Read The Best of British Crime omnibus Online
Authors: Andrew Garve,David Williams,Francis Durbridge
âIs that when he's to be released?' Alison shook her head and gave a ruminative smile. âRosemary wanted to bring the family here to the Festival on Saturday.'
âI doubt they'll be in the mood for dancing. But then, he could be freed earlier. If the kidnappers are satisfied, and Bob can persuade them.'
Alison looked up from her plate. âAnd if they're not satisfied? Are they really going to harm him, or is it all threats?'
âThreats, I hope. But we must still do as they order.' He chewed for a moment while considering the prospect. âThey don't have the risks ordinary kidnappers run. For instance, they don't have to pick up a ransom.'
âIsn't that when kidnappers are usually caught?'
âI should think so. I'm no authority, but it stands to reason.'
âIt's when they're always caught on the TV. D'you suppose this SAE group is really not interested in money?'
âWe don't know it's them for certain, of course. They haven't admitted it.'
âBut who else could it be?'
âYou're right. Bob's assumed it's them, like the rest of us. But he won't accept they're not on the make. Not in some way.'
âBut they don't have to be out for money. Not if they're people committed to a cause.'
McFee dabbed his mouth with his napkin. âBob's not the sort to get committed to a cause beyond self-interest, so he's not really in the market for people of the other kind,' he observed cynically.
âBut what can the SAE stand to gain, except better treatment for animals?'
âIt's difficult to say exactly.' His eye roved from his now empty plate to the dish of apple crumble Alison had brought in earlier.
âWe're going to lose a great deal?'
âAye. Not the lot, but a great deal.'
âI suppose it's only money. And money canna buy happiness,' she added. It had been a favourite phrase of theirs in the early days of their marriage.
âAnd we're paying to save a life.' McFee looked solemn. âI just wish it was a life worthier of the sacrifice.'
âEvery life is worthy of saving, Hughie.'
âBut this one less so than most. You're very forgiving.'
âSo are you or you wouldn't be ready to help.'
He didn't respond directly. âThe SAE have told us we have to sell twelve million, eight hundred and fifty thousand shares. Beginning at ten in the morning. A million shares every fifteen minutes. On the open market. Till they're all gone.'
âThat's a very exact figure?'
âAnd they knew it exactly. Of course it was in the prospectus for anyone who could add up. It's the total number of shares held by all the directors. It's just short of sixteen per cent of the whole company. It's going to be a terrible jolt.'
âYou mean the price of the shares will drop?'
âLike a stone. And when it's known it's the directors who are selling, the stone could turn into a bomb.'
âSo the two-and-a-half million pounds our shares were worth on Fridayâ '
âCould fetch less than half that, I'm afraid.'
âA million and a quarter's still a lot of money.' Her tone allowed that they were not about to be reduced to penury. âHave some apple crumble.' She removed his dinner plate, stacked it with her own, on top of the seed catalogues, before passing him a dessert dish. âI still say you're a good man, Hughie McFee. To give up so much for someone you don't care for at all.'
He poured some Scotch into his glass. âIf anything happens to stop Dermot Hackle becoming Managing Director when the time comes, I wouldn't want the cause to have been my doing. Not in any way.'
âBecause you'd be made Managing Director instead?'
His eyebrows lifted. âThat doesn't follow.'
âBut you always wanted that. You know, I hadn't thought ⦠' She hesitated, absently helping herself to an overgenerous portion of the pudding. âThat couldn't be why Dermot's been kidnapped? Dermot as opposed to Bob for instance? Or any of the other directors?'
âI don't know what you mean.' The sharpness of his comment surprised her.
âNeither do I really.' But his response made her want to try again. âBecause Dermot has more enemies in the company than anyone else? More rivals, maybe? Could that have anything to do with what's happened? Or what will happen next?'
âCertainly not,' he said, again with untypical fierceness.
Alison absently added more cream to her crumble.
âIs Mummy very ill, Emma?'
âJust an upset tummy.'
Tim Hackle, who was only just nine, lined up his mouth over his plate before disgorging another cherry stone on to it. âWill she stay in bed for the rest of tonight?'
âProbably. Doctor Ricini's giving her something,' said his sister. The two were finishing supper in the kitchen.
âSo why have we got a doctor living with us?'
âShe isn't living with us. Just a couple of nights while Daddy's away. D'you want some more cherries?'
âOo, yes please, Emma. Did the doctor bring the cherries?'
âI think so.'
Out-of-season fresh fruit was not a regular feature of the Hackle family diet. Emma put a handful of cherries on to Tim's plate. Resisting a desire to take some more for herself, she then rose from the table, picked up the dish of fruit and put it in the refrigerator.
âAre the cherries a present for letting her stay?'
âPerhaps.' Emma returned to her seat and poured herself another cup of tea.
âLike the chocolates we took to Auntie Susan? When we went to Bedford?'
âThat's right.'
Thirteen year old Emma was very like her mother â quiet, self-denying and self-effacing â but quite capable of supervising the household when her mother was indisposed. Mary Ricini had already said as much, approvingly, a few minutes earlier, before she had gone up to sit with Rosemary.
Tim pulled away the stalk from a cherry between his teeth. âWhy didn't Daddy say he wasn't coming home?'
âHe didn't know till it was too late.'
âBut if he was going to Nottingham, why did we see him at Heathrow in the afternoon? He doesn't fly to Nottingham. Not usually, does he?'
Since almost every one of Tim's utterances ended in a question, it was surprising that over the course of time he hadn't become at least marginally better informed.
âWe didn't see him. Not for sure,' said Emma.
âTwenty-three.' Tim had been counting his cherry stones. He was a good-looking child. Mary Ricini had remarked that he'd inherited his father's captivating smile, while silently judging that a match for his father's bedroom eyes was coming along nicely too. âI saw him,' the boy offered, in a contrary half-whisper.
âYou only thought you did.' Emma looked troubled. âYou haven't told Mummy?'
â'Course not. You gave me l0p not to.' The hurt look would have done justice to a bishop wrongly accused of misquoting the Lord's Prayer. âIt was him though. With that lady.'
The two had taken a bus the few miles to the airport after lunch on the previous afternoon so that Tim could see the new Aeroflot airliner take off. He was an avid plane spotter. They had been waiting for a return bus at the terminus in the centre of Heathrow when Tim had spotted a familiar-looking car. It had certainly seemed like the one their father drove, and it had been heading for Terminal Two.
âWe never saw the faces,' said Emma.
âI saw Daddy's. I'm certain. Nearly certain anyway. And I saw the number plate,' he ended with a rush.
âNo you didn't.'
âSome of it.' He rubbed his nose. âMost of it. Why can't I tell Mummy?'
âBecause, I don't want you to. And you promised not to.' She knew that the promises he made for money were the ones he honoured: in so doing, he kept the way clear for negotiating similar contracts in the future.
âIs it because she's got a tummy upset? She didn't have that yesterday. Not when you said not to tell her.'
Emma was a sensitive creature, as well as an observant one. She had grown up a good deal in the previous year. There were many things she knew about that depressed her mother. She sensed that her father's being with a pretty young woman at Heathrow, an hour after he'd left the house to drive directly to Nottingham, would qualify as another of those things. âMummy doesn't like Daddy flying. She worries. In case there's an accident.' It was a good try.
âWe'd know by now if there'd been an accident, wouldn't we?'
âIf he hasn't got the car he'll be flying back. She'd worry about that too. And it probably wasn't him we saw anyway.' She looked at the time pointedly, got up, and began to clear the table.
Tim brushed the hair from his eyes and gave his sister a bright-eyed smile. âCan I watch telly till half past then?' he pleaded.
Emma nodded, relaxing inside herself. Reason had triumphed where bribery hadn't totally â with his favourite programme providing the coup de grâce.
She knew it had been her father's car all right, with her father driving it. She had seen him quite clearly, also the woman in the passenger seat, before Tim had even noticed the car.
There was no way Emma could know that by declaring what she and Tim had seen, she might have reduced the danger for her father. No one had told her he was in any danger. That being so, you could understand why she deemed it important not to report something she was instinctively certain would make her mother miserable.
Something similar had happened before. A friend had told her mother she'd seen her father with a woman going into a London night-club. Unknown to the others, Emma had overheard the conversation. Her mother had dismissed the report saying the woman had been a customer of Closter Drug, that it had been a business date, that she'd known about it. But her mother had been sad for days afterwards, and Emma believed she knew why.
So Emma's reticence now was not only innocent but also maintained with the best of intentions.
In contrast, there was someone else closely connected with Closter Drug who, unlike Emma, knew about the kidnap and who had been with Dermot Hackle after the children had seen him. That person had no justification for remaining silent â but plenty of reason.
âThank God that's over,' Jane Larden sighed and fell back into the front passenger seat of the Mercedes. âI don't know how you managed to be so cool all evening.'
âWith some effort.' Larden started the engine, then moved the car towards the exit in the nearly empty underground carpark of the National Theatre on London's South Bank. Their guests of the evening had driven out just ahead of them.
âI wasn't any help, was I? I'm sorry, darling, I'm just numb still.' She leaned across and kissed him on the cheek, her hand moving to caress the inside of his thigh.
âYou were fine,' he replied, only half meaning it, but as always affected by her touch. The news about Dermot Hackle had moved her deeply â much more than he had expected. He had realised too late that it would have been better to have delayed telling her anything until the evening was over.
âIt's just as well it was theatre and dinner after, not just dinner. I don't believe I could have coped with Roger and Sybil through a long meal tonight.'
âThey're not an easy pair. But he's an important customer. I thought of cancelling, but it seemed the wrong thing to do. For a lot of reasons. They enjoyed themselves, at least. It was a good play.'
âWas it? I couldn't concentrate.'
The two had met earlier as arranged at one of the theatre bars. She had arrived by cab. He had driven directly from the factory. There had been a few minutes to talk before their guests had appeared. He had given Jane the bare bones of the kidnap story then. They had not been alone since. Their meal at Ovations, the theatre restaurant, had ended a few minutes before this.
âSo when exactly did they take Dermot?' Jane asked as he was swinging the car into York Road.
âWe don't know. Some time last night probably. He'd rung Rosemary. From Nottingham we assume. He said he'd have to stay over. Hughie McFee did a discreet check on all the places where he might have stayed. He wasn't registered at any of them, and there was no reservation.'
âWhat about the person he went to see? You said it was a business trip?'
âThere was no appointment in his diary. Nothing his secretary knew about.'
âWas it someone who rang him at the weekend?'
âCould have been. His wife doesn't remember any particular call. We've a number of major customers in the area. But we don't know which one it was, and we could hardly ring them all asking if they'd seen him.'
âBecause they'd know he'd gone missing?'
âThat, and because we simply don't know whom we can trust.'
She gave a little shiver. âSo it's possible Dermot didn't go to Nottingham at all? I mean it could have been a ruse to get him away from home?'
âPossibly.'
âIn which case no one there's going to know anything about him anyway.' She paused. âIf the SAE are using his car telephone, I suppose it means they're using his car too?'
âNot necessarily. It's a portable phone like this one.' He nodded at the instrument below the dashboard. âThey're more likely to have abandoned the car.'
âSo can't you report it as stolen? If the police find it, you'd have an idea where to start looking.'
He shook his head. âSo far we've avoided any contact with the police. The Irishman was adamant about that.'
She nodded understandingly. âWhen Dermot spoke, did he sound normal?'
âNormal, but his voice was faint. He could have been some distance from the phone. Maybe tied up with someone holding it for him. That's just guessing.' He had caught a new look of distress on her face.