Authors: Gigi Pandian
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Amateur Sleuths, #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #International Mystery & Crime, #mystery and suspense, #mystery books, #new adult romance, #mystery novels, #traditional mystery, #humorous mystery, #Mystery and Thrillers, #Humor, #british mysteries, #Amateur Sleuth, #english mysteries, #cozy mystery, #chick lit, #Mystery, #Cozy, #treasure hunt, #murder mystery, #mystery series, #international mystery, #murder mysteries, #Historical mystery, #female sleuth, #New Adult, #action and adventure
Lane maneuvered Rupert’s car from the Edinburgh suburb of Leith into the crowded center of the city.
“I’ll come check into the hotel with you,” he said, “but then I should take off before it gets to be much later.”
“You never told us what the bleeding hell you intend to do!” Rupert said.
“I have a friend in Aberdeen,” Lane said coolly. “I’m not going to get him mixed up in this, but he would gladly go to the inn and get some information about what’s going on.”
“Oh. Well why didn’t you say so in the first place?”
Lane did the talking at the front desk, and we went up to our two adjoining rooms.
“Two rooms,” Rupert commented. “I wonder who’s sharing.”
We didn’t enter the second room. Lane and I didn’t have any luggage to unpack. Besides my messenger bag, our belongings were still at the Fog & Thistle Inn. Rupert tossed his bag on the floor and lay down on one of the beds on top of the covers. He crossed his arms behind his head and closed his eyes.
I stepped out into the hallway with Lane. I looked down the empty corridor with checkered carpeting and cream-colored walls, and then into Lane’s face. He looked so different without his glasses, even with his hair falling over his face in the same manner. The same intense hazel eyes gazed at me. How could anyone mistake those eyes?
“You sure you know what you’re doing?” I asked.
He smiled confidently, but sadly, and kissed my forehead. I watched him disappear down the hallway. If he was as good at disguising himself as he claimed, I also had to accept another possibility. How easy would it be for him to walk away? I wasn’t sure I would ever see him again.
I took a few deep breaths before returning to the room, then closed the door softly behind me so as not to disturb Rupert. God knew he needed the rest.
“Are you in love with him?” Rupert said from the bed. I walked over to him. His eyes were still closed, and his face was more drawn than before.
“You need to sleep,” I said. “Do you want me to get some supplies to change the bandage on your arm again?”
He opened his eyes and sat up, moving the pillows so he could lean against the headboard. His blue-gray eyes had all but lost their bright blue vigor, and the gray stood out next to the grayish tint of his sunken sockets.
“We know each other too well for that,” he said.
“For me to buy you disinfectant?”
He smiled weakly.
“For you to get away with ignoring me,” he said.
I sat down on the edge of the bed. “The answer is, I don’t know,” I said.
He smiled again, and took my hand in his. I didn’t object.
“Your fingernails,” he said. “They’re still short. How are those drums of yours?”
“Still got them,” I said. “Transatlantic flights are no match for my tabla.”
“Why did we ever break up?” he asked.
“I left the country, remember?”
“Yes, I know that part. Long-distance relationships are way too romantic and impractical for either of us. But you could have stayed.”
“You never asked me to.”
“What if I’m asking?”
“You’re a little late.”
He held my hand, looking at me in silence for a few moments before his eyelids drooped. He sank down onto the pillows. I covered him with the blanket from the other bed.
“Don’t go,” he mumbled, before falling into a restless sleep.
I sat on the other bed for what seemed like hours. I had my headphones with me in my messenger bag, so I listened to music as I scribbled notes on the hotel stationery about who could possibly have killed Knox and left Rupert in such bad shape. I think the bhangra beats I was listening to must have been overly complex, because I ended up with two lists. One that included everyone at the inn as a suspect, and one that excluded everyone because it didn’t seem possible for them to have done it. I wadded up the sheets of paper and quietly left the room to get some food. I returned a short time later with some new clothes, including a new pair of heels, fish and chips, and refreshment.
The scent of the fried fish and pungent condiments woke Rupert, but only long enough for him to eat a piece of fish and wash it down with a lager I’d picked up at the off-license down the street along with a bottle of Macallan whisky for me. I was momentarily worried that I shouldn’t have given alcohol to someone with an injury, but then I remembered that bit of advice concerned head injuries rather than infections. The alcohol would probably do him good.
I turned on the television at a low volume and flipped among the five channels of reception while drinking the whisky before I fell asleep to news about the dental crisis in Scotland.
I woke to the smell of kippers under my nose. I’m told that most non-Brits can’t stand the smoked fish that’s saltier than anchovies, especially as a breakfast food. I love it. It took me a moment to remember where I was, before sitting up in my clothes from the day before to find the room full of daylight and Rupert standing next to me. He looked somewhat better than he had the night before. His eyes were no longer as sunken and dark, and his smile approximated a hearty one.
“Hungry?” he asked.
“Always.” I looked across the room. “Room service?”
“You really do sleep through everything, love.”
For a few moments I could almost imagine life was back to normal. The familiar smells and the familiar sight of the man in front of me brought me back to a time when life made sense. The illusion quickly faded as I looked at Rupert’s sickly pallor. He and Knox would never again be able to go on a crazy adventure together.
“Where’s Lane?” I asked.
“He didn’t come back.”
“You checked the other room?” I asked.
He nodded. “He probably stayed over at his friend’s house in Aberdeen,” he said, taking a bite of eggs from the tray. His eyes watched me intently.
I forced myself to speak. “I’m sure you’re right.”
After eating far too many kippers, I took a long shower and got dressed in my new clothes. Lane still wasn’t there when I came back into the room.
As I stood at the window, looking out at a view of a cobblestone alley, Rupert came up beside me.
“It’ll be okay,” he said.
“You used to be a better liar.”
“Right now I feel like I used to be better at a lot of things.”
“I know what you mean.”
“What the bloody hell has happened to our lives?” he said. He held me tightly with his good arm around my waist, but didn’t attempt to do more than that. That made it all the more difficult to push him away.
I was desperate for a decent cup of coffee, and probably even more desperate to do something other than sit helplessly in that hotel room. I left the hotel and walked down the narrow street, with cars somehow managing to whiz by in two directions. I found a coffee house almost immediately, but took my time sipping the strong coffee before heading back to the hotel.
“See, she’s
fine
,” Rupert was saying as I opened the door.
Lane stood a few feet away from Rupert, his appearance showing no signs of whatever disguise he had assumed. He had fixed his thick black glasses and was wearing them again. A small locked bag lay at his feet.
“What did you learn?” I asked.
“Malcolm is back,” Lane said. “And he isn’t happy that some joker is wreaking havoc on his dig. They’re all there, so that isn’t going to help us narrow things down.”
“That’s a really insightful friend you’ve got there, Lane,” said Rupert.
“Both Jaya and I are under suspicion,” Lane said. “Mostly Jaya. Her blood-stained coat, and a note from Jaya the police found in Knox’s pocket.”
“Bloody hell,” Rupert mumbled, sitting down on the edge of his bed.
“The police aren’t watching the dig around the clock,” Lane said. “They don’t have that kind of manpower to spare, since they’re not positive what’s going on. All of the people on the dig have been instructed not to leave. Mr. and Mrs. Black were asked not to take any unexpected trips as well, which they found rather amusing.”
“That’s great,” Rupert said. “We’re in exactly the same place as we were yesterday. If only we all had such helpful friends we’d be out of this in no time.”
Lane looked ready to throttle Rupert. My turn to intervene.
“We needed that information,” I said, “but now we need to figure out who is behind everything. Lane is right. I’d rather not be figuring out the bad guy from a jail cell. Or wait until something happens to another one of us. I’d rather figure out who is the homicidal maniac.”
“Your language has become a bit overwrought in your old age, Jaya,” Rupert commented.
“Damn it, Rupert. When are you going to realize life is not a game?”
“When are you going to grow up and realize that perhaps it is?”
Rupert and I glared at each other.
“Let’s make a list,” Lane suggested.
“I already tried it,” I said. “Last night. After you left and Rupert fell asleep. I thought it might help. But it doesn’t. Don’t make me fish it out of the trash.”
“It’s really not such a bad idea,” Lane insisted.
“He’s right,” Rupert said.
“Fine,” I said. “I’ll summarize.”
They both looked at me imploringly. I got up and fished the crumpled pages out of the trash.
“We can rule out Knox,” I said, “for obvious reasons. Next there’s Professor of Scottish archaeology Malcolm Alpin, who, if we are to believe Rupert’s statement, we can also rule out. It’s too bad, since it really was such a good theory.”
They agreed we had to rule him out, though Lane only admitted it grudgingly, eyeing Rupert.
“No one else has an alibi that we know of,” I said, “so let’s go through motives. Fiona Murdoch, who has never been known for her good judgment and is taking a hell of a long time to complete her dissertation—though I’ll agree she’s on a better path than Knox took—was the instigator of this whole mess when she told Knox about the ruby. She could have finally gotten fed up with Knox and with you, Rupert, but why not leave you out of the whole thing if that was her intent? It seems easier not to put yourself in a position where you’re going to need to kill someone. Leaving us with her motive, which makes no sense.
“Moving on to Derwin McVicar, the pompous graduate student of archaeology—”
“You’re in Britain, love,” Rupert cut in. “So the proper terminology is post-graduate student.”
“Two to one non-Brits in the room, so the proper terminology is simply ‘graduate’,” I countered. “Getting back to the point, Derwin is a pretentious man who is too busy kissing up to the professor to do much else besides write methodical notes. He certainly wouldn’t be distracted by an Indian treasure. Anyone disagree? No?
“Moving on to the others who aren’t a part of the dig, Mr. and Mrs. Black have full run of the inn since it’s their establishment, so they could have found out what you were up to, Rupert, but why would they care? They seem quite content running their little inn.
“Lastly, Fergus and Angus. They’re a bit eccentric, and they thought you should be digging for fairy treasure rather than Pictish history, so I grant that they’re a bit of a wild card, but I still don’t see them bumping off members of the crew one by one to prevent the dig from moving forward. If the purpose was to stop the dig, there are easier ways and, at the very least, better people to target.”
Silence followed my exhaustive list.
“You’re not thinking badly enough of people, Jaya,” Lane said finally. “How do we know the Blacks don’t have more motive than you think? What if one of them secretly wants to run off to a Caribbean island if only they had the money?”
“But that doesn’t make any sense,” I insisted. “We can’t go inventing motives we don’t know exist. That won’t get us anywhere. By that logic, anyone could develop a greedy streak.”
“All right,” Rupert said. “Brainstorming, then. I say…Derwin McVicar did it. With a name like that, he’s got to be messed up in the head. Traumatized since childhood and all that.”
I stared angrily at Rupert. I saw Lane looking intently in his direction as well.
“That’s not a bad idea,” Lane said slowly.
It was Rupert’s turn to look incredulously at Lane. “I was joking, old boy,” he said.
“No, no,” Lane said, shaking his head. “But his name. Derwin McVicar. It’s far too good to be true, isn’t it?”
Rupert and I stared at him.
“I mean that it could be an alias,” Lane said. “Did anybody know Derwin before he came to the dig?”
Rupert and I were silent for a moment.
“I think he worked with Professor Alpin before coming here,” Rupert said.
“It was a recent connection,” Lane said, “not long before he found some research that got him to the dig.”
“But nobody knew about the treasure until Knox found the bracelet,” I added.
“How do we know that?” Lane said simply. “For all we know, it could have been Derwin who dropped the bracelet when he found the treasure.”
“The bracelet wasn’t dropped recently,” Rupert said. “Knox wasn’t daft. He could tell the difference.”
“I think my head may explode,” I said, throwing myself down onto one of the beds.
“Then what do you propose?”
I looked up to find them both looking at me expectantly. Rupert’s chest moved up and down with effort. Although he would never say it, it was clear how labored his breathing had become.
We needed to get Rupert to a doctor soon. He’d never go willingly until this was settled.
We didn’t have much time.
“It’s your turn to act,” I said to Rupert. “These speculations are getting us nowhere. Your ‘amnesia’ has come to an end. You’re going to appear at the pub and flush out the killer.”