‘Alice Quincy.’ The voice was faint and full of sleep.
‘Alex Mavros. Sorry it’s so early, but I really need to find David Waggoner.’
‘What?’ the young woman mumbled. ‘I don’t understand.’
‘You don’t have to understand, Alice. It’s to do with Maria Kondos going missing again. He may have seen her.’ Phrasing the untruth that way reduced his guilt.
‘Ah, right. Hang on.’ He heard her fingers fly across a keyboard.
‘Sarpaki Fourteen,’ she said. ‘Do you want the phone number?’
‘Yes.’ He entered it into his mobile’s memory. ‘Thanks, Alice. Could you do me a favour? My talking to him is a bit sensitive. Could you keep this between us?’
‘Oh. OK.’
He cut the connection before she could ask more, then dressed quickly, pulling on a classy striped shirt of his brother-in-law’s that flapped about his thin frame.
OdhosSarpaki was only a few minutes’ walk away. Mavros thought about calling Mikis in as back-up, but decided he could handle the old soldier on his own. He’d also borrowed one of Nondas’s kitchen knives, one with a worn handle but a very keen edge. He reconsidered ringing Waggoner first, but decided warning him wasn’t a good idea. Not for nothing did the police make house raids in the early morning — catch the bad people at their most befuddled.
A seagull took off from the deserted street when he turned the corner, leaving behind a partially consumed chicken carcass. The scent from the flowers on the plants hanging from the wooden balconies covered the whiff of decay. Mavros found number fourteen, which had Waggoner’s name neatly printed on a card, and pressed the bell for over half a minute. Then he started pounding on the door.
‘Who is it?’ came a shocked voice from behind the door, in Greek.
Mavros kept thumping away.
The door opened to reveal David Waggoner in a striped silk dressing gown and leather slippers.
‘Morning,’ Mavros said, brushing past him. ‘You and I need to have a chat.’
‘What do you mean coming-’
‘What do you mean consorting with known drug traffickers and antiquities thieves?’
That put a stop to the old man’s protestations.
‘You’d better come up,’ he said, heading for the wooden staircase.
The house contained floor tiles and ornate ceilings that suggested it was several hundred years old. On the first floor, a double door led into a large open space, furnished at one end as a saloniand the other as a dining room, both full of antique pieces. There were several vases of cut flowers.
‘Do you own this place?’
Waggoner nodded.
‘And the house at Kornaria? Your army pension must be very generous.’
The old man looked at him combatively. ‘I went into business after I left the forces.’
‘Yes, that’s one of the things I want to talk to you about.’
‘What makes you think I’ll take part in any conversation?’
‘This,’ Mavros said, pulling the knife out from under his shirt.
Alarm flashed across Waggoner’s face. ‘You. . you wouldn’t. .’
‘Strange you haven’t asked about this,’ Mavros said, pointing at the dressing on his neck.
‘What. . what happened?’
It was clear he was prevaricating. ‘You know exactly what your friend Tryfon Roufos ordered.’
Waggoner’s head dropped. ‘He’s not my friend.’
‘Business associate, then. You know how untrustworthy he is, don’t you?’
‘I. . I’ve heard things, yes.’
Mavros plunged the knife into the wooden table between them and left it vibrating to and fro. The former SOE man’s eyes followed it like those of a small jungle creature being hypnotized by a snake.
‘I’m not leaving till I find out what you’re doing,’ Mavros said, glancing at the knife. ‘If you don’t want your throat to end up with a deeper cut than mine, start talking. Now!’ His anger surprised him — the Cretan urge to violence had taken him over again. Then he remembered that Waggoner had killed many times in the past and watched him even more closely.
‘I. . Roufos made me a proposition.’ He hesitated, but continued when he saw the intensity in Mavros’s eyes.
‘He knew I had free access to the Heavenly Blue — and he found out what I thought about Rudolf Kersten.’
‘What was the proposition?’
‘That I — what’s the expression? — case the joint to see how Kersten’s coin collection could be stolen.’
‘Uh-huh.’ Mavros smiled tightly. ‘You know that Roufos was using Rudi Kersten’s grandson for the same purpose?’
Waggoner’s jaw headed floorwards. ‘What? I wasn’t aware there was a grandson.’
‘Oskar Mesner. He’s here in Chania. Coincidentally, he knows the neo-fascist shit-heads Roufos got to tickle my throat. In fact, your pal Roufos contributes to an organization of far-right headbangers who go around goose-stepping and giving Nazi salutes as they beat up immigrants. What do you feel about that?’
Waggoner was clearly taken aback. ‘I don’t know anything about it.’
‘I always find it’s a good idea to do basic research on people before you go into business with them.’ The words rung hollow in Mavros’s ears — he’d only recently discovered essential information about Luke Jannet and his sister. ‘Anyway, what was your interest? You’ve been blackmailing Kersten for years. Did you want to take every single thing of his, even via a bastard like Roufos?’
‘The man was a hypocrite and a murderer. He deserved to die on the street.’
‘As opposed to an orange grove not far from where you were watching the massacre shoot.’
Waggoner glared at him. ‘What are you implying? I had nothing to do with his death.’
‘Don’t worry, I saw where you were sitting. But maybe you got one of your bandits from Kornaria to do the deed.’
‘That’s ridiculous,’ the Englishman blustered, but he lowered his gaze again.
‘Or maybe Roufos used your inside knowledge of the set to send one of his heavies in. I saw you speaking on your phone while you were on the platform.’
There were beads of sweat on Waggoner’s forehead. ‘That’s all speculation, Mavros. Kindly leave.’
‘I’m not finished. Besides, Inspector Margaritis will get to you and your phone records soon enough.’ Mavros doubted that, given the official feeling that it was suicide, but even imaginary leverage was useful.
‘Now,’ he continued, ‘let’s talk about Kornaria. I know you used the village as one of your bases during the war.’ He waited till the old man confirmed that with a nod. ‘So it’s perfectly reasonable that you built a house there — even if the money you used to do so resulted from blackmail, which is a crime even in Crete.’
‘Get to the point.’
Mavros smiled. ‘I was hoping youwould. No? Well, allow me.’ He leaned forward and pulled the knife from the table.
Waggoner stood up unsteadily. ‘Now look here, you can’t-’
‘I can!’ Mavros yelled, stepping round the table and pushing the old man on to the sofa. ‘I can do anything I fucking well like, you murdering, thieving, lying piece of empire detritus. You want to know something? The EAM man Kanellos you said betrayed you to the Germans, he was my father.’
‘What?’ Waggoner gasped. ‘Your father?’
‘And, as you know very well, he had nothing to do with the betrayal of your band. You executed that man yourself.’
Waggoner’s face was now slicked with sweat and his thick-veined hands were trembling. ‘Your father?’ he repeated. ‘How can that be?’
‘It’s a small country,’ Mavros replied. ‘Sooner or later, everyone knows everyone else.’ He raised the knife. ‘As you can imagine, I’m seriously pissed off about the lies you spread. There’s only one way I’m leaving this house with you still breathing — tell me everything I ask.’