He swallowed. Twice. Hard. His eyes darted here and there. "Got to have something, Barbie," he whimpered.
She winced at the name. Only Tony had called her that. On her father"s
lips it was a malediction. Nonetheless, she moved to him, put her hand
on his shoulder, and forced herself to touch his unwashed hair. "Dad,
try to understand. It"s Mum we have to consider. Without you, she would
never survive. So we"ve got to keep you healthy and fi t. Don"t you see?
Mum…loves you so much."
Was there a glimmer there at that? Did they still see each other in this
little hell they so richly deserved, or was the fog too thick?
He gave a choked sob. A dirty hand went into his pocket and the small,
round tin was produced. "Jim don"t mean no harm, Barbie," he said as he
handed the tin to his daughter. His eyes slid from her face to the
shrine, to the plastic flowers in their plastic vases beneath it. She
went to them at once, dumped out the fl owers, and confiscated the
additional three tins of snuff hidden there.
"I"ll speak to Mr. Patel in the morning," she said coldly and walked out of the room.
Of course it would be Eaton Terrace. Eaton Place was simply tpoo, too
Belgravia, and Lynley would never stoop to ostentation. Besides, this
was just the city townhouse. Howenstow—the Cornish estate—was where the
Lynleys really hung their hats.
Barbara stood looking at the elegant white building. How enchantingly
clean everything was in Belgravia, she thought. How upper-class chic. It
was the only area in the city where people would consent to live in
converted stables and boast about it to all their friends!
We"re in Belgravia now. Did we mention it? Oh, do stop by for tea! It"s
nothing much. Just three hundred thousand pounds, but we like to think
of it as such an investment. Five rooms. With the sweetest little
cobblestone street that you"ve ever seen. Do say you"ll be here at half
past four. You"ll recognise the place. I"ve planted bego nias in every
window box.
Barbara mounted the spotless marble steps and, with a scornful shake of
her head, noted the small Asherton coat of arms beneath the
brass light fi xture. Armigerous, Lynley! No converted stable for you.
She lifted her hand to press the bell but stopped herself and turned to
survey the street. Since yesterday there had been no time to consider
her position. Her initial meeting with Webberly, fetching Lynley from
the wedding, and the subsequent meeting at Scotland Yard with the
peculiar little priest had all followed so swiftly that there had been
no moment in which she could sort out her feelings and devise a strategy
for surviving this new apprenticeship.
True, Lynley had not been as appalled at the assignment as she had
thought he would be, certainly not as appalled and outraged as she
herself had been. But then his mind had been occupied with other
matters: the wedding of his friend and, no doubt, his late-night
assignation with Lady Helen Clyde. Now, with some time to reflect upon
it, he would surely allow her to feel the full brunt of his irritation
at being saddled with such a pariah as herself.
So what to do? Here it was at last, the opportunity she had been waiting
for—hoping for, praying for—the chance to prove herself in CID once and
for all. It was the chance to make up for the arguments, the slips of
the tongue, the impetuous decisions, the foolish mistakes of the past
ten years.
"There"s a lot you might learn from working with Lynley." Webberly"s
words returned to her, and she knotted her brow. What could she possibly
learn from Lynley? The right wine to order with dinner, a few dance
steps, how to dazzle a roomful of people with engaging conversation?
What could she learn from Lynley?
Nothing, of course. But she knew too well that he represented her only
chance of being reassigned to CID. So, as she stood on his fi ne
doorstep, she considered thoughtfully her best approach to getting along
with the man.
It would have to be complete cooperation, she decided. She would offer
no suggestions, would agree with every thought he had, with every
statement he made.
Survive, she told herself, and turned and pressed the bell.
She had been expecting a buxom, uniformed, pert little maid to answer
her ring, so she was surprised. For Lynley himself opened the door, a
piece of toast in one hand, slippers on his feet, and his reading
spectacles perched on the end of his aristocratic nose.
"Ah, Havers," he said, looking over them at her, "you"re early. Excellent."
He led the way to the back of the house and into an airy morning room,
fresh with white wainscoting, pale green walls, and an unusually
restrained Adams ceiling. French doors at one end were undraped to allow
a view of a late-blooming garden, and breakfast was laid out in silver
serving dishes along an ornate walnut sideboard. The room smelled
invitingly of warm bread and bacon, and in answer to the odour, Barbara
felt her stomach rumble hollowly. She pressed her arm against it and
tried not to think of her own morning"s fare of a single overboiled egg
and toast. The dining table was laid for two, a number that momentarily
surprised Barbara until she remembered Lynley"s evening rendezvous with
Lady Helen Clyde. Her ladyship was no doubt at this moment still in his
bed, unused to rising before half past ten.
"Do help yourself." Lynley motioned absently towards the sideboard with
his fork and gathered up a few sheets of the police report that lay in
haphazard fashion among the china. "There isn"t a person I know who
can"t think better while eating. But avoid the kippers. They seem a bit
off."
"No, thank you," she replied politely. "I"ve eaten, sir."
"Not even a sausage? They, at least, are remarkably good. Do you find
that the butchers are finally having a whack at putting more pork than
meal into sausages these days? It"s refreshing, to say the least. Nearly
fi ve decades after World War II and we"re fi nally coming off
rationing." He picked up a teapot. Like everything else on the table, it
was antique bone china, no doubt part of the man"s family history.
"What about something to drink? I have to warn you, I"m addicted to
Lapsang Souchong tea. Helen claims that it tastes like dirty socks."
"I…I could do with a cuppa. Thank you, sir."
"Good," he declared. "Have some and tell me what you think."
She was adding a lump of sugar to the brew when the front bell rang
again. Footsteps came running up a stairway in the back. "I"ll get it my
lord," a woman"s voice called. It was a Cornish accent. "Sorry about
the last time. The baby and all."
"It"s the croup, Nancy," Lynley murmured to himself. "Take the poor child to the doctor."
The sound of a woman"s voice fl oated down the hall. "Breakfast?" A
lighthearted laugh. "What a propitious arrival I"ve effected, Nancy.
He"ll never believe it"s purely coincidental." Upon her last sentence
Lady Helen breezed into the room and paralysed Barbara into a moment of
breath-catching, ice-sheathed despair.
They were wearing identical suits. But while Lady Helen"s had obviously
been cut by the designer himself to fi t her fi gure, Barbara"s own was
off-the-rack, a through-the-lookingglass chain store copy with rucked
seams and altered hemline to prove it. Only the differing colours might
possibly save her from complete humiliation, she thought. She grasped
her teacup but lacked the will to lift it to her lips.
Lady Helen paused only fractionally at the sight of the policewoman.
"I"m in a mess," she said frankly. "Thank God you"re here as well,
Sergeant, for I"ve a terrible feeling it"ll take three heads to see me
clear of the muddle I"ve made for myself." That said, she deposited a
large shopping bag on the nearest chair and went directly to the
sideboard, where she began browsing through the covered dishes as if
food alone were sufficient to see her through her dilemma.
"Muddle?" Lynley asked. He glanced at Barbara. "How do you like the Lapsang?"
Her lips felt stiff. "It"s very nice, sir."
"Not that awful tea again!" Lady Helen groaned. "Really, Tommy. You"re a man without mercy."
"Had I known you were coming, I"d hardly have been so remiss as to serve it twice in one week," Lynley replied pointedly.
Unoffended, she laughed. "Isn"t he piqued, Sergeant? From the way he
talks, you"d think I was here every morning, eating him out of house and
home."
"There is yesterday, Helen."
"You vicious man." She turned her attention back to the sideboard.
"These kippers smell appalling. Did Nancy bring them up in her
suitcase?" She joined them at the table with a plate piled high with a
gastronomic argument of eggs and mushrooms, grilled tomatoes and bacon.
"What"s she doing here, by the way? Why isn"t she at Howenstow? Where"s
Denton this morning?"
Lynley sipped his tea, his eyes on the report on the table before him.
"As I"ll be out of town, I"ve given Denton the next few days off," he
replied absently. "No need for him to come with me."
A crisp piece of bacon halted in midair. Lady Helen stared. "You"re joking, of course. Tell me you"re joking, darling."
"I"m perfectly capable of getting along without my valet. I"m not totally incompetent, Helen."
"But that"s not what I mean!" Lady Helen drank a mouthful of the Lapsang
Souchong, grimaced at the taste, and set down the cup. "It"s Caroline.
She"s gone off on holiday for this entire week. You don"t think…Tommy,
if she"s run off with Denton, I"ll be absolutely lost. No"—this as he
was about to speak—"I know what you"re going to say. They have every
right to their personal lives. I agree completely. But we simply must
come to some sort of compromise over this—you and I—because if they get
married and live with you—"
"Then you and I shall get married as well," Lynley replied placidly. "And we"ll be as happy as hedgehogs, the four of us."
"You think it"s amusing, don"t you? But just look at me. One morning
without Caroline in the flat and I"m a complete disaster. Surely you
don"t think this is an ensemble that she would approve of?"
Lynley regarded the ensemble in question. Barbara didn"t need to do so.
The vision of Lady Helen was branded into her mind: a smartly tailored
burgundy suit, silk blouse, and a mauve scarf that cascaded down to a
trim waist.
"What"s wrong with it?" Lynley asked. "It looks fine to me. In fact,
considering the hour"—he glanced at his pocket watch—"I"d say you"re
almost too sartorially splendid."
Lady Helen turned to Barbara in exasperation. "Isn"t that every bit just
like a man, Sergeant? I end up this morning looking like an overripe
strawberry and he murmurs ‘looks fine to me" and buries his nose in a
murder fi le."
"Far better that than assist you with your clothing for the next few
days." Lynley nodded at the ignored shopping bag that had toppled over
and now spilled a few assorted pieces of material onto the floor. "Is
that why you"ve come?"
Lady Helen pulled the bag towards her. "I only wish it were that
simple," she sighed. "But it"s worse by far than the Denton-Caroline
affair—we"ve not finished with that, by the way—and I"m at a total loss.
I"ve mixed up Simon"s bullet holes."
Barbara was beginning to feel as if she"d walked into something designed
by Wilde. Surely at any moment Lane would enter stage left with the
cucumber sandwiches.
"Simon"s bullet holes?" Lynley, more accustomed to Lady Helen"s pirouettes of thought, was patient.
"You know. We were working on the patterns of blood splattering based on
trajectory, angle, and calibre. You remember that, don"t you?"
"The piece to be presented next month?"
"The very one. Simon had left it all organised for me in the lab. I was
supposed to run off the preliminary set of data, attach them to the
cloth, and set up the lab for the fi nal study. But I—"
"Mixed up the cloths," Lynley fi nished. "St. James will go on about that, Helen. What do you propose to do?"
She looked forlornly down at the samples that she had dumped
unceremoniously onto the floor. "Of course, I"m not hopelessly ignorant
in the matter. After four years in the laboratory, at least I recognise
the twenty-two calibre and can easily find the forty-fi ve and the
shotgun. But as to the others…and even worse, as to which blood pattern
goes with each trajectory…"
"It"s a muddle," Lynley fi nished.
"In a word," she agreed. "So I thought I"d pop by this morning to see if perhaps we could sort it all out."
Lynley leaned down and fingered his way through the pile of material.
"Can"t be done, old duck. Sorry, but you"ve hours of work here and we"ve
a train to catch."
"Then whatever shall I say to Simon? He"s been working on this for ages."
Lynley pondered the question. "There"s one thing…"
"What?"
"Professor Abrams at Chelsea Institute. Do you know him?" When she shook
her head, he went on. "He and Simon both have testifi ed as expert
witnesses. They did in the Melton case only last year. They know each
other. Perhaps he"d help. I could phone him for you before I leave."
"Would you, Tommy? I"d be so grateful. I"d do anything for you."
He lifted an eyebrow. "Surely not the thing to say to a man over breakfast."
She laughed engagingly. "Even the dishes! I"d even give up Caroline if it came to that."
"And Jeffrey Cusick?"
"Even Jeffrey. Poor man. Traded for bullet holes without a second thought."
"All right then. I"ll see to it as soon as we"ve finished our breakfast. I take it that we may now finish our breakfast?"
"Oh yes, of course." She dug happily into her plate while Lynley put on
his spectacles and looked at his papers once more. "What kind of case is
it that has you two rushing off so early in the morning?" Lady Helen
asked Barbara, pouring herself a second cup of tea, which she sugared
and creamed with a liberal hand.
"A decapitation."
"That sounds particularly grim. Are you travelling far?"
"Up to Yorkshire."
The teacup was suspended and then lowered carefully to the saucer
beneath. Lady Helen"s eyes moved to Lynley, regarding him for a moment
before she spoke. "Where in Yorkshire, Tommy?" she asked impassively.
Lynley read a few lines. "A place called… here it is, Keldale. Do you know it?"
There was a minute pause. Lady Helen considered the question. Her eyes
were on her tea, and although her face was without expression, a pulse
began to beat in the vein at her throat. She looked up but the smile she
offered did not touch her eyes. "Keldale? Not at all."