I could hear his relief down the phone line that I wasn’t blaming him.
‘Where do you live?’ I asked. ‘I’ll come by to pick up my phone.’
‘No, man,’ he said. ‘I’ll bring it. You staying with Mr Martin?’
‘No, I’m at the Coral Stone Club,’ I said. ‘Unit number one.’
‘I know it, man,’ Carson said. ‘I’ll get the phone back there.’
‘Thank you,’ I said, and hung up.
‘Any luck?’ Henri asked me when I went back to the others.
‘Yes. Carson Ebanks has my phone and my shirt. He’s going to drop them back to the apartment.’
‘Great.’
The atmosphere improved little throughout the evening as we ate some supper and then played charades, each of us in turn drawing a book, film, song or play title from a hat and trying to get the others to guess it by mime alone.
I thought there was going to be a slightly awkward moment when I drew Agatha Christie’s A Murder is Announced out of the hat, but no one else seemed to notice.
Sir Richard was particularly good at guessing, even getting the tricky title True Grit from some rather strange and obscure miming by Bentley Robertson. I could easily understand how Reynard Shipping Limited had grown to be the market leader under his astute leadership. There seemed to be nothing going on that escaped his sharp and insightful scrutiny.
Hence, I couldn’t imagine that he was unaware of the ongoing antagonism directed at me by his son — an antagonism that intensified in direct ratio to the amount of red wine Martin consumed, which was considerable. But Sir Richard made no attempt either to stop it, or to apologize to me in any way.
In contrast to her husband, Lady Mary was not the sharpest needle in the sewing basket, getting hopelessly confused by the game and being totally unable not to speak when she shouldn’t. But even she was not as affable towards me as she had been in the Range Rover at Luton Airport.
Bentley wasn’t being very pleasant either. He took every opportunity to put me down. Whenever I made a wrong guess, he would roll his eyes and make some comment or other about how stupid I had been. But at least I could understand the reason why he was so ill-disposed towards me — she was sitting next to me on the sofa.
I had what he wanted.
What I couldn’t fathom was why Martin had been so blatantly unfriendly ever since I’d arrived on Cayman.
It couldn’t only be because I’d accused him of purposely poisoning me with carbon monoxide, although that in itself would have probably been enough, and it certainly hadn’t helped.
There had to be more to it.
Perhaps he didn’t approve of me as the boyfriend of his cousin.
But he’d actually been unduly hostile towards me right from when we’d been first introduced by Gay Smith on the balcony of the box at Sandown, which had been before I’d even met Henri.
Everything pointed to the fact that it must have something to do with me overhearing him being so crudely castigated by Bentley at Newbury. Perhaps he was embarrassed that I’d seen him being spoken to in that manner by someone I would consider as his subordinate.
My shirt and phone were waiting for us on the doorstep when Henri and I arrived back at our apartment just before midnight.
Our truce from earlier was still holding and we went to bed and converted it into a full-blown peace treaty.
But I couldn’t get to sleep afterwards.
Henri, meanwhile, went straight off, and she was soon snoring gently beside me. I continued to toss and turn for what seemed like an age before, finally, getting up and going through to the kitchen to make myself a cup of tea. Perhaps that would help.
I put on some shorts and took my tea outside to the beach. It was a beautiful night with an almost full moon casting sharp shadows of the palm trees on the sand. I walked down near to the water’s edge.
I was troubled.
Coming away for Christmas with Henri’s relations had been a mistake. My presence now seemed to be resented by all of them. Maybe it was because Christmas is such a family-orientated time and I was an interloper, here to take one of their number away from them. Or had my first instinct been right all along — she was out of my league.
I wandered along the beach in the moonlight.
All was in darkness at the Reynard residence.
My naturally inquisitive instincts drew me closer. Was there a rubbish bin handily placed that I could rummage through to discover Martin’s darkest secrets?
I knew there wasn’t.
Henri had already shown me how all the trash was mechanically compacted into tightly compressed bales before being placed in a dumpster ready for collection. Great for reducing its volume but not much good for snoopy investigators like me.
Nevertheless, I walked off the beach onto the Reynard terrace as if somehow being close by might help me to understand what was going on in Martin’s mind.
I wondered if there were any CCTV cameras watching me. I couldn’t see any. Martin had already said how safe he felt on Cayman and that crime was rare. However, I would have expected some sort of security at such a valuable property, especially as Martin and Theresa were away so much in Singapore.
I finished my tea and was about to walk out onto the beach on my way back to bed when I heard a noise — a door being opened.
I silently stepped into the shadow beneath one of the casuarina trees and watched as Theresa padded along the path in bare feet from the main house towards the guest cottage. She was wearing a thin white housecoat that billowed open slightly as she moved, revealing her nakedness beneath.
So I had been right about the body language on the plane. Theresa and Bentley were lovers.
As she walked, she held her hand to her mouth and furtively scanned from side to side, as if she knew precisely how dangerous was this particular Christmas game she was playing. It didn’t matter how drunk her husband had become after all that red wine, there was no guarantee he wouldn’t wake up and discover her missing from their marital bed.
I smiled to myself as I walked back down the beach to the Coral Stone Club. There was definitely a measure of schadenfreude in me knowing that my tormentor from the previous evening was being cheated on by his own wife, and right under his nose. And with the creepy Bentley Robertson, too.
Henri might be pleased that Bentley’s lecherous leanings were currently directed elsewhere. Not that I’d tell her.
She was still sleeping soundly as I slipped back between the sheets beside her, and now I quickly joined her in the Land of Nod.
In spite of my nocturnal sojourn, I was awake early and I left Henri asleep while I went into the kitchen.
I opened my laptop and checked for any new e-mails but, unsurprisingly over the Christmas holiday, there weren’t any.
Horseracing paused for just two days before Christmas and also on the big day itself, then it restarted with fervour on Boxing Day with eight or nine different meetings, the most prestigious being at Kempton Park for the annual running of the King George VI Chase.
The London office of the BHA took the more usual British approach to the Christmas period, closing from Christmas Eve right through until the New Year. Not that all the BHA staff had the time off. Far from it. Integrity officers, clerks of the scales, stipendiary stewards and many others were still working on the racecourses, checking horse identities, monitoring weighing rooms and carrying on the other regulatory functions of the Authority.
Indeed, this was the first time since I’d joined the BHA that I had not been working on Boxing Day.