‘Must look my best for the funeral, after all. It’s at Mortonhall, on Friday. I’ve got a fair idea what I’m going to do with the ashes afterwards.’ She made an unmistakable flushing movement with her right hand.
‘Cheerio, then. If you want to come to the funeral you’ll be welcome. The senior partner’s talking about having a reception afterwards in the office. That’s a bloody sight more than I’d do for him.’
She closed the door on us with something grotesque, that we took for a smile.
We hustled down the path to the garden gate as fast as we could and dived into the Nissan, which sat self-consciously under the trees. As soon as we were inside, I looked across at Prim, straight-faced. ‘Widow of the Year, eh?’ That was enough; we erupted in hoots of laughter.
‘God,’ she gasped at last, still convulsing, ‘I actually feel happy for Willie Kane. Imagine, if Dawn had chucked him out before she left and he’d been forced to go back to that! Whoever killed him did him a favour.’
‘Aye, but he did one for her too. With him dead, she’ll have the house, free and clear.’
‘And what more could she be after?’ muttered Prim, ominously.
‘Ah, hold on though,’ I said, trying to keep her enthusiasm in check. ‘She said nothing at all to show that she knows about the theft, or the fiver. She connected you to me, remember, and that’s the story the police will have told her, about you and I finding him when we got back from the airport.’
‘So what? No, Oz. I’d put nothing past that woman. If Mrs Archer told her about the theft, the bank account and everything, she could have been signing Kane’s death warrant. Wish we knew a bit more about the boyfriend though. That’s another thing we didn’t find out.’
I looked at her, happy in the knowledge that I was about to score a point. ‘Remember what Dawn said about him, though. Head boy and head girl at the same time.’
‘Yes, I remember; but you remember, Mr Clever Dick. Mary Erskine’s an all-girl school. My dumb sister must have got it wrong.’
‘Ah Miss Clever … eh, Clever whatever. Mary Erskine’s run by the Merchant Company, and there’s a partner boys’ school less than a mile away. Stewart’s-Melville; it’s right at the end of this road, in fact. So …’
She was like a kid on a treasure hunt. ‘So why don’t we just head along there now and see what we can find out?’
In which the Old School Archives gives us an answer we don’t fancy … not one bit
Daniel Stewart’s and Melville College, to give it its full, lengthy title, was formed by the amalgamation of two smaller Merchant Company schools, when economies of scale began to mean something even in the select world of Edinburgh private education.
It’s housed in a fine old building on the Queensferry Road, a rectangle with copper-domed towers on each comer. As we reached it, the mothers of its primary school children were just beginning to gather in their second-hand Volvo estates. For some of them, picking up Junior and chewing the fat with the other Mums was probably the highlight of the day. There were so many of them gathered there that we had to park illicitly in the Tourist Board Headquarters and walk back.
The School Office was a slightly chaotic room. That meant that it was like all the school offices I’ve ever seen, only the accents were more refined, and the weans were better dressed … more uniformly, you might say.
The junior secretary was a friendly girl. ‘How can I help you?’ she said, and we both knew that she meant it, relieved to be dealing with people from the outside world.
Prim looked at me. I looked at Prim. In the same instant we realised we’d gone barrelling in there without a cover story. ‘No, you go on,’ said my partner, dropping me in it. Fortunately, my natural glibness, formed out of years spent trying to chat girls just like this one out of their knickers, came surging to the surface. I gave her my best pre-coital smile, the one that says, ‘Would you be interested in what I’ve got here!’
‘My friend and I are researching for a magazine article,’ I said, inspirationally. ‘We have a commission from the Sunday Times supplement for a piece which takes the attitudes of senior-school pupils from the mid-70s and compares them with today’s generation.
‘We’re asking a few schools if they can put us in touch with their head boys and head girls from those times, so that we can set up interviews. We’ve just seen the head girl of 1975 at Mary Erskine, and she suggested that we should look up her opposite number here.
‘Is there any possibility that you could give us his name?’
The girl smiled at me. I could tell that I’d have been in with a chance there.
She put a hand to her chin, as if she was thinking about it, but I knew the answer already. ‘I’m sure that I can lay hands on the School Yearbook for 1975,’ she said. ‘Wait a minute.’ She hurried off.
‘Smooth-talking bastard,’ Prim muttered under her breath as the girl disappeared.
It was only a minute, too. She came rushing back, pink-cheeked and triumphant. ‘I knew we had one left. It is only one, though. I can’t let you take it away, but I can photocopy pages if you’d like.’
She handed it across the wooden counter. I took it, and noticed that my hand was shaking, very slightly. I held it out so that Prim could see and flicked through the pages until I found the index. ‘Captains Courageous’ began on page twenty, after the Rector’s report on the year.
Naturally, the Head Boy was the first entry. The outstanding chap of the year, beyond a doubt. Captain of Rugby, Captain of Cricket, Captain of Squash, School Athletics Champion, Leader of the Debating team, an all-rounder of the sort in which schools like Stewart’s-Melville rejoice. A veritable hero, in fact.
There was a photograph too. He stood there in blazer, decorated with his many sporting colours, slim, squared-jawed, clear-eyed, a man-boy on the verge of a career of leadership in whatever profession he chose. And below the photograph, in rich italics, a caption.
‘Head of School, 1974-75. Richard Ross.’
Prim gasped and looked up at me. ‘That’s Superintendent …’
I closed the book. ‘Yes, partner. I was afraid it would be him. That’s who’s got Mike Dylan shitting himself trying to find that fiver. And that’s who’s been crumpling the sheets with Linda Kane, just like they did twenty years ago.’
We had our backs to the girl, so she couldn’t hear us. ‘Our FP club keeps very good records,’ she said. ‘I’m sure they could help you find him.’ Helpful to the end.
I handed her back the yearbook. ‘That’s all right, dear,’ I gave her a ‘goodnight’ smile. ‘Right now, I’m more worried about this chap finding us.’ I could feel her eyes in my back, wrinkling with bewilderment, as Prim and I hurried away.
In which plans are made for flight
‘D’you think Linda’ll tell him we’ve been to see her?’
‘Abso-bloody-lutely, my darling.’ I checked my watch. ‘About half an hour ago, I reckon.’
She looked at me; not scared, but anxious. ‘We’re in trouble, Oz, aren’t we?’
‘Right up to our pretty little chins, Primavera. You get the picture, yes?’
I didn’t need to spell out anything. ‘Oh yes, I get it. Mr Archer pours out all his troubles to Mrs Archer. Mrs Archer tells her outraged friend Linda, all about the theft, the account and the banknote. And she tells her that Oz Blackstone, PI, is hot on the trail. Linda tells her boyfriend, Superintendent Ross.
‘I imagine that gave them a wonderful idea: that they should beat you to it, get rid of the wee chap for good and pick up his money at the same time. Is that how you see it?’
‘Sure is. How do you think they went about it.’
‘I’d guess that she phoned Willie, and told him she wanted to see him, alone. Lucky Linda: Dawn was away, so Willie said, “Okay, come to the flat on Wednesday.” You said that when you phoned in the evening a woman answered the phone. That must have been her. Think back,’ she said. ‘Was it?’