Authors: Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
‘If we can find out about those shares, to start with . . .’
‘I’ll do a bit of leaning. Anything else?’
‘Reading police – matching Mark’s car with the motorbike damage?’
‘More leaning. Leave it to me. Tower of Pisa job. I suppose Pak’s not come up with anything?’
‘Not yet.’
‘Well, he’s a good lad. He won’t stop until he does. For now, why don’t you go home? You look played out.’
‘Yes, I’m going now.’
‘Hang on, you haven’t got a home to go to, have you?’ Porson said, and he seemed to hesitate on the brink of something.
‘I’m staying with Atherton, sir,’ Slider said. ‘He has a spare room.’
‘Oh, well that’s all right,’ Porson said briskly, and turned away. ‘Off you go, then.’
Slider went, wondering uncomfortably whether the old boy had been about to offer him
his
spare room, and whether he would have welcomed Slider’s company.
Atherton did an enormous stir-fry for quickness’ sake, and the four of them sat around the table companionably, as if they had known each other for years, with the cats teetering on the backs of armchairs, trying to see over peoples’ shoulders, and purring like food mixers. Joanna hoped so much that Atherton and Emily could survive the end of the case and the realisations that were bound to come over her then, because they seemed so right together – as right as Joanna felt with Bill.
It was inevitable they should talk about the case, and a lot of it was rehashing the supposed Waverley B plot, guessing how much money the whole thing was worth, and wondering despairingly how people could be so fixated on money.
‘Because they’ve got nothing else in their lives,’ Slider said.
‘That’s all very well, but Tyler, at least, did have other things in his life, before he destroyed them by his own hand,’ said Atherton.
‘We’ve got to find documentary evidence,’ Slider said. ‘I can’t believe Bates got hold of the only copies. Where would your father keep something that important?’ he asked Emily.
‘In his computer,’ she said with a shrug.
‘He wouldn’t give a copy to anyone? He didn’t send you anything, like a data disc or a memory stick?’
‘I’d have said so if he did,’ she said patiently.
‘What about a friend? Candida Scott-Chatton for instance?’
‘No. He wouldn’t implicate her when it was something as dangerous as this. And she’d have told you, surely, if he gave her something and told her to guard it with her life.’
Atherton looked at her sharply. She was holding the locket, warming it in her hand as she so often did. ‘He did send you
something
.’
She met his eyes. ‘My birthday present?’
‘Why did he send it to you if he knew you were coming over? He could have given it to you in person.’
‘He wanted me to have it on the day,’ she said.
‘Which was a week ago. And Masseter was killed two weeks ago. Allowing for the post—’
‘You think he sent Emily the locket when he heard Masseter was dead?’ Joanna said. ‘But why? You couldn’t get a data disc in that.’
‘I’d have noticed,’ Emily agreed, with quiet humour.
‘But he did tell you it was very valuable and warned you not to let it out of your sight,’ Atherton persisted.
‘No, he warned me not to lose it. I was the one who decided to wear it all the time. I like it. And it reminds me of him.’ Her eyes filled abruptly with tears. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said. Slider passed her across his handkerchief, and she accepted it and blotted her eyes, biting her lips to regain control.
Atherton said, ‘I can’t help thinking that he may have sent you a clue of some sort with it. Did it come in a box?’
‘Yes, a jeweller’s box, in a Jiffy bag. But there was nothing else in it.’
‘I don’t suppose you have the box with you?’
‘Yes, it’s in my case. But honestly, there’s nothing else in it except the card that came with it, and unless you’re suggesting there’s a microdot . . . ?’
‘Well, you never know,’ Atherton said.
‘I do. Where would he get access to the technology to compress all his files into a microdot?’
‘But I’d like to have a look at it, if you don’t mind,’ Atherton said, and she shrugged and went upstairs, returning with an ordinary jeweller’s box about four inches square, in red leatherette. Inside was the usual black velvet bracer, with slits where the chain would have been secured to hold the locket in place, and a square, stiff card with some handwriting on it.
‘You’re right, your dad’s handwriting is terrible,’ Atherton said. ‘What does it say?’
Emily took it back. ‘It says “Happy birthday, darling. I hope you like it. It’s valuable so be sure not to lose it. It will be something to remember me by, even if you’re glad to see the back of me.”’
‘That’s an odd thing to say, isn’t it?’ Atherton said, frowning. ‘Why would you be glad to see the back of him?’
‘Oh, it’s a sort of old joke,’ she said. ‘He didn’t like it when I went to live in the States, because he was going to miss me, and he said it must be because I didn’t like having him hanging around me, spoiling my pitch. A joke about me being a better journalist than him – which wasn’t true. He was the best there was.’
Atherton held out his hand. ‘Would you let me look at it?’
‘There’s nothing in it except a picture of him,’ she said, but she undid the clasp anyway, and handed it across.
Atherton took it, warm from her hand, smooth and pleasant to the touch. It didn’t look old, that was his judgement. There’s a look to old, second-hand gold. This looked quite new. And it didn’t look valuable to him, either – not enough to warrant a warning. It was worth maybe a couple of hundred pounds, not more. He prised it open with a thumbnail, and inside was a photograph of Stonax, smiling and looking rather windblown with that shock of dark hair. The photograph was held in place by a thin oval bezel. He thumbnailed that off, as well, and lifted out the photograph, which he saw had been cut with scissors to fit the oval shape. There was nothing behind it but the back of the locket.
He turned the photograph over. On the back was some very small, neat writing.
BZ793A58
He handed it to Slider. ‘Eight randomly assorted numbers and letters,’ he said.
When Slider came back to the table from the telephone, he said, ‘Jimmy Pak says there’s an absolute mass of information there – notes, scanned documents, letters, cuttings from newspapers, you name it. It looks like the goods all right.’
Joanna reached over and kissed Atherton on the cheek. ‘Genius!’ she said. ‘Old planet-brain, the boy wonder.’
‘Fluke,’ said Atherton. ‘It was Ed Stonax who was the clever one, thinking of hiding it that way.’
‘I don’t know why I didn’t think of it,’ Emily said. ‘I’m embarrassed.’
‘Don’t be. How were you to know?’
‘But he said he had something important to tell me. I suppose when I got here he was going to tell me everything, show me the documents.’
‘I’m not quite there,’ Joanna said. ‘He copied everything into the computer and encrypted the files?’
‘The Arbuthnots heard him tapping away day and night,’ Slider said.
‘Then why did he keep the original stuff – assuming that was what was in the file that was stolen?’
‘Insurance,’ Atherton said, ‘in case of a break-in. The way I see it, he wouldn’t leave everything in the file, but enough to look convincing, so that if they broke in they’d think they’d got the lot and (a) not tear the place apart and (b) feel confident they’d covered themselves. He knew they were ruthless – he must at least have suspected Danny’s “accident” was helped along. But probably he didn’t realise just how ruthless they were. He can’t have thought that they’d actually kill him – only cut him off at the pass like they did the first time.’
‘If he’d known,’ Emily said quietly, ‘it wouldn’t have stopped him.’
‘But he might have gone about it a different way,’ Slider said.
‘So if he had all Danny’s stuff,’ Joanna said, ‘what was he waiting for? Why didn’t he go public right away?’
‘Hard to say, until we see what there actually is in the encrypted files,’ Slider said. ‘It might be that there was something else he still needed. Or he might have been working it up into a final report. Or he may have had someone else involved and was waiting for them to act.’
‘But no-one else has come forward to say they were working with him.’
‘True. Well, I don’t know the answer to that.’
‘Of course, there wasn’t any particular hurry,’ Atherton said. ‘It wasn’t as if the leisure park was going to be built in one day, starting tomorrow. He may just have been considering what course his action should take. He had plenty of time.’
‘Except that he didn’t,’ Emily said. There was an uncomfortable silence, which in the end she broke. ‘So is this enough to get them, now?’
‘I don’t know until I look at the stuff. Jimmy Pak’s making copies, and we’ll have to go through it all tomorrow and see what we’ve got. And then get Porson in on it and start making up a case. But if your father took this trouble to get the information to you, I’m betting it will be significant.’
‘But you still don’t know where Bates is,’ Joanna said. ‘Not to rain on the party, but we can’t go home until you get him.’ She anticipated Atherton’s next words and said, ‘We can’t stay here with you for ever, Jim. Even if you were willing to keep
us
, what about Derek?’
‘Derek?’
‘The baby.’
‘Why on earth—?’
‘Don’t ask,’ said Slider. ‘Is that your phone?’
Atherton went out into the kitchen, where they heard him say, ‘Oh, hi . . . Yes, he is. Did you want to . . . What? Good for you! Yeah, yeah, I’m writing it down. Brilliant. OK, I’ll tell him. Love to Tony . . . No, I mean it. Bye.’
He came back in, grinning. ‘That was Norma. She was waiting for a call back from an estate agent friend – or in her case, probably a former lover.’
‘Pots and kettles,’ Joanna muttered.
‘Anyway, she’s found – or rather he had found – Richard Tyler. He’s bought a house in Holland Park Avenue. And given what property costs along there, he must have done very well out of Brussels and whatever else he’s been up to since he went away. He moved in at the end of August.’
‘Just about the time Bates escaped,’ said Joanna.
‘Holland Park Avenue’s right on our doorstep,’ Slider said. ‘Not much more than half a mile from the station.’
‘Also just round the corner from Aubrey Walk,’ Atherton added, ‘where Bates’s house is.’
‘And a hundred yards or so from where they found the black Focus,’ Slider added grimly. Joanna glanced at him, and knew that expression. She felt a cold chill, though she wasn’t sure what she feared. ‘I said that Bates hadn’t a friend in the world but Tyler – if you can call him a friend. But friend or not, he’s the one person Bates can be sure won’t shop him. What would be more natural than that he should hole up with Tyler? On his old stamping ground, which criminals always like, being creatures of habit. And handy for his old house if he needs a bit of equipment. I’m sure Tyler could arrange that. Tyler came back to England at the end of July, and Bates was sprung at the end of August.’
‘And all the king’s horses and all the king’s men couldn’t find him,’ Atherton said. ‘Well, of course they couldn’t if he was under the wing of a former minister and EU commissioner.’
Joanna was still looking at Slider and reading his mind. ‘Bill, no. You’re not to.’
‘Just a look,’ he said. ‘I promise I’m not going to do anything, but I just want to have a look.’
Atherton looked at him too. ‘What, now?’
‘Why not?’
‘I’m coming with you, then.’
Slider said to Joanna. ‘Just a look. And I’ll feel better about leaving you because you won’t be alone, with Emily.’
‘Better let them get it out of their system,’ Emily said to her. ‘You know what boys are like.’
She was easy about letting Atherton go, Joanna thought, because their love was so new, and she couldn’t yet imagine anything bad happening to him. Perhaps it was another thing to lay at pregnancy’s door. But she had never tried to stop him doing what he felt he had to. It was just that the longer she knew him and the more she loved him, the harder it was to let him go.
Nineteen
Down and Out
T
hey drove to the station in Atherton’s car and left it there, to take an unmarked car out of the pool instead. It was possible, Slider thought, that they knew the number of Atherton’s car as well as his, and he didn’t want them to look out of the window and see it, and know they were being watched. Atherton thought he was being unnecessarily cautious.
‘But since you are, hadn’t we better tell someone upstairs where we’re going?’
They went up to the department, where Mackay was on night duty. He was at his desk having a bunny with Fathom, who was sitting on the other side of it, evidently waylaid on his way home, since he was wearing his street clothes, a bomber jacket and a pair of lamentable cut-away leather driving gloves.