Authors: Lynda La Plante
William was irked by the way Summers was speaking to him. ‘Listen to me, Myers, I took the personal items because there were details of how much he had been forking out to this guy and it was a lot of money. Whether it was blackmail or not is immaterial now. Chalmers is out of the loop. I was just trying to protect Maynard’s reputation, and mine and the Party’s. He’d have been misappropriating funds, for Chrissakes.’
Myers Summers got to his feet and walked round the room
as he spoke. ‘All right, then, let me put it to you another way. His bank will have particulars, won’t they? His bookkeeper, accountant. Maybe friends of this Justin Chalmers character knew about the money. Maybe there are other Maynard pickups in other diaries – last year’s for instance. The police will be looking into everything.’ He laid a hand on the mantelpiece and turned to face the desk. ‘Can’t you see, Sir William? This is a huge story. I mean, the man was supposed to be some great political hope, and he’s climbing the ladder like a trapeze artist when he tops himself because he’s heartbroken about some bloody poof. How much sleaze do you need to make a juicy front page?’
Myers pulled at his pinstriped waistcoat, then his tie, then his jacket, as if to calm himself. ‘Okay, Sir William, I’ll tell you what’ll happen. You give a statement – I’ll get my people to write it for you – and in it you say nothing about the diaries or documents you took. Nothing. You happened to be there as you had a meeting scheduled. After finding the body you were deeply distressed and needed a few moments to collect yourself before calling the police. I’ll talk to the housekeeper. I’ll also run a trace on Chalmers. List the other names you found in the diaries and I’ll give them the once-over as well.’
‘Is all this necessary?’ William asked.
Myers Summers picked up his bulging briefcase: he was already running late for his next appointment. ‘If Andrew Maynard was murdered, then it’s abso-fucking-lutely necessary and even if he committed suicide, drunk or drugged up, whatever, it’s still gonna be headlines for weeks because the press will want to find out who his boyfriends were, what his relationship was with every male he knew, in fact. And you can bet they’ll come after you. You found him dead, you financed him to the hilt, and it’s public knowledge that he’s your mentor when it comes to public-speaking. Everyone knows you scratch each other’s backs. What they’ll wonder is just what else you’ve mutually scratched.’
‘It’s okay, Myers. I get the picture. But no one’s going to think
that
of me.’
Myers Summers raised an eyebrow. ‘They’ll believe anything, if they’re told it often enough. Isn’t that why you have a publicity agent?’ He rested his hand on the door handle. ‘I’m just warning you, as one of the mega-rich, you are just the type the tabloids will go for. The bigger they are, the harder they fall. And all those little people you may have forgotten treading on when you were climbing up will come crawling out of the woodwork.’ He paused and faced William. ‘Just for the record, were you having a scene with Maynard?’
William gasped. ‘
What?
’
‘Are you queer?’
William sucked in his breath, shocked. ‘
No, I am not
. And how dare you speak to me like that!’
‘Well, that’s the best news so far. I’ll deal with it,’ Myers said, and with that he opened the door to the hall. ‘I’ll be in touch shortly – if I make it through that mob and live to tell the tale.’
William remained in his study. Up to now, he would have described himself as unshockable; a tough man who had made it to the top by his own hard graft but who now enjoyed rubbing shoulders with the British aristocracy. For the first time, he realized the depth in him of a naïvety he had never previously suspected. He checked his watch and buzzed for his secretary.
Michael scooted in. ‘Yes, Sir William?’
‘I’m due at lunch. Can you call the Ritz and—’
‘Oh, I’m sorry, Sir William, Lady Thorn called, but I didn’t want to interrupt your meeting with Mr Summers. She sends her apologies, but has come down with flu.’
William sat down behind his desk. ‘Perhaps, under the circumstances, it’s a good thing.’
‘Yes, sir, I’ve got sheets of messages. There are also numerous faxes, e-mails and an urgent call from Superintendent Hudson, Metropolitan Police. He’s left his home number and direct line.’
Michael left the study and William unlocked the drawer that
contained Maynard’s business-appointment diary, and wondered why Myers hadn’t asked to see it. It soon dawned on him that such a devious man wouldn’t want to touch it. If the story did get out, Myers could say he knew nothing about any diaries being removed. William’s eyes travelled to his wall-safe, which held Maynard’s personal diary. It was as if he could see the red leatherbound cover through the steel door. It was dangerous to keep it, but he could not bring himself to destroy it.
Later, Myers Summers phoned William to give him details of the post-mortem: Andrew Maynard had died from loss of blood due to both arteries being severed on right and left wrist. Tests showed that his blood contained a vast quantity of alcohol and cocaine. There were no signs of physical violence. It was determined that he was a practising homosexual but no traces of semen were found apart from his own. His naked body was devoid of pubic hair and smothered with Johnson’s baby oil. Myers hesitated to draw breath. ‘They also found numerous bottles of pills. You name any kind of speed and your friend had it, plus five grams of cocaine. Oh, and another tasty morsel that will, no doubt, be fucking leaked is that Maynard was suffering from genital herpes.’
William couldn’t listen to any more. He was sweating. Only the announcement of a Third World War would knock this lot off the front page.
‘The housekeeper’s blabbed,’ Myers went on. ‘She’s told the cops about a diary and drawers full of letters and that you were the only person with access to them before they arrived.’
‘I suppose the police will want to question me,’ William observed.
‘’Course they will, but wait, just fasten your seat-belt. So far strong-arm tactics have kept it all under wraps in case it was murder, but it’ll all hit the fan tonight. So far the press have only had the most meagre details. They only know he died at home. But tonight they’ll have the titillating details. You know anything about his family?’
‘No, I don’t. His parents are dead. I believe he had a sister, but she died in some car accident. There’s just an aunt in Bournemouth, as far as I know.’
‘Ah, well. No doubt we’ll know a lot more by tonight.’
William shrugged. ‘You sound very sure. Why?’
‘All right then,’ Summers grunted. ‘How about this? Someone has managed to get photographs of the body from the mortuary and some other bloody hack paper has been sent photographs of Maynard dancing in some gay nightclub in Morocco, so Christ only knows what else they’ll get from some bloody perverted bastard trying to make a few quid.’
‘Well, what’s all that got to do with me? I financed him. I didn’t go down the Palais with him, dancing on a Saturday night.’
Summers hesitated. ‘We only have your word for that.’
William was starting to get angry. ‘I’ve told you, Myers, I knew nothing about his pervy life till yesterday, and I will make a statement to that effect and hand it over to the police. I’ve already spoken to them anyway – at his house before I left.’
‘That won’t satisfy the papers,’ Summers was impatient. ‘You were closely associated in life so you will be in death.’
‘So what do you suggest I do?’
‘Give a statement and, thinking about it, perhaps it’d be better in your own words.’
‘You fucking said you’d write it!’ William said angrily.
‘Maybe I did, but standing back a bit, I think it should come from you. You knew him better than anyone else.’
‘What’s that supposed to mean?’
‘One minute you were calling him the political saviour of the millennium, next he’s pictured dancing with twelve-year-old boys in Morocco! You work it out. I can’t be involved.’
‘Can’t or won’t? Which is it, Myers?’
There was a pause. ‘My wrists are tied.’ Summers gave a humourless laugh. ‘Sorry, under the circumstances, that was a rather crass thing to say.’ He continued, ‘I’ve been warned off
you, William. I’m sorry, but a word of advice. For God’s sake keep schtum about the diaries and stuff. Burn them, get rid of them, deny ever seeing them. And don’t mention the note. Why did Maynard want
you
to find him, before the police? And don’t mention this Chalmers bloke either.’ There was a pause, this time at William’s end. ‘You still there? Hello? Hello?’
William had hung up. He’d never liked the squint-eyed son-of-a-bitch anyway. It was just that he was so well connected. Well, fuck him! William hadn’t become one of the wealthiest men in England without being able to take care of some jumped-up journalist – or a pack of them come to that. And if they wanted to dig around in his past, let them. He didn’t have anything to hide.
‘Michael,’ he bellowed. ‘Call a press conference.’
‘For when, sir?’
‘First thing in the morning. Meanwhile I want you to cut out every newspaper article on Maynard and record every piece of television news coverage to date, even if it takes all night.’
‘It’s all over the Internet,’ Michael said nervously.
‘Then print out whatever anybody’s saying. I want to read it all, no matter what it says. Is it bad?’
Michael nodded and his lips trembled slightly. ‘Some of it’s downright sick. Er . . . will you be arranging his funeral?’
‘What?’
‘Andrew Maynard’s funeral, sir.’
William slumped into his chair. ‘Yes, yes – well, you sort it out, I can’t think about that right now. Go on, do what you have to, no expense spared, but keep it simple.’
Michael left the room, as William lowered his head into his hands. He had been too preoccupied, too shocked for it all to have sunk in. He had been blocking out the emotional impact of losing a man he had grown to admire and love like a son, and now the floodgates opened. The tears trickled down his cheeks, as he murmured his protégé’s name in despair and bewilderment.
He tried to hide his tears when Michael tapped and reentered. The police were waiting to see him.
William blew his nose, wiped his face and nodded for Michael to let them in. He stood up, hand outstretched to meet Superintendent Hudson and Detective Inspector Joan Fromton. He offered them tea or coffee but they refused, seating themselves in front of his desk on two hard-backed chairs that were usually placed against the wall.
The interview lasted two and a half hours. They questioned William in detail as to how he found the body, what the housekeeper had said, why she had called him before contacting a doctor or the police. William had no need to lie. He just did not mention that a note had suggested she call him: it was feasible that she would have anyway as he was so closely associated to Maynard.
Then came the obvious question; ‘Just how closely?’ With dignity William dismissed from their minds any notion that he was homosexual. All he was, and all he had been for the past few years, was a friend and business associate. There had been nothing more between them than friendship and admiration. He had had no inkling of Maynard’s private life.
He was asked whether he had removed any items from Maynard’s property and he said that he had not.
When questioned about Maynard’s associates, he again extricated himself well by saying that, as he had already stated, he did not know of Maynard’s private life so did not know any of his close male or female friends. The officers were polite, at times appearing genuine in their sympathy with his grief. Twice William came close to tears as he repeated that he had not really taken in the loss of someone he had greatly admired, and felt sad that, despite their friendship, Maynard had not spoken to him about his depression. This led the officers to ask William if he had been aware that Maynard used certain substances, and that a substantial amount of cocaine had been found in his house. William said he had not. The interview eventually ended with
William admitting, ‘It is hard, I suppose, for you to understand how someone like me could be foolish enough not to see what Andrew was, but I didn’t. You see, I cared for him deeply, as a father would. He was special to me, but now I have to face the awful truth that I never really knew him at all.’
The Superintendent thanked William, and said that he would have Maynard’s note sent to him as soon as it could be released. Hudson had a habit of appearing to dismiss a subject, then hopping back to it. ‘You recognized the writing on the note as Maynard’s, is that correct?’
William nodded.
‘It was very blurred from the water, but you still believe it to be Maynard’s own handwriting?’
William’s nerves were ragged. ‘Yes, I do. Is there any reason for me not to? He had very distinct, looped writing.’
‘Yes, we are aware of that. But the letter was submerged in water so it’s quite difficult to ascertain for sure . . . That said, the forensic experts believe it to be Maynard’s.’
The policeman assured him that foul play was not suspected and offered William his condolences. When he was ushering them from the room, Joan Fromton asked if William would please contact them should any of Andrew Maynard’s associates approach him; they would still like to make enquiries about the drugs discovered at Maynard’s home. Then she threw William. ‘Does the name Justin Chalmers mean anything to you, Sir William?’
William knew that he had flushed but he shook his head. ‘I can’t say that it does, may I ask why?’
‘He is the main beneficiary in Andrew Maynard’s will. He had no family, but no doubt Mr Maynard’s lawyers will be able to assist us. Thank you very much for your time.’
William gave a long, weary sigh. Chalmers worried him greatly but, as the police had said, there were no criminal charges under review. But yet again, just as he went to shake the Superintendent’s hand, he felt the carpet tugged from beneath him.
‘Sir, if this case had proved to be other than suicide, and you had removed items from the deceased’s premises, it would be a criminal offence. I am sure you are aware of that. I take your word for it that you did not remove any such items such as diaries, private letters . . .’