Straight (31 page)

Read Straight Online

Authors: Dick Francis

Then there was a frantic call from a nearly incoherent woman who wanted to speak to Mr. Franklin urgently.
“Mrs. P.?” I asked tentatively.
Mrs. P. it was. Mrs. Patterson, she said. I gave her the abysmal news and listened to her telling me what a fine nice gentleman my brother had been, and oh dear, she felt faint, had I seen the mess in the sitting room?
I warned her that the whole house was the same. “Just leave it,” I said. “I’ll clean it up later. Then if you could come after that to vacuum and dust, I’d be grateful.”
Calming a little, she gave me her phone number. “Let me know, then,” she said. “Oh dear, oh dear.”
Finally the Antwerp voice returned and, begging him to hold on, I hopped over to the door, called Annette, handed her the customers’ orders and said this was the moment for securing the defenses. She gave me a disapproving look as I again closed the door.
Back in Greville’s chair I said to the voice, “Please, monsieur, tell me if my brother had any dealings with you. I am trying to sort out his office but he has left too few records.”
“He asked us particularly not to send any records of the work we were doing for him to his office.”
“He, er, what?” I said.
“He said he could not trust everyone in his office as he would like. Instead, he wished us to send anything necessary to the fax machine in his car, but only when he telephoned from there to arrange it.”
“Um,” I said, blinking, “I found the fax machine in his car but there were no statements or invoices or anything from you.”
“I believe if you ask his accountants, you may find them there.”
“Good grief.”
“I beg your pardon, monsieur?”
“I didn’t think of asking his accountants,” I said blankly.
“He said for tax purposes ...”
“Yes, I see.” I hesitated. “What exactly were you doing for him?”
“Monsieur?”
“Did he,” I asked a shade breathlessly, “send you a hundred diamonds, color H, average uncut weight three point two carats, to be cut and polished?”
“No, monsieur.”
“Oh.” My disappointment must have been audible.
“He sent twenty-five stones, monsieur, but five of them were not diamonds.”
“Cubic zirconia,” I said, enlightened.
“Yes, monsieur. We told Monsieur Franklin as soon as we discovered it. He said we were wrong, but we were not, monsieur.”
“No,” I agreed. “He did leave a note saying five of the first batch were CZ.”
“Yes, monsieur. He was extremely upset. We made several inquiries for him, but he had bought the stones from a sightholder of impeccable honor and he had himself measured and weighed the stones when they were delivered to his London house. He sent them to us in a sealed Euro-Securo courier package. We assured him that the mistake could not have been made here by us, and it was then, soon after that, that he asked us not to send or give any information to anyone in his ... your ... office.” He paused. “He made arrangements to receive the finished stones from us, but he didn’t meet our messenger.”
“Your messenger?”
“One of our partners, to be accurate. We wished to deliver the stones to him ourselves because of the five disputed items, and Monsieur Franklin thought it an excellent idea. Our partner dislikes flying, so it was agreed he should cross by boat and return the same way. When Monsieur Franklin failed to meet him he came back here. He is elderly and had made no provision to stay away. He was ... displeased ... at having made a tiring journey for nothing. He said we should wait to hear from Monsieur Franklin. Wait for fresh instructions. We have been waiting, but we’ve been puzzled. We didn’t try to reach Monsieur Franklin at his office as he had forbidden us to do that, but we were considering asking someone else to try on our behalf. We are very sorry to hear of his death. It explains everything, of course.”
I said, “Did your partner travel to Harwich on the
Koningin Beatrix
?”
“That’s right, monsieur.”
“He brought the diamonds with him.”
“That’s right, monsieur. And he brought them back. We will now wait your instructions instead.”
I took a deep breath. Twenty of the diamonds at least were safe. Five were missing. Seventy-five were ...
where?
The Antwerp voice said, “It’s to be regretted that Monsieur Franklin didn’t see the polished stones. They cut very well. Twelve teardrops of great brilliance, remarkable for that color. Eight were not suitable for teardrops, as we told Monsieur Franklin, but they look handsome as stars. What shall we do with them, monsieur?”
“When I’ve talked to the jeweler they were cut for, I’ll let you know.”
“Very good, monsieur. And our account? Where shall we send that ?” He mentioned considerately how much it would be.
“To this office,” I said, sighing at the prospect. “Send it to me marked ‘Personal.’ ”
“Very good, monsieur.”
“And thank you,” I said. “You’ve been very helpful.”
“At your service, monsieur.”
I put the receiver down slowly, richer by twelve glittering teardrops destined to hang and flash in sunlight, and by eight handsome stars that might twinkle in a fantasy of rock crystal. Better than nothing, but not enough to save the firm.
Using the crutches, I went in search of Annette and asked her if she would please find Prospero Jenks, wherever he was, and make another appointment for me, that afternoon if possible. Then I went down to the yard, taking a tip from Greville, and on the telephone in my car put a call through to his accountants.
Brad, reading a golfing magazine, paid no attention.
Did he play golf? I asked.
No, he didn’t.
The accountants helpfully confirmed that they had received envelopes both from my brother and from Antwerp, and were holding them unopened, as requested, pending further instructions.
“You’ll need them for the general accounts,” I said. “So would you please just keep them?”
Absolutely no problem.
“On second thought,” I said, “please open all the envelopes and tell me who all the letters from Antwerp have come from.”
Again no problem: but the letters were all either from Guy Servi, the sightholder, or from Maarten-Pagnier, the cutters. No other firms. No other safe havens for seventy-five rocks.
I thanked them, watched Brad embark on a learned comparison of Ballesteros and Faldo, and thought about disloyalty and the decay of friendship.
It was restful in the car, I decided. Brad went on reading. I thought of robbery with violence and violence without robbery, of being laid out with a brick and watching Simms die of a bullet meant for me, and I wondered whether, if I were dead, anyone could find what I was looking for, or whether they reckoned they now couldn’t find it if I were alive.
I stirred and fished in a pocket and gave Brad a check I’d written out for him upstairs.
“What’s this?” he said, peering at it.
I usually paid him in cash, but I explained I hadn’t enough for what I owed him, and cash dispensers wouldn’t disgorge enough all at once and we hadn’t recently been in Hungerford when the banks were open, as he might have noticed.
“Give me cash later,” he said, holding the check out to me. “And you paid me double.”
“For last week and this week.” I nodded. “When we get to the bank I’ll swap it for cash. Otherwise, you could bring it back here. It’s a company check. They’d see you got cash for it.”
He gave me a long look. “Is this because of guns and such? In case you never get to the bank?”
I shrugged. “You might say so.”
He looked at the check, folded it deliberately and stowed it away. Then he picked up the magazine and stared blindly at a page he’d just read. I was grateful for the absence of comment or protest, and in a while said matter-of-factly that I was going upstairs for a bit, and why didn’t he get some lunch.
He nodded.
“Have you got enough money for lunch?”
“Yerss.”
“You might make a list of what you’ve spent. I’ve enough cash for that.”
He nodded again.
“OK, then,” I said. “See you.”
Upstairs, Annette said she had opened the day’s mail and put it ready for my attention, and she’d found Prospero Jenks and he would be expecting me in the Knightsbridge shop any time between three and six.
“Great.”
She frowned. “Mr. Jenks wanted to know if you were taking him the goods Mr. Franklin bought for him. Grev—he always calls Mr. Franklin Grev. I do wish he wouldn’t. I asked what he meant about goods and he said you would know.”
“He’s talking about diamonds,” I said.
“But we haven’t ...” She stopped and then went on with a sort of desperate vehemence. “I wish Mr. Franklin was here. Nothing’s the same without him.”
She gave me a look full of her insecurity and doubt of my ability and plodded off into her own domain and I thought that with what lay ahead I’d have preferred a vote of confidence: and I too, with all my heart, wished Greville back.
The police from Hungerford telephoned, given my number by Milo’s secretary. They wanted to know if I had remembered anything more about the car driven by the gunman. They had asked the family in the family car if they had noticed the make and color of the last car they’d seen coming toward them before they rounded the bend and crashed into the Daimler, and one of the children, a boy, had given them a description. They had also, while the firemen and others were trying to free me, walked down the row of spectator cars asking them about the last car they’d seen coming toward them. Only the first two drivers had seen a car at all, that they could remember, and they had no helpful information. Had I any recollection, however vague, as they were trying to piece together all the impressions they’d been given.
“I wish I could help,” I said, “but I was talking to Mr. and Mrs. Ostermeyer, not concentrating on the road. It winds a bit, as you know, and I think Simms had been waiting for a place where he could pass the car in front, but all I can tell you, as on Sunday, is that it was a grayish color and fairly large. Maybe a Mercedes. It’s only an impression.”
“The child in the family car says it was a gray Volvo traveling fast. The bus driver says the car in question was traveling slowly before the Daimler tried to pass it, and he was aiming to pass also at that point, and was accelerating to do so, which was why he rammed the Daimler so hard. He says the car was silver gray and accelerated away at high speed, which matched what the child says.”
“Did the bus driver,” I asked, “see the gun or the shots?”
“No, sir. He was looking at the road ahead and at the Daimler, not at the car he intended to pass. Then the Daimler veered sharply, and bounced off the wall straight into his path. He couldn’t avoid hitting it, he said. Do you confirm that, sir?”
“Yes. It happened so fast. He hadn’t a chance.”
“We are asking in the neighborhood for anyone to come forward who saw a gray four-door sedan, possibly a Volvo, on that road on Sunday afternoon, but so far we have heard nothing new. If you remember anything else, however minor, let us know.”
I would, I said.
I put the phone down wondering if Vaccaro’s shot-down pilots had seen the make of car from which their deaths had come spitting. Anyone seeing those murders would, I supposed, have been gazing with uncomprehending horror at the falling victims, not dashing into the road to peer at a fast-disappearing license plate.
No one had heard any shots on Sunday. No one had heard the shots, the widow had told Greville, when her husband was killed. A silencer on a gun in a moving car ... a swift
pfftt
... curtains.
It couldn’t have been Vaccaro who shot Simms. Vaccaro didn’t make sense. Someone with the same antisocial habits, as in Northern Ireland and elsewhere. A copycat. Plenty of precedent.
Milo’s secretary had been busy and given my London number also to Phil Urquhart, who came on the line to tell me that Dozen Roses had tested clean for barbiturates and he would give a certificate of soundness for sale.
“Fine,” I said.
“I’ve been to examine the horse again this morning. He’s still very docile. It seems to be his natural state.”
“Mm.”
“Do I hear doubt?”
“He’s excited enough every time cantering down to the start.”
“Natural adrenaline,” Phil said.
“If it was anyone but Nicholas Loder ...”
“He would never risk it,” Phil said, agreeing with me. “But look ... there are things that potentiate adrenaline, like caffeine. Some of them are never tested for in racing, as they are not judged to be stimulants. It’s your money that’s being spent on the tests I’ve had done for you. We have some more of that sample of urine. Do you want me to get different tests done, for things not usually looked for? I mean, do you really think Nicholas Loder gave the horse something, and if you do, do you want to know about it?”
“It was his owner, a man called Rollway, who had the baster, not Loder himself.”
“Same decision. Do you want to spend more, or not bother? It may be money down the drain, anyway. And if you get any results, what then? You don’t want to get the horse disqualified, that wouldn’t make sense.”
“No ... it wouldn’t.”
“What’s your problem?” he asked. “I can hear it in your voice.”
“Fear,” I said. “Nicholas Loder was afraid.”
“Oh.” He was briefly silent. “I could get the tests done anonymously, of course.”
“Yes. Get them done, then. I particularly don’t want to sell the Ostermeyers a lemon, as she would say. If Dozen Roses can’t win on his own merits, I’ll talk them out of the idea of owning him.”
“So you’ll pray for negative results.”
“I will indeed.”
“While I was at Milo’s this morning,” he said, “he was talking to the Ostermeyers in London, asking how they were and wishing them a good journey. They were still a bit wobbly from the crash, it seems.”

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