Outside, there was another bomb scare. Bailey had to wait to get out from the underground car park while someone stuck a mirror beneath his car. Girls in skirts were asked to consent to the same examination on their way in to work, and he wanted to suggest to the man on duty that if he had brought in a bomb, it would have been gift wrapped.
The sun shone, melting the irritation and sense of impending doom. Bailey might have lost that capacity for fury which had made him want to hit walls, but he could not shed his contempt for ambition, any more than he could rid himself of the far more corrupting force of pity; he looked to his own demise without a sense of tragedy. At forty-seven he was old, for a policeman. The equivalent of an honourable discharge would not leave him penniless. He just wished he had reached the age when he was really pragmatic enough to leave alone a delegated quick-result case like the murder of Damien Flood.
He
chuckled with a sense of freedom as he rounded Parliament Square, saw the traffic jam, stopped and ran his tongue behind his top teeth, executed a U-turn with the satisfying ease of a taxi driver diving towards the prospect of a fare and then found that the change of direction left him, suddenly, directionless. He was pointing towards Victoria when he wanted to go northeast to his own happy hunting grounds. There was no other immediate reason for Bailey to go for a drink at the Spoon and Fiddle. Owned by Mickey Gat from Whitechapel. Run by the brother-in-law of a four-month-dead, one-time athlete, pool player turned drunk, killed in the aftermath of a pub fight. Bailey could recall, word for word, the statement made by this brother-in-law, Joe Boyce, background material only.
âI get one day off a week from being a barman,' the statement said, âand when I do, I go to a different kind of place to drink. If Damien was around, I would go with him. To tell the truth, he wasn't the best companion, since he could not hold his drink, always picked a fight, while me, I get quiet and sleepy. Anyway, he did pick an argument with someone in the pub, the Lamb it's called, only round the corner from where I live, as a matter of fact, and it all ended up in threats, you come outside with me, all that stuff. Damien loved it of course, Damien would. He had three friends with him, big blokes, like himself, all ex-boxers, they could handle anything. I dunno why it is when blokes are big, they seem to attract trouble. One of them wanted to go home, so Damien said go then, but he didn't, and then Damien says to me, stay, will you? And I said, the hell I will, if this lot are coming back for a fight, I've your sister to look after and I'm not getting hurt for anyone. Fine, he says, fine, and we get another drink. I don't drink much myself; you can't when you run a bar, but when I'm not at work, I take anything offered. They're a good laugh, that crew of Damien's, when they get together. That other team were long gone, I forgot about them.'
Ryan
had taken this statement. He had an ear for the vernacular and an ability to make people talk, something to do with his deceptively friendly face.
âAnyway, I hardly noticed that the crowd had left and I forgot the fact they threatened to come back. I can't, for the life of me, remember what the argument was about. Damien was good at pool; the pub has five tables; he'd won some money off a bloke who thought he was better; Damien had fleeced the poor kid on a bet, that was it, I think. Oh, maybe three or four games. What was lost? I've no idea. Maybe fifty, more like a hundred, but Damien was so shambling and so clever, they couldn't see him coming. He was more than good at pool: he was brilliant.'
There would have been a pause in the statement, for tea, Bailey guessed, rehearsing it all in his mind. The man was not a defendant, merely a witness. He would have been afforded all the luxury the police station could allow. Which was tea or coffee in a smoke-filled interview room, not quite far enough away from the sobbing and grunting in the cells.
âAnyway, the place closed and out we went. Damien wanted to go to some other place, I said, no, not me, I must get home, your sister has an early start. He nodded, he never thought much of me, to tell the truth, and you were either with Damien or against him. So I didn't wait to see if there was anyone there in the shadows, if you see what I mean. He had more than enough going for him with his friends around him. I was only ever asked along for the ride because my wife wanted Damien and me to be friends; he's a bit flash for me. If he wanted a fight he had one. Boys will be boys and there never was any stopping my brother-in-law. I never dreamt it would go so far.'
Not a bad bloke, that Joe Boyce, Ryan had said to Bailey. Bailey had never seen the man whose evidence had been agreed as part of the setting; it would provide nothing of great interest to either prosecution or defence at the forthcoming trial. Pleasant Mr Joseph Boyce had helped with descriptions, that was all, leaving before the action, as Damien's friends had confirmed in their own, sorrowful evidence. Since they too had failed to prevent the death, they could not afford contempt, although one of them suggested it. Joe was nothing but a hanger-on, adopted by Damien and Mickey Gat because he was wed to Damien's sister, Mary Catherine Boyce: there was a statement from her too.
Bailey
could not have said why he wanted to cast his eyes over Mr Boyce, some little trace element of bitterness in the statement, perhaps, but with his car accidentally pointing west instead of east, the time was as good as any. Ryan was a fine investigator. He got on the wavelength and spoke as he was spoken to, but his judgement, well, that varied.
Bailey always knew the exact time of day, and as long as it was greater London, exactly where he was without reference to anything or anybody. The map and the minutes past the hour always seemed to tally with his preconceptions. The talent was one he dismissed as no more than accident; you walk round streets, he said, you get to know which way is south and how long it is since last you slept.
T
he Spoon and Fiddle surprised him, first for its diminutive size, then for the luxuriance of the flowers, third for its signs of taste and privacy, and lastly, as an afterthought, its proximity to the Eliots.
âMr Boyce?'
The man turned from an assiduous polishing of glasses at the bar, responded with an almost stagy deference, clicking his heels.
âAt your service, sir!' A small man, Bailey noted, muscular; soft round the chin.
He produced his warrant card. âAbout the Donovan trial. Can I have a word?' It sounded such a clichéd way to begin but Bailey knew life was full of clichés; most people understood little else and expected a policeman to talk like his TV equivalent. What he had not expected was for Joseph Boyce to respond in the same clichéd terms, by looking visibly shocked, turning white, so that the livid bruise on his cheekbone and round the left eye burned in a pale skin like the mark of a branding iron. The reaction was quickly controlled. Boyce shook himself, looked resigned, then smiled with a sigh and extended his hand.
Bailey
did not want to take it, did so reluctantly. The pressure was dry and firm.
âMy, but you gave me a shock. I thought all that was over, bar the shouting. I hope they hang the bastard, but you can't these days, can you?'
âYou seem to have been in a fight, Mr Boyce.' Bailey pointed at the bruise, somewhat rudely.
âKids. Followed me home last evening after I wouldn't serve them a drink. It's nothing. I got away lightly.'
âDid you report it?'
âC'mon, sir, you know better than that. When I couldn't begin to tell you what they looked like? I just wanted to get home. How else can I help you?'
There was a hidden truculence behind the easy manner. The man was clean, but Bailey could sense fear.
âI just wanted to check a few points on your statement. About your brother-in-law and the evening he died. I'm sorry if it upsets you, but if I dot the Ts and cross the Is, there's less chance you'll be needed at the trial.'
The light of hope sprang into Joe's eyes. âThat would be great,' he said firmly. âI don't want to go anywhere near a court if I can help it. Upsets the wife, see? What do you want to know? Thought I said it all.'
Bailey hoiked his long frame onto a bar stool. He had not quite thought what to ask, an investigator without portfolio and a car pointed in the wrong direction, but he was rarely at a total loss for words.
âWere you fond of your brother-in-law, Mr Boyce?'
âOh yes, of course, even though he could be a problem. Anyone who knew Damien loved him. You should have seen the turnout for his funeral. I've never seen flowers like it. Never.'
Bailey nodded, without adding that he had been present himself on the edges of the same funeral, taking in the appearance of Damien's friends and looking out for signs of his family. There had been one woman sobbing, only one. The flowers had been repellent; Bailey's experience showed that the amount of floral tributes at funerals was often in inverse proportion to the grief, indeed they were sometimes a last revenge.
âIs
your wife the only relative?'
âThere's a cousin or two somewhere, but otherwise, yes. The parents died when they were kids; Damien and she grew up together. Like peas in a pod. Very close.'
âWhat does your wife do, Mr Boyce?'
Boyce turned from friendly to angry.
âLeave her out of it, will you? She's had quite enough, what with having to identify her only kith and kin and then being asked to confirm what time I came home that night, as if it was me who needed the alibi! What does it matter what she does for a living?'
Bailey could picture the statement of Mary Catherine Boyce. Short and to the point. Identifying her brother. Saying what time her husband had gone out and come in. Cleaning lady, he remembered suddenly, as if that mattered.
He got up. âI'd only want to ask her a few questions about Damien's background. I know there was a fight, but we're still, well, how can I put it, short on the motive.'
âAnyone can get killed in a fight,' said Boyce, pointing to the bruise. âHappens every day in this God-forsaken place. You could work hard all your life without ever putting a foot wrong and still go that way. What difference does your background make?' He was becoming increasingly agitated.
âWhere could I find her, Mr Boyce? I'll do my best not to cause any upset.'
âI believe you. Others wouldn't. Why don't you send that other bloke? I liked him.'
Because Ryan is so often blind, Bailey thought, watching the other man struggling for control. Boyce was working out how to minimise the inevitable, a primitive, Bailey concluded: a body responsive to orders and not so stupid as to imagine he could hide his wife for ever. Nothing unusual in that: there were not many men who wanted police officers calling on their wives, especially a spouse unlikely to declare her meagre income or pay tax on it. But it was not this aspect of the black economy which worried Boyce. He was weighing up the pros and cons of where such an interview with Cath should take place. Should he invite this interference home some afternoon when he could insist on being present, or could he ensure Bailey saw Cath somewhere where she would be equally awkward, embarrassed and taciturn? He smiled. There was no malice in the smile, Bailey noticed, merely satisfaction.
âAll
right, if you must. No time like the present. She's working round the corner here. Chantry Street. You might know it. Big houses. Number seven.'
Then it was Bailey's turn to mask surprise. Declining the now effusive offer of a drink, something Ryan rarely did, he left with a nod of acknowledgement.
As he reached his own car, Bailey saw a large, silver-coloured Jaguar, old but perfectly preserved, moving with all the grace of an ageing ballerina as it rolled over the cobblestones of the mews. It stopped outside the flowers of the Spoon with scarcely a sound, while Bailey looked on, enviously. There were few materialistic ambitions which moved him much, outside the clocks he collected, but the sight of this elegant vehicle inspired an acquisitive admiration. The very best vintage, he thought, I would love one of those, a car which was more than a car. He was thinking, as an antidote, how such a motor would not last five minutes in his neck of the woods without a garage built like a fortress, when a figure rose out of the driving seat, yawned, stretched and executed three karate kicks, before ambling into the Spoon. A huge creature, dressed in a vivid shell suit, with a walk both languid and energetic, the sun catching pale hair and a face tanned by sunbeds. Bailey smiled to himself, envy of the car dispelled. Awesomely gorgeous Mickey Gat. A legend in her own time, except for lazy investigators like Ryan who never listened to important gossip and never kept their eyes open wide enough. Feminism incarnate, in one sense, that was Mickey Gat; big enough to make jelly of a man. One of a dying breed, lawless, but law-enforcing. Like the Jag, Bailey reflected: they were both in their way the very best of British. The sight of Mickey, looking like a bull in a china shop amid the discreet wealth of the mews, somehow made Bailey feel at home. He smiled after the retreating figure with affection, almost with desire, which was only in part for the car.
Mickey
had attended the Damien funeral, probably contributed some of the flowers of which Joe had boasted, but it had never been part of Ryan's narrow mandate to explore any closer link. It made no odds, surely, who the murdered man knew; he was killed in a pub brawl and no single witness had suggested it was more complicated than that. Bailey shrugged. Neither had the ripples of the investigation turned up the fact that the sister of the deceased worked for a family Bailey knew. Why should it? Mary Catherine Boyce working for the Eliots; the fact did indeed stretch the long arm of coincidence. Bailey had learned never to be surprised by the elastic length of that particular limb. He decided, all the same, not to go to the Eliots' number seven Chantry Street. Something told him that was a move which could embarrass Emily Eliot, and her Treasure. Let well alone. If the woman the Eliots called Cath, and her statement called Mary, had not told them anything about her family, least of all the death of a brother, it was not for Bailey to invade her privacy; after all, he had no real purpose, even less official blessing for these formless, further enquiries. He was only here because he had turned his car in the wrong direction. Mary Catherine, known as Cath. The woman who had also turned Helen's flat into a different version of itself over the last week or two. If Bailey vowed to keep diplomatic silence with the Eliots, should he then use Helen in pursuit of his own curiosity? She would not like that.