Authors: Simon Brett
âTam?' Her voice was very weak.
âFrom Clachenmore. Now, come on, you set me up to go there because you knew Tam was to hand if necessary. Don't pretend you don't know him.'
âI know who you mean, but I don't know him well.'
âWell enough to know how poor he is and what he'd be prepared to do for money.'
âBut how am I supposed to have arranged this?'
âSimple. You rang him at the hotel. I know he had a call this morning.'
âDon't be ridiculous. I hardly know the man.' Now she was almost shouting.
âYou've known him ever since he started working at Clachenmore.'
âI've only seen him there a couple of times.'
âThen maybe you knew him before. In his previous job. It was somewhere in the same area.'
âI didn't know him then. Not at all. I've never even been to Glenloan House.'
âWhere?'
âGlenloan House.'
There was only one other person Charles had ever heard use that name, someone who once owned a house in Meadow Lane.
He moved quickly and efficiently, as if the actions he had to make were long premeditated and rehearsed.
A street lamp outside the house in Meadow Lane showed it to be dark and empty. Fortunately, there was nobody about to see him enter. He moved towards the front door, thinking to break one of the glass panels and reach round to the catch, when a sudden memory stopped him. The window catch Jean Mariello had complained about had been forgotten in the rush of her leaving, and the sash slid up easily.
Inside he was glad of the light from the street lamp, which gave a pale glow to the white room.
Relevant memories came back. Again he saw Willy sitting opposite him in the Truth Game, long brown hair greyed with plaster dust. He remembered Stella's repetition of the fact that he had been decorating; Jean Mariello's words about her husbandâ âHe'd suddenly get sick of his surroundings and want to change it all'â âSaw himself as the great landowner in his ancestral home in front of his blazing fire. The man of property.'
It was on the left. When he looked along the wall, he could see the light catch on the slight prominence of plaster where the fireplace had been filled in. There was a central heating radiator fixed to the wall across it.
The radiator swivelled on its brackets to lie nearly flat on the floor. Behind it the plaster was more uneven, as if done in haste. Even in the pale light available, it was clear that the paint over this area was newer than in the rest of the room.
He was lucky. The pile of rubble which he had noticed when he last saw Jean Mariello was still there. He found a rusty screwdriver and started to chip away at the new plaster.
Willy had made the task easier by the slapdash way in which he had replaced the bricks. As he flaked off plaster and dug into the mortar, Charles tried to visualise the scene. Willy Mariello, the spoilt child, saw things going against him. The group had split up. His new career as an actor was not going to lead to instant stardom. His marriage was in shreds and Anna had rejected him. Bored and frustrated, he suddenly decided he was sick of his house. Where was the fireplace he had dreamed of?âreplaced by bloody central heating. It would be a big job to change it. But Willy was impulsive; he did not like to go the boring correct way about things. Smash the fireplace covering first, and then see if he liked it.
But something had made him decide to fill the space in again. Charles prised away one brick, but the light did not reach the void. If only he had a torch. He began to be acutely conscious of the pain in his shoulder as he drove the screwdriver into the recalcitrant mortar. He was sweating.
He had to remove six bricks before he could see anything in the space. But as the sixth was worked out of its socket, the light flowed in and he shared the revulsion that Willy Mariello must have felt at the discovery. In spite of the discoloration of dirt and time and the decay of the fabric of the trousers and sock, what he saw had once been a human leg.
Nausea rising in his throat, he made himself confirm the initial impression. But there was no doubt. He found flesh dried down on to bone. It seemed that there was a complete body in the fireplace.
Again his movements were automatic. As he rose he realised how long he had been kneeling on the floor. The pain burned in his tattered leg. He decided to use the front door.
As he opened it, a large block of stone from the portico crashed down in front of him. It was the slab carved with the date. 1797. If he had not remembered the faulty catch and broken into the house the obvious way, it would have killed him.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
At last he shut the ponderous tome,
With a fast and fervent clasp
He strain'd the dusky covers close,
And fixed the brazen hasp:
“Oh, God! could I so close my mind,
And clasp it with a clasp!”
THE DREAM OF EUGENE ARAM
JAMES MILNE OPENED
the door of his flat. âAh,' he said. It was not an expression of surprise, just an acknowledgement of information received. âWon't you come in?'
âThank you.'
âMalt?'
âThank you.' It was exactly as before, both sitting in their comfortable chairs with their glasses of malt whisky, surrounded by books.
âI heard you had arrived in Edinburgh from one of the Derby students.'
âYes. I know you knew I was here.'
The Laird understood. âYou've been to Meadow Lane?'
âYes. As you see, the slab missed me. One of your little plans that didn't work.'
âAh well.' The man did not seem emotional, just tired. âAfter that, I'm surprised you came round here on your own.'
âYou mean the malt could be poisoned or you could have a gun hidden somewhere?'
âIt's possible.'
âNo. That's not your style. The method must be indirect, done without you present. Then you can just shut your mind to the fact that it ever happened, and go back to your books.'
âYou seem to understand me very well, Charles.'
âI think I do. Various things you said. Something about envying a writer his ability to live by remote control.'
âYes. And you said writing wasn't like that.'
âIt isn't.'
The Laird chuckled, as if their old conviviality had been re-established. Then he was silent for a moment. âRight, how much do you know?'
âJust about everything. As you see from my face and hands, I've been dismantling a wall.'
An expression of pain cut across Milne's face. âSo you've seen it?'
âJust as Willy Mariello did.'
âYes. He came and told me on the morning before he died.'
âAnd did he say he was going to the police?'
âNo, no, that wasn't his idea at all. He suggested that I was a wealthy man and . . .'
âBlackmail. That would fit everything I've heard of Willy. And sort out his mortgage arrears. He could live off you for the rest of his life.'
âI don't know. That's what he suggested. Regular payments or . . .'
âHe'd go to the police.' The Laird nodded. âAnd that was why you had to kill him.'
There was a slight hesitation before a muttered âYes.'
âWho was it, James?'
The man looked flustered and pathetic. âNo one. It was . . . just someone I knew . . . a . . . no one . . .'
âWho?'
âA boy. From the school. From Kilbruce. A pupil of mine. He was called . . . Lockhart.' The Laird put his words together with difficulty. âHe was a good boy. I liked him. He seemed interested in my books and . . . He . . . used to come round for tea or . . . That was all, really. In spite of what they said, that was all.
âThen one evening he came round . . . he wasn't in school uniform . . . and he said he was going to run away to London, and he'd left a note at school and sent one to his parents. I said I thought it was foolish, but I couldn't stop him. And that . . . I'd miss him . . . Just that, nothing more.
âBut when I said it, he said something . . . vile . . . a comment on why I'd miss him. He said . . . it was just like all the others . . . that I . . . It wasn't true!' His hands were kneading the arms of his chair rapaciously. âI don't know what happened then. I . . . he was dead. Perhaps I strangled him, I don't know. But suddenly he was dead.
âThen I knew I had to get rid of the body. The men had just finished installing the central heating. I thought of the fireplace. There were no development plans for the area. The house wouldn't be demolished, and no one was going to revert to open fires after central heating had been put in.' (No one except an impulsive fool like Willy Mariello, Charles reflected wryly.) âIt'd never be found out while I was alive, and there was nobody to mind when I was dead. So that's what I did.'
âAnd everyone assumed the boy had gone to London as he said, and disappeared?'
âYes. You keep reading of cases of kids doing that.'
There was a long pause. âAnd you managed to live in the house and forget it?'
âYes. It had been so quick. Sometimes I really thought it hadn't happened, that I'd read about it in a book or . . . I didn't think about it.'
âJust as you wouldn't have thought about me if Tam had drowned me or if that piece of masonry had crushed my skull.'
âExactly,' he said with engaging honesty. âI've always found it difficult to believe in the reality of other people. You know, I like them, but if I don't see them, it's as if they'd never existed. Except my mother, she was real.'
His eyes glazed over and Charles pulled him roughly back on to the subject. âRight. So we know why you had to kill Willy Mariello.'
âYes. The dagger was just a trial run, really. I never thought it would work. But I saw them downstairs at lunch time on Tuesday and thought that'd do until I found a better way. There was a long chance it might work.' A gleam of intellectual satisfaction came into his eye. âAnd it did. The perfect remote control crime.'
âYes,' said Charles wryly. âAnd then I rather played into your hands by confiding in you as my Dr Watson.'
âYou did. At least it made me fairly certain that I wasn't on your list of suspects. That is, until the middle of last week.'
âWhy? What happened then?'
âYou started getting evasive, which seemed odd. I felt you were holding something back. But what really scared me was when you said you were going to give the case up, because it involved someone you knew well. I thought you were on to me then.'
âGood God. That wasn't what I meant at all. I was talking about Anna. You know, I told you I was having an affair with her. Well, at that stage I was suspicious of her.'
âOh.' The Laird sounded disappointed. âThen I needn't have planted the bomb.'
âIt was you!' Charles sat bolt upright in his chair.
âYes. I'd been building up your suspicions of Martin Warburton to keep the heat off me anyway. But I did follow him and I actually managed to break into the Nicholson Street flat. When I saw all the bomb-making equipment I knew it might be useful. Martin seemed in such a bad state that he wouldn't be able to give a coherent account of his movements. So when I thought you were on to me, I picked up the bomb and waited my chance. Once it was planted, all I had to do was stay with you until it was discovered and you'd cease to be suspicious of me. The fact that it happened at Holyrood just added drama to the situation.'
âSo the break in the connection was deliberate? You knew the thing wouldn't blow up?'
The Laird nodded smugly, pleased with his own cunning. Charles began to realise just how detached the man's intellectual processes had become from his emotional reactions. For him life was an elaborate mental game, in which passion was an intruder. The Laird expanded on his plot. âAnd then of course Martin Warburton played into my hands completely. I knew he was in a confused state, but suicide was more than I could have hoped for. It made the whole thing cut and dried, a complete case with a problem and an unquestionable solution. And, from my point of view, a perfect sequence of crimes, which neither I nor anyone else need ever have thought about again.
âAnd if you hadn't worked it all out at Clachenmore, or even if Tam (who incidentally was my mother's gamekeeper for years and would do anything for me) had made a clean job of dispatching you, it would have worked.' Charles was again amazed by the detached way in which the man could talk to someone he had twice tried to murder. The Laird went on in the same level tone. âBy the way, what was it made you sure it was me?'
âAh, well . . .' Charles was damned if he was going to admit the circuitous route by which he had reached the solution. And then suddenly his mind joined two incidents whose significance he should have seen long before. â
The Dream of Eugene Aram
,' he pronounced confidently.
âWhat?'
âHood's poem. When you returned my book, I asked if you had read it and you said “No”, quite vehemently. But then later you quoted from the poem . . .'
The Laird supplied the words as if in a trance.
â“Much study had made him very lean
And pale and leaden-eyed.”'
Charles nodded, confident in his lies. âSo that made me wonder why you wanted to divert my attention from
Eugene A ram.
I looked back at the poem and there it wasâthe story of a schoolmaster who committed a murder and was not found out for many years until the body was discovered. Obviously you didn't want to set my mind on that track.'
The Laird agreed tonelessly. âI didn't think you'd noticed.'
âAh,' said Charles with what he hoped was subtle intonation. And then he quoted from
The Dream of Eugene Aram
.
â“Then down I cast me on my face,
And first began to weep,
For I knew my secret then was one
That earth refused to keep:
Or land or sea, though he should be
Ten thousand fathoms deep.
So wills the fierce avenging Sprite,
Till blood for blood atones!
Ay, though he's buried in a cave,
And trodden down with stones,
And years have rotted off his flesh,â
The world shall see his bones!”'