by Will Kingdom
‘He puts out feelers. Among his own people, to begin with, and maybe some of his showbiz friends. His network. On the fringes of which, maybe, are Justin Sharpe’s “hard friends” in Cheltenham. So when Justin happens to find out that Seffi’s at the lodge at Mysleton …’
‘It gets back to Seward in like no time at all, and Seward, he’s through with elaborate scams, arranging smart parties. It’s down to basics. He sends these guys out to fetch her. Bring her in.’
‘That could be it. We know that one of them was an employee of a security firm doing a bit of moonlighting, like they often do.’
Marcus looked appalled. ‘The man was having Persephone kidnapped, to make her attempt to re-engage with … Is that even possible, Lewis? That she could be forced to do it? Go into trance, under duress?’
Cindy considered. ‘Perhaps we should be asking ourselves not what is possible, but what such a man as this might consider possible.’
‘And when it all goes pear-shaped and one man winds up dead,’ Bobby said, ‘Justin’s hard friends go back to make sure he doesn’t implicate them. Maybe one of them is even the other Mysleton guy. The one who felt obliged to put Crewe out of his misery.’
Grayle thought of something. Wished that maybe she hadn’t. Felt queasy.
‘If they made Justin talk, there’s, uh, one thing he could’ve told them. Which is my name.’
‘Oh,’ Bobby said.
‘I told him my name. I didn’t write it down or anything, I didn’t spell it out, but…’
‘This is madness!’ Marcus howled. ‘It’s got completely out of hand.’
‘Yes,’ Cindy said, ‘perhaps it has.’
‘What if the bastards turn up here?’
‘Just a name?’ Bobby said. ‘No address?’
‘No. No address.’
‘She’d be hard to track down from just a name, Marcus, even if Justin remembered it correctly. All the same …’
Marcus pushed his chair back. ‘We should take it to the police.’ He glanced at Bobby, coughed. ‘I mean …’
‘You mean the real police,’ Bobby said.
Grayle thought about having to make that full statement, tell the cops about the hacker at the bottom of the River Wye, take them to the spot where they tossed it in, stand by while the divers went down. Oh God.
‘They gonna believe us, Bobby?’
‘Do we believe us?’
Marcus came to his feet, paced the flagged floor. ‘We’ve been here before, I think. What the holy fuck are we going to do, Maiden?’
‘If this is Seward,’ Bobby said, ‘it would be naïve to assume that he’s going to stop now. He’s still going to want Seffi.’
‘We need to find her first, right?’ Grayle now had that jumpy sensation around her middle.
‘Well, at least I know a senior copper who’s prepared to believe anything of Gary Seward. If we can spend an hour or two trying to harden all of this up a bit, I could take it across to Gloucester and dump it in his lap. That would be the sensible solution.’
‘I guess.’ Any residual excitement seeped out of Grayle, leaving only the queasy feeling. If they were right, at bottom this was just a sordid tale of underworld obsession, revenge, cover up. Which, as Marcus said, had gotten way out of hand.
And yet was still glowing darkly under the halo of Big Mystery: the imploded window, the drawing – where did you get by taking stuff like this to the cops? You got disbelieved. Derided. Suspected. Accused. Referred for psychiatric reports, like all those creeps who said, I heard a voice telling me to do it.
‘All right.’ Marcus cleared his throat. ‘I think we all probably agree that before doing anything hasty we should spend some time attempting to locate Persephone ourselves. She needs to know about this possible Judge connection.’
‘Assuming she doesn’t already,’ Grayle said. ‘And that’s one of the reasons she hightailed it into the night without so much as an offer to pay for the glass.’
‘Yes, all right, Underhill. So how do we go about finding her?’
‘We could call in a medium,’ Grayle said.
‘Or we could simply call her agent,’ Maiden said. ‘She was talking to her yesterday from this pub we called at on the way over here. Whatever it was about, she didn’t want me to know. She took the phone into the loo. Afterwards she started saying there’d be no point in coming to St Mary’s, and that she had to be somewhere tomorrow – that’s today.’
‘She didn’t want us to know where she was going,’ Grayle said. ‘Why?’
‘Do we have the number of the agency?’
Grayle smiled. ‘I guess Marcus does.’
Marcus called from his study. He was quivering with the kind of adrenalin charge he’d thought he’d never experience again. ‘Want to speak to Nancy Rich,’ he told some lofty bitch.
‘Ms Rich is in a meeting. Perhaps you could call back later.’
‘Just get her,’ Marcus rasped.
‘I don’t know whether you heard what I—’
‘Well get her out of the bloody meeting!’ Marcus roared. ‘This is crucially important.’
‘And you are?’
‘Marcus Bacton, my name. Tell her—’
‘Does she know you?’
‘Tell her it’s about Persephone Callard.’
‘Are you a journalist?’
‘What I am’, said Marcus, ‘is a man with very little time to fart about, so you can tell Rich that if she doesn’t want to lose her principal meal ticket, she’d better get off her complacent arse and drag herself to the fucking phone. Am I making myself clear?’
‘Explicitly,’ the woman said coldly. ‘Hold the line, please.’
Marcus waited. The agency’s phone played Mozart to suggest you were connected to people of taste and intelligence. Marcus drummed his fingers on the desk. Outside, the wind was still battering the castle walls.
Nancy Rich came on the line.
‘You have one minute, Mr Baxter.’
‘Bacton. Look, I’m calling because I believe you’re still in fairly regular contact with Persephone Callard.’
‘I’m her agent.’
‘It’s imperative I speak to her. Without delay.’
‘Mr Bacton, have you any idea how many callers say precisely that?’
‘And half of them are dead, no doubt. Madam, I don’t care how many bloody crank calls you get, this is not one of them.’
‘Had to play the Winterstone card, in the end,’ he told them. ‘That’s the school. Which, inexplicably, is still in existence. Says she’ll call me back. Wants to check me out, I suppose. I think she’s still afraid I’m a bloody journalist.’
‘You are a bloody journalist,’ Grayle said.
‘Hmm. Yes. One forgets.’
Grayle smiled. The only good thing about this weird, uncomfortable situation was that Marcus had been galvanized.
The rest of the morning they drank coffee, nibbled toast, tossed around wild theories. Cindy tried, in vain, to call his producer. Grayle stashed all the dailies out of sight because of the way he kept going back to stare in distress at those big headlines. In the end Cindy said he’d walk up to the Knoll, give himself a retune.
Around two, a call came through.
Bobby’s mobile.
Foxworth. Maiden took the phone outside.
‘Information for you, Bobby. Show you what a helpful fellow I am.’
‘I always knew that, Ron,’ Maiden said warily.
‘Sir Richard Barber, Bobby. Still interested?’
‘Sure.’
‘Barber and Seward. It’s a yes. Barber retired at the last election, yeah? Afterwards, gets divorced from his missus. Papers are thinking, hello, what’s been going on there? But it’s too late now, he’s nobody special any more, so they never tried too hard to find out what he’d been up to in his nice new flat. Which, as it turns out, he’d been renting from Seward for quite a while before he bought it. Only for girls, mind, nothing sordid – Gary hates perverts. J
ust nice, clean, grown-up girlies.’
‘So, Gary’s flat and Gary’s girls? Where’d you get this, Ron?’
‘I’m a member of the Conservative Club. For the cheap beer. Always a comfort after the kind of day I’ve had.’
‘No developments, then.’
‘Oh yeah. Just the kind of development you need with my budget. Another one. Even nastier.’
‘No!’ Maiden wedged himself into the doorway, out of the wind.
‘Woman gets round to reporting her boyfriend missing after the other side of the bed’s been cold the best part of a week. Local bobby makes a routine visit to his place of work – he has a garage – finds somebody’s dropped a bloody car on the poor sod.’
‘Like from a crane?’
Ron explained.
‘What are the Cotswolds coming to?’ Maiden said neutrally. ‘No leads?’
‘How many d’you want? For starters we’ve got about half a dozen blokes whose wives this lad reckoned he was stuffing, so the regular girlfriend’s also worth a glance. Oh, yeah, lots of angles and about two spare bodies in CID for the legwork. I was trying to link it into this other one seeing it wasn’t far away, but they won’t quite gel.’
Maiden said, ‘You talk to the late Mr Crewe’s employer yet?’
A chuckle.
‘I was waiting for that. Yes, I have indeed. In person. Lovely office in Worcester. Charming view of the Severn. Mr Martin Riggs on the door, gold lettering. And what a nice chap. Out comes the twelve-year-old malt. “What a tonic to see you, Ron, talk to an old-fashioned copper again.”’
‘He offer you a job when you retire?’
‘Blimey, son, that’s positively uncanny. Must be with poking the psychic.’
‘What else he have to say?’
‘Crewe? According to Mr Riggs, Forcefield is such a big organization nowadays that it’s appallingly difficult to keep tabs on all the staff. However, he’s done some checks and this does seem to be a regular lad, absolutely no reason to suspect, etcetera, etcetera.’
‘You believe that?’
‘What difference does it make? Where are you at present, Bobby?’
‘Staying with friends, out past Hereford.’
‘You and the lady?’
‘Just me. She had some business.’ Maiden decided there wasn’t going to be a better time to pump Ron on the subject of Clarence Judge. ‘Leaving me with lots of free time to read Gary’s book. Oh … I take it you know about the new paperback – the reward for a name on Judge?’
‘You what?’
He had Ron’s full attention. He took the phone into Marcus’s study, found the book, read out the relevant part of the Preface.
‘I may be wrong here, Ron, but do you think maybe he doesn’t trust you to investigate it properly?’
‘I don’t doubt that would be true, if it was my case, Bobby, but Clarence was found on a building site down near Abingdon. Where he was done, that’s another matter, but Abingdon was where they found him, so it’s Kiddlington’s migraine. Especially now. Well, the cheeky cunt.’
‘Still a big shortlist, is there?’
‘Extensive. Not counting the ones excluded on account of having fingers too arthritic to hold the gun steady.’
‘Is Seward really that upset?’
‘Think of Clarence as a not-over-bright brother Gary felt responsible for. Vicious as a cobra, but not over-endowed up top. You gave him a gun, knife, spanner … pointed him in the right direction, waited for the screams. And he never knew when it was over. The one time I nicked him, I sent six bobbies in with batons. When I got there, four of them were sitting on Clarence, the other two getting helped into an ambulance with half an ear in a paper bag and that much blood around they weren’t sure which of ’em’s it was. Never a domestic animal, Clarence Judge.’
‘What was it he went down for last?’
‘Rape and attempted murder – sadly, nothing to do with Seward. Clarence’s night off. Took the barmaid home, but she changed her mind. Naturally, the Met offered him a deal for Seward, but Clarence is too loyal.’
‘Matter of honour, for Seward, then, seeing the killer go down?’
‘Seward has no honour,’ Ron Foxworth said coldly. ‘Matter of pride. And talking of pride … let me say one thing, my son, and let me say it very clearly. If it were to turn out to be your delicate, artistic fingers on Seward’s collar, as distinct from my gnarled old digits, I just can’t tell you how upset I would be. Just can’t begin to tell you.’
Marcus snatched up the phone. ‘Yes!’
‘Mr Bacton, it’s Nancy Rich. My secretary’s done some checks with the school, where there are still people who remember you. Having spoken to you herself she says you simply have to be the same person. I’m therefore inclined to accept that you have Seffi’s best interests at heart.’
Marcus grunted. Could imagine how people at the bastard school had described him.
‘So perhaps I can ask you some questions,’ Rich said. ‘What was Seffi’s state of mind when you last saw her?’
‘Erratic,’ Marcus said. ‘Confused. She stayed here for a few days, now she’s missing. Listen, I do know the background. I just don’t know how much of it you know, but I understand you spoke to Persephone on the phone yesterday morning.’
‘Yes. But that was about a contractual arrangement. It’s not something I would normally discuss.’
‘Look,’ Marcus said. ‘I don’t know what other clients you have—’
‘Let’s just say that none of the others are in this particular line of work.’
‘Quite. And I don’t suppose any of them would find themselves in the position of being used by a man with an extensive criminal record to try and contact a violent psychotic who’s been in his grave for over a year.’
A considerable hush.
‘Oh my God,’ said Nancy Rich. ‘Are you serious?’
‘No.’ Marcus eased himself on to the desk. ‘I’m entertaining my fucking self.’
‘That’s impossible.’
Underhill came into the study then. And Maiden.
Marcus was inspired.
‘Look, Rich, this is a police matter now. I have a detective with me. Would you like to speak to him? Name’s Maiden. Inspector. I can put you—’
‘Absolutely not!’ Rich said, aghast.
The sun struggled against heavy, muscular clouds, strings of vapour twisting like tendons. A meshwork of illusion and lies obscuring the light.
Lies. Lying to himself. Sheltering behind the confusion of his identity, flailing in the dark and swirling soup of his motivations, his impulses, his ambivalent sexuality. This way, that way, insubstantial, capricious. His bangles rattled cheaply, his pearls were paste, his Oxfam shop woolly jumper a mass of plucks, his bra full of bubble-wrap.
‘I hate that Cindy now for what he’s caused. It’s like he’s sneering at ordinary people’s good luck.’
Taunting voices carried on the wind.
‘I must say, I never liked him myself. People like that, they’ve always got a chip on their shoulder, haven’t they?’
‘Angel of fucking Death …’
‘… chosen as God’s tool to break the hold of the National Lottery on the public’s consciousness?’
Cindy’s mouth stretched into a silent scream. What if this flip remark was on target? What if he had become a channel, a conduit? But not for God, not for good. He thought of Colin Seymour, who planned to introduce handicapped youngsters to the thrills of flying, rising above nature’s blackest jokes.
Cindy laid his hands on the collapsed capstone, massaging its ancient heart, until the stone and his hands grew warm.
Give me knowledge, give me inspiration, give me truth, give me direction, give me clarity of mind.
He straightened his spine, breathed deeply into his abdomen for a hundred seconds. Then he closed his eyes and set up an earth rhythm on the drum until it began to sound in his solar plexus beneath the waistline of his blue skirt. The beat v
ibrating directly through his body, emerging in his spine. Ascending the spine
(dummm)
… to her head
(dummm)
… to his shoulders
(dummm)
… down her arms
(dummm)
… into his fingers
(dummm)
… and into the stone.
‘Old stone.’
(dummm)
‘Strong stone.’
(dum-dummm)
‘Strengthen me.’
(dum-dummm)
‘Hold me hard.’
(dum-dummm)
‘Against the dark.’
(dummm)
Marcus put down the phone.
Maiden and Underhill were standing on either side of the unlit woodstove. Marcus shook his head.
‘Surprising how educated, law-abiding people are so reluctant to get involved with the police. Oh, she said, that would put her in a very difficult position. Client confidentiality, all that bollocks.’
Underhill said, ‘They found Justin, Marcus. The cops finally found Justin. Bobby just talked to—’
‘Where’s Lewis?’
‘Up at the Knoll.’
‘Hmm,’ Marcus said. ‘How much do either of you know about this fellow Kurt Campbell?’
XXXIX
IN THE EARLY EVENING BOBBY MAIDEN BORROWED MARCUS’S TRUCK and drove down to the village, to Grayle’s cottage. He’d never been here before. The windchimes gave it away – two sets, hanging either side of a lantern over the old, studded door.
The cottage was in the middle of the terrace which lined one side of the short street, with the church wall on the other. The tiny forecourt space was filled by the Mini. Maiden parked the truck in the rutted road.
It was dark; the wind had died but the air was colder. There was a dim light in the squat-towered church. It was all very quiet, no kids around, no dogs barking. The lantern came on and by the time he reached the front door Grayle had it open.
‘Isn’t New York, is it?’ Maiden said.
‘Guy in the shop says the last time the council retarred the village street it was for Queen Victoria’s carriage.’