`But individuals haven't been given police protection?' `No, but no one's been refused it either.'
`Will there be extra security after this second death?'
`Come on, Julian,' said Martin. 'That's a Command decision, not one for CID. We'll protect everyone here to the best of our ability and resources. But we've no idea who or what we're protecting them against.'
`You don't see a terrorist connection?'
`No, and neither do you, so stop trying to drum up an angle. Terrorists do it for the publicity.
There's been none of that, other than the Scotsman letter, and whatever that was, it sure as hell was not a terrorist communique.
`What we're investigating here are two unexplained, violent deaths, with no possibility of suicide in either case. An alleged murder mystery, to give you a non-prejudicial, legally correct headline.'
Thirty-nine
Skinner was striding towards the first tee when the stocky figure of Julian Finney fell into step beside him.
`Yes Julian, what can I do for you?'
I know that officially you're on holiday, but I wondered if you could give me a quick interview.'
Officially and unofficially, son. No chance. Didn't Royston fix you up with Andy and Alison?'
`Yes, but Bob, I no more believe that you're not involved in this investigation than I believe your scratch score will beat Darren Atkinson.'
Skinner smiled. 'Thanks for your confidence! Look, there's nothing I can say to you that won't have been said already, and I can't step in over the heads of the officers in charge. You know that so let's cut the crap, I'm on the tee in five minutes. What do you really want?'
Finney looked diffidently at his feet. 'Oh, it's just that I heard a whisper that there had been a big argument between Masur and Mike Morton on the practice ground the other day, and that you were there. Is Mike Morton one of the lines of enquiry that Superintendent Higgins was talking about?'
Skinner stopped in his tracks, a few yards from the tee. `Julian, I've never lied to you, and I'm not going to start now. Yes, there was an argument between Morton and Masur the other night. In fact there was another disagreement between them last night, at the PGA dinner.
I'm not going to comment at all on our investigation. All I'll say to you — strictly off the record — is that if someone goes out and commits murder immediately after having a heated public argument with the victim, then he has to be either crazy or dumb. I know that Morton isn't dumb. Time will tell whether he's crazy.
`Now, go to the press office for any further information. I've got some golf to play, and I don't need distractions.'
Finney smiled. 'Thanks Bob.' He made to leave, then hesitated. 'Might as well hang around and watch you tee off.'
Skinner growled and stepped up on to the tee beside his team. He glanced around, tasting the tension which hung in the air. The crowds were much thicker than on practice day, the television cameramen were on their rostrums and in their fairway buggies, and already there were numbers on the leader-board.
Skinner peered at the board closest to the tee. Andres Cortes was the early leader, three under par after eight holes, a shot ahead of Deacon Weekes. The others were all level par, with the exception of Oliver M'tebe, who was two over after ten.
Darren Atkinson stood beside Bravo on the tee, arms folded across his chest, staring heavy-browed down the first fairway. The muscles at the base of his jaw were clenched tight, and he seemed to Skinner to be standing an inch or two taller.
`This is it, Bob,' he said softly. 'This is where the hard men come out to play. This isn't a matter of money, there's honour involved. No one but me is going to walk off with Murano's million quid, because only the best has the right.
As far as the team competition is concerned, remember that the best ball, mine included, on any hole registers the score. I'd be grateful if you'd look after Wales and the Jap. Make sure they pick up once they've had half a dozen whacks at any hole. I'll be concentrating so hard I won't even notice them.
`You're on seven shots against the course today, with your handicap. If you can pick up a nett birdie with each of them, you'll have done your part for the team. Your other eleven holes don't matter.'
Skinner smiled, but there was a hard edge to his expression also. 'You don't know me very well, yet, Darren. All eighteen matter to me. Game on, pal.'
The green-blazered announcer stepped forward, microphone in hand. 'Finally, ladies and gentlemen, we have team eight. Mr Norton Wales; Mr Hideo Murano; Mr Bob Skinner.' He paused, allowing modest applause after each introduction. And finally, the world's Number One golfer, the reigning US Open Champion, the King of the Majors, Mr Darren Atkinson.'
The stands erupted in applause which faded only when Atkinson stepped up to the tee. It renewed itself as lie crushed a three hundred and ten-yard drive down the centre of the fairway.
Skinner steered his tee shot well clear of the cross-bunker, keeping the ball as low as possible for accuracy, and gaining ground through a favourable bounce. Murano and Wales followed him, hitting conservative iron shots on to a fairway which seemed, thanks to the thick crowd on the left, to be much narrower than twenty-four hours earlier. Wales's shot was still in the air as Atkinson strode from the tee. The battle for the Murano Million had been joined in earnest.
As Skinner and Sue Kinture walked side by side down the first fairway, the policeman noticed that his noble caddy was more animated than ever. Did Darren give you any ideas on course improvements last night then, Susan?'
She laughed. 'Oh yes, he gave me lots of ideas.' She paused, looking across at the golfer as Norton Wales fluffed his third shot and picked up. 'He says that what he'd like to do is tweak Witches' Hill until it's tough enough for him to find it difficult. Then, he said he'd like to have a tournament here every year, just to sort out the men from the boys.'
They had reached Skinner's drive. Adrenaline had sent the ball ten yards further than in the practice round. He selected a four-iron and fired in a high shot aimed on the right-hand bunker, but drawing into the centre of the green. A buzz rang along the gallery behind him, followed by an intensely satisfying round of applause. 'Oh good shot, Bob,' cried Susan Kinture. Norton Wales, who had joined them, slapped him on the shoulder in encouragement.
The team captain acknowledged him with a wink and a brief wave and strode after his shot.
When they paused, as arranged, on the third tee for the two minutes' silence, Atkinson was one under par, having taken par at the first hole and birdied the par-four second. With Skinner's nett three at the first the team stood two under.
As they walked together down the par-five seventh following two good tee shots, Atkinson was three under, and ahead on the professionals' leader board. The team was five under par, thanks to a second nett birdie from Skinner at the fifth. Atkinson had settled into a groove of brilliant golf and was more relaxed than he had been at the start of the round.
I've been thinking, Bob,' he said. 'This course has a lot of potential, if someone other than O'Malley could get to grips with it. I said as much to Sue last night. So I've got an idea. I don't imagine that poor old White's widow really wants to be left with forty-five per cent of a golf course. I think I'll offer to take her share off her hands. I don't think I'll find a better investment opportunity. Certainly not in Europe.'
They stopped at Skinner's drive, which had carried just over 260 yards, leaving as much again and more to the guarded green. Three-wood, please, Sue.' She seemed not to hear him — at first as she looked, smiling, at Atkinson. As awareness dawned, she jumped, taken by surprise. 'Sorry Bob. Miles away. A three-iron?'
`No, three-wood. I'm not playing that safe.'
He cracked a long straight approach shot, which finished in the centre of the fairway thirty yards short of the green. They walked on, the gallery to the right of the hole keeping pace with them.
I like your idea, Darren,' said Skinner, as they approached the leader's drive. 'But there's just one proble
m. Maybe Sue didn't know about it. The company holds a substantial insurance policy on Michael White's life, to cover that situation. So Myrtle isn't looking for a buyer.
The Keyman arrangement means that she has one already. If you want to buy into Witches'
Hill you'll need to talk to Hector Kinture.'
Atkinson frowned, as he asked Bravo for his three-wood. He lined up more quickly than usual, and smashed into the ball. It soared away towards the green, but hooked left in flight and plunged into a thick copse of trees.
Bravo stood, head bowed against his white bib. 'Sorry boss. Should have given you a two-iron.'
Atkinson shook his head. 'No, Bray, it was me. Club was right, shot was crap. It was a concentration lapse, that's all.' The ball was unplayable, and the drop-out, with a one-shot penalty, still left a difficult approach. Despite a valiant effort, a fifteen-foot putt caught the lip of the hole and swung past, leaving the tournament leader to tap in for a six, and a dropped shot.
`Sorry lads,' said Atkinson to Wales and Murano.
`That's all right, skipper' said Skinner, mischievously, rolling in a six-foot putt. 'Mine was for a birdie. I told you that all eighteen holes matter to me. To the team too, it seems!'
Forty
‘Mr Wills? Hello, it's Maggie Rose here: Mr Skinner's personal assistant. I'd like your help on something, but I'm calling from Schiphol Airport, and I haven't much time.'
`Yes, Miss Rose. What on earth are you doing in Holland?'
I'm travelling back from Germany. I've been to see Lisa Soutar.'
Rose could almost hear Wills sit bolt upright in his chair. Oh yes! And was your trip worthwhile?'
`By God, but it was! You should see what she's got. I'll tell you all about it, but not over the phone. The important thing is that I've traced the Witches' Curse, right back to the source. It was written down in 1598, by Matilda Tod, who seems to have been Aggie's sister. She passed it on at some point to one Elizabeth Carr, and that's how it came into Lisa's family.
`What I don't know is who Elizabeth Carr was, and why Matilda Tod should have handed on the tale with its condition and its warning to her. I wonder if you'd be prepared to help me find out? Could you research the contemporary records of the Parish of Longniddry, or whatever it was called then, to see if you can find any trace of an Elizabeth Carr? All that I can tell you about her is that she married a man called Tullis, and gave birth to a daughter named Frances in 1623.' She stopped, and a tone in her ear signalled the passage of another minute.
`Well, would you do that for me? It'd save time, and I'd persuade the boss to authorise a fee.'
Wills laughed. 'I'd be happy to help. And you can forget the fee. I smell a doctorate in this!'
Oh no,' said Rose, emphatically. 'The story of the curse has to be kept secret, at least until Lisa says otherwise. The women of her family have guarded it for four hundred years. If it's published without Lisa's agreement it'll be a breach of trust… and more besides.
I mentioned a condition and a warning. The condition is that only a Kinture, or the sovereign of the day may hear the tale. The warning is that anybody who betrays the secret will have to answer to the Devil himself! My warning is that Mr Skinner would take the view that all this, bizarre or not, is evidence in a murder investigation.'
In that case,' said Wills, 'I will respect Lisa's wishes. I might not be too bothered about Beelzebub, but I wouldn't want to fall foul of Bob Skinner!'
Forty-one
Skinner rolled in a two-foot putt for a four on the eighteenth, completing a round of 74. The crowd in the grandstands and around the green applauded politely, unaware that they were watching a man who had just played the best golf of his life.
They fell silent as Darren Atkinson stalked his putt, a tricky 20-foot downhiller with no margin for error if the ball was not to run five or six feet past on the fast green, its surface spiked by the shoes of over thirty golfers and their caddies. But his stroke, when it came, was smooth and the Titleist rolled straight as an arrow. The crowd's shout rose as it travelled, and reached a crescendo as it dropped into the hole for a three, and a round of 64.
Skinner, with Wales and Murano at his heels, stepped across to shake his captain's hand.
'Well played, partner,' he said. 'That was even better than yesterday.'
`You don't know how much better,' said Atkinson. 'When you're playing for this sort of dough, the fairways, and greens, even the hole itself, are helluva narrow. The hole seems barely more than the width of the ball. Look at some of the other scores.'
Skinner peered up at the board behind the stand to the left of the green. Atkinson was four shots clear of Andres Cortes, who was alone in second place, with Ewan Urquhart and Deacon Weekes a further shot back. Oliver M'tebe had recovered to level par, but Tiger Nakamura had crashed to 75.
`The team must be well placed too, Bob. You chipped in with five birdies on top of my eight under, then there was Norton's crazy two at that short hole. I make it we're fourteen under in total. We're on a roll, boys.' Arms around the shoulders of Skinner and Wales, he led them towards the Recorder's tent to register their cards. Too bad I let you down with that six.'
`You didn't, pal,' said Skinner, with undisguised triumph. 'I covered your tail on that one, remember!'
Atkinson laughed aloud. 'I told you you were a bandit off seven. A gross seventy-four for Christ's sake. D'you realise you shot one better than the Tiger? Come on, I'll buy you all a drink to celebrate. Let's hand our cards in, talk to the press, then go change.'
They stopped at the entrance to the tent, totalled and signed their scorecards. Skinner handed his to Atkinson. 'If you'll register that for me, I'll join you guys in the bar. I want to call in on my people, and I'd rather do that before I have a drink.' He glanced towards the clubhouse and saw Sarah, seated beside Arthur Highfield, through the window of the first-floor dining room, which was in use as a competitors' hospitality suite. 'Tell my wife where I am if you get there before me, will you?'
Skirting the clubhouse, and waving to Sarah as he passed, he jogged round to the tented village, and to the mobile police office. He jumped up the three steps and thrust the door open. Inside, Alison Higgins and Andy Martin — looking as uncomfortable as ever in his Superintendent's uniform — were seated at the table which they had used earlier for their press conference. They were watching television, and looked round in surprise as Skinner entered.
`What the hell's this?' he barked, in mock anger. 'There's a murder investigation on here.'
Higgins took him seriously, and looked flustered. She switched off the TV. 'We've gone as far as we can go on the enquiry, sir. We've got Morton more or less under open arrest, we've got all the other players and celebrities under very discreet police guard, and we've interviewed everyone relevant. There have been a couple of developments, though sir.'
OK Ali, calm down and tell me what they are. No, let me guess one of them. There's been another letter to the Scotsman.'
The detective looked up sharply. 'Not quite, sir. This one was shoved through the letterbox of the Herald office in York Place. They called us and faxed a copy down here.' She picked up a sheet of curling A4 paper, sliced from a fax roll, and handed it to him.
Skinner looked at it and frowned. 'I was afraid this would happen. Typed this time,' he muttered. 'Wonder why that should be?'
He read aloud, "Dear Editor, By water… so goes another."
`Brief and to the point. Right, I want the original, not a fax. I want publication stopped too.
The Herald might not like it, but enough's enough. I let the first one go because I thought it was a crank, to see if we could smoke him out. But now, with a second murder I'm beginning to get a chilly feeling. Do we know when this was received?'
`Mario's been to the Herald to check that out, sir. It was found in the hallway at York Place around ten, behind the door, but it had been there since the receptionist got in at nine. It was in a dirty envelope, with footprints all over, and th
e girl thought it was rubbish that the cleaner had missed. A delivery rider picked it up eventually and handed it to her. She tore it open, saw the 'Dear Editor', and stuck it, as usual, in the newsdesk in-tray. They get lots of punter stuff handed in like that. It didn't come to the top till twelve-thirty. The Herald contacted us just before one. The editor called me, personally.'
`When did you hold your press conference?'
`We began at nine-forty-five, and finished about ten past ten.'
And no details of the death were reported before then?'
'No, sir. The first report of a second incident at Witches' Hill was on Radio Forth at nine o'clock, and that said only that the start of play had been delayed by a police operation on the course. No one said anything about a death, before we issued our statement at the press conference.'
`Therefore…' he paused `…whoever dropped that note off at the Herald, knew about the murder, and the detail of it, before it was made public. Apart from us, Jimmy Robertson, the club pro, who's been in shock since he found the body, and the ambulance drivers — who are all tight-lipped — only twelve people at Bracklands knew about this. They have all been under police guard since Masur's death, so none of them could have slipped up to Edinburgh to stick this through the Herald's door.'
`Could one of them have been playing silly buggers, sir, phoning an accomplice in town?'
`Nice thought, but no way. Andy, Neil and I were with the house party until around quarter to nine. The envelope was through the Herald letterbox by nine. I'd say that possibility is ruled out.
`That just leaves the killer in a position to drop that note, or have it dropped. We were entitled to be sceptical about the first letter. The second makes it deadly serious. Do we know how Maggie got on in Germany with the Soutar girl?'
`She called in from Amsterdam Airport, sir. She's coming here to report at eight-thirty tomorrow morning.'
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