âWhat kind of thing?'
âI'd just take bits of routine work and make more of them. Claim we were following something up, looking for someone. Sometimes we were, sometimes we weren't, but none of it really amounted to much.'
âMeaning?'
âI did a lot with a man called Lindon Laing â always thought it was a queer's name but I don't recall that he was. He was a stringer for the
Daily Mail
and the
Evening News
. He paid me good money for a story â at the end of 1934, I think â that I based on something and nothing. I told them we had a clue to the victim's identity based on the fact her name began with the letter M.'
âWas that a real lead?'
He was impatient at the interruption.
âI don't remember now. I doubt it. It was probably some link to Massiah. Other times I'd say that Captain Hutchinson is anxious to interview someone. That he'd asked all the other police forces in the country for help. Something and nothing. What you have to remember is we were inundated with accusations. Ex-wives trying to set their husbands up. Neighbours trying to set neighbours up. Then there were people who'd gone on holiday and not sent postcards so were presumed murdered. None of this stuff came to anything.'
âYou didn't know that.'
He ignored me.
âTell me about the women, Dad.'
âI've told you. I like women. Always have. And they've been kind to me. Always have. Frenchy, now â don't know what she saw in me but she must have seen something.'
âWhat did you threaten them with?' I said. âThe ones you didn't bother to get to know too well?'
He rubbed one hand over the other.
âWomen are pliable, Bobby. You know that. And they want the same as us, they just don't know how to admit it. I helped them do what they wanted to do.'
I looked down.
âWhat did you say? That if they said anything you'd have them up on vice charges? Ruin their reputations?'
âIt was enough to be a policeman. But a couple did complain. Word did get round.'
âYou went to trial?'
âNobody would go that far. So they had no grounds for firing me or reprimanding me.'
âAnd the Carole Lombard lookalike?'
He looked blank for a moment. Blank and old.
âI'd forgotten about her. She was quite something. Must have been twice my age. Bonny lass. She was down with some older, rich bloke having a dirty at the Grand. I don't think he was much cop in bed.'
âBut you were with the French girlâ'
âI met her on the pier and within five minutes we were underneath it.'
âThe French girl?'
âNo, the other one. She said: “I've always had a thing about uniforms.” I don't remember what I said. Next thing, we're under the pier, she's stuffing her knickers in my mouth and we're having a knee-trembler. Wouldn't even let me get the johnny on. Fine by me â I've always hated them bloody things. It were parky too, I can tell you. Then it were “Thank you and goodbye”.'
I chewed my lip, thinking about what Tingley had said about the pathologist Spilsbury being fallible.
When I said goodbye to my father I wasn't sure I would be seeing him again. As I waited for the overground train to central London, I wondered about him as a rapist. I also wondered about Frenchy as victim. But mostly I was wondering about the older woman he'd been with, the Carole Lombard lookalike. I didn't think he was a murderer, but was it possible that she was the Trunk Murder victim?
A taxi took me to Millbank and the City Inn just behind the embankment. Tingley was sitting in the spacious foyer beneath a complicated map that was also art.
âHe's here,' he said. âHe has a couple of minders with him.'
I was trying to figure out the map.
âPR type minders or heavies?' I said absently.
âHeavies.'
I nodded and led the way up a spiral staircase to the bar above. It was a vast space with sofas and chairs running to a wall of long windows. Simpson was sitting by the windows, alone on a sofa, a tall glass in front of him. A bulky man was sitting a few yards away with a coffee, and a second, slighter man was on a stool at the bar.
Both watched as Tingley and I walked over to Simpson.
âForgive me for not standing,' Simpson said as we stood on the other side of the coffee table. He looked at Tingley. âDon't believe I know your friend.'
âTingley,' Jimmy said, sitting in the armchair opposite Simpson. I sat in the chair beside him.
âYou're on the brink of harassing me,' Simpson said to me. âAnd that could get very nasty for you.'
âWhat we know is pretty nasty for you,' I said.
Tingley shifted his chair to put it at an angle to Simpson's sofa. It also meant the man at the bar and the man behind Simpson were both in his view. Not that I could imagine for a moment anything kicking off in here.
âTingley â ah, yes. Our security services put quite a lot of work your way. You should bear that in mind.'
Tingley smiled, crossed one leg over the other.
âAnd that means I know a lot of stuff of a very sensitive nature. You should bear that in mind.'
âWhy did you call this meeting?' Simpson said, reaching for his glass.
âTo get the truth,' I said.
âThe truth?' He laughed. âThat only exists in bad fiction, doesn't it?'
âWhy didn't you come to me for help?' I said.
âAt what particular stage of your plodding career and my meteoric rise?'
âAt the stage when you were deciding to have a blackmailer killed.'
He stretched his arms out along the back of the sofa but said nothing. We looked at each other. It turned into a staring contest.
âWhat is it that you think you've got on me?' he finally said.
âDidn't know you were into rough,' I said.
âOh, Robert. Surely you know â a little bit of everything does you good.'
âBut it didn't work out with Little Stevie.'
âLittle Stevie? Sounds like a little scut. They all try it on.'
âOK, then. But are you going to explain what happened?'
He slapped the arm of the sofa. A little puff of dust bounced into the air and slowly dispersed.
âMy dear chap â you've come to get a confession! How wonderful.' He crossed his legs revealing bright red socks. âBut this is not a crime novel and I have absolutely nothing to confess to.'
âSo why have him killed?'
He pouted.
âIs that what this is about? The death of a rent boy.'
âWhat else did you think it was about?' Tingley said. He wasn't looking at Simpson, he was looking at the man at the bar, who had his mobile phone to his ear. I saw a curious look cross Simpson's face. I flashed a look at Tingley.
âWilliam,' I said. âWe know you're up to your neck with the gangster families who rule Brighton. We know you were being blackmailed by a rent boy who stole your wallet. We know your daughter was threatened because you're in hock to the crime families. And we know Bosnian Serb gangsters had possession of your blackmailer. Your high-flying government career is well and truly over.'
Simpson looked from me to Tingley and shook his head.
âRobert, there was a time when I thought you were politically most astute. Of late, I've become aware that you're a plodder. You have no feel for nuance. These scurrilous allegations â what can you possibly do with them? If so much as a hint leaks into
Private Eye
or a national newspaper, so much shit will rain down on you that you will drown before you can even reach for a hat.'
He gave a nod to the man sitting at the bar.
âIf, however, you decide to do things above board and take me through the courts, I will, of course, have more respect for you.'
He stood.
âBut I will also destroy you and your family.'
That teatime I went to see Molly. She opened the door and when she saw it was me turned away and walked back into the sitting room, leaving me to follow if I chose. I closed the door and followed her into the sitting room.
She was wearing a baggy trouser suit and looked pretty good. Except that she had logs burning on the fire on a sunny summer day. She sat down in her chair but said nothing to me. I sat down in the chair opposite.
âThanks again for intervening the other day.'
She shrugged.
âDo you want a cup of tea?'
Her voice was harsh.
âHow's it going with the drink?'
âGrand, just grand.'
âLook,' I said. âI feel like a cog has come loose and I can't find a way to put it back on.'
She pushed her tongue behind her teeth, thrust out her lower lip.
âHow do you think
I
feel?'
I sensed a softening in her.
âI know. I'm sorry.' I shook my head. âReally sorry.'
She didn't respond. I pushed my luck.
âI want to be here to take care of you.'
Her tone didn't change so it took me a moment to register what she said next.
âYeah, well, you can fuck off. You've fucked up this family. Family is meant to mean something. You make a commitment. You
made
a commitment. To our kids. To me. Our wedding day. Such a wonderful day. Remember when everybody clapped?'
I saw her grind her teeth, knew the calm was over.
âYou
shit
,' she said. Then: âHow does it feel to have ruined my life?'
âTruly terrible,' I said.
She had a lovely mouth. I watched as she worked it.
âGood,' she said, a dying fall.
Tingley met me in a bar on the Brighton boardwalk. When we'd left Simpson in London we'd talked a little but then gone our separate ways. Now, he looked at me.
âSo are you telling me this guy is going to get away with it?' Tingley said.
âFor the moment it would appear so.'
There was an elderly couple leaning into each other, making their slow progress across the beach. The brim of the woman's hat was blown up by the wind and she was holding it on with her left hand. His head was down, his chin tucked into his muffler. They had linked arms and she laughed, open-mouthed.
âTerrific,' Tingley said, swirling his drink in his glass.
âWe haven't got the evidence â and we missed something.'
âWe did.'
âHow can you drink that shit?' I said.
He said nothing. I sighed.
âDo you think I'm happy about it? I lost my career over this. My life is in the toilet.'
He drained his glass and tilted his head to look at me.
âSo you've got nothing to lose by taking him on.'
âThere's always something. And if we take him on, we won't win.'
âSo? You lose either way.'
âBut I want to choose the terrain. You should understand that.'
He nodded.
âYou mean you want to live to fight another day?'
âThat's the appropriate cliché, yes.'
He kept his eyes on me. Those pale, unblinking eyes.
âI'm not giving up,' I said. âI'll get him some other day. Just not today.'
The couple stood facing the sea, the waves slapping slowly against the shingle. I looked back at my friend. He raised his glass.
âTo that other day.'
EPILOGUE
June 1934
H
e was sitting in his suit in a corner of the room when she came home.
City of Dreadful Night
lay open in his lap. His father, a sunless man, had given him the bleak Victorian poem for his twelfth birthday. The gas jets were lit and the one behind his head cast his elongated shadow across the room.
âYou startled me,' she said, her mouth somewhere between a smile and something more nervous. âI didn't expect to see you today.'
He was sitting, left leg crossed over right, trousers on the left leg pulled up to avoid bagging at the knees, a narrow band of lardy, hairless leg between turn-up and sock.
âWhere have you been?' he said.
âTo Hove â to that doctor we heard about. It's all set for next week.'
He knew his temper scared her. He saw she was avoiding looking at his face, her eyes fixed instead on that narrow band of bare leg. Her eyes were still focused there when he stood. She looked up and saw his face. He moved towards her.
He felt he was in a cathedral or some vast building where the silence buzzed. That strange susurrus of sound that pressed on his ears. Then he realized the dim roar was inside, not outside, his ears. His blood pumped through him in sharp surges. He checked his pulse with a finger on his wrist. His heart was beating quickly but not as rapidly as he expected.
He looked around him. Everything neat and in its place. He glanced down at his suit. He saw a dark spot on his waistcoat. He took his handkerchief from his pocket and rubbed at the spot. It didn't budge, although there was a blossom of pink on the white cloth.
He needed to still his ears. He walked to the radiogram and turned it on. The bulb glowed red. He recognized the music that grew louder as the radio warmed up. Ketèlbey's
In a Monastery Garden
.
He picked up the packet of Rothmans on the table beside the sofa. He smoked two cigarettes, listening to the music, looking everywhere but at her. She lay face down on the floor, blood in a spreading halo around her head.
He should have felt regret. He knew that. But long ago, in Flanders, his emotions had been cauterized. He had returned unable to feel. Besides, the carcass lying splayed on the carpet was not the woman he had desired and, in his way, loved.