âYour other self is secure,' Esther said.
âLet's imagine a scene,' he replied.
âLet's.'
âFor instance, I might be at the window of my place in Pine Street, though not necessarily observed.'
âWell, yes, I expect you might be at times. Neighbourhood watch.'
âTell me this, then, Mrs Davidson, whose car's out there? Whose car out there on this a.m. occasion?'
âIn our scene?'
âIn our scene.'
âThis is not an easy one to answer.'
âA well-known car.'
âGive me a clue.'
âLike new. Not a scratch anywhere. Original wing mirrors, most probably.'
âPellotte's?'
âYou'd already had a clue from the sergeant, yes? He mentioned names â Pellotte, Dean Feston?'
âDoing what in Pine Street?'
âStopped.'
âA call on someone. A dealer? Who's in Pine Street? They're coming to your place?'
âNot a call. They're on the pavement, stuffing themselves with cash. Working fast.'
âStuffing themselves?'
âTheir pockets. The boot's open.'
âThey're taking money from the boot?'
âThe boot's like an operating theatre.'
âMeaning?'
âEquipment.'
âWhich?'
âAn oxygen cylinder. Blood transfusion gear. Big green first-aid box.'
âMany cars carry those.'
âAnd spare suits, shirts.'
âCash from where?' Esther asked.
âAsda bags. Two. Full.'
âYes, but from where?'
âYou ask the key questions. Why you're in that job.'
âBut would you know from where?'
âIf I say Larch Street? Most probably.'
âAround the corner.'
âWho's in Larch Street?' Caple said.
âGordon Basil Hodge?'
âBrilliant recall, Mrs Davidson! But to be expected. A brain like yours! You've got him dossiered, haven't you?'
âCollection by Pellotte and Dean from Hodge?'
âThat sort of thing.'
âRoutine.'
âThink so? What was the word around about Hodgy?'
âHe's won best trader awards, hasn't he?'
âSo the dossier says, I expect. That's old info, though. What did the voices tell us now, up-to-date?'
âWhich voices?'
âVoices generally.'
âGossip voices?' Esther asked.
âGossip, but spot-on gossip. That's obvious, isn't it?'
âIs it?'
â
Now
it's obvious. Because of the BMW stopped in Pine Street.'
âWhich spot-on gossip are we talking about?' Esther said.
âAsk yourself, why two bags of boodle?'
âTakings.'
Caple laughed. âWell, yes, you could call them that. Hodgy taking from the firm. Trying to.'
âSkimming?'
âPellotte himself, in person, present.'
âPellotte collects regularly. Everyone sees the BMW harvesting.'
âThis is a morning, doorstepping call, I'd say, plus paramedic backup kit and the emergency wardrobe. Not routine. The opposite.'
âOh. Is Hodge all right then?'
âOK so far, I think. But short of two Asda bags.'
âThe emergency clothing in the car boot?'
âUnused.'
âHow do you know? Perhaps they'd changed into the suits they were wearing when you saw them. The garments in the boot might have been the stained ones. Are you sure Hodge is all right?'
âThe clothes were clean.'
âThe spot-on gossip you mentioned said Hodge was diverting Happy Gardening Solutions loot, did it?'
âClever voices, weren't they?' he said.
So, how did all this bring revelations about Gervaise Manciple Tasker? Esther wondered, but didn't ask. Number Three guiding rule with informants: let them tell it their way. Don't badger. Don't push. Number One was: they know where they're safest so let them pick the meeting spot. Two: assume what they tell you is three-quarters wrong. âAll the Asda-bag money into their pockets?'
âNot all. It's too much. Their tailoring would look ridiculous.'
âWhy not just take it to the office safe â Happy Gardening Solutions? That's usual. We think it's laundered through company books.'
âThey're making for somewhere else,' he said, âand are timetabled. Where? There's been some more gossip around. It says they'll be away at a castle. A conference, to do with books they both like, especially Dean, relating to some author. Famous. Some in hardback. Not porn. Faunt Castle. No secret they're going. Everybody knows and has a chuckle. Those two, in love with books! How nice! They're proud of it, I bet. For something like that they'd want to look all right, not fat with cash. They pocket as much as they can in case the car's raided or pinched. They're going to be off Whit. Takers at the Faunt car park won't know they shouldn't touch the holy BMW. To them it would be just a BMW â luxury model, good for a glean or a drive away.'
Esther could see how the tale might develop. âThey put some of the money back in the boot, did they?'
âAlongside the oxygen, in a blue plastic crate, to help keep things tidy. They shoved the extra money under newspapers. And their pistols. Brownings. They're famed for Brownings. From their jacket pockets.'
âThey flourished guns?'
âNot flourished. Just didn't bother hiding. This is Pine Street. This is Whit. This is Adrian Pellotte and Dean.'
âWe're working on it.'
âThey wouldn't want to go to a literature conference in a castle with automatics aboard, would they? Off colour. And they had to make pocket room.'
âHow much do you reckon?'
âIn the Asda bags originally, I'd say at least twenty K, and maybe up towards twenty-five.'
âHow much goes back into the boot, under the papers? You'll know that exactly now, won't you?'
âAh . . .' he said.
âWhat?'
âYou're on to it.'
âOn to what?'
âHow things will turn out,' he said.
âThey drive off towards this castle, Faunt Castle?'
âThere's eleven thousand four hundred in the boot.'
âAnd you could guess at something like that, from watching them.'
âI knew it was pretty good. Used notes, no numbered list anywhere.'
âBut some forged and antiqued. At least some. Obviously, you couldn't tell that then. Did you tail them?'
âTail them?'
âTo the castle.'
âTail Pellotte and Dean Feston! Not fucking likely. Sorry! Not at all likely, Mrs Davidson. Couldn't be done â not secretly. They're too fly, too alert, know the game too well. We're talking about the chief of Happy Gardening Solutions and his heavy.'
âRight. But, of course, you didn't need to tail them. You knew where they were going. Faunt Castle will be on the map.'
âI keep my car in a friend's multi-lockable warehouse yard. It's on Whit, but I have to pushbike there. It takes a while. So I couldn't have tailed them, even if I'd been stupid enough to want to.'
âIt gave you a break-in idea, did it?'
âWhat?'
âThem loading their pockets. They're obviously scared someone might force the boot while they're into lit at Faunt. So, get as much of it about their person as they can manage. But more or less half is still there. “Very promising,” you say to yourself. “And I know where the car will be for most of the day, unattended.”
âMany would surely think like this, Mrs Davidson, if they'd seen the money moving.'
âAs you had.'
âThis is why observing from a window can be useful. It's dirty money, anyway. Crooked money. Drugs money. They can't have a proper right to it. Courts confiscate that sort of money.'
âYou, too. A true hijack. You were doing society a service,' Esther said. âDid you know how to get a BMW boot open? I don't suppose it would be alarmed. Pellotte doesn't want the police called to his car.'
âNow, listen: I'm not under caution.'
âNo.'
âNone of this can be used.'
âNone of it.
âAnd no recording.'
âNo recording.'
âI thought, “They're going to be off Whit. All that pious, timid respect for Pellotte's car won't apply.” It has always niggled me, you know.'
âWhat?'
âThe BMW. Its shine and size. The untroubled life it gets.' His cheery features went twisted and sour for a few moments. âThe rest of us drive something small and old and bottom of the range even when it was new, so if it does get done or taken the loss is nothing much.'
âEnvy's a deadly sin, Ivor.'
âSo damn smug the two of them look, cruising Whit. Yes, I know BMW boots. Not impossible.'
âEvidently.'
His face became upbeat again. âFaunt, the castle, ever seen it, Mrs Davidson?'
âI don't think so.'
âBeautiful. Not huge, but lovely. Middle ages, though mucked about with since obviously. Grey walls and towers backgrounded by the greenery of old trees. A centre for social and cultural stuff now, but you can imagine it as someone's home, although with towers. And a moat. Swans. There's a place like it in the books, I think. Why Faunt was picked for the conference. That's the talk. Several pricey vehicles in the car park. Four-by-fours. A Bentley. Three BMWs. Couple of Lexuses. Perhaps he's that kind of writer. Classy.'
âYou do the boot, lift the carrier bags, get back to your car and scarper?' Esther said. âI don't suppose you'd take the Brownings.'
âWhat would I do with Brownings?'
âDefend yourself, when Pellotte and Dean come looking for their deficit eventually?'
âGuns are not me, Mrs Davidson.'
âGood.'
âBut it's tricky in that car park. Plenty of people about. Some conference folk, most likely, and others, too. It's a community centre, you know. All sorts going on there as well as the literature. People coming to learn Italian and ballet steps. I have to look as if the BMW is
my
BMW. Like casual? And there might be CCTV, though I couldn't see it. The money's still in the bags, both about half full. They're bulgy. I've brought a black leather, very executive, valise with me in case I'm lucky.'
âYou pushbiked over to your car from Pine Street carrying a valise?'
âDon't report me to traffic for one-handed cycling, will you?'
âBit obvious?'
âNecessary.'
âDean's news gathering service will probably hear about it.'
âI'm entitled to own a valise.'
âAnd a bike. But he'll wonder if you were after treasure. Theirs. A chunk will have gone missing, won't it? Most probably, he's got your address in his data cupboard. He might suspect some window gazing.'
âAll right, perhaps I could have done things a different way. I didn't. I was rushed. So, at Faunt I take the money out of the bags in the boot and make four, neat flat piles. Then I wrap these with the newspaper and put them into the valise. This left the Brownings very obvious, but did I worry? I pull the boot lid down. Although it won't shut properly because of a bust lock it stays down. Most likely it will swing up when they're driving home, especially if they don't notice it's been done. Some rage then, I should think. Oh, dear, dear!' He half giggled, half smirked. âI'm still acting matter-of-fact â like I'm here for the conference or another activity and have papers and so on in the valise to do with my visit. There's a reception desk in the castle visible from the car park, which means, also, the car park is visible from the desk. I can see a woman staring out towards me and the BMW. I don't like it. What's she going to think if I walk to my old Peugeot from the BMW carrying a plump case and drive away, not even having gone into Faunt? Who's she going to tell? Will I see a blue light behind me after a couple of miles?
âSo, I walk urgently up towards reception, as though ashamed of being very late, yet pleased to be here at last. I say to her: “The conference, please?” “Pole?” she replies.
âI couldn't make out what she meant. Did she think I was Polish? Did it matter if I was? Or was the author Polish? Maybe some other meeting on, to do with exploring to the North or South Pole. I said: “Right.” You see, Mrs D., it didn't really matter where I ended up in the castle as long as she believed I belonged
somewhere
. She pointed to double doors on the other side of the reception foyer and I crossed to them and went inside. Quite a big room, fairly crowded, but with a few empty places at the back. This would be part of the original castle, the ceiling high, the walls bare stone. Might have been the Great Hall once, for feasts and merrymaking. Terrific. I love authentic old buildings. History I'm in favour of, times when Whit and Temperate didn't exist even. I took a seat, placing my valise under it.' He bent and re-enacted this with the custody chair, but no valise.
He straightened. âNow, a surprise,' he said. âWho do you think was lecturing? Dean! He sounded pretty good, as though he'd really done some reading. He spoke about all sorts of characters in the books like they were actual people he knew very well, but quite different from the people he knew on Whit. Maybe when he was banged up alone they became like friends â company in his cell. The money gave him quite a lot of extra chest and most probably around the hips, also, but I couldn't see that because he spoke from behind a lectern.