Gently reached for the letter again and examined the sheet of paper closely. It was certainly of an uncommon type, a class of paper he had rarely met with. Though soft and thin, it had the appearance of strength and the surface was finely grained. Held up to the light it showed part of a watermark — a piece of design, with the
letters: O… DA… VI.
‘Do you know what sort of paper this is?’
‘Of course! I’ve made a study of papers. That’s an Italian one, the “Leonardo da Vinci” — supposed to be the same as da Vinci used.’
‘Where can you buy it over here?’
‘I don’t think you can, unless they have some in London.’
‘Have you seen any of the members use it?’
‘No… I’ve only seen it in reference books.’
Gently lingered a little over the panicky bank manager — just then, he was wanting to be especially helpful! The rest of the bank house was suspiciously silent, and one wondered if some surreptitious eavesdropping was in progress.
‘Your wife tells me that you are driving over to Lynton today…?’
Farrer shuddered involuntarily. ‘We were going to visit her people
…’
‘It might be wise to postpone the trip.’
‘I’m not stirring a foot till you’ve got him inside!’
Rather against Hansom’s wishes, Gently agreed to the police protection — Hansom was thinking more in terms of manpower than of scared bank officials. When the door closed behind them he gave vent to his ill humour:
‘On top of all the rest we’ll need a whole bunch of search warrants!’
That was the case — interrogations were unfortunately now not enough. Because of the letter they would have to search for incriminating evidence. For some more of that paper, for the source of the printed characters — on the very slim chance that neither of these had been destroyed.
‘What’s the betting that we don’t get a print off that letter — not apart from yours and mine, and the boyo’s back there?’
Hansom leant on the Wolseley’s wheel and brooded darkly over the problem; he wore a sub-Byronic scowl when he felt that things were piling up on him.
‘There wasn’t one on the knife…’
‘Not on either of the knives! This is a very slick chummie, and he doesn’t make mistakes. I can tell you something, though.’
‘That it lets Johnson out?’
‘Well, doesn’t it?’ Hansom gave Gently a challenging leer.
‘You can take it either way… there’s somebody who wanted Johnson nailed — or there’s Johnson, setting up an Aunt Sally for us to shy at.’
‘How do you explain that precious paper?’
Gently grinned. ‘Didn’t it seem familiar? I’ve got an impression that you’ve been nursing a sheet in the office for three days.’
‘Hell’s bells!’ Hansom stared at him. ‘Surely not the “Dark Destroyer”?’
‘We’ll need to check it to be certain, but I’m offering you three to one…’
At Headquarters both their guesses were tested and found correct: the letter bore no additional prints and its paper matched that of the picture. It went a stage further. The letter and picture corresponded. The partial watermark on the one was found completed on the other. The original whole sheet had been divided — by the blade of a sharp knife; the picture represented one half, and from the other had come the letter.
‘So what do you make of that? She didn’t send that letter herself!’
And if Shirley Johnson hadn’t sent it then it followed that her husband had: it was too fanciful to suppose that any outsider had obtained the paper. But her husband, looking for something to simulate a Palette Group origin, would naturally choose a piece of such an arty-looking paper. Therefore he had composed the letter, and therefore he had done the slashing — a piece of deliberate misdirection which could hardly have been conceived by innocence.
Or by sanity, if it came to that… though Johnson had seemed to have his wits about him.
‘I’d like to know where she got that paper… I didn’t see any more of it at the flat.’
‘I’ll send a kiddie out there to look. Perhaps Johnson put a match to the rest of it.’
‘There’s also another possibility — she might have been given it by one of the others. Maybe just that single half-sheet, it being a difficult paper to come by.’
‘Ah-ah!’ Hansom shook his head. ‘I’m getting cheesed with all these hunches. For me, this fixes it square on Johnson, and that’s the way I’m going to see it from now.’
‘All the same, we’ll go through with the search.’
‘Yeah — who are we to rest on Sundays?’
‘Every Palette Group member without exception — including St John Mallows. Him, I’ll see personally.’
He got on the phone to the academician, who listened without comment while Gently told him what had happened.
‘It’s a bit of a shock, Gently… I don’t know what to say.’
‘If you will, I’d like you to meet me in the Gardens.’
It was midday and the city had woken up to its Sunday life — there was a thin movement of traffic and a scattering of pedestrians. Many of the latter were churchgoers, dressed in sombre, scented decency, in contrast to the scantily clad cyclists who pedalled intently towards the country. From the direction of Thorne Station came the thud of drums and the tooting of bugles, for it was there that the naval cadets had moored their flagship, an ex-MTB.
By now a small crowd had gathered outside the Gardens, and saunterers were peering hopefully through the railings and herbage. A reporter and his photographer were arguing with the constable in charge, but on the appearance of Gently they hastily transferred their eloquence.
‘Our editor’s getting in touch… surely we could take a couple of pics?’
Under the plane trees near the pens the scavengers lingered, a watchful group.
St John Mallows drove up with all the consequence that was dear to him, waving the crowd away from the gate to make a space for his shiny Daimler. He was dressed very sprucely and wore a magnificent bowler hat, and willingly posed by the car to enable the photographer to get a picture.
‘Never miss a chance of a press puff, my dear fellow…!’
He steered Gently through the gate as though he had personally taken charge of the business. Then he continued to walk briskly, his hand on Gently’s arm, paying no attention to the ruined pictures until they were round the bend and out of sight. There he came to a sudden halt and, planting his feet, stared about him.
‘Vandalism… the purest vandalism!’ He snuffed the air as though it contained a fragrance. ‘Exhilarating, isn’t it? — because it’s so thorough! Just imagine him, will you, as he went round that lot — imagine the pure ecstasy of soul-glutting hatred!’
This wasn’t quite the reaction that Gently had expected, but one could predict very little about Mallows’s reactions. With his blue eyes sparkling he seemed to be drinking in the spectacle — it held for him a quality transcending moral judgements.
‘Unbalanced, of course — psychopathic in capitals — ordinarily, we repress the lust to commit mayhem. But the glorious scope of it — what a masterpiece of catharsis! I don’t remember ever having seen such a completely successful blow-up.’
‘It’s a good job you weren’t exhibiting.’
‘My dear Gently, don’t be petty! This is an occasion on which any man would gladly sacrifice a canvas. I almost wish I’d had one in — feel I haven’t been represented. Can’t you sense the stupendous energy, the crackling flame of the fellow’s loathing?’
‘What do you recommend then — an associated membership?’
‘Dear me, no! I’m afraid you’ll have to lock him up. He’s right round the bend, he needs a holiday from life.’
‘And who do we happen to be talking about?’
‘Why — X. Who else comes into it?’
Farrer’s exhibit had been removed along with the knife, and Gently made no reference to this interesting feature. Instead, he quietly produced the letter from his pocket. He offered it to Mallows without prefacing an explanation.
The academician, after glancing at him, unfolded the grey sheet, which he examined without the slightest alteration of expression. After feeling the paper between his sensitive fingers he raised it to the light to look for the watermark.