He was thoughtful. Nodded now and then. âYou don't think Oliver will find the culprit?'
âI think it's more than a simple case of industrial espionage emanating from Vicori House. It seems to me that some of the happenings at the flats can be put down to spiteful mischief, but others are dangerous. I don't say I've got the half of it yet, but I'm getting there, and now â after what happened yesterday â I have a lever to prise out some more of the truth.'
âIt's Saturday and I'm at a loose end. Shall we make a list of who lives where and why you think they're implicated in . . . whatever?'
Together they worked on a chart and found a gaping hole where information about the people in number six ought to be.
âI don't think anyone mentioned the people in that flat. The two old biddies went on a bit about the old lady who died of a heart attack on the ground floor, but that seems to have happened before any of this started. Or . . .' She frowned. âMaybe that started it? No, I'm being fanciful. That was a death from natural causes.'
âWho said so?'
âMm? The biddies. Oh.' She struck her forehead. âI am so stupid! I lapped up everything they told me but I didn't check any of it. I thought they were just two elderly ladies without an axe to grind, but . . . Let me get my notes out.' She scrabbled in her handbag for her notebook.
âNow, what they told me â and it needs checking â is that a woman, I think her name was Lavinia, lived on the ground floor. She was in her nineties and never went out. Social services came in twice a day, and the biddies ran errands for her when they could. The place was a tip, apparently. The biddies said they came back from shopping one day and found her on the floor in the entrance hall, dead. They didn't go to the funeral because it was in the local Catholic church and they're Church of England if they're anything, which I rather doubt â that they go to church, I mean.
âAfterwards the caretaker told them that the old lady's grandson was coming round to see what furniture he could sell or give away. Carrie said she didn't think there was much that they'd have wanted, even as a keepsake. In other words, I suppose they'd have liked the chance to look around and pick up any unconsidered trifles. Sir Lucas is thinking of buying the remainder of the lease from the grandson, if he'll sell.'
Piers pointed to flat six. âYou haven't any details for these people?'
âHarvey something. That's all I've got.' Annoyed with herself. âIt might just be an oversight.'
âOr it might be someone they like too much, so they don't want to point a finger in their direction?'
âPossibly, yes. Or it might be someone tied to Sir Lucas's organization. Tariq used to work for him. It seems Sir Lucas owns the building and that he's “vetting” or possibly “approving” of any new lettings. I only hope Oliver isn't getting himself into difficulties by allying himself too closely to Sir Lucas. I don't care for the man.'
âYou have to let Oliver make his own choices.'
She sighed. She knew that.
He emptied the last of the coffee into his cup. âTalking of Max, which we weren't, but we might as well . . . He came round to see me the other day, saying he needed to explore what business opportunities might open up for him in addition to his work as a member of parliament. He's looking for directorships in this company or that.'
He sent her a sharp look. She didn't react.
âIn words of one syllable,' he said, âhe thinks you would be happy to appoint him as a director of the Abbot Agency, so that he could go on the board of this other company . . . What's it called, Holland and Butcher? He says they want closer ties and he'd be able to . . . Don't throw your mug at me! Calm down. It was not my idea.'
âNor mine,' said Bea, seething. She pressed both hands to the back of her head. âOh. Oh! Now I see why he was so keen for me to sign up with them. The idiot! As if I . . . He's a lovely boy, of course he is, but not the world's greatest brain, and I would never have thought of making him a director of the agency.'
âThat's all right, then. I didn't think you'd like the idea, but I did think I should check.'
âHe seems to think that . . . He doesn't see any difficulties, whereas I see nothing but problems everywhere I look.'
âTell me, slowly and quietly, in words of one syllable, what happened yesterday. Was it an attempt on your life? God forbid.'
âNo, I don't think it was that.' She closed her eyes. âYesterday. I'd been talking to Lady Ossett. Then I called on the Professor on the floor below her. I asked him to go up and talk to Lady O. Then I rang the bell for the lift. Nothing happened. It's an old lift, but mechanically sound. It doesn't clang and clatter as some of them do. I thought someone must be using it.
âI started down the stairs which wind round the lift shaft. I could hear people shouting down below. Carmela was standing by the lift on her floor, also trying to summon it. I spoke to her. She didn't respond, so I went on down. She followed me. Nearing the bottom of the stairs, I heard more shouting and then the front door bang shut. The young couple from flat number two were in the foyer. They looked as if they'd been in a fight. The boy had a nosebleed.
âThe lift doors opened to reveal the two old biddies, who'd been riding up and down, waiting for the disturbance to be over before they departed for their afternoon's walk or whatever. The girl explained that they'd had a visit from a man looking for a Miss Whiplash at that address. She'd told him to go away, he'd insisted, they'd struggled, Connor intervened and got the worst of it. Their visitor had gone by the time I got there.'
âThere really was a visitor?'
âOh yes. I heard him leave. Carmela confirmed she's had much the same problem. As with the other “incidents”, the nastiness had escalated. First, call-girl cards with the tenants' private phone numbers on had been put in their letter boxes, and then displayed in a public place, bringing punters into the flats. Carmela invited me to join her for a cup of coffee down the road. As we left the building, the caretaker arrived with some cleaning materials and stuck an “Out of Order” notice on the lift door. Carmela and I talked. She was helpful though always loyal to Sir Lucas.
âIt seemed odd to me that the caretaker should clean the lift at that time of day. On our return Carmela and I saw what looked like a broom handle had been placed between the lift doors, preventing them from shutting. There was no light on inside the lift. We assumed, I think correctly, that the power had been cut to the lift. I saw . . . It was dark inside, but I thought I saw someone's feet on the floor wearing a pair of trainers. I suggested we call the caretaker, but then I thought â or Carmela said â I'm not sure who suggested it, I'll have to think, my head achesâ'
âLeave it for now.'
âCarmela and I between us pushed the door open, but it sprang back. Before it closed I saw . . .' She took a deep breath. âI saw a young man with dark hair, dressed in a black padded jacket and jeans. Trainers; white with orange laces. He was lying on something, a pile of something, maybe a sports bag. I think it was Tariq, and I think he was dead.'
B
ea put her hands to her head. âDid my imagination run away with me?'
âYou wouldn't imagine white trainers with orange laces. You saw them all right.'
âWhich means that I saw Tariq lying . . .' She held up both her hands. âI'm jumping to conclusions again. I've never met Tariq and wouldn't recognize him if I did. I saw
a
young man lying on the floor in the lift, with his back to me. He was half propped up on something between him and the floor. I assumed that he was young because he wasn't thick around the middle. His head was in shadow but he did seem to have dark hair. I didn't see his face. But three people said I saw decorators' rubbish. Why would they lie? Why would they want to cover up a death?'
He shrugged. âDo you want to hand it over to the police?'
âOn what grounds? “Please, sir; I want to report a suspicious death, but I've had a bad bump on the head and three other people say I'm imagining it.” I did think of asking CJ about it, but he's on Sir Lucas's side in this, and Sir Lucas doesn't want anything to get out which might affect the share price of his company.'
She cleared the breakfast things away. The sky had turned ice blue. It would be cold outside. It was a Saturday, and there was no real need to go down into the agency rooms although she often did so.
Maggie hadn't returned home. Nor Oliver. She didn't like to think of them staying on in the flats. âThere's something very nasty going on there. Let me tell you what else I imagined. The moment I saw â whatever â in the lift, I got out my mobile and said I'd call the police. Someone reached round from behind me and snatched the phone out of my hand. I turned to see what was happening, the heel of my boot snapped, I staggered . . . and felt a blow to my head before I blacked out. I didn't fall. I was pushed. Now you can have a good laugh.'
âI'm not laughing. What happened to your phone?'
âI was told it got smashed to pieces on the tiled floor as I fell. Oliver arrived just as the others were picking me up. He saw the phone in pieces and didn't think to rescue it.'
âIf we accept that all three of them had something to hide, I can understand them not wanting the police brought inâ'
âFour,' said Bea, homing in on the recollection of the moment when she'd fallen to the ground. âCarmela was by the lift. The dark-haired girl was standing next to her. The boy Connor was by the door to their flat. None of them was near enough to snatch my phone. As I turned I caught a glimpse of someone looming over me. It was a fleeting impression, but yes, I think someone else had come into the foyer at that moment.'
â
Four
people conspiring to hide a body?'
For a moment she wondered if Piers had joined the opposition in refusing to believe her story.
He hadn't. âBea, if you go back there . . . No, make that
when
you go back there, I'm coming with you. It's a Saturday, and we should be able to find everyone in. We'll talk to every single one of them. We'll check and double-check until we find out what's really going on. If Oliver tries to interfereâ'
âIf someone in the flats really is using email to liaise with Sir Lucas's enemies, Oliver could find the link, however well hidden. I wondered at first if they would all have computers but, having met some of them, I think probably everyone does, except perhaps for the biddies, and even they might use one occasionally to keep in touch with their friends or order something online.'
âGive me your gut reaction. Who is doing this?'
Her mind see-sawed between various possibilities. Images of all those she'd met went flittering through her head. âTariq may have been responsible for . . . I do think he keyed Sir Lucas's car, but as for the rest of it . . . I really don't know.'
âDid Lady Ossett try to kill her husband?'
âNo. Definitely.'
âHas he left her, or not?'
âCarmela says he has. If he removes the Freud picture soon, then yes, he has. It's possible he's looking for a younger and more beautiful woman to hang on his arm. Lady O doesn't want to believe she's being superseded by someone younger, and she says he's only pretending to leave her, to protect her from his enemies. That's his cover story, too. I don't believe him and I don't believe her. At bottom, I don't think she believes it, either. She's facing a solitary life as a divorcee again. What's more, she's frightened. She thinks someone is out to get her. I don't
want
to believe her, because if it's true, it's going to affect Maggie's future. Unfortunately, I do. The cat died because it ate her supper.'
âDid she kill the cat to persuade Lucas that she's in danger from person or persons unknown?'
Bea stared into the middle distance, testing this hypothesis. It fitted the facts, but didn't convince. âNo, I don't think so. The poisoning was done by someone who was at the bridge party that afternoon. I thought at first that someone might have come up the fire escape from outside the building, but that's not possible because of the way it's constructed. Then I thought someone might have got
out
of his or her flat on to the fire escape and climbed the stairs to the top . . . but then you can't get into the penthouse or into any of the other flats unless someone opens a door for you from the inside. Which means you could only do it if you had an accomplice.'
âWhich is not impossible.'
A gesture of resignation. âYou know something? I would like to walk away from the whole boiling lot of them. Let them fight it out among themselves. What do I care if Tariq has been killed? He probably deserved it. Well, no . . . I can't say he deserved it, unless it really was him who caused his boss to tumble down the stairs, and even then . . . No, he didn't deserve to die. But I really do not see why I should bother my head with them.'
He cheered her on. âI understand. If it weren't for Maggie and Oliver getting involved, you'd wash your hands of them.'
âYes, I would. I am
not
amused. I'm annoyed about my mobile phone being smashed. It might have got broken when it fell to the floor, of course. But I suspect it was deliberately smashed because it held â or once held â some rather incriminating evidence, and someone wanted to make absolutely sure I didn't have it any more.'
She told him about the shots she'd taken of the tiny nail marks on the staircase. âSir Lucas deleted the pictures on my mobile, probably after sending them on to his own phone.' With her most angelic expression, she added, âWhich is exactly what I'd done, too, before I met him. I've fallen into the habit of sending any pictures I take on my phone back to base as a matter of routine, in case I happen to be mugged on the way home, or have an accident. As soon as I'd got the pictures on my camera, I sent them on to my old mobile which is currently sitting in the top drawer of my desk downstairs. Sir Lucas doesn't know that, and he thinks he's got the only hard evidence there is.'