He decided not to follow that line of thought – everything was geared to triumphant, vindicatory success – he had no intention of risking his life if he could help it. It was definitely lightening now. He stepped away from the toll-house and moved a few yards into the wood. The sun’s rays would be spearing over Alexandra Palace through the hurrying clouds, slowly illuminating the villages of Hornsey and Highgate, Finchley and Barnet to the east. Now he could actually see the heave and sway of the branches above his head, feel the gusts of wind tugging capriciously at the ends of his scarf. The inn was revealed to him, opposite, its white stucco façade glowing eerily; lights were on in many of the windows and he could hear a clanging sound from the yard behind. He moved a little way further back into the trees. Whoever was coming should think that he or she had arrived early and first – he didn’t want to be spotted.
He smoked another cigarette and sipped at his rum. He could read his watch now without the aid of his torch – twenty minutes to go. For a moment he had another attack of doubt – what if he was wrong? – and he ran through his deductions again, obsessively. It seemed entirely conclusive to him – his only regret being that he had not had the time or the opportunity to try his theory out on anyone. The rationale and the judgement had to stand on its own terms, its inherent credibility self-sufficient.
A motor taxi puttered up the hill from Highgate and continued on its way. There was a little more traffic on Spaniards Road – a man wheeling a barrow, a dog-cart with two boys driving – but it was ideally quiet. He had a sudden urge to urinate, quickly unbuttoned his fly and did so. Trench-life again, he thought – a tot of rum and a piss before you went over the top. Think of the big attacks – tens of thousands of soldiers suddenly emptying their bladders. He smiled at the image this conjured up and –
A taxi pulled into the yard beside the inn.
Inside he saw a man in a Homburg lean forward and pay the driver.
Christian Vandenbrook stepped out and the taxi drove away.
Lysander shouted furiously from the shelter of the trees.
‘Vandenbrook! What the hell are you doing here? Get away!’
Vandenbrook hurried across the road. He was wearing a long tweed coat that almost reached his ankles.
‘I sent you the telegram!’ he shouted, peering into the wood, still not seeing where Lysander was. ‘Rief? I know who Andromeda is! Where are you?’ He saw Lysander and ran up to him, panting. ‘It came to me after the theatre – I just had to confirm a few things before I told you.’ He stepped behind a tree and looked down Spaniards Road where it sloped towards Highgate. ‘Someone’s following me, I’m sure. Let’s get away from here.’
‘All right, all right, calm down,’ Lysander said and they headed down a beaten earth path that led deeper into Caen Wood. Vandenbrook seemed unusually tense and watchful. At one point he pulled Lysander off the pathway and they waited behind a tree. Nothing. No one.
‘What’s happening?’ Lysander asked.
‘I’m sure I was followed. There was a man outside my house this morning. I’m sure he got into a motor and followed my taxi.’
‘Why would anyone follow you? – You’re imagining things. So – tell me what you know.’
They were deep in the wood by now. In the grey, pearly dawn light Lysander saw that the trees around them – beech, ash and oak – were ancient and tall. Stands of holly grew at their feet and the undergrowth on either side of the pathway was dense. They could have been in virgin forest – it was hard to believe they were in a borough of north London. The wind was growing stronger and the trees above their heads whistled and groaned as the branches bent and yielded. Lysander gathered in the flying ends of his scarf and tucked them in his coat.
‘D’you want a nip of this?’ he held out his hip flask. ‘It’s rum.’
Vandenbrook took a couple of large gulps and handed it back.
‘Tell me,’ Lysander said. ‘So, who’s Andromeda?’
‘It’s not a he – it’s a she. That’s what was confusing you.’
‘And? –’
‘The person who’s blackmailing me is a woman – a woman called Anna Faulkner. Don’t be confused by the name. She’s Austrian. The enemy.’
‘She’s dead. She killed herself.’
‘I know but –’ Vandenbrook stopped, looking suddenly shocked. ‘How do you know this?’
‘Because she is – she was – my mother.’
Vandenbrook stared at him and Lysander saw his expression change from excited near-panic to something colder, icier. All pretence gone. Two men in a wild wood at dawn with a gale blowing about their heads.
Vandenbrook reached into the pocket of his coat and drew out a revolver. He pointed it at Lysander’s face.
‘You’re under arrest,’ Vandenbrook said.
‘Under arrest? Are you mad?’
‘You and your mother – you were in it together – two Austrian spies. You were both blackmailing me.’
Lysander didn’t mean to laugh but one burst out of him all the same.
‘I have to hand it to you, Vandenbrook – you’re exceptional. You’re the best actor I’ve ever seen. Better than any of us. Best ever. You missed your vocation.’
Vandenbrook allowed himself a small smile.
‘Well, we’re all actors, aren’t we?’ he said. ‘Most of our waking lives, anyway. You, me, your mother, Munro and the others. Some are good, some are average. But nobody really knows what’s real, what’s true. Impossible to tell for sure.’
‘Why did you do it, Vandenbrook? Money? Are you stony broke? Did you want to get back at your father-in-law? Do you hate him that much? Or was it just to feel important, significant?’
‘You know why,’ Vandenbrook said, evenly, unprovoked. ‘Because I was being blackmailed – blackmailed by that bitch Andromeda –’
A fiercer gust of wind whipped Lysander’s hat off and, an instant later, Vandenbrook’s head seemed to explode in a pink mist of blood, his body thrown violently down to the ground by an invisible force.
Lysander closed his eyes, counted to three and opened them. Vandenbrook still lay there, the left half of his skull gone, matted hair, brains bulging, spilling, blood flowing thickly, like oil. Lysander picked up his hat, put it on and backed off so he couldn’t see. He turned to find Hamo striding through the trees, shouldering his Martini-Henri.
‘You all right?’ Hamo asked.
‘Sort of.’
‘I would have plugged him earlier – soon as he drew his gun – but I was waiting for your signal. What took you so long?’
Lysander wasn’t really concentrating. He was looking at Vandenbrook. From this angle all he could see was a small red hole under his right ear.
‘Sorry, Hamo, what were you saying?’
‘Why did you wait so long to take your hat off?’
‘I was trying to squeeze some more information from him, I suppose. Get a few more answers.’
‘Risky thing to do when a man is pointing a gun at your nose. Strike first, Lysander, and hard. That’s my motto. That’s why I used a dum-dum. One-shot kill required, no messing about.’
Hamo went to check on the body and examine the effects of his expanding bullet. Lysander took a notebook from his pocket and tore a sheet from it.
‘So this is the man responsible for your mother’s death,’ Hamo said, looking down on Vandenbrook.
‘Yes. And he managed to kill her without so much as laying a finger on her. He was going to use her – and me – as his ticket to freedom.’