“Other evidence?”
“A plethora of crap that we’re sorting through. Disintegrating newspapers, half a dozen empty cigarette packs, a wine bottle. You name it, it’s there. The island’s a local hang-out, has been for years. We’ve probably got two generations of rubbish to sift through.”
Lynley opened the folder. “You’ve narrowed time of death between half past five and seven,” he noted and looked up. “According to the college, the porter saw her leaving the grounds at a quarter past six.”
“And the body was found not long after seven. So you’ve actually less than an hour to play with. Nice and narrow,” Sheehan said.
Lynley flipped through to the crime scene photographs. “Who found her?”
“Young woman called Sarah Gordon. She’d gone there to sketch.”
Lynley raised his head sharply. “In the fog?”
“My thought as well. You couldn’t see ten yards. I don’t know what she was thinking. But she had a whole kit of stuff with her- couple of easels, a case of paints and pastels-so she was obviously setting up for a good long stay. Which was cut a bit short when she found the body instead of inspiration.”
Lynley looked through the pictures. The girl lay mostly covered by a mound of sodden leaves. She was on her right side, her arms in front of her, her knees bent, and her legs slightly drawn up. She might have been sleeping save for the fact that her face was turned towards the earth, her hair falling forward to leave her neck bare. Round this, the ligature cut into her skin, so deeply in places that it seemed to disappear, so deeply in places that it suggested a rare, brutal, and triumphant sort of strength, a surging of adrenaline through a killer’s muscles. Lynley studied the pictures. There was something vaguely familiar about them, and he wondered if the crime were a copy of another.
“She certainly doesn’t look like an arbitrary body dump,” he said.
Sheehan leaned forward to get a look at the picture. “She wouldn’t be, would she? Not at the hour in the morning. This wasn’t any arbitrary killing. This was a lying-in-wait.”
“Quite. There’s some evidence of that.” He told the superintendent about Elena’s alleged call to her father’s house the night before she died.
“So you’re looking for someone who knew her movements, what her schedule would be that morning, and the fact that her stepmother wouldn’t go running along the river at a quarter past six if she had the chance not to. Someone close to the girl, I should guess.” Sheehan picked up a picture and then another, looking at them with an expression of marked regret on his face. “I always hate to see a young girl like this die. But especially this way.” He tossed the pictures back. “We’ll do what we can at our end to help you-matters being what they are in forensic. But if the body’s any indication, Inspector, aside from someone who knew the girl well, I should say you’re looking for a killer who’s craw-fi lled with hate.”
Sergeant Havers emerged from the buttery and descended the stairs from the terrace only moments after Lynley emerged from the library passage which connected Middle Court to North Court. She flipped her cigarette into a bed of asters and sank both hands into the pockets of her coat. Pea-soup green, it hung open to reveal navy trousers going baggy at the knees, a purple pullover, and two scarves-one brown and one pink.
“You’re a vision, Havers,” Lynley said when she joined him. “Is this the rainbow effect? You know the sort of thing. Rather like the greenhouse effect but more immediately apparent?”
She rummaged in her bag for a packet of Players. She shook one out, lit it, and refl ectively blew smoke in his face. He did his best not to lap up the aroma. Ten months without smoking and he still felt the urge to rip the cigarette from his sergeant’s hand and smoke it to the nub.
“I thought I ought to blend in with the environment,” Havers said. “You don’t like it? Why? Don’t I look academic?”
“You do. Certainly. By someone’s defi nition.”
“What could I hope to expect from a bloke who spent his formative years at Eton?” Havers asked the sky. “If I’d shown up in a top hat, striped trousers, and cutaway, would I have passed muster with you?”
“Only if you had Ginger Rogers on your arm.”
Havers laughed. “Sod you.”
“Sentiments returned.” He watched her flick a bit of ash to the ground. “Did you get your mother settled at Hawthorn Lodge?”
Two girls passed them, holding a muted conversation, their heads together over a piece of paper. Lynley saw that it was the same hand-out which had been posted in front of the police station. His eyes went back to Havers, who kept her own on the two girls until they disappeared round the herbaceous border that marked the entrance to New Court.
“Havers?”
She waved him off, puffing on her cigarette. “I changed my mind. It didn’t work out.”
“What have you done about her?”
“Carrying on with Mrs. Gustafson for a bit. I’ll see how it goes.” She brushed her hand aimlessly over the top of her head, ruffl ing her short hair. The cold air made it crackle. “So. What d’we have here?”
For the moment, he submitted himself to her desire for privacy and gave her what facts he had gleaned from Sheehan. When he was fi nished telling her what he knew so far, she said:
“Weapons?”
“For beating her, they don’t know yet. Nothing was left at the scene, and they’re still working on possible trace evidence on the body.”
“So we’ve got the ubiquitous unidentifi ed blunt object,” Havers said. “And the strangulation?”
“The tie from the hood of her jacket.”
“The killer knew what she would wear?”
“Possibly.”
“Photos?”
He handed her the folder. She put her cigarette between her lips, opened the folder, and squinted through the smoke at the pictures that lay on top of the report. “Have you ever been to Brompton Oratory, Havers?”
She looked up. The cigarette bobbed as she spoke. “No. Why? Are you getting some of that old-time religion?”
“There’s a sculpture there. The martyred St. Cecilia. I couldn’t quite put my fi nger on what it was about this body when I fi rst saw the pictures, but on the way back here it came to me. It’s the sculpture of St. Cecilia.” Over her shoulder, he fingered through the pictures to find the one he wanted. “It’s the way her hair sweeps forward, the position of her arms, even the ligature round her neck.”
“St. Cecilia was strangled?” Havers asked. “I thought martyrdom was more your basic lion-attack in front of a crowd of cheering, down-thumbing Romans.”
“In this case-if I recall it correctly-her head was half-severed and she waited two days to die. But the sculpture only shows the cut itself, which looks like a ligature.”
“Jesus. No wonder she got into heaven.” Havers dropped her cigarette to the ground and crushed it out. “So what’s your point, Inspector? Do we have a killer hot after duplicating all the sculptures in Brompton Oratory? If that’s what’s going on, when he gets to the crucifi x-ion, I hope I’m off the case. Is there a crucifi xion sculpture in the Oratory, by the way?”
“I can’t remember. But all the Apostles are there.”
“Eleven of them martyrs,” she said refl ectively. “We’ve got big trouble. Unless the killer’s only looking for females.”
“It doesn’t matter. I doubt anyone would buy the Oratory theory,” he said and guided her in the direction of New Court. As they walked, he listed the points of information he had gathered from Terence Cuff, the Weavers, and Miranda Webberly.
“The Penford Chair, blighted love, a good dose of jealousy, and an evil stepmother,” Havers commented when he was done. She looked at her watch. “All that in only sixteen hours by yourself on the case. Are you sure you need me, Inspector?”
“No doubt of that. You pass for an undergraduate better than I. I think it’s the clothes.” He opened the door to L staircase for her. “Two flights up,” he said and took the key from his pocket.