He had brought Samantha to Quarry Hill at night after abandoning the caravan. They had stumbled through the undergrowth looking for one of the entrances. By torchlight they had picked their way down some rough-hewn steps through a sloping shaft that linked with a tunnel where they could stand upright with ease. This was one of the main arteries. A short distance on, they had discovered a recess some two meters deep in the side of the tunnel. Presumably it was the beginning of a working that for some reason had proved unsatisfactory. To Mountjoy it had felt secure and smelled all right and was more congenial as a place to rest than the main tunnel. He had led Samantha into it with all the gusto of an estate agent showing a client around. As he pointed out, with the torch and some spare batteries and food and a blanket, it was perfectly habitable. And she had slept. They had both got some sleep.
Yet this morning she wouldn’t stop griping about the cold. Mountjoy’s tolerance of women who complained was limited in the best of situations. He was beginning to become unhappy with Samantha’s attitude. In his opinion the first two nights in the caravan had been colder than down here. She’d been too terrified that he was a rapist to speak of the cold-or possibly she thought he might interpret it as a come-on. Now that she’d survived several nights without being molested, the protests about creature comforts were mounting up.
To calm her down, he repeated a few words of consolation someone had once given him in Albany. “Sleeping rough would be a damned sight colder.”
“What do you call this, if it isn’t rough? Couldn’t we go back to the caravan park? They won’t be expecting us to go back.”
“The farmer will. He’ll be guarding his patch now.”
“Some other site, then.”
“I’ve got somewhere else in mind.”
She was elated. “Let’s go, then. It can’t be worse than this.”
“I have to check it first.”
“You mean on your own?”
“Be sensible. What do you expect?”
“Don’t leave me here. Please don’t leave me. I hate the dark.” The voice was on that dangerous rising note again.
“Maybe I can get something warmer for you to wear.”
“You don’t have the money.”
“I didn’t say I’d buy it.”
“Don’t leave me here.”
“I must.”
“Why? No one would recognize me. You said when you put that disgusting stuff on my hair that it would change my looks. No one’s going to spot me like this.” She flicked a strand petulantly away from her face. True, the brown dye they had used in the caravan had made a big difference and instead of standing out like a dandelion in seed, everything drooped. When she wasn’t griping about the cold, she gave him hell for messing up her hair.
“You’re not going out until it’s necessary,” he told her. “This is just a recce.”
“I wouldn’t scream, or anything.”
“No chance. I’m doing this alone.”
“Cruel bastard.”
“If you want to stay here forever, fine, I won’t go. We’ll sit here and rot.”
A pause, then, “How long would you be?”
“I’m not going immediately.”
“I mean is it far, this other place?”
“Not far.”
She said with heavy suspicion, “It isn’t another cave, is it?”
“This isn’t a cave. It’s a mine, or if you want to be strictly accurate, a quarry. No, where I’m going isn’t underground. Quite the reverse.”
“Couldn’t I come with you?”
“Don’t be daft.”
“I’ll die of fright.”
“If you don’t shut up about it, I’ll gag you again.”
Still she wouldn’t leave it. “What if you’re recaptured and I’m left down here?”
“I’d tell them, wouldn’t I?”
She scanned his features for the slightest betrayal of insincerity. “Have you heard any more from them?”
“No,” he said. “I’m giving them time.” Seeing how she stared at him aghast, he said, “They’ve got work to do, or one of them has. Did your father ever mention a detective called Diamond?”
“Daddy doesn’t discuss his work with me. In fact, he doesn’t discuss anything with me. He and I don’t have much in common.”
“He disapproves of your busking, I expect.”
“And much more. What were you going to tell me about this detective?”
He’d caught her interest. She’d been on the verge of panic at the prospect of being left here and his only practical way of dealing with it was to distract her. He could have ignored her and walked off. No one would have heard the screams. But he knew what it is to be reduced to despair by the brutal indifference of a jailer. Causing another hapless being to suffer was no pleasure for him and no solution. It would dehumanize them both. So he fed her tidbits of information as a way of reassurance. “Diamond is one of your father’s top detectives, which doesn’t say much for the others. Four years ago, he led an investigation, a murder investigation, and screwed it up. He put the wrong man away. You’re sure you haven’t heard about this?”
A shake of the head. It was a small triumph for Mountjoy that she’d stopped complaining.
“There are bent cops and there are cops like Diamond who believe they’re right,” he went on. “He isn’t bent-I think. He truly believed he’d cracked the case. He’s a typical pigheaded policeman, bossy and blinkered, but there’s something about the man. It can’t be his charm, which escapes me, or his style of interrogation, which just stops short of red-hot needles, or his leadership qualities, because the people who work with him hate his guts. He drives them too hard. What it comes down to, his one saving grace, is that he’s straight. Mistaken, but honest. And I’m giving him a chance to prove it.”
“You’re the man he sent to prison.”
Two days ago, careful not to alarm her, Mountjoy would have denied that he was an escaped con. Now, paradoxically, confirming it was a way of fostering confidence. He said with a fleeting smile, “A college education isn’t wasted on you.”
“You don’t have to be sarcastic.”
He hadn’t meant to be. “I’ve got a lot of time for students.” And he almost added that he’d been principal of his own college, but he didn’t want to tell too much, too soon Anyway, I was talking about Superintendent bloody Diamond. He got it wrong and I’ve told him to do something about it.”
“After all this time?”
“After all this time.”
“What can he do? Do you know who really did the murder? Did you tell him?”
“All I know is that Diamond got it wrong. I told him so. Whether he believes me is far from certain.”
“You must have some ideas of your own. You must have thought about it while you were locked away.”
“Constantly. I got nowhere because I didn’t have all the facts. No amount of thinking is going to solve a crime if you don t have the full picture.”
“Does this man Diamond?”
“Does he what?”
“Have the full picture?”
“Not up to now, but he’s the only one with the means to get at the truth. He has all the original statements and he knows-”
Samantha interrupted with a little gasp, followed by “What’s that?”
“What?”
“A sound, a scuffling.”
“I didn’t hear it.”
Together they listened. It occurred to Mountjoy that if a search party had entered the mine, footsteps and voices ought to be audible, but it would be difficult to know from which direction they were approaching because there were so many entrances to this labyrinth. Choosing an escape route would be a lottery.
“There it is again!” she told him.
It didn’t sound human in origin. It was a light sound, a rustle, not far away.
“And again!” said Samantha.
“That’s dust falling. I felt it on my neck.” He shone the torc
h upward and a dark shape fluttered across its beam. “A bat. That was only a bat.”
“Oh, my God!”
“They won’t come near you.”
“I’m terrified of bats.”
“They’re not interested in us. It’s their home. See that ledge up there.” He pointed the torch. “That’s where it flew from. It disturbed some tiny chips of limestone.”
She squeezed her eyes shut, folded her arms across her chest and started rocking her torso and producing a high-pitched moaning sound. He’d never heard anything like it. The fear had gripped her like an epileptic fit. Was she epileptic? he wondered. How would he deal with it? In all his planning he hadn’t anticipated anything like this.
Abandoning his self-imposed pledge not to touch her, he put a hand on her upper arm and shook her. “Stop it, will you? Don’t be so ridiculous.”
She opened her eyes. “Why don’t you kill me and get it over? Yes, kill me. I’d rather die. Kill me, murderer!”
He pushed her down and forced her hands behind her back and tied them.
Chapter Thirteen
He kept Julie in suspense all the way back to Manvers Street. She was ninety-nine percent sure he wasn’t serious about transforming her into a crusty, but that one percent was amusing to work on. She might pass muster wearing a dread-lock wig, he suggested, and if the CID’s wardrobe didn’t run to combat trousers she could get away with black leggings with plenty of holes. He was sure that the RSPCA could supply her with a vicious-looking pooch; she definitely needed a dog. He strolled on stolidly, embroidering the tease all the way. But behind the poker face his mood was improving and it wasn’t that beer in the Roman Bar that had made the difference.
Julie wasn’t spared until they reached the nick. They were crossing the reception hall when Diamond spotted something behind the protective glass at the public enquiry point.
“I don’t believe this.” But he still marched over for a closer inspection.
Another of the woolen bees was positioned just behind the glass, goggling at him with its ridiculous eyes.
He rapped on the glass until the constable on duty came over.
“Who left this here?”
“What’s that, Mr. Diamond?”
“This bee.”
“That’s a bumblebee, sir.”
“I don’t care what it is. Who is responsible for it?”
The constable frowned.
Diamond had turned flamingo pink. “Whose idea of a joke is it? That’s all I’m asking.”
“It’s no joke, sir.”
“You’re telling me, laddie. When I find the perpetrator he won’t be laughing.”
There was a pause before the constable summoned the confidence to say, “Didn’t you get a bee of your own, Mr. Diamond?”
This polite enquiry went unanswered.
“Everyone should have got one this morning. It’s Operation Bumblebee.”
Diamond’s eyes resembled two dashes in a line of Morse code. Behind him, Julie Hargreaves lowered her face and squeezed her arms across her stomach in a desperate attempt to remain serious.
“You can have this bumblebee if you like, sir,” the hapless duty constable added to his list of offenses. “We’ve got a box of them back here. The poster comes with it.”
Something had to be done, and fast.
Without trusting herself to speak, Julie touched Diamond on the arm and drew his attention to a large poster that dominated the cluster of notices to his right. There was a cartoon figure of a bee in a
police helmet and boots. The wording ran: SUPER BEE SAYS TO BEAT THE BURGLAR WE NEED YOUR HELP. BUZZ THE BEELINE FREE ON 0800 555 111.
He studied it in silence.
Eventually Julie managed to get out the words, “Public relations.”
The constable said, “If you don’t mind me saying so, it isn’t just PR, ma’am. Since we started Bumblebee last year, the break-ins have dropped dramatically. There are five men in the team, working with Sergeant Wood, the Bumblebee officer.”
“The what?” said Diamond.
“Every report of a break-in is fed through a central hive- that’s the computer, of course. Go upstairs and you can hear it humming.”
“God help us!” murmured Diamond.
“And then the villains get stung. Would you like a bee, Mr. Diamond?”
Diamond shook his head and allowed Julie to lead him away.
“Four years is a heck of a time,” Marcus Martin declared in the polished accent of a fee-paying school.
And a heck of a lot of women, thought Diamond. They had found Britt Strand’s last boyfriend in the paddocks behind his Elizabethan manor house, undoubtedly one of the few brick mansions in the whole county, its triple-gabled facade glowing bright orange in the afternoon sun and blood-red where the shadow of an oak fell across the wall. Marcus Martin was with a young woman who was mounted on a black mare, in a schooling ring surfaced with wood chippings and laid out with practice jumps. Immaculately kitted as the equestrienne was, in black velvet hunting cap, black coat, white stock and antelope-colored jodhpurs, she hadn’t succeeded in moving the horse and didn’t seem to be trying, thus giving the impression that the riding lesson wasn’t her main reason for being there. The way Martin helped her dismount with both hands around her thigh reinforced this impression. He unfastened the tack for her and sent her toward the stables with a push on her rump. She didn’t object.
“But you remember me, I expect?” said Diamond.
“Too well, my friend, too well.”
He introduced Julie, who was awarded the doubtful compliment of a lingering head-to-toe inspection.
Martin said with his eyes still on her, “It’s hard to credit.”
“What is?” Diamond asked.
“Inspector Hargreaves.”
“It wouldn’t be if you were evading arrest,” said Diamond in a tribute that almost made up for the teasing earlier. “No doubt you’ve heard that Mountjoy is on the run from Albany?”
Martin hadn’t heard and he couldn’t see how it affected him.
“It doesn’t,” said Diamond. “It affects me, though. I’m the fall guy who may have to speak to him. He claims he’s innocent, of course.”
“What does the wretched man want-a retrial?”
“He wouldn’t get that.”
Martin fed the mare a couple of sugar lumps and waved to a stable lad to take her back to her stall. Then he suggested they go inside the house, where they would be warmer.
“I’m trying to refresh my memory of the case,” Diamond told him as if the facts had all deserted him. For once he was being as amiable as the television detective Columbo, whose style of questioning he aspired to, but only rarely approached. “You’re the obvious man to ask about Britt.”
“I don’t know about that,” said Martin. “Our relationship was short and to the point. Weeks, rather than months.”
“You don’t mind talking about it?”
“Not in the least. But I don’t see what bearing it has.”
In the house, before a flickering log fire in a recessed stone fireplace almost as large as the office Diamond and Julie shared at the nick, Marcus Martin expanded on this. “I respected Britt. She was a class act. Extremely pretty and considerably brighter than I am. She was a damned fine horsewoman, too.” There was genuine admiration in his tone. “She rode regularly. They take their riding seriously in Sweden. Anyway, Britt was keen to do some jumping and someone at the stables offered to bring her out here. I have a show-jumping layout- not the one you saw, but a full course-the best for miles around. Perhaps you noticed it when you drove in. That’s how we met. After she had exercised my best stallion, and cooled off with a Perrier-she was TT, you know-she said she’d like to ring for a taxi. She didn’t possess a car. Naturally I offered to drive her home, and I did.” He paused and gave Julie a wink. “The next morning.”
“This was when-in September?”
“Around then. Maybe August. As I said, it was age
s ago. The whole thing didn’t last more than three wild and steamy weeks. It was over at least a week before she was killed.”
“You told me at the time that you drifted apart,” recalled Diamond. “It’s hard to reconcile that with three wild and steamy weeks.”
“Did I? Then I suppose it was true. Yes, I’d been through my repertoire, so to speak. I wouldn’t say we were getting bored with each other by Week Three, but we only had one thing in common.”
“You mean the riding?”
He grinned. “She was about to start college, and I had a weekend trip to Belgium as reserve to the British show-jumping team and we didn’t fix another date. Simple as that. There was no argument, thank God, or I might have felt guilty later. After I got back from Brussels I started up with someone else.”
“The young lady who supplied your alibi.”
“Yes, indeed. She died, you know. Meningitis.”
“Your girlfriends don’t have much luck. You met this one at a party, if I remember, and went home with her.”
“To Walcot Street, yes. A frightful slum, but I scarcely had a chance to notice. She practically dragged me to her lair and ravished me. Repeatedly.”
Diamond took a sip of the sherry the young man had provided. He suspected that the sexual bragging was targeted at Julie. He didn’t remember it being so explicit four years ago. All this passion was something of a mystery to Diamond considering that Marcus Martin was a short, unprepossessing man with carroty hair trained in wisps across his balding scalp, but he’d never understood how the female libido worked. Maybe the riding had something to do with it. Or the big house in the country.
“Can we go back to Britt Strand? The affair was conducted here for the most part, was it?”
“Entirely. Her place was very unsuitable. The people downstairs-I’ve forgotten their name-”
“Billington.”
“Right. They wouldn’t have approved. Very straight-laced. Chapel, I believe. The old lady watched from downstairs like a Paris concierge.”
“You met them, then?”
“Several times. I used to call for Britt and drive her back in my Land Rover.”
The Summons pd-3 Page 14