Bryant & May 09; The Memory of Blood

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Bryant & May 09; The Memory of Blood Page 16

by Christopher Fowler


  This particular line of enquiry seemed to be a dead end, not least because being on the fire escape had nothing to do with scaling a wall and prising open a locked window under the gaze of closed-circuit cameras, pedestrians and street traffic.

  The more she studied the activity grid, the harder it became to discern an accurate pattern. Raymond Land was wrong – standard operational procedures would not be enough to unlock the investigation. She wondered how Arthur and John were getting on. They hadn’t yet been told about the discovery under Cannon Street Bridge. This latest development would either confirm their theories – or wreck them.

  ∨ The Memory of Blood ∧

  24

  Scaramouche

  The detectives caught their train home and passed back through the Kent countryside, which was alternately sodden and sunlit. As they crossed the flat expanse of the Medway River, May made an admission. “All right, I can see why you wanted me to meet Dudley Salterton. We’re looking for someone who understands perfectly why Robert Kramer is obsessed with Mr Punch. This is a mind game between the two of them. It takes a special kind of arrogance to even contemplate attacking someone in that manner.”

  “Oh, I think we’ve already met the killer,” Bryant replied airily. “The circumstances surrounding the taking of life are usually mundane or squalid. This was at a rather glamorous party. Ego, you see. The ego of someone who’s taking on the world and proving they can win. Kramer prides himself on being a victor. And the trouble with being a victor is that there’s always somebody waiting to challenge you.”

  “No, it’s something more than that,” May insisted, watching the flashing greenery. The fecundity of the English countryside never ceased to amaze him. “This great anger is driven by something very powerful indeed. A need for revenge, a desire to right a wrong – it’s not just ego.”

  Bryant sat forward with a crooked smile crinkling his face. “Ah, now you’re thinking like me. I wondered if you’d start to see things my way.”

  “But I don’t understand how someone can maintain two states of mind. How can you kill and deceive, and yet still go to work and smile at your colleagues as if there’s nothing wrong?”

  “Because that’s what the most successful killers do, John. They hold two entirely separate mind-sets as one, and don’t see any dissonance between the different states. Punch sees himself as a united persona, not a schizophrenic. He simply goes about his business, righting perceived wrongs and coming out on top, even if it involves murder. Killers have been known to operate in nursing homes where everybody loves them. In the 1940s, Dr Marcel Petiot injected at least twenty-seven people with cyanide while he was healing his patients. They say many successful City businessmen are trained to think in exactly the same predatory manner. Kramer sees himself as Punch, and so does the murderer. Punch wants to knock him down. You can’t have two kings in one palace, as they say.”

  “Then how do we separate our suspects? What can we do to force them to open up? If our killer thinks like Punch, he’ll keep going, getting rid of anyone who gets in his way.”

  “I have a few ideas. The sheer volume of suspects constitutes some kind of a clue. The killer is trying to cause anarchy, trying to break everything apart. And we are expected to watch. It’s an act of bravura from someone with nothing to lose.” Bryant opened his mobile and rang Longbright’s direct line. “I have to be quick,” he told her. “I think there are tunnels coming up. Did you do anything about Anna Marquand or did you forget?”

  “I got thrown in a swimming pool,” said Longbright.

  “Well, when you’ve finished messing about, could you go and see Judith Kramer? She’ll probably respond better to you.”

  “We’ve been trying to get hold of you. Your phones are off.”

  “No, John’s battery is flat and I put mine in the wrong pocket and got caramel fudge all over the aerial.”

  “Gregory Baine is dead. He was found hanging from a noose under Cannon Street Bridge this morning. There was a Hangman puppet left beside him with one of our cards attached.”

  “Baine? Are you sure it’s him?”

  “Of course we’re sure. Why?”

  “If there was to be another murder I would have expected it to be someone else. Judith was the obvious candidate, but I wondered about what’s-his-name, the fat theatre critic who upset everyone.”

  “Alex Lansdale.”

  “Yes, him. Scaramouche, you see – the artful clown, usually described in the commedia dell’arte as ‘sly, adroit, supple, and conceited’, although that would be favouring him with praise.”

  “I don’t understand. Why?”

  “Oh, simple. In the play, Mr Punch stretches his neck.”

  May had been listening. “There’s that song by Queen,” he said. “You know, Scaramouche and something about fandangos?”

  “That’s right,” said Bryant. “Traditionally, the hanged man dances a jig as he dies. But now you’re telling me it was the producer. Pity there isn’t one in the Punch story.”

  “He’s more of an accountant,” Longbright pointed out.

  “Well, there is one of those,” said Bryant. “You realize we gave PCU cards to everyone who was interviewed after the Kramers’ party? That’s why it was attached to the Hangman puppet. The killer wants us to know he’s part of the group.”

  “But that makes no sense at all. Why?”

  “Because if we’re unable to make a prosecution even with the help we’ve been given, Punch will have proved his point. We’ll be back soon. Get the kettle on. It’s going to be another long night.”

  ∨ The Memory of Blood ∧

  25

  Girltalk

  Judith Kramer sat at her dressing table patting powder beneath her dark eyes. Dressed in a loose-fitting black V-neck sweater and jeans, she looked thinner and older than she had at the party. She had tied her hair back and donned plain silver earrings. The effect was severe and unflattering, like that of a New York hostess attending a charity function for want of something more useful to do.

  “I’m expected to be presentable,” she explained, noting Longbright’s watchful gaze. “Robert likes his surfaces nice and smooth. He’s very conscious of his image.”

  “You don’t approve?” Longbright asked, seating herself beside her.

  “I support him.”

  “That isn’t what I asked.”

  “That’s what I’m here for, isn’t it? To make him look good?”

  “Mrs Kramer, I don’t know you and I can’t judge.”

  “Oh, but everybody else does. They see the younger second wife come in and watch her struggle to be part of the actors’ conversations. They’re a likeable crowd, you know, but insular. If you didn’t see Helen Mirren in Phaedra or Vanessa Redgrave playing Prospero in The Tempest they’ll happily leave you on the outside. I’m afraid I only know Sir Ian McKellen from Lord of the Rings. I never saw him in Waiting for Godot, so apparently I’m not worth talking to.”

  She sat straight and studied her skin in the mirror, as if suddenly realizing who she was. “It seems odd not having to check on Noah every few minutes. Since last July he’s occupied nearly every moment of my day, and now – emptiness. It’s suddenly so quiet. I wasn’t much of a mother. Didn’t have the temperament for it.”

  “Not everyone does. It’s no sin.”

  “I’m keeping Gloria on for a while, even though there’s nothing for her to do. Robert blames her for taking the night off. And me, for letting the baby alarm turn itself off in my pocket. He has a long list of people and things he wants to blame, but Gloria and I are right at the top. He can’t bring himself to look me in the face. It will always be like this from now on, and I suppose it will break us up. The guilt, the recriminations. I see Noah’s face when I close my eyes, but it’s already changing. Just a crying baby’s face, you see, no real features. Like the horrible little wooden puppet of Punch’s Baby. I never wanted them in the nursery, but they were put there because the room was lockable. I
nsurance. It’s always about money with Robert.”

  “If you’d prefer, I can come back another day. I realize this is a terrible time for you – ”

  “Frankly, I’m grateful anybody talks to me at all. Everyone around here is carefully avoiding the subject of the baby, as if I’ll start screaming if they mention his name. I’m sorry – this really isn’t like me. I feel outside of myself somehow. I guess that’s the Valium I’ve been taking. What do you need from me?”

  “I thought we’d get to know each other a little. Girl talk.”

  “We’re neither of us girls. Besides, I don’t think it’s very advisable. My husband wouldn’t like it.”

  “If you prefer, I can just listen. Why don’t you tell me a little about yourself?”

  “I’m not used to talking about myself. I’m better at listening, too. God knows I get enough practice in this house.”

  “Try it, just this once,” said Longbright. “I think you need a lighter lipstick. Here, use this.” She handed Judith a gold tube of Jungle Amazon Coral Dew that had been discontinued in 1970.

  “All right.” Judith pursed her lips, applied the still-fresh lipstick and turned to face the detective sergeant. “I come from a nice Hampshire family. If you don’t like horses or yachting, we feed you then politely wait for you to leave the county. That’s what I did. I came to London with a degree in media studies, which is the equivalent of a proficiency badge in knitting, and ended up taking a job in a telecommunications company, working for one of the directors who played golf with Robert. Robert was still getting over Stella, his first wife. She hadn’t been dead for very long – ”

  “How did she die?”

  “Pills and booze, nothing very original. She’d always been highly strung, had two modes of operation by all accounts, hysterical laughter and sobbing – very high maintenance. I think Robert disappointed her as well. Everyone said he was very cut up about her death, although I never saw much evidence of that. They lived in this palatial house in Smith Square. Robert had made his fortune in property and I hear she was a bit of a gold digger. Anyway, it was all about keeping up appearances, and they had a very grand lifestyle, but Stella couldn’t handle it. After she died, Robert removed every trace of her from his life. He took down the photographs and burned them, threw away her letters, wiped the slate clean. That’s how he copes. He can’t be seen to lose at anything.”

  “How did you meet? Just at work?”

  “No. It was Boat Race Day and we were at a very grand party in Henley-upon-Thames, and we kept bumping into each other after that. We always seemed to be surrounded by crowds of people, and I thought, one day I’ll get him alone, but I didn’t. I never did, not even after we were married. Ridiculous how women think they can change men, and of course we don’t. We simply become more and more prescriptive until they finally go away from us.”

  “It sounds like you’re being rather hard on yourself.”

  “Am I? I honestly don’t know what I brought to the party. He certainly didn’t need me. All my friends thought he was a good catch. I have no idea what he saw in me then, and I still don’t. Which is what makes it all so much worse.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Please dignify me with a little intelligence. I’m not stupid, I’m just not very interested in the theatre. I know that you know. I’ve seen who you’ve been talking to. It was me who continued the affair, not Marcus. I needed someone to talk to, and it was obvious Robert would never be my friend. But by then the wedding preparations were already under way and I couldn’t back out. I suppose it suited my purposes, but if a woman says that, everyone thinks she’s a bitch. Strange how it’s fine for a wealthy man to keep a mistress.”

  “You think your husband has a mistress?”

  “Of course he has. Why else would he slip off after the theatre shuts and come home at four in the morning? He doesn’t even bother to wash the perfume off. I suppose it’s the lack of effort he puts into deceiving me that makes it so galling.”

  “Do you think he’s in love?”

  “I very much doubt it, if his track record is anything to go by. He’s spending more nights with this one than anyone else he’s seen, but I think that’s simply because he doesn’t want to come home to a wife and a crying baby. Well, he won’t have to worry about that now. The affair will come to an end eventually, he’ll be in a bad mood for a few weeks and then he’ll come creeping back to me with a new pair of diamond earrings, something obvious like that, and I’ll still have Marcus. I’m sure you know all this anyway. Actors are such gossips, and you did take statements from them.”

  “We heard plenty of unsubstantiated rumours.”

  “I assume one of them concerns the paternity of my son.”

  “Yes. You don’t have to tell me any more, unless you think it has a bearing on the case.”

  “For all I know it might. I assume you’re like a priest? You can’t repeat what’s said outside this room?”

  “I can if it incriminates you in the case under investigation.”

  “I imagine it incriminates me for stupidity, if nothing else. Marcus is – was – Noah’s father. The baby wasn’t planned, but Robert was desperate for a son, so I thought it would all work out – until now.”

  “You think someone did this to get back at you?”

  “Well, what do you think, Detective Sergeant? Let’s see now, who would be the most upset to find out that Noah was not his son after all, but the product of his unfaithful wife and her lover?”

  “That’s a very serious accusation, Mrs Kramer.”

  “Everything I’ve ever done has been about survival. I suppose I thought that having a child with Marcus would help me to survive a loveless marriage. I hadn’t counted on my husband finding out the truth.”

  “You can’t be sure that he has.”

  “It certainly looks that way, doesn’t it? You should see him this morning. He looks like he’s just met his own ghost.”

  “You mean because he’s upset about Mr Baine.”

  “They used to be best friends until Robert started thinking that Gregory was cheating him. Gregory was always getting them into financial scrapes. I imagine Robert is very upset, because he won’t have his money man to bail him out this time. Even if he finds another producer, it’ll be a nightmare trying to put everything right. I heard there’s no question of cancelling the play. They’re going on.”

  “My boss thinks your husband really believes in the Punch legend,” Longbright observed. “Do you think he does?”

  Judith Kramer paused to think, qualifying her words. “He certainly believes in good and bad fortune. That’s why there’s a puppet in the play that comes to life. It appealed to Robert. He was raised in a very odd family. His mother filled his head with all kinds of nonsense. You’d be surprised how superstitious successful men often are. For all I know, he honestly believes Mr Punch stepped down from his hook and murdered his child. I assume that was the desired effect, and it has been achieved.”

  Longbright studied the sallow face before her and could see that Judith Kramer was still suffering from the effects of over-medication. “How is your husband coping?”

  “You’ve spoken to him, you should know. I’m not sure anything really touches him. His main goal in life has always been to make something of himself. Now that he’s achieved that, I can’t imagine anything else matters.”

  “I’ve read his statements. The only thing that puzzles me is his move from property into the theatre.”

  “Why?”

  “Theatre people seem – irrational. They’re not known for their pragmatism.”

  “Well, of course they’re steeped in odd beliefs. They see ghosts and touch wood, ban the mention of Macbeth and wish each other bad luck before performances. If anyone whistles backstage they have to go out of the room, come in, turn around three times and swear in order to lift the curse. But have you ever noticed? The more money people have, the odder they become, and my husband is extrem
ely rich – or at least he was until Gregory died.”

  “There’s no indication that your husband is in any way involved. I have physical evidence against that.”

  “What kind of evidence?”

  “I can fully account for his time at the party, and I hear he has an alibi for last night. He was with you.”

  “Was he? I don’t think I noticed. Anyway, I didn’t say he would do it himself.” Judith gave a bitter laugh. “Robert never does anything himself. He’d hire someone to handle the problem for him. I’m surprised he proposed to me in person.”

  “A lot of men are like that.”

  “Oh, my husband is unique, I assure you. Robert purchased the Punch and Judy puppets just after his first big sale. It was very important that he beat everyone else at the auction, and he didn’t care that he paid far too much for them. There are lots of ugly stories about how he made his money. In one of these tales, he set up a holiday flat-share website for students, bringing a million contract users to it on the promise that he would never charge them for the service. Then he sold the site to a company that immediately started charging them via a loophole he had deliberately left in their log-in forms, and sued them when they defaulted.”

  “He wasn’t at all bothered by that?”

  “I suppose he has the morality of a typical City boy. They’re all opportunists, aren’t they? It doesn’t pay to be sentimental. Anyway, with the money he made, he bought a Victorian theatre called the Putney Empire from two widowed sisters, on another supposedly unbreakable promise – that they could stay as sitting tenants in the property next door while he restored the building’s fabric to its former glory.”

  “I assume he didn’t keep his promise.”

 

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