it so badly?” She gripped his hand suddenly, her fingers bloodless. “I don’t care why they want it! I don’t care if they want to splash the news about some painting with a whore and her bloody prince in it! I don’t care if people close to the royal family get it and burn it. I don’t care! But I’m not dying for it, Mr. Ballam. I tell you here and now. I’ll do whatever I have to do to protect myself. Whatever I have to do.”

  He could see that she meant it.

  Forty-Four

  AS HE LET VICTOR IN, TULLY POINTED TO THE SINGED BASE OF front door. “I didn’t know I was signing up for this, old boy.”

  “What happened?” Victor asked. “Are you all right?”

  “Someone wanted to know where you were.”

  “And you told them?”

  “No, which was why I had my front door char-grilled. It gives a new meaning to flame mahogany.” Tully poured them both a coffee perched on the edge of the table by the window.

  “I never thought it would get this dangerous.”

  “Liar! Of course you fucking did. But I’ve got no one to blame but myself. I wanted to help you, and I still do. So is Liza Frith in the flat?”

  “Yeah; I’ve just left her there. Thanks.”

  Tully nodded.

  “The place is registered in my mother’s name, so no one should be trace it back to me. And I rent it out through an agent in the summertime. It’s definitely secure. Got an alarm and what they call decorative bars on windows and doors, although frankly, if you didn’t have bars on a basement flat, you’d be asking for trouble. If she doesn’t go out or let anyone in, be safe.” He paused, then asked, “Why’s she there?”

  “I need to keep an eye on her.”

  “So, now she’s in danger?”

  Victor caught the tone in his voice. “I had to get Liza Frith somewhere I’ll move her as soon as I can. I’m sorry, Tully, really I am, but I had no choice.”

  Tully kept his gaze averted. “This is all getting a bit much, isn’t it? I now Lim Chang’s been killed and I have a hooker in my late mother’s You should go to the police.”

  “I can’t.”

  “You’re still reporting back to Mrs. Fleet?”

  “Up to a point. But now I’ve put some distance between her and me.”

  “So who’s paying you?” Tully replied, raising his eyebrows. “You funds, Victor.”

  “I’ll see you get paid.”

  “Oh, you’re such a fucking prick at times!” Tully emptied his cup and then refilled it. Irritated, he sat down at the table. “Listen, Victor, I’ll be frank with you. I’m worried. You were hired to investigate a call girl’s death and protect Charlene Fleet’s business; that was all. But now the whole thing’s mushroomed. How d’you know Fleet isn’t behind it?”

  “She might be,” Victor admitted “Did you see who did that to your door?”

  Tully glanced over his shoulder. “Some nut.”

  “Man or woman?”

  “Man.”

  “Did you get a look at him?”

  “Not clearly,” Tully replied, “but after he’d scorched my door, he was on the street looking up at me. Wearing a hoodie, with a scarf over the bottom half of his face. But I did see his eyes, and I think he was Chinese.”

  Chinese. Like the man at the airport. Nothing in his features betrayed what Victor was feeling. The overwhelming sense that he was drowning, capsized, his lungs riddled with holes. He had no idea what was happening or where the next threat might come from. Tully and Liza Frith were relying on him to keep them safe, and he couldn’t even protect himself.

  “It said in the paper that the police think Lim Chang’s death is related to the triads,” Tully offered. “Some revenge killing. Personally, I wouldn’t be surprised; it’s always revenge with them. The triads are such excitable little people. I remember the
m when I used to gamble. Fascinating, very quick, prodigious memories, nasty tempers if they were crossed. There was a basement club in Chinatown where I used to go.” Tully paused, memory taking a snapshot of an earlier time. Of the time he had been broke, panicked. Of the time he had gone to Victor for help. “Anyway,” he hurried on, “the regular Chinese are all in awe of the triads—like the Italians with the Mafia—because the triads pretty much run Chinatown.”

  “So?”

  “I’m saying that it could well be a revenge killing.”

  “For gambling debts? No, not Lim Chang; he was an upright company man.”

  “Who was after the Hogarth. Maybe he double-crossed someone. Promised them the painting, then reneged on his word.”

  “Or perhaps it’s just convenient for the police to blame it on the triads,” Victor replied. He wanted to confide in Tully but was on his guard. There was only the faintest odor of burned wood still present in the apartment, but it was in the air and in the furnishings, the threat hanging over both of them. “You don’t have to go on with this, Tully.”

  “I owe you, remember? What I did was wrong. My bad conscience will make sure I keep helping you.” A shudder of an old unpleasant memory drifted between them. “But I still say you should go to the police.”

  “And what if they think I’m behind all of this? There’s a Hogarth in the mix. Even if they didn’t take me in, they’d keep an eye on me. I don’t want that.”

  “You’d rather get killed?”

  “Why would I get killed?”

  “For the same bloody reason the dealers and the call girls have been—because they know about the painting.”

  “You know about it too.”

  “But I don’t know where it is.”

  Victor held his gaze. “Neither do I. Now.”

  “You’ve forgotten one other person who knows—Arnold Fletcher. I’ve been thinking about him. Perhaps you were right; perhaps he is involved. He got you and Mrs. Fleet together. Perhaps he knows there’s a Hogarth up for grabs.”

 

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