And with a wave of cigarette smoke she disappeared.
Carl Vincent finally got through to the Arts and Antiques Unit at the Yard after a solid fifteen minutes of trying. Tracking down Jackie Ferris took five minutes more.
On the line she sounded brisk and businesslike, prepared to give him exactly as much of her time as importance warranted, but no more.
“My DI,” Vincent said, “in a roundabout sort of way, he’s had a message from Grabianski. Seems as if he’s ready to push ahead. Could be soon.”
“Right. Maybe you should get yourself down here sharpish. Any problem with that?”
“None that I can think of.”
“Fine. Ring me as soon as you arrive.” Jackie Ferris hung up.
Holly had told Grabianski he should buy root ginger and lemons and make ginger tea; it would help to clear away a lot of the toxins that were troubling him. He was almost back from a trip to the fruit and vegetable stall, purchases in a small plastic bag, when he noticed someone sitting on the steps outside his building. It was Faron.
She was wearing a shiny silver dress and there were new gold highlights in her hair. Between the bottom of the dress and the expected clumpy shoes, her legs, thin in spangled tights, seemed to go on forever.
“Hi-ya!” She dropped her magazine as Grabianski came through the gate and, quickly to her feet, caught hold of his arm and kissed him on the cheek.
“Don’t tell me, Faron,” he said, “you were out for a walk on the Heath, and before you knew it here you were outside my house. You thought you’d stay for tea.”
She peered along her sharp little nose. “You’re sending me up, aren’t you?”
“Maybe. Just a little.”
“That’s all right. Eddie does it all the time. And worse. Downright rude, sometimes. Know what I mean? No respect.”
Grabianski unlocked the front door and led her through what it always delighted him to remember were called “the common parts.” Several flights of stairs and they were standing in the combined living room-kitchen, an elevated skylight drawing in the light from above their heads.
“Have a seat,” Grabianski said, pointing toward the low settee. “I’ll put the kettle on.”
“I don’t suppose you’ve got any white wine? I should’ve brought some myself, but I didn’t think. Well, sometimes you don’t, do you? Not till it’s too late.”
Out of the mouths of babes and five-thousand-a-show models, thought Grabianski. He took a bottle of Sancerre from the fridge and uncorked it. Faron was back on her feet again, prowling the room.
“It’s nice here. Cozy.”
“Thanks.” He gave her a glass of wine and she gulped the first mouthful as if it were pop. “Only one thing, though, I thought there’d be paintings, you know, all round the walls, like at Eddie’s.”
What Grabianski had were landscape photographs; a few enlarged shots of birds that he’d taken himself. On the glass-topped coffee table in front of the settee, there was a black statuette of a falcon in flight. A few shelves of books, mostly reference, and that was all.
“Where’s your tele, then? In the bedroom, I suppose. Eddie keeps his in there, too. Still, at least you’ve got a few CDs.”
It was difficult not to think Faron would be disappointed with his selection: Bird Calls of Africa and the Near East; Tropical Storms; a recording of Prokofiev and Janáãek violin sonatas he’d bought because he liked the look of Viktoria Mullova on the cover; Steven Halpern’s Spectrum Suite, recommended by Holly for the way it resonated within specific areas of the body. After the African bird calls, it was the one Grabianski played most.
“You know,” Faron said, turning, “what Eddie don’t trust about you? He thinks you don’t know how to have fun. Too serious, right?”
“Is that why you’re here?” Grabianski said. “To help me have fun? Ask a few questions. See if I don’t talk in my sleep.”
She batted Oxfam eyes at him from across the room. “I don’t like the way that sounds.”
“No. Nor should you.” Just for a moment, he touched the back of his hand to her cheek.
Faron sipped at her wine and then, from the tiny leather rucksack she’d had on her back, shook out a smart red notebook and matching pen. “I was going to nip to the loo and scribble it all down before I forgot.”
“And now?”
Faron shrugged.
Grabianski reached out for the notebook and tore it in two, letting the halves drop to the floor. When he touched her face again she didn’t pull away and he was surprised, despite the makeup she so expertly wore, at the softness of her skin.
“I wonder,” he said, “if you’d consider doing something for me?”
“Oh, yeah,” she grinned. “And what’s that?”
“That man Sloane. The artist. I’d like to meet him.”
It was twenty past five that evening, when Lynn and Khan came into the office and caught Resnick just on the point of leaving.
“Peter Paul Spurgeon,” Lynn said, “thirty-seven years of age. Married with three children, Matthew, nine, Julia, eight, and Luke, five. Wife’s name’s Louise.”
“Currently resident,” Khan said, “27 Front Street, Bottisham. That’s just …”
But Resnick knew where it was. “It’s a village, northeast of Cambridge.”
“Yes, sir. Seems he left the area for a while after getting his degree; came back six or seven years ago.”
“After university, he worked in publishing,” Lynn said. “London and Edinburgh. Set up some kind of firm of his own, apparently, but it didn’t take. Sounds as if he might still be keeping it going in a small way, but what he does to pay the bills, he’s a sales rep for a number of other publishers, mostly academic ones, all over the eastern counties.”
“His wife works, too,” Khan said. “A librarian at one of the colleges.”
“Well,” Resnick said, looking almost as pleased as they were themselves. “Good work. Very. Now what d’you say we break the habit of a lifetime, hike up the road, and beat everyone else to the bar in the Borlace Warren?”
Forty-two
Number 27 was sideways on to the road and deceptively small. The spiraling hedge separating it from the narrow pavement was in need of cutting back, causing passersby to step around it or raise an arm to brush it aside. The green wooden gate could have used a coat of paint. A ten-year-old Ford Fiesta, dingy cream, sat by the curb.
“Doubt he does his repping in that,” Khan remarked.
“Let’s hope not,” Resnick replied.
“According to records, he owns a Vauxhall estate, L reg.”
“Left early,” Resnick suggested.
“Maybe never got home last night.”
The two of them had stayed in the vehicle, sixty yards back down the road, while Lynn took a slow wander past the house.
“Someone’s home anyway,” she said, returning. “Caught a glimpse. A woman, I think. Back door’s open and there’s a radio playing.”
“Houses like this,” Khan said, “how d’you tell which is the front and which is the back?”
“It’s like one of those tests they give you,” Lynn grinned. “You know, intelligence.”
“Likely the front door then, after all.”
“If it is the wife,” Resnick said, “no call getting her alarmed without reason. Lynn, why don’t you go and have a word? Anil and I’ll hang on here.”
Before she was halfway there, a maroon estate came slowly around the far curve and signaled that it was going to stop. The driver eased across and parked close behind the Fiesta. By now, Lynn had stopped in her tracks and Resnick and Khan were out of the car and beginning to walk toward her.
The man who emerged from the Vauxhall was tall enough to have the slightly stooped posture of someone who habitually dips his head in conversation. He wore heavy-framed glasses and though his dark hair was still quite full, the crown of his head was bald.
“Spurgeon?” Lynn said quietly, once he’d clicked through the gate.