Authors: Henry Porter
Suddenly the weight of her assailant was gone and she understood that he had been hauled away by the other man. She rolled away from the wall and began to struggle to her feet, knowing she might have to fight for her life again. But they were crashing down the stairs and a second or two later the front door banged and they were gone. She got up. She felt no pain, just terrible sickness and fear swarming in her mind.
No sound came from upstairs. She picked up her bag and took the stairs three at a time. The two men had come from a large office overlooking the street. The lights were still on and papers were strewn across the floor. In a glance she saw a small pale-green safe with its door open and a leg protruding from behind the desk.
Hugh Russell was out cold. She ran her hand over his body, checking for injuries and found a small patch of damp blood at the back of his
head. She reached for the phone, then thought better of it and crouched down to the safe. There were a few folders in the bottom, which contained title deeds, one or two share certificates and some letters written in an unsteady, elderly hand that was certainly not Eyam's. The shelf was empty. She got up and looked around, then went over to the filing cabinet. There was nothing under Eyam's name or her own. She returned to the desk and searched the papers on the floor.
Russell began to groan. She moved to his side. He opened his eyes and raised one arm to shade them from the light. He didn't know what â or who â had hit him. She helped him sit and examined the back of his head. âGod that hurts,' he said.
âYes, you'll need a couple of stitches. We'll call the ambulance. Just take it easy.'
He stared blankly at the safe. âSo they've got everything?'
âThat's where you kept David Eyam's documents?'
He nodded groggily. âYes, I took them out of the envelope and left them in there ready for you.' She noticed a key in the safe, still attached to a chain. They had torn it from his belt.
âWas there anything in the filing cabinet?'
âNo.'
âWhat was written on the documents in the safe? I mean, who were they addressed to?'
He tried to think. âNo one â I took them out of the marked file to look over them this afternoon and then returned them to the safe when I came over to the hotel. All the other material addressed to you I gave you this morning.'
So he had read the documents and was so alarmed by their contents that he had come to find her.
âI think we'd better call the police and ambulance. I'll dial, but I want you to speak to them. Just give them the address and say you've been attacked during a break-in.'
When he had finished she replaced the phone and reached for a bottle of water lying on the desk, and handed it to him. He put it to his lips: the plastic bottle made a cracking noise as he gulped.
âOK?' she asked, kneading his shoulder gently. âThe cut is not too
bad. It's stopped bleeding. Don't tell the police I was here, but say what was stolen. It's important that this all goes on record. Say it was private material left by the late David Eyam. Was there anything else in the safe?'
âAbout seven hundred pounds in cash.'
âAre you sure it's gone?'
âWell, look for yourself!' he said testily.
She didn't need to. It was possible that this was just an ordinary burglary, but the voice of the man shouting on the stairs didn't sound like a local thug, and anyone committing a burglary would surely have snatched her bag when it fell to the floor. This was a professional job and the money had been taken to disguise the real purpose of the break-in.
A siren was making its way up the street. âIs there another way out of here?' she asked.
âGo downstairs and to the back of the building. You'll find a door with the key in the lock. You'll need to slide the bolts top and bottom.' He stopped, revolved his head then rubbed the back of his neck. âDid you see the man who did it?'
âThere were two of them, but let's keep that to ourselves for the moment.' She touched him on the shoulder. âYou're going to be fine; just stay there. I'll be in touch.'
Downstairs she worked the bolts and found herself in an overgrown garden. In the half-light she felt her way to a gate and wrenched it open. There was a path, which she followed down an incline into The Cut. She was shocked but clear in her mind. If the men were professionals, why didn't they wait until the offices were empty and they could take all the time they needed to search Russell's files? In an hour or so they could have broken into the rear of the building and had the place to themselves without risk of disturbance. She knew the answer to her own question. They didn't have the luxury of time because Eyam's files were so important that once they suspected they were in Russell's possession they had to move quickly. It didn't matter who was in the building or what violence had to be used. It was also clear to her that only after Russell had found her at the Green Parrot cafe did they understand
where Eyam's documents might be. From the moment since she'd showed her face at the inquest and rather naively entered her name in the register at the door they had been waiting to see who would contact her.
When she entered the hotel she saw that the Jubilee Rooms had been cleared and a long table set up and laid for dinner. At the reception she was handed two envelopes with her key. The first was from Darsh Darshan and contained his card with a note scratched in childish writing. âPlease contact me in person soonest.' The second was an invitation from Mermagen to a nightcap in the bar after dinner.
Once in her room, she undressed and bathed the gash on her anklebone, then examined the bruises on her shoulder and by her left kidney. Eyam's scarf had done something to protect her neck, but there was a bump on the back of her head which, like the grazes on her upper arm and shin, wouldn't show. Violence shocked her and when directed at her made her feel a sense of total astonishment. She recalled the breath and the violence of the man who held her down, and his evident excitement, and hoped that he had been injured by the jab with the chair leg. From the minibar she took a whisky miniature and Canada Dry, which she drank looking out into the night. At least they hadn't got the will or Eyam's letter, and according to Russell, there was nothing on the documents to show who they were intended for, although that would be easily deduced once the will was known about. Though surprising, the will was straightforward enough. The letter, on the other hand, struck her as bizarre and strained. She took out the envelope and ran her finger along the words of the last passage.
The evening I speak of at the start of this note is perfect. I write on a patch of gravel garden in front of the cottage resting on an old metal table, which I inherited when I bought the place. I have a glass of Puligny
Montrachet at my side; a neighbour's dog is making eyes at a bowl of cheese sticks. It has been a very hot day. The sun has set and the sky is bruising a gentle purple in the west. It is just past eight o'clock, and the cuckoos call from the other side of the valley. There are hawks hunting in the dusk above me. As ever, the Dove is their prey. The birds sing but mostly they listen and watch at this time of the day. You will find it all very much behind the times, but I have been happy here.
If you are reading this it means I'm gone. The evening is yours now with al its grandeur and its flaws: you are more than equal to both. Good luck, and look after my books, my beloved Bristol and my garden â especialy my vegetable patch.
With my love, David.
Dove Cottage, August 20th.
It was as if someone else had written it. Eyam's prose was fluent and stagey: long sentences with plenty of asides placed between dashes that could try the reader's patience. These staccato eruptions of sentiment weren't him at all. And there was much else that jarred. For a start, Eyam hated dogs and white wine, even when it was very good. Montrachet was her favourite wine, not his. She remembered one of his rather obsessive monologues talking about the village of Puligney Montrachet on the Côte de Beaune, where he had once found himself looking for a restaurant. The village was dead; the houses had been bought as investments by the wine growers and were empty. There were no shops and no one about. It was like an abandoned film set, a place with no content, waiting for lines to be spoken to give it semblance of life. Montrachet was a fraud and so was its wine, he said.
He also loathed descriptions of sunsets, once saying to her that it was impossible even for a genius to evoke a sunset without seeming like a booby. Sunsets were off limits, as were all love poetry, walks in the moonlight and nightingales.
Which brought her to the cuckoo. She didn't know much about British natural history but she did remember a verse her English grandmother had taught her: â
The cuckoo comes in April, Sings her song in May, Changes tune in the middle of June, And then she flies away
.' The letter was dated in August by which time the cuckoo was well on its way
back to Africa. Like the neighbour's dog and the Montrachet, the cuckoo was a fraud. The cheese sticks too. Eyam was allergic to dairy products, particularly cheese. He had once keeled over at Oxford after eating cheese on top of a shepherd's pie.
The sentence âI kiss your clever eyes for good fortune and the happiness that has not been ours' touched her but she had to admit it didn't sound like Eyam. He simply didn't think that way, at least he never said or wrote such things. So the entire point of the letter was to warn her that he had been watched and that things at Dove Cottage were not as they seemed. It didn't make any sense to her, because the letter was oblique in its meaning yet at the same time obviously coded. She rose and walked around the room, working through the events of the day.
The process of fixing the elements of a problem calmed her because she had a faith, acquired in part from Eyam, that no difficulty existed without a solution: optimism was the prerequisite for civilisation, he used to say. Without optimism humanity was ruled by fear and superstition. She dressed again, went downstairs and asked the man on reception if she could use the phone. Tony Swift, the coroner's clerk, answered from his usual stool in the Mercer's Arms. They met forty minutes later at a Thai restaurant a five-minute walk from the eastern end of the square, which with various diversions and feints took her the full forty minutes.
âI wonder if I can ask you a few more questions about the inquest,' she said when she sat down.
âAre you all right? You look distraught.'
âI fell over,' she said. âBruised my ribs and ankle. About the inquest: can you tell me about it?'
âOff the record, sure.'
âWhy was the hearing held here?'
âWhen Lady Eyam decided she'd have the funeral where her stepson lived, it became a matter for the coroner, because he has jurisdiction if a body lies within his district. We were notified that the remains would eventually arrive in High Castle and so the investigation â such as it was â went ahead.'
âIts purpose being to . . . ?'
âEstablish the cause of death.'
âWas there any kind of official interest in this case? Pressure from anyone?'
âWhat are you asking?'
âDid anyone try to stop you investigating what had happened in Cartagena?'
He eyed her thoughtfully. âYou're asking if I think he was assassinated, aren't you?'
âWell, it's a possibility, surely?'
âNo, I spoke to Detective Bautista by phone before the formal interview and he was clear which group planted the bomb and why. They wanted to kill as many as possible in that party headquarters and not David Eyam. Besides, there was no motive to kill Mr Eyam.'
âWhat if you were told that Eyam had offended certain parties in Britain; would that alter your view?'
He shook his head. âI knew that he'd had to resign from government. He told me. He made no secret of it. Everyone knew.'
âWas there anything that you discovered that was not submitted as evidence to the inquest?'
âWhat do you have in mind?'
âThe money â Eyam's father's money. He was worth between twenty and thirty million. I happen to know that Eyam did not inherit anything like that.'
âMaybe there wasn't time. After all, they died only a couple of months apart.'
âSo you looked into that.'
âNo, I read about his death in the papers. I put things together.'
âCome on, Tony, you talked to people. You followed your instincts. I can see it in your eyes.'
He lifted the glass of wine to his lips and ruminated. âI am not an investigator,' he said eventually.
A procession of small dishes began to arrive, which he marshalled and addressed with the kind of relish that made her think food was a substitute for something missing in big, slow-moving Tony's life.
âThe Swedes â what happened to them? And the man who shot the film?'
âThey were treated for minor injuries and shock and went home.'
âWhy didn't you interview them? They might have seen something that the camera didn't pick up.'
âWe had the detective. That was all that seemed necessary, but I grant you that the Swedes might have had something to say.'
âHave you got their names? Contact numbers?'
âNo, I don't believe we do.'
âThat's an odd way to conduct an inquiry.'
âWe have limited resources. We do our best.'
âBut no one questioned what Eyam was doing in Colombia? Why was that? There is probably no country in the world that would have been less appealing to him, and yet no one thought to ask what he was doing there. It doesn't cost any money to ask a question like that.'
Swift shook his head and mumbled something.
âDid you check with the border police? Did you find out the flights he took? His onward journey? The government collects all that information nowadays.'