Authors: Lyndon Stacey
âBecause I wanted to find out what it was all about first. And because I wanted to see whether he worked it out, himself.'
âAnd do you think he has?'
âI'm not sure. He told Pippa he hadn't.'
âBut you don't believe him?'
âI'm not sure,' Gideon said again.
There was a long pause while he stroked her hair, listening to the gentle hiss and spit of the cedar log on the fire and watching the flickering glow play on her olive skin.
âHave you tried putting the names into an Internet search engine?' Eve asked suddenly.
âNo. It may have escaped your notice, but I don't have a computer.'
âOh, no, I forgot. You're still in the Middle Ages, aren't you? Well, I've got my laptop in the car, we could use that.'
âIn the car? That's a bit chancy, isn't it?'
âWell, it's locked in the boot, of course.' She sat up. âI'll go and get it.'
Gideon groaned. âMust you? Surely it won't work, anyway â without an Internet connection?'
Eve stood up, laughing down at him. âI was wrong. You're not medieval; you're prehistoric. It's a wireless connection. Or I can use my mobile phone. Won't be a minute . . .'
By the time she returned, Gideon had resigned himself to the fact that he wasn't going to be allowed to doze comfortably on the sofa for the rest of the evening, and had put the kettle on for a restorative cup of coffee.
âWhere's this list, then?' Eve called from the sitting room.
âIn the ring binder on the bookshelf. You'll find it tucked in the last pocket.'
Gideon finished making the drinks and took them through to where Eve sat, intent on the small screen in front of her. He sat down beside her and picked up the discarded binder, remembering his promise to look up Nero's feeding history.
He found the information printed on a sheet of A4 and, tucked behind it in the same plastic sleeve, another torn sheet, on which a feed order had been scribbled in Damien's slightly disjointed handwriting. One corner of this sheet was turned back, as if it had been hastily pushed into the pocket, revealing what looked like the very dark photocopy on the reverse.
With mild curiosity, Gideon drew the sheet out and looked more closely. It was indeed a photocopy, but very underexposed and indistinct, so that much of it was illegible. It appeared to be an image of a page from a book, showing the splayed edges of the other pages at one side and the central fold at the other. What little could be read was handwritten, but the script, a beautiful copperplate, was clearly not Damien's.
Gideon lifted it and leaned nearer to the light, concentrating hard. From the partial phrases he could make out, he quickly recognised it as a
page from someone's diary or journal but much of it was illegible.
â
. . . that Major Clemence is a bastard. I was running as fast as I could . . .Â
' he read, and then, further down, â
. . . I'd leave, but I promised Damien and I don't want to let . . .
' Another obscure section. â
. . . tonight, the others were teasing me but I need . . .
'
Feeling almost guilty, Gideon read on, peering closer as the words became even less distinct. There was a gap in the script, a short line that might have been a date, and then the writing continued, but this time more slanted and far less clear, as if the writer was working fast and under some emotion.
â
. . . Oh God, this is a nightmare! I still can't believe . . .
'
â
. . . keep thinking I'll wake up â God, I wish I could! What the hell am I . . .
'
â
. . . didn't have a chance to speak to them. I don't think I could have faced . . .
'
â
. . . every time I close my eyes I hear that terrible . . .
'
â
. . . again today and I was terrified they would want . . .
'
â
. . . can they be? I'm so scared. I still want to tell the truth. Gary wants . . .
'
At this point the script disappeared completely, infuriatingly, into the encroaching photographic gloom, with only the odd word surfacing. Gideon was forced to abandon his attempts to decipher it. He read it through again with mounting frustration. It was like a half-heard conversation, or someone mumbling and refusing to repeat themselves.
âFound Robin Tate,' Eve said suddenly, breaking in on his thoughts. âMember of the Modern Pentathlon team at the Dubai Olympics. We were just talking about that this afternoon, weren't we? Pentathlon, I mean. Strange, isn't it? This morning I hadn't a clue what it was and now here it is again.'
Gideon frowned, trying to remember where else the subject had cropped up recently, but the answer eluded him.
âAh,' Eve went on. âAdam Tetley â that was the guy's name, wasn't it? The one they're questioning. He's here, too.'
âWho else? Any of the others?'
âNo . . . Adam Tetley, Robin Tate, Timothy Landless, and Philip Proctor. The reserve was Ian Duncan, and Stuart Wells competed as an individual. The team coach was Harry Saddler. That's all the names mentioned.'
âOh, just for a moment, I thought we might be onto something, but I suppose that would have been too easy. Not that it would have explained why Damien should have their names written in code. Talk about a riddle! You know, I don't think I'm cut out to be a detective. Maybe I should just give the paper to Rockley, after all, and have done with it.'
âAnd what about Lloyd and Pippa?'
Gideon sighed. âYeah, I know . . .'
There was silence for a moment, and a log spat and whined on the fire as a pocket of sap heated up and exploded. Eve's fingers tapped the keyboard and Gideon's gaze fell on the photocopy once more. He held it out to her.
âWhat d'you make of this? It was in the folder.'
Her brows drew down in concentration as she scanned the sheet in her hand before exclaiming, âOh, isn't that annoying! If there was only just a little bit more. It's like finding a treasure map with the X missing! It looks like someone's diary, don't you think?'
âYeah, that's what I thought. Whoever it is sounds pretty desperate, don't they?'
âDidn't you say Damien's brother committed suicide? Perhaps it was his.'
Gideon took the paper back and looked at it again.
âYou know, you might just have something there. But why would Damien photocopy it if he had the original? It doesn't make sense.'
âNo idea.' Eve shrugged, her attention back on the screen.
âI've got Sam Bentley here,' she announced presently.
âPentathlon again?'
âNope. Owner-manager of an extremely prestigious health club, by the look of it. Bentleys of Bath. Spas, mud baths, saunas, every kind of massage known to man, and then some, spray-on tanning, toning tables, seaweed therapy, whatever that is, body-wraps, reiki healing, aromatherapy, acupuncture, shiatsu â good God, the list is endless! We've got pictures, too. Shiny tiles, mosaics, gold-plated taps, fluffy gold-coloured towels by the dozen and carpet pile so deep you could get lost in it. This is seriously opulent. The website's huge, too. It even gives sample itineraries and menus, and you wouldn't want to go there to lose weight, I can tell
you, although it says you can . . . About the only thing it doesn't tell you is the price.'
â
If you have to ask, you can't afford it.
' Gideon leaned over her shoulder to take a look. âWhat makes you so sure it's the right Sam Bentley?'
âWell, it's the same contact number,' she said on a note of triumph.
âWell, well. Maybe I should go and pay Mr Bentley a visit,' Gideon mused.
âI think I should come too.'
âI wasn't thinking of booking in,' he said, with amusement. âIt's a bit beyond my touch, to say nothing of it not being exactly my scene. I was thinking more of laying siege to the reception area until he agrees to see me. Maybe a message containing the words Damien Daniels might do the trick. Any luck with the other names?'
âWell, Lloyd turns up all over the place, of course. He has his own political website; he's on the Countryside Alliance one, and the drag hounds one. I can't find anything on Garth Stephenson â at least not one that was likely to be ours â but Julian Norris is there under Norris Security, and I've also found an account of his death in the archives of a regional paper.'
âOh? What does it say?'
âIt's only short. Here, it's easier if you look.' She pushed the laptop towards him.
â
Local Businessman Killed in Car Crash
' was the unimaginative headline, and it continued,â
Respected local businessman Julian Norris, founder of Norris Security Systems based in Sturminster Newton, died on Friday night when his Vauxhall estate car left the road and hit a wall in Winterbourne Whitechurch. It
is believed that Mr Norris, who was thirty-nine and married with two young children, died at the scene when the stone wall collapsed, crushing the vehicle. The reason for the crash is not yet clear, but no other vehicle was involved and police would like to hear from anyone who witnessed the accident. The family request that donations be sent to . . .
'
Gideon read it through again, then looked up.
âThat's odd.'
âWhat is?'
âWell, Tilly said Julian crashed on his way home from their place â Puddlestone Farm â and it says here that Julian Norris lived at Stur. So what was he doing in Winterbourne Whitechurch? It's not exactly en route.'
âIt says his
business
was based at Sturminster Newton; it doesn't say he actually
lived
there,' Eve pointed out.
âThat's true. I'll have to ask Tilly. Anything else?'
âNot on Robin Tate, but Vanessa Tate's mentioned a couple of times in three-day-eventing news and results. Adam Tetley's mentioned again, too. Did you know he used to have horses in training with Damien?'
âWell, yes, actually I did,' Gideon confessed apologetically. âTilly told me the other day. They had some trouble. He didn't pay his training fees and eventually it turned out he'd bought the horses with company money and couldn't pay it back. Needless to say, he lost his job, and I gather his wife sent him packing, too.'
âWhy does that make him a suspect? Surely he couldn't blame Damien for that. It was patently his own fault.'
âWell, apparently it was Damien that dropped him in it, in the end, by contacting his boss, but I agree, it seems a bit hard. Unless there's more to it than meets the eye. It all happened five or six years ago.'
âYou didn't say anything about that, this afternoon.'
âNo. I don't want Lloyd to know I've figured out the list.'
âBut you mentioned Sam Bentley,' she reminded him.
âI know. I took a chance, and I wanted to see his reaction, but there wasn't one, really, was there?'
âYou know, if you told Lloyd about the names, he might be able to clear up the whole mystery, had you thought of that?'
âWell, yes, obviously. But . . .'
âBut you're not going to.'
âMaybe. But not just yet.'
Eve tipped her head on one side and looked at him.
âAre you sure this is about protecting Pippa?'
âYes,' Gideon said, surprised. âWhat else?'
Eve watched him for a few more lingering moments, then pursed her lips and shook her head.
âI don't know. Ignore me. Well, we're finished here. Let's get to bed, huh?'
BENTLEYS OF BATH
was, in fact, on the outskirts of Bath, rather than in the city centre. The business was housed in a huge, purpose-built complex, which was a clever mix of old and modern styling, and stood, the website had stated, in sixteen acres of its own landscaped grounds. The name was inscribed on a large polished bronze plaque, to the right of the smoked-glass double front doors.
Gideon had taken advantage of a bright, cloudless morning to give his new motorcycle an outing and, as the deep, burbling note of the powerful engine died away and he took his helmet off, he caught sight of a couple of curious faces at one of the downstairs windows. Even as he glanced at them, they were hastily withdrawn, and he unzipped his leather jacket with a private smile. Visitors to Bentleys were probably not in the habit of turning up on two wheels.
Through the front doors, which opened silently at his approach, he found himself in a sumptuous reception area, carpeted in gold and furnished in
bronzed metal and golden-veined marble. Two tall, well-built men stood, one on either side of the doors, but the smart brown and gold uniform did nothing to disguise their function. Something about the look in the eye and the set of the jaw proclaimed them as security; probably ex-army, Gideon decided, and as he advanced across the acres of carpet, he fancied he could feel their eyes boring suspiciously into his back.
âGood morning, sir. Welcome to Bentleys of Bath.' The twenty-something girl on the other side of the marble-topped reception desk had perfect teeth and nails, and just-out-ofâthe-salon burnished copper hair. Her smile faltered almost imperceptibly as she took in the appearance of the visitor, but training took over and she recovered immediately. âCan I help you?'
Gideon could have left his helmet and gloves outside with the bike but it was no part of his plan to conform, so he dumped both on the polished marble in front of him and smiled at the girl.
âI'd like to speak to Mr Bentley, please,' he said pleasantly.
âI'm sorry, sir. Mr Bentley is in a meeting.'
âAh, yes, I thought he might be. And, no doubt, this meeting is expected to last most of the morning.'
She relaxed a little.
âYes, sir. I'm afraid so.'
âAnd this afternoon?'