Angel Confidential (34 page)

Read Angel Confidential Online

Authors: Mike Ripley

Tags: #london, #fiction, #series, #mike ripley, #angel, #comic crime, #novel, #crime writers, #comedy, #fresh blood, #lovejoy, #critic, #birmingham post, #essex book festival, #religious cult, #religion, #classic cars, #shady, #dark, #aristocrat, #private eye, #detective, #mystery

BOOK: Angel Confidential
7.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘They don't have a phone upstairs,' Stella was saying as she worked the mobile. ‘They never had. He kept them downstairs ... It's ringing.' We all looked towards the house. ‘Pick up, Caroline, come on, pick up.'

We saw Mrs Buck stand up from behind the furniture line. She was a sad, battered puppet framed in the theatre of those windows.

We saw Buck appear at the top of the stairs, shouting. Caroline Buck picked up the phone in the living room.

‘Hello?' said Stella nervously. ‘Can I speak to Simon, please?'

We could see only her shoulder; the phone must have been behind the hallway door, and she had her back to us, so we couldn't see her face.

‘It's Estelle, Caroline, Estelle Rudgard. I expect Simon's told you by now ... That we're going away together ... I'm sorry, Caroline, but I'm also glad it's out in the open now … The deceit was bad for us too ... Now we have my trust fund, we can go away and we won't be a bother to you, Caroline … Caroline? … Can I …?'

She closed the phone and I wished there was more light so I could see her face. But then again I didn't.

‘She hung up,' said Stella.

We knew. We could see.

Simon Buck had gone back into a bedroom. His wife had put the phone down and walked like an automaton across the room and out towards the kitchen or another room we couldn't see.

Then Buck had emerged, coming down the stairs, zipping up a long windcheater. He was shouting again, questions, as if expecting an answer.

‘You were brilliant,' Veronica squeaked, grabbing Stella's arm. ‘She's left him.'

But she was back.

As Buck entered the living room from the hallway, his wife came in from the other side. He didn't look up, just concentrated on the zip of his jacket, his bag over his shoulder.

‘You won't need that,' I said to Carrick Lee, pointing at his gun.

Caroline Buck had one of her own. That was a shotgun too, full size.

When Buck was halfway across the room, and still hadn't seen her, she fired a single shot.

Even through the windows and out in the garden, we heard it quite clearly.

 

We ran for the gap in the hedge.

Veronica stumbled once and almost lost her glasses. Carrick Lee unloaded his sawn-off and hid it inside his jacket as he ran.

I found the gap and pushed Veronica through. Then, as Stella brushed by me, I grabbed her by the shoulder.

‘Tell me you didn't know that was going to happen,' I hissed in her face.

‘I didn't. Honest. I
knew she'd get mad, but I
didn't even know they had a gun.'

I had to believe her. There wasn't time to argue.

I certainly believed that she hadn't expected the second shot that came across the lawn from the house.

I don't think any of us had expected that.

 

 

 

Chapter Twenty

 

‘Walk, don't run,' said Carrick Lee, and then proceeded to walk off up the road, fumbling with a mobile phone, the twin of the one Stella was still clutching.

I hustled the women in the opposite direction, to where I had left Armstrong, and we piled in, none of us wanting to be the first to speak.

By the time I had Armstrong turned full circle, the headlights of Lee's Discovery were coming down the road. He slowed behind me and flashed his lights but made no effort to pass me. I pulled away and he followed us back through the village.

We saw two or three cars, mostly people coming home from work, turning into driveways. No pedestrians. No sirens.

I turned into the driveway of Sandpit Lodge and stopped, and the Discovery pulled up behind me.

‘Give me the phone,' I said to Stella, and she handed it over without a word. ‘And stay here. Both of you.'

‘Why? It is man's talk or something?' Veronica snapped chopsily.

‘What you don't know, the police can't extract forcibly,' I said as I climbed out.

Carrick Lee got out of the Discovery's passenger side. Bobby Lee waved to me from behind the steering wheel.

‘I didn't think he was old enough to drive,' I said to his father. He had buttoned up his poacher's jacket. I
couldn't tell if the sawn-off was still in there.

‘If he can reach the pedals, he can drive,' said Lee.

‘Yeah, ‘course.' I shuffled my feet.

‘Best not hang about,' he said, his hands in his pockets. ‘I need to know where he is.'

‘In the cellar of 23 Lennard Street, Islington. You'll need drills and digging gear and a coroner. Sorry, there was no easy way to put it.'

He nodded his head sadly.

‘Do you know what happened?'

‘No, not for sure. Carrick somehow found out that Buck had been helping Stella's old man to fiddle her trust fund. He got him alone in the house and ... who knows? Fight or accident? There's no way of knowing now. There were no witnesses. Buck trashed the house, and I guess he had plans to have it demolished. I don't know if he'd have got away with it.'

‘Oh, he wouldn't have done that.'

‘Would you really have done him?' I had to ask.

‘Not in front of his wife.' He snorted slightly. ‘Funny that, as it turned out. She's a hard bitch, that one.'

But he was
looking at Stella in the back of the cab, not thinking about Mrs Buck.

‘That other one, the plump one …'

‘Veronica.'

‘Yes, well, she's got guts, that one. She went for me like a tiger.'

‘She would. Not a brain in her head. Look, Mr Lee, I don't know what you want to do now, but we're out of it if we can be.'

‘That's fair,' he said reasonably. ‘You've done your bit.'

‘I've done very little. I can't tell you what happened. I don't know the how or the when or …'

‘Oh, I'm pretty sure of the “when”,' he said.

‘On his grandmothers birthday?' I guessed.

‘Yeah. She knew. She could probably tell you to the exact minute.'

‘I believe you,' I said, and I did.

‘She said I could trust you.'

‘But I never met her, never even saw her.'

‘She saw you.'

I didn't know whether that was
supposed to spook me or not.

‘Then I wouldn't want to upset her by saying anything she might disapprove of,' I said carefully, ‘would I? Assuming I had ever met her, or indeed knew who we were talking about in the first place.'

‘I'm glad we understand each other,' he said, to my great relief. ‘If anything has to be done, I'll do the right thing.'

‘That's fine by me.'

‘And them?' He gestured towards Armstrong.

‘They'll see reason. Trust me.'

‘I don't,' he said, and reached inside his coat.

I was half a second from hitting the ground when I saw what he was holding in his hand. It was a cheque. And he was offering it to me.

I was shaking as I took it and read it. The payee line was blank but it was dated and signed and drawn on an account called ‘Lee & Sons Business A/C No 2' from a bank in Leicester. The cheque was made out for £500.

‘There'll be another in six months if you keep everyone quiet and happy. What's the matter?'

‘I didn't expect this,' I said without a word of a lie.

‘What did you expect? Gold sovereigns? Gypsy silver?'

‘No, nothing like that. I just didn't ... I don't think I've earned it.'

‘You haven't. Yet.'

I held out my hand and he shook it.

‘You've got a deal, Mr Lee.' I kept on shaking his hand. As long as I was holding it he couldn't reach for his gun. ‘But you've got to tell me that you've finished with this business. And tell me now.'

‘I'm done, as long as you tell me that her father had nothing to do with the death of my son.'

I squared up to him.

‘And if I said he had, what could you do to him that's worse than what she's going to do now she's back home?'

He gave my hand an extra shake.

 

I drove Armstrong up to the Lodge. There were lights on everywhere but no cars, no police. The doors to the Classic Car Museum were closed.

‘I'd better go in alone,' said Stella.

‘Are you sure you'll be all right?' asked Veronica when I didn't.

‘I can handle him. Now. Don't worry, he loves me really.'

‘He's waiting for you,' I said.

‘I know,' she said without looking.

I had been watching the door. It had opened, and silhouetted there was Sir Drummond, the light from the hallway playing around his domed head like a halo.

‘You'll ring? Keep in touch?' Veronica pleading.

‘Tomorrow. Bet on it. Thanks for everything.'

Stella grabbed her and kissed her on the cheek. I couldn't see, but I felt Veronica blushing.

Stella put a hand on the door handle.

‘Estelle?'

We all heard him; a lonely cry in the dark.

‘I'm coming, Daddy!' she yelled.

She was out of Armstrong and closing the door when she froze and then pushed her head back inside.

‘Why did you need two pairs of handcuffs?' she asked me.

I just looked at her.

‘See you around, kid.'

 

We had done only about three miles on the motorway back to town when Veronica asked me to pull over so she could throw up. I breathed a sigh of relief, as anyone who had ever driven a cab would, that at least she asked first.

I gave her a few minutes of privacy to stagger around the hard shoulder, bent double. Even with the traffic thundering by, I could hear her retching. Then I turned off Armstrong's engine and went to find her.

She was sitting on the grass, halfway up the embankment, her face in her hands, elbows on her knees. I sat down next to her, and for a while we watched the cars hiss by Armstrong on their way to London.

‘I've never seen anything like that before,' she said, taking off her glasses and trying to drag a tissue from the pocket of her jeans so she could wipe her mouth. ‘I never dreamed I would see anything like that. Ever.'

‘You've got to try and forget it,' I said, thinking, as she was, of the way Simon Buck had been thrown backwards across the room by the blast from his wife's shotgun. The way the blood had spattered the inside of the French windows as if some mad artist was flicking paint from a brush. ‘You will, in time.'

‘And his poor wife … What …? Do you think …?'

I was tempted to put an arm around her, but the thought didn't linger, and the consequences might have.

‘We don't know for sure; we were too busy running away. But sometimes it's safer to assume the worst.'

At least Veronica hadn't seen, and neither had Carrick Lee, though he'd known instantly.

And Stella couldn't have seen, because I had been holding her by the shoulders and shaking her, so she had her back to the house.

So all that was left was for me to convince myself that I hadn't really seen, just out of the corner of one eye over Stella's shoulder, Mrs Buck place the shotgun butt on the floor and then lean forward, her mouth open.

‘Couldn't we have done anything?' Veronica asked, though I was far from sure she wanted an answer.

‘There was nothing we could have done,' I lied. ‘The woman was totally unstable. We couldn't have known how she would react.'

Veronica reached down and pulled a handful of grass, then threw it towards the motorway. Most of it fluttered over my legs.

‘It's so unfair, you know. I started this to help somebody and to get some answers. I can't see that I've helped anyone and there are lots of questions unanswered.'

‘That's life, kid. You really should … just accept it and make the best job of it if you can.'

‘Job?' she snorted, concentrating on the traffic. ‘I haven't got a job now you've more or less solved the case.'

‘I knew it would be my fault,' I said, trying to lift her spirits. ‘What are you going to do? What do you
want
to do?'

She slapped the palms of her hands on her knees.

‘I'm going home, well, back to Shepherd's Bush, anyway. Then I'm going to sleep all day tomorrow, then I'm going to pack up everything I own and find a new flat.' She paused, then looked at me. ‘And
then
,
I'm going to set myself up in business.'

Other books

Such a Pretty Face by Cathy Lamb
Rose (Suitors of Seattle) by Kirsten Osbourne
Unexpected Pleasures by Penny Jordan
Running Scarred by Jackie Williams
Forever...: a novel by Judy Blume
Hollywood Hills by Joseph Wambaugh