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Authors: Elizabeth George

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #British Detectives, #Police Procedurals, #Private Investigators, #Traditional Detectives

BOOK: A Banquet of Consequences
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Point taken, he’d said. But suicide or murder, Clare Abbott’s death wasn’t their remit. It belonged to Detective Chief Superintendent
Daniel Sheehan. Their job was limited to passing along information to him. Or so things had been supposed to go.

When his phone rang, Lynley had hoped it would be Daidre Trahair. He hadn’t seen her in days, and he missed her rather more than he wanted to consider. It turned out to be Havers, however, although it was difficult at first to tell because a dog was barking, it seemed, directly into the detective sergeant’s mobile.

“She’s been poisoned, sir,” Havers said, her voice rising with agitation. “I swear to God she’s been bloody
poisoned.
Someone got to her. I found her on the floor and she’d sicked up everywhere and I think she’s in a coma and—”

“Rory Statham?”

“Who bloody else?”

“She’s still alive?”

“Barely breathing. Barely anything. I rang triple nine and they’ve taken her off to A & E.”

“Where are you, then? Christ, Barbara. Whose dog is barking?”

“Hers. I’m in her flat. He’s an assistance dog or something, like blind people have. He’s meant to stay with her and he’s gone bonkers now they’ve taken her out of here.”

“Is there some place you can put him?”

“Hang on.” More barking ensued, growing progressively more panicked. Then it faded and Barbara returned. “He’s in her bedroom. Bloody hell. I have no clue about dogs, but if he could talk, I wager he’d tell a real tale about all this.”

“Have you phoned the police?”

“I
am
the police.
We’re
the police. Look, the means have to be the same, Inspector. Whatever got to Clare—”

“Sodium azide.”

“—got to her. Rory.”

“Perhaps. But this isn’t ours, Barbara. If anything, it’s Fulham’s.”

“The means are the
same.
Murder and now attempted murder. Of two women who were known to each other, connected to each other in more ways than one. Professionally. Personally.”

“Nonetheless—”

“You can make things happen, and I need you to do it. I
know
you
understand why. What it can mean. For me. In everyone’s eyes so I can finally . . .” She stopped herself. He could hear her ragged breathing. When she said, “Inspector, I need you to help me,” he was as torn as he’d ever been.

Still he said, “Barbara, you’re on someone else’s patch. Considering what you’ve got going on there, I’m surprised Fulham hasn’t sent a uniform already.”

“They don’t send uniforms when all they know is that someone was carted off to hospital. And as of now that’s
all
they know and we can keep things that way. You can keep things that way.”

“Christ. Listen to yourself. It’s
exactly
this sort of thinking—”

“All right. Understood. On board and all the rest. So meet me at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital. That’s all I’ll ask.”

“You can’t possibly expect me to believe that. And even if I agreed to meet you, what would be the point?”

“The point would be talking to the casualty blokes with me. Talking to the doctors. Talking to whoever. Listen, the paramedics didn’t even want to
touch
her when I said sodium azide. They actually put on hazmat suits. So they’ll be looking for the poison straightaway at hospital, and if we speak to them, we’ll know what we’re working with.”

“We’re not ‘working with’ anything.”

“You
know
that’s bollocks. Someone took out Clare Abbott and then slithered over here to take care of Rory Statham. Meet me at the hospital, sir, so we can know for sure what happened to Rory. If I’m wrong, I swear to you I’ll wipe my nose and get back to Victoria Street. But in the meantime—”

“All right. I’ll meet you there. Don’t make me regret this.”

“You won’t. I swear it. Straight and narrow all the way.”

“That had better be the case, Sergeant Havers.”

It was a nightmare getting to Chelsea, the hospital’s location in Fulham Road. With the traffic and the rain providing their usual patience-taxing combination, it was only through choosing some creative alternatives through the upmarket neighbourhoods of Belgravia and upper Chelsea that he was able to make it to the hospital’s precincts in under three-quarters of an hour, a drive that would have taken ten minutes in the dead of night.

The rain was unrelenting. Once he’d parked the Healey Elliott, he turned up the collar of his father’s ancient trench coat, and he set back up the street. He found A & E a rain-sodden disaster area, as a car-lorry-and-multi-bicycle smash-up in the vicinity of Battersea Bridge had brought seven injured people into casualty moments before he arrived. They lay on trolleys, bleeding and groaning as medical personnel in scrubs dashed round them, shouting orders at one another while an intercom belted out cries for various doctors to pick up phones, go to radiology, or proceed at once to the operating theatre.

None of this was what Lynley had hoped to encounter, and it didn’t bode well for being able to gather any information about Rory Statham. He searched through the milling throng for Havers, hearing her before he found her when she called his name. She was crossing to him from a swinging door beyond which he could see only a corridor and a set of lifts. She looked as bedraggled as he’d ever seen her, and he could only pray that she managed to keep out of the way of Superintendent Ardery once she returned to Victoria Street. Which, he also prayed, would be very soon as he’d not put Isabelle in the picture as to what was going on.

He said, “What happened?”

“They’ve got her—”

“I mean to you, Barbara. What on earth have you done to yourself?”

She grimaced, glancing down at her clothing. She looked like someone who’d dived headfirst into a bin of garden clippings. “I fell. More or less.”

“Which part?”

“What?”

“The more or the less.”

“Less, I s’pose.” She looked round, as if for escape from what she knew was coming. “Look. I had to break in, sir. There was a wisteria vine on the front of the building and—”

“Please Christ don’t tell me anything else. Where is she?”

“In isolation till they know for sure. They’ve all suited up even to touch her. It’s that deadly, this stuff, and she’s lucky she didn’t drop off the twig.”

“What are they doing for her?”

“Don’t know for certain. It’s been dead wild here”—with a gesture round the room with its teeming hordes—“so I followed them as far as they’d let me. There’re chairs and a coffee machine near isolation and I’ve been waiting . . .” She brushed at her hair with the flat of her hand. This didn’t improve its overall appearance. She added, “Arlo’s in my car. He can’t stay there f’rever, so I was also hoping—”

“Who’s Arlo?”

“The dog. Her dog. I couldn’t leave him in the flat, could I? If I’m to take on this case, he’ll need to be taken care of and, see, I was thinking that you might also be willing . . . You know. Till she gets out of hospital?”

He stared at her for a good ten seconds before replying. “Havers,” he said, “does it ever occur to you that one day you might push things too far? With me, I mean.”

“It’s only that I know you like animals, sir.”

“Is it indeed? May I ask how you arrived at this conclusion? As well as the conclusion that you’re going to take on this case?”

“There’s those horses at your pile in Cornwall?” she said, going for his first question and avoiding the second. “I know you ride. You love to ride, don’t you? And your mum has those nice dogs of hers. Retrievers, aren’t they? Some sort of retrievers? Or maybe they were greyhounds?”

He took a deep breath. “Take me to where they’ve put her.”

She headed back to the swinging doors and from there to the lift. On the second floor, he followed her down one corridor and then another till they were at a corner of the hospital, and it was here, behind closed doors accessed only through a release operated from within, that Rory Statham apparently occupied a hospital bed while procedures were set in place to save her life.

Mercifully, Havers said nothing more for the moment. In an evident attempt to wriggle back into his good graces, she went to the coffee machine and brought them both a cup of that beverage. They were drinking this in silence when a woman in the process of removing official protective garb came out of the isolation area. Next to him, Barbara said, “This is who . . .” and got to her feet. He did likewise.

Wisely, considering her appearance, Havers did not produce her
warrant card. She let him do those honours, perhaps knowing that the doctor’s credulity would be too far stretched should Havers have declared herself an officer of the Metropolitan Police.

The doctor’s name tag identified her as Mary Kay Bigelow. She was tall, thin, and she looked exhausted. Lynley wondered how long she’d been on duty. He explained that his companion Barbara Havers had been the one to come upon Rory Statham as she’d had an appointment with her that morning. Because Barbara had been aware of the cause of the recent death of Rory’s friend Clare Abbott, she’d concluded that Rory had somehow come into contact with the same substance, sodium azide. He did not use the word
murder
at all, but he knew that his presence suggested it.

Bigelow said that they were certain of nothing yet, but that all precautions were being taken. They were treating the patient as they would for cyanide poisoning, which was the only protocol available when it came to sodium azide, if that was what they were actually dealing with. So at present, the patient was receiving sodium nitrite and sodium thiosulphate intravenously. The doctor also spoke of horizontal nystagmus, flapping tremor, and high blood concentration of lactates as well as lower potassium than was normal. Shortly after admission to hospital, Bigelow revealed, the patient had gone into cardiac arrest, but she’d been brought back and, at the moment, she was stable but critical and comatose.

To Havers’ question about when Rory Statham might be available for a brief conversation, the doctor shot her a withering look. “If she lives through the next twenty-four hours, we can talk about miracles. As to conversations, that’s not going to happen.”

“But it
is
sodium azide,” Havers said. “What poisoned her, I mean.”

“It presents as sodium azide,” Bigelow admitted.

Havers’ expression replied that was good enough. She turned to Lynley the moment that the doctor walked in the direction of the coffee machine. She said tersely, “I
knew
the second I saw her on the floor . . . She’s bloody lucky I showed up at her flat, Inspector. Someone was depending on her being alone long enough to bite it like Clare. These two women were connected in life and now they’re connected in poisoning as well. We’ve got a death in Cambridge and
a near death in Fulham, and you know what that means. Or what it
could
mean if you take my part.”

He did indeed, but Lynley wasn’t about to head in that direction. He said, “Barbara, I can’t ask Isabelle—”

“Isabelle,”
she said pointedly. “And you bloody well can.”

It was his own damn fault, Lynley thought. A strange form of madness had caused him to become involved with their guv, and despite the fact that this madness had arisen from his grief over Helen’s murder, he couldn’t use that to excuse himself. He’d never admitted openly to having been the superintendent’s lover and God knew Isabelle would never speak of it, but Havers was no fool. She’d drawn a conclusion that was not incorrect. But what
was
incorrect was where she was allowing it to lead her.

Havers thought that their entanglement would prompt Isabelle Ardery to grant his wishes, either as a form of submitting to blackmail or perhaps from some kind of sentimental attachment to the time they’d spent in her bed. Lynley knew otherwise.

He said to Havers, “The superintendent goes her own way, Sergeant.”

“Fine. Then we can work around her. You can work around her. Cambridge is going to need to know about this. You’re going to need to tell them. You’re going to need to supply them with the second autopsy on Clare—”

“Which I’ve already sent along to Sheehan. I’ve spoken to him about it as well. And I see where you’re heading. But it’s just not on. This”—he nodded to the isolation ward’s door—“must be handed to the locals and handled
by
the locals, and Clare Abbott’s death must be handled by Cambridge. If they want help in coordinating, they can—”

“Shaftesbury,” Havers said. “You’re forgetting Shaftesbury.”

“What about Shaftesbury?”

“That’s where Clare Abbott lived. That’s also where Caroline Goldacre lives.”

“Who?”

“She was with Clare Abbott the night she died.
And
Rory Statham was recently in Shaftesbury, where she would have had contact with her as well.”

“Are you suggesting she murdered Clare Abbott? And then tried to murder this woman Rory?”

“I don’t know
what
I’m suggesting, but I want to find out, and you can make that happen.” She shifted her feet. “You want me back, yes?” she demanded shrewdly. “You all want me back, don’t you? So let me come back. But let me come back on my own terms. Let me get that transfer paperwork torn up by proving myself to her because that’s the only way she’s ever going to tear it up. I swear to you, sir. I’m begging you here. Please don’t make me do it on my knees.”

God, she was the most infuriating woman, he thought. But what was the point of her keeping her job if she couldn’t do the job as it was meant to be done?

CHELSEA

LONDON

Lynley did not return at once to Victoria Street, although he insisted Havers swear that she herself would do so. Instead, he dropped down to the King’s Road, joined the eternal tailback of cars, taxis, and buses heading in the direction of Sloane Square, and ultimately zigzagged towards the river. On the corner of Cheyne Row and Lordship Place stood the tall umber brick home of his longtime friend Simon St. James. If, he decided, he was going to attempt battle with Isabelle Ardery, he might as well have all the necessary facts.

St. James himself answered the door, accompanied by the household dog, a long-haired dachshund with the unlikely name of Peach. She inspected Lynley’s shoe soles and ankles and deemed them acceptable before returning to her previous employment, which appeared to be begging morsels of toast from her master. This toast St. James was at the moment munching. A very late elevenses, he revealed. Did Lynley wish to join him? They’d have to make do on their own with the toaster and the coffee press as he was alone in the house with neither his wife nor his father-in-law to call upon for assistance in matters culinary.

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