EG02 - The Lost Gardens (29 page)

Read EG02 - The Lost Gardens Online

Authors: Anthony Eglin

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #England, #cozy

‘Bring them all the way up.’

Jamie took a nervous backward glance at Kingston then continued up the ladder to where her head was level with the opening. She handed Fox the canvases. Stooping, he took them and stepped back. ‘You can go back down, now,’ he said.

Kingston watched Jamie descend and looked up at Fox again. He had put down the gun but was still holding the flashlight. Kneeling, in full sight through the opening, he was shoving the hefty trapdoor cover with his free hand, sliding it over the opening.

‘Sorry, doctor, but we’re going to have to leave you down here to stew for a while.’

‘You bastard, you …’

‘Oh, and those tools, please. Have the lady hand the bag up, would you?’

Kingston handed the tool bag to Jamie, watching silently as she took them up the ladder and handed them through the half-open trapdoor. As they disappeared, the heavy wooden cover slid in jerks across the opening. It finally came to a stop, leaving a two-inch gap through which Kingston could see only the dancing light from Fox’s flashlight.

‘Sorry we never got the chance to meet, doctor,’ Fox said through the narrow gap. His voice was calm, as though he really meant what he was saying. ‘We would have had a lot to talk about—more than you would ever imagine.’

Before Kingston had a chance to say anything, he saw the gap vanish as the cover slammed shut and Fox’s parting words echoed down. ‘Get comfortable, won’t you, because you could be down there for a long time. A very long time.’

Chapter Twenty-four

The minute Fox locked the trapdoor Kingston was at the top of the ladder examining the underside, thumping it in different places with his fist. He remembered the two black rotating metal brackets that locked the door in place and knew that it would take extreme leverage and force to break them. Soon, he backed down the ladder and joined Jamie who had been unsuccessfully trying to call out on her mobile. Though her face was noticeably pale, he was relieved to see that she appeared reasonably calm.

‘No signal, I’m afraid,’ she said.

‘I’m not surprised. These walls are probably two feet thick and then there are the walls up above, too.’

‘How much longer do you think the lamp will last, Lawrence? Perhaps we should turn it off for a while.’

‘I wouldn’t worry. We should be good for at least another six hours or so but I don’t think we’re going to need anywhere near that long.’

‘I know you’re trying to make me feel better but I don’t mind telling you, I’m scared. Really scared. To hell with the paintings now, Fox can have them. We’re in serious …’ Her voice trailed off and she lowered her head. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said, looking up at him again. ‘Forget what I just said.’

Kingston took her arm and steered her to the trunk. ‘Here, come and sit down,’he said softly.

She sat looking up at him, her eyes unflinching, no longer showing any visible signs of distress. Kingston wondered how many other young women would be able to exercise such self-control given the same terrifying circumstances.

‘Fox doesn’t have the paintings,’he said calmly.

‘What do you mean? I handed them over to him.’

‘No you didn’t. I gave you the canvases that covered the real ones.’ His face broke into an impish smile. ‘Fox has the Paris street scene and the other two losers. The real ones I slipped behind the crate.’

‘Brilliant. You sure had me fooled.’ She looked at him for a long moment, obviously weighing the implications. ‘So, sooner or later, once Fox finds out he’s been tricked, he’s going to come back, right?’

Kingston nodded. ‘Hopefully sooner rather than later. Thing is, when he does, we must be ready for him. He’ll be furious—my guess is that he won’t hesitate to use that gun if he has to. But that could all be in our favour.’

Her brief moment of elation over, Jamie’s expression was sombre again. ‘In our favour! What will he do when he comes back, then? We’re sitting ducks down here.’

‘First we have to find a place to hide the canvases.’ He reached behind the crate and took out the three loose canvases. ‘Hold these for a moment, would you?’ he said, handing them to her. He took off his jacket, laying it across the wooden crate, the inside lining facing up. ‘This should work for the time being,’ he said.

Jamie watched as he smoothed out the back section of the nylon lining. Neatly hidden by pleats was a long zipper that extended all the way across the back lining. ‘It’s called a “poacher’s pocket”,’ he said, taking the canvases from Jamie and carefully folding them loosely in two so as not to risk cracking any of the paint. He winked. ‘Big enough to hide a brace of partridges.’ He slid the paintings into the pocket and closed the zipper, folding the pleats back in place. ‘There,’ he said, looking up, satisfied. ‘That should out-fox Fox.’

‘Clever,’ said Jamie. ‘So what are we going to do when he gets back?’

‘I’ll tell you in a minute,’he said, going to the ladder and climbing to the top.

She watched as he took the Swiss Army knife out of his pocket and started to lever the screwdriver blade under one of the metal straps that secured the ladder to the ledge of the trapdoor. In thirty seconds the strap was swinging free. ‘Don’t know what I’d do without this little baby,’ he said, moving over to the second strap. ‘Glad they used nails and not bolts,’ he mumbled. Soon, the second strap was loose. Slowly he descended the ladder that was now movable. At the bottom, he gripped the rung level with his knees with both hands and suddenly jerked the ladder upwards. Sliding on the edge of the ledge surrounding the trapdoor, it struck the underside of the door with considerable force making a loud thump. He put the ladder back in position, looked at it for a second, then said, ‘Next time Fox pokes his nasty face down here, he’s going to regret it.’

‘I’m starting to get the idea,’said Jamie.

‘It’s not the greatest,’ said Kingston, ‘but given the vast number of choices, it’s the best I can come up with on the spur of the moment. It’ll depend mostly on timing and a simple cue from you which we can work out.’

For the next couple of minutes, Kingston demonstrated how they would deal with Fox. He went over it twice to make sure each of them knew exactly what had to be done, then they settled in for the wait.

Kingston sat on the wooden crate, Jamie on the trunk, ready to get into their positions the minute they heard the slightest sounds overhead.

‘I’m sorry that I got you into this damnable situation, Jamie.’ Kingston said, shaking his head.

‘Look, Lawrence, neither of us had the faintest idea that there could be any real danger in coming down here—nothing like this—so don’t blame yourself. In a way, I should carry the blame for not having seen through Fox, not believing that the paintings could be here.’

Kingston shrugged. ‘Under different circumstances we might have been able to make a deal with Fox. Let him have the paintings if he would agree to walk away. Somehow I don’t think that’s an option any more. The man’s a psychopath and he knows damned well that, given the chance, the first thing we’d do now is to call the police.’

‘I know it’s too late now, Lawrence, but perhaps it would have been a good idea to let someone know we were coming down here. Not a soul knows we’re here.’

‘There are quite a few things I wish I’d done differently, Jamie. I regret not having been more forthright with you and keeping stuff to myself. In all fairness, Ferguson should have been in on our discovery, too. He helped us find all of this.’ He paused, looking up the ladder, thinking. ‘I did try to call him by the way,’ he said, turning back to her.

A minute or so passed as they were left to their own thoughts. Kingston was tempted to test the waters and tell her how much he had come to value and enjoy her companionship, how his feelings had changed towards her over the last weeks, just to see how she would respond, curious as to whether his feelings might be reciprocated. Springing it on her suddenly seemed inappropriate. Perhaps he could segue into it once he’d broached the question of their eventual parting, which he thought about constantly now.

Would she would ask him to stay on after the gardens were opened, to help with the vineyard and the winery? Now he’d had time to think it over, that prospect was both appealing and challenging. He prided himself on knowing a lot about the noble grape but to actually plant a vineyard and work alongside a professional winemaker would be an experience and an education that would never come his way again. While he pondered these questions his ears were alert for any sounds from above. Quickly he abandoned the idea of bringing any of it up. It was foolish of him to have thought of it in the first place. The only thing that mattered now was getting out of the damned tomb that they were in.

Kingston looked at his watch. Twenty-five minutes had passed since Fox had left. By this time he could be miles away. Maybe he hadn’t bothered to look at the canvases after all. Unlikely, but it
was
possible. He’d undoubtedly seen them lying on the top of the crate, with the Pissarro on top, and would have no idea that a switch had taken place.

‘Hell,’ he muttered under his breath.

Jamie, whose chin was resting on her cupped hands, her eyes fixed on the floor, looked up at him. ‘What?’

‘Nothing. I just hope to God that he’s not driving to London or somewhere bloody miles away before he looks at those paintings.’

‘If he was telling the truth when I met with him, he could be taking them back to France. To the dealer.’

‘Girard,’ Kingston muttered instinctively.

Jamie sat up and lightly massaged her forehead. ‘If he is, that would be catastrophic.’

‘No, don’t you worry, Jamie, he’ll look at them. He has to—thirty million pounds’worth of art? He won’t be able to resist it.’

‘Sounds like you may be right, Lawrence.’

‘What?’As he looked up at her the saffron light from the lamp glinted Vermeer-like on the whites of her eyes. She was looking up unblinking at the trapdoor. He heard it, too, now—a faint shuffle.

There it was again. No doubt about it. Someone was up there.

Kingston looked at Jamie, put his index finger to his lips and quickly moved up against the wall behind the ladder where he would be out of Fox’s line of sight when he looked through the trapdoor opening. Jamie remained sitting on the trunk that they’d positioned about eight feet in front of the ladder. When Fox removed the trapdoor he couldn’t miss seeing her.

A few more seconds of silence—and then the unexpected.

A knocking on the trapdoor.

Jamie, biting her lip, looked across at Kingston. He frowned and motioned for her to be quiet and still.

More knocking, this time harder.

Then the barely audible grind of the brackets being slid aside.

Kingston watched as the trapdoor was lifted and a shadowy head leaned over the opening right above him.

‘Jamie?’

It wasn’t Fox’s voice.

Kingston stepped around to the front of the ladder. It was only one word but the voice sounded familiar. Ferguson? He looked up. Hell’s bells. It
was
Roger Ferguson.

Jamie was on her feet, clasping her hands to her head. ‘Thank God,’ she said.

‘You’re both damned lucky I found you,’ he replied. ‘Who on earth locked you in this place?’

‘Let’s get the hell out of here first and then we’ll tell you everything,’said Kingston.

Jamie was already at the top of the ladder, Roger helping her up into the room. Carrying his jacket and the lamp, Kingston was right behind her.

‘How in the world did you find us?’ Kingston asked.

‘It was the tool bag.’

‘Of course, no reason for him to take it,’ said Kingston. ‘You got my message?’

‘I did. I called back but your answering machine’s not working. After a message like yours, you didn’t think I was going to sit on my hands and wait for an engraved invitation, did you? So I drove over. Neither you nor Jamie was around and China didn’t know where you were, so I thought—well, it struck me that if your discovery was so “awesome” as you put it, you would be at the chapel, so that’s where I went. When I saw that vertical pew and the stairway … well, I don’t mind telling you, it was one hell of a surprise.’

Jamie tugged Roger’s sleeve. ‘We have to go, quickly,’ she said.

‘All right. Anyway, it was bloody dark looking down those steps, so I went and borrowed this flashlight from China. If it hadn’t been for the tool bag sitting in the middle of the room, I might have missed the trapdoor altogether. One hardly expects to find a Bosch drill in the middle of a subterranean medieval chamber. If it weren’t for that—’

‘Look,’ said Jamie, ‘we don’t have time to stand around and chat about it. Fox could come back any minute—he’s got a gun—and then there’ll be three of us down there,’ she said, nodding at the trapdoor hole.

‘Fox?’ Roger asked.

‘Never mind, we’ll tell you later,’ Jamie replied, testily.

‘We’d better not leave that trunk,’ said Kingston, putting on his coat, making sure the canvases were flat in the poacher’s pocket. ‘Give me a hand with it, will you, Roger?’

Kingston went back down into the room and dragged the small trunk across the floor to the foot of the ladder. What was inside, he wondered? What could possibly be so important to Ryder? With a grunt he hoisted it up on to his shoulder and started up the ladder. At the top Roger gripped the handle and the two of them manoeuvred the trunk over the trapdoor ledge and on to the floor.

With Kingston and Ferguson carrying the trunk between them and Jamie a few paces ahead holding the lamp and carrying the tool bag, they started back to the chapel.

Nothing was said as they hurried along the corridors, Jamie looking over her shoulder now and then, careful not to get too far ahead.

Kingston’s mind was on the trunk. What on earth could it contain? More paintings, possibly, but from the painstaking manner in which the other three had been sealed and crated, it seemed unlikely. Whatever it was must be valuable. He started to imagine possibilities when he realized that Roger had suddenly stopped. So had Jamie. She was standing motionless a dozen paces ahead of them one hand held up, palm facing them. She looked over her shoulder. ‘Someone’s coming,’ she whispered, just loudly enough for them to hear. ‘It has to be Fox.’

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