The Mozart Conspiracy: A Novel bh-2
Page 30
‘You earned it,’ Aragon said.
‘Take care of Sandy Cook’s widow and kids,’ Ben said. ‘Give the rest to charity. Do something good with it. I don’t want it.’
Kinski was at home. It took him a while to hobble to the door on his crutches. ‘Good to see you on your feet, Markus,’ Ben said as he stepped inside the hallway. He was carrying something in a plastic bag.
Kinski was in a dressing gown. His hair was a mess and he had four days’ stubble growth on his face. His skin was pallid and there were dark bags under his eyes.
Ben looked around him at the small, modern suburban house. It didn’t look like the home of a big rough guy like Markus Kinski. Everything was too orderly and cared for, neat little vases of flowers on the tables. A woman’s touch about the place. Helga, Ben guessed.
The detective looked happy to see him. Ben looked down at the heavily plastered leg, stubby bare toes sticking out from the end. The plaster was covered in the autographs of well-wishers.
Kinski caught his gaze. ‘Itches like crazy,’ he said. ‘The fucking thing can’t come off soon enough.’
‘How is she?’ Ben asked as Kinski hobbled down the hallway.
‘A little subdued,’ Kinski said. ‘But she’ll be fine. She’s a tough kid.’ His eyes wandered to the plastic bag Ben was carrying. ‘What’ve you got there?’
‘I brought her something,’ Ben said. He reached inside the bag and pulled out the big floppy teddy bear he’d picked out in a hurry on his way across town. ‘I hope she likes it.’
‘Why don’t you ask her yourself?’ Kinski suggested. He limped to the bottom of the stairs and leaned on his crutches. ‘You’ve got a visitor, Clara,’ he called.
A door opened on the landing and a little face peeped out. Her eyes lit up when she saw Ben standing there. She ran down the stairs and hugged him tight.
He was happy to see her smiling again. That lost look had faded from her eyes since the last time he’d seen her. She’d been through a hell of a lot, but maybe her father was right. She was a tough kid.
‘I suppose you’re far too grown up and mature for this,’ he said, handing her the teddy bear.
She clasped it to her chest. ‘I’ll call him Ben.’ She beamed. ‘I have another new friend, too,’ she said brightly. She turned. ‘Can I show Ben, Daddy?’
Kinski nodded. Clara ran happily up the hall, clutching the teddy. ‘Muffi!’ she called. A Rottweiler puppy, a black ball of fur no bigger than a rabbit, flopped out of the sitting room on clumsy oversized paws and cocked his head to one side, watching Ben with big curious eyes. He had a patch of tan above each one, just like Max.
‘Go and play with the puppy,’ Kinski told her. ‘Ben and I need to talk.’
He led Ben into the kitchen and propped his crutches against the table. He opened a cupboard and took down two tumblers and a bottle of Jack Daniel’s. They sat, Kinski’s plastered leg sticking out in front of him. He poured out two full glasses and shoved one towards Ben.
Kinski groaned, tried to shove two fingers down inside his plaster. Frustrated, he gave up and knocked back half a measure of the bourbon.
‘I thought you were on the wagon,’ Ben said.
‘Fell off. Takes my mind off this goddamn itching.’
‘Aragon told me you’re heading the investigation.’
Kinski nodded. ‘I get the feeling it’s going to drag on for months. They say it’s the shit-hottest team of defence lawyers anyone’s ever seen.’ He grunted. ‘The fuckers are going to need them.’
‘You can cut down the weed,’ Ben said, ‘but the roots go deep. You can’t destroy it.’
Kinski shrugged. ‘Maybe you’re right. Personally I’ll be happy to see some bastards take a fall. That’ll satisfy me.’
They drank in silence.
‘I’ll never forget what you did for Clara,’ Kinski said quietly. ‘I wish I could have been there to help you.’
‘I’m sorry about your friend Hildegard,’ Ben said.
Kinski raised his tumbler to his lips. When he put it down it was empty. He let out a long sigh. ‘Ben, when they told me about Leigh—’ His voice tailed off. His stubbled chin sank to his chest.
Ben laid a hand on the cop’s arm. ‘Thanks, Markus.’
Ninety minutes later he was leaning back in a soft armchair and looking around him at the luxurious décor of the private clinic’s lounge area. The warm room was filled with plants and flower arrangements. There was a pretty Christmas tree in one corner. Snow pattered lightly against the windows.
Hidden speakers were playing some kind of musical-box stuff that sounded to Ben like Mozart. He couldn’t name the piece and he didn’t care. He didn’t want to hear any damn Mozart. It made him think of Leigh and Oliver. Suddenly he missed his old drinking flask.
‘Hello, Eve,’ he said.
She paused in the doorway before she smiled selfconsciously and crossed the room towards him. She was wearing a navy tracksuit with a sleeve cut away and her arm in a sling. She was in plaster from her elbow to her fingertips. There were no autographs on her cast.
‘How’s the hand?’
‘I don’t think I’ll play the guitar any more,’ she said as she lowered herself into the armchair next to his. ‘They operated on it. We’ll see. Doesn’t hurt too bad, though. As long as I keep dosing myself stupid on painkillers.’ She smiled. Her face looked tight and pale.
He shifted round in his chair and winced a little at the sharp pull on his ribs.
‘Look at the state of us,’ she said. ‘All banged up. Are you OK?’
‘I’ll live,’ he said. ‘Just a little stiffness, that’s all.’
‘I was surprised when you called. I didn’t think I’d see you again, Ben. Thanks for coming to visit me.’
‘I’m glad Aragon’s looking after you,’ he said.
‘Real VIP treatment in this place.’ She paused. ‘I’ve a lot to thank Philippe for. It’s more than I deserve,’ she added.
‘He’s a good man,’ Ben said. ‘For a politician.’
‘He’s taken good care of me. I might have to be on probation for a while, but I can handle that. It’s a fresh start for me.’
He nodded. They both knew she’d been cut a lucky deal. Ben knew more than she did about the strings Aragon had pulled to make things work out for her. Aragon had a lot of compassion in him. He made Ben wonder about his own compassion.
‘I’m ashamed of all the things I’ve done,’ she said, looking down.
‘You never had a lot of choice. You made it right in the end.’
‘Yes, we made it right,’ she said. ‘So what about you-you sticking around a while or what?’
‘I’m catching a flight to Dublin this afternoon.’
‘Shame,’ she said. ‘I’d have liked to get to know you.’
He smiled sadly and said nothing.
‘Planning on ever coming back this way?’ she asked.
‘Maybe one day.’
‘You won’t be at the hearing?’
He shook his head. ‘I was never here.’
‘I’m the star witness,’ she said.
‘I know. You’ll be fine,’ he told her.
He went to leave. She followed him into the hallway. ‘Wait,’ she said. ‘I just remembered something. I had them bring it here from my place after you called.’ She climbed the stairs and disappeared through a door on the first floor. When she reappeared a moment later she was holding something very familiar in her good hand. It was his old brown leather jacket.
‘I thought I’d never see that again,’ he said.
She flushed. ‘You left it in my flat that day.’
He took it from her and slung it over his shoulder. It felt good. ‘Thanks,’ he muttered. He turned for the door.
‘You’re sure you can’t hang around for a while?’
‘I’m sure.’
‘Can I call you sometime?’
On the twenty-kilometre taxi journey south-east towards Wien Schwecha
t airport Ben took off the new jacket he’d bought and slipped on the old leather one. He felt a little happier with it on. He found his drinking flask in one pocket, and his phone in another. He turned the phone on to check if it still had any battery life. It did.
He used it to call Christa Flaig. She listened in silence when he told her that Fred’s death had been answered for. He didn’t say too much. ‘Watch the papers,’ he said. ‘And you might be getting a call from a cop called Kinski. You can trust him.’
He had an hour to kill after check-in, and he knew exactly how he wanted to use that time. He took a stool at the departure-lounge bar and bought a triple whisky. That didn’t take too long to finish, and he ordered another. He didn’t get drunk often, not properly drunk. But today didn’t feel like a bad day for it, and now didn’t seem like a bad time to get started. He slipped the pack of Gitanes out of his leather jacket and thumbed the wheel of his Zippo. He clanged the lighter shut, took a deep lungful of the strong smoke and let it trickle out of his nose. He closed his eyes. Immediately he was seeing Leigh’s face in his mind.
The barman eyed him and came over. ‘Rauchen verboten,’ he said, pointing at the no smoking sign. Ben shot him a look that made him back away. A woman in a pinstriped trouser suit sitting along the bar tutted irritably but said nothing. He finished the whisky, twirled the empty glass on the polished surface of the bar. He thought about ordering another one.
His phone rang. He ignored it. It rang a few times then stopped.
He ordered the whisky. The barman poured it curtly.
The phone started ringing again. The woman along the bar was staring at him, as if to say either answer the damn thing or turn it off.
He sighed and pressed to answer. The line wasn’t good. The voice was female. He listened for a moment and then said, ‘What do you want, Eve?’ She’d said she would call him sometime. But not this soon.
‘Who’s Eve?’ asked the voice.
‘What?’ he said, confused. He put a hand over his other ear, shutting out the noise of the bar and the music and the flight announcement that was drowning out her words.
‘It’s Leigh,’ she shouted down the phone. ‘It’s Leigh.’
Chapter Sixty-Three
The mountains of Slovenia
A few hours later
It was a long drive from Ljubljana airport to Bled in the north-western corner of Slovenia. Ben pushed the rental Audi hard and fast. He was anxious to see her again. The awful image of what he’d taken to be her dead face was still lodged in his mind.
The little town was nestled deep in the pine forests. The road took him around the Lake Bled shoreline under a heavy grey sky. Across the water was a tiny wooded island with a baroque church steeple poking through the trees. The snowy mountains towered in the background. The road was virtually empty and rain had washed it clear of ice.
As he reached the outskirts he checked his map. The directions she’d given him on the phone led him to an elegant chalet-style villa at the end of a quiet street. Rain pattered on the windscreen as he drew up outside the house. A polished brass plaque on the wall was inscribed with the name Anja Kovak in heavy black lettering. Beside the name was a title he didn’t understand, but it looked like the kind of plaque a doctor or lawyer would have. A professional person. He checked the address again. It was definitely the one Leigh had given him, but it didn’t seem right. What was she doing here?
He sat in the car for a minute to clear his mind. He’d been doing a lot of thinking since her call. He watched the raindrops run down the outside of the screen. Then he reached for the handle, opened the car door and swung a leg out.
That was when the door of the house opened and he saw her standing there at the top of the steps. She was wearing clothes a size too big for her, a heavy black woollen pullover and a pair of black baggy trousers. They looked borrowed. Whoever had lent them to her liked black.
He climbed out of the car and walked slowly through the gate. It began to rain harder. Leigh came towards him. They started moving more quickly as they got nearer to one another. She hugged him tight as they came together.
He held her. He didn’t want to let go. The pain in his ribs didn’t matter. He suddenly wanted to kiss her again-but he didn’t know if it was the right thing.
They held each other for a long time, and then she pulled away from him, clasping his hands tightly. Her hair was wet with the rain. She was crying and laughing at the same time. ‘It’s so good to see you,’ she said.
‘I thought you were dead,’ was all he could say. ‘The last few days have been a torture.’
She looked up at him. ‘You said it was over. Is it, really?’
He nodded. ‘It’s over. You’re safe. You can get on with your life again.’
‘You found them?’
He nodded again.
‘What did you do?’
‘Don’t ask me that.’
‘Where’s Clara?’
‘At home with her father. She’s fine. They’re both fine.’
Leigh glanced up at the sky, hugged herself and shivered. ‘It’s raining,’ she said. ‘Let’s go inside.’
She led him into the house. There were terracotta tiles on the floor, and the walls were painted white. It looked clinical and clean. He heard a cough and looked to his left. There was a sign on the wall that he couldn’t read. Through the open doorway next to it he could see some people sitting on chairs. A couple of them were reading magazines. Someone coughed again. The air smelled of chlorine disinfectant. It was a doctor’s waiting room.
‘What are you doing here?’ he asked Leigh as she led him past the door and up the corridor towards another one.
‘Anja’s consulting,’ she said. ‘We can talk in here.’
She pushed open the door and he followed her into a kitchen. It was small and practical. There was a percolator bubbling on a gas cooker, and the smell of real coffee.
She poured coffee into two cups and handed him one. ‘You look different. What happened to your hair? It’s darker.’
‘You look different too. You look alive.’
‘I’m definitely not dead,’ she assured him, smiling.
‘I know what happened at the convent,’ he said. ‘I should have been there for you.’
‘I’ve been trying to call you for days. Your phone was never on. I was really worried about you.’
‘I didn’t have my phone,’ he said. He didn’t tell her why. ‘What happened to you? What are you doing here?’
‘It’s a simple story,’ she said. ‘The helicopters went away. They took Clara. There was nothing I could do.’ She paused a while, remembering. ‘I waited until the men were gone. I could see the smoke. I guessed what was happening. I was scared they might come back. I wanted to get away, as far and as fast as I could. I was covered in blood.’
‘Whose blood?’
‘Not mine,’ she answered.
‘The old hammer-gun?’
She nodded. ‘I had to use it.’ She shuddered, closed her eyes for a moment, sipped coffee. ‘I couldn’t bear the feel of his blood on me. I found a stream where I scrubbed it all off. I wandered for a long time in the snow. I just walked. I didn’t know where to go. Everything was wilderness, and trees and hills. I don’t remember too well, but they said I was staggering and near to collapsing when they found me.’
‘Who found you?’
‘Anja.’
‘The doctor?’
She nodded. ‘I was lucky. Anja doesn’t get too many days off. She was skiing with some friends. They found me and took me to a ski cabin in a valley. At first Anja said she wanted to take me to the hospital. She was the only one in the group who spoke English. I pleaded with her not to take me there. She agreed to bring me back here to her surgery, and I’ve been here all week. I’m fine now.’
‘I’m thankful to Anja,’ he said. He stroked her arm. It felt warm and soft. ‘There’s something I have to tell you, Leigh. Your father’s letter. It was destroyed. I�
��m sorry.’
‘I’m not sorry,’ she said. ‘I wish he’d never found it. I would have destroyed it myself.’
‘Something else,’ Ben said. ‘I think your father was right. So was Arno. I don’t think it was a fake.’
‘We’ll never know, will we?’
He shook his head. ‘No. But I’m glad it’s gone too.’
‘And so this is definitely over?’
‘It’s definitely over.’
‘I feel I should know more.’
‘I don’t think you should. People died.’
She was quiet.
‘I’ll take you home,’ he said.
‘I’ve got no papers. I lost everything.’
‘You won’t need them. We’re going back by private jet.’
She raised an eyebrow. ‘Whose?’
‘It belongs to Philippe Aragon.’
‘Aragon?’ She shook her head, puzzled. ‘The politician?’
‘Don’t ask,’ he said. ‘Will you be ready to leave here in the morning?’
‘I’m ready now.’
‘Dinner first,’ he said.
‘You’re taking me out? I’ve nothing to wear.’
‘You look great,’ he replied, and smiled.
Dinner was in the restaurant of the Grand Hotel Toplice on the shores of Lake Bled. They sat at a small table for two in the corner. He’d ordered the best bottle in the house. He couldn’t take his eyes off her. He had to keep reminding himself that she was really here, really alive.
‘You’re still looking at me like I’m some kind of apparition,’ she laughed.
‘You didn’t see the photo of you. You scared the hell out of me. I still stop breathing every time I think of it.’
‘That’s what comes with years of playing tragic heroines onstage,’ she said. ‘I’ve died a thousand times. Opera’s full of gruesome deaths. Carmen gets stabbed. Tosca jumps off the battlements. Lucia di Lammermoor stabs her husband, gets covered in blood, goes mad and then dies herself. You soon learn to look very dead. And they sometimes film the performances, so there are cameras zoomed right on your face. I can hold my breath like a pearl diver, and I can keep my eyes open forever without blinking.’