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Memory of Bones

Page 19

by Alex Connor


  ‘He had friends there.’

  ‘Family?’

  ‘No, Diego was divorced.’

  Roma nodded, her voice gentle. ‘Do you know if your son had any enemies?’

  ‘Because he was killed? He was, wasn’t he? He was killed.’

  ‘Yes, I’m afraid he was.’

  ‘Who did it?’

  ‘I don’t know,’ she replied honestly. ‘But now we know who he was, we can move the case forward. Did your son have any enemies?’

  He shrugged. ‘No, he wasn’t a man like that. No one envied Diego.’ There was a long pause. ‘I don’t think he knew a lot of people in London, apart from me.’

  ‘What was the business?’

  ‘Builder.’

  ‘Had he had any arguments with clients lately?’

  ‘Who would kill him? No!’ Carlos Martinez replied shortly. ‘Diego kept himself to himself. He was quiet. He would do anything for anyone. He was kind, almost too kind.’

  Pausing, Roma remembered the card found on the body and fired a volley into the air. ‘Did your son know a Doctor Ben Golding?’

  ‘We all did,’ Carlos said, smiling. ‘A long time ago, Dr Golding’s parents gave me a loan which saved my business. I never forgot it. We owed them a lot.’

  ‘So you knew the family?’

  ‘Dr and Mrs Golding were killed when the boys were in their early teens.’ Carlos paused, rubbing his right eye. ‘I’d known Miriam – Mrs Golding – when she worked at the Prado. I’d done some building repairs there and she hired me to work on their family house.’ He was looking back, remembering. ‘It needed work. Big old house, with bad plumbing. Rundown, always something needing repair. I had to replace the guttering too …’ He trailed off, then rallied. ‘There were two boys – Ben and Leon. Ben came to London—’

  ‘Did you know him here?’

  He shook his head. ‘Nah, we weren’t in touch. I haven’t seen him since he was a teenager.’

  ‘What about Leon?’

  ‘Oh, I knew Leon. And Diego knows – knew – Leon quite well.’

  Roma leaned forward in her seat, intrigued. ‘Did your son work for Leon Golding?’

  ‘On and off,’ Carlos replied. ‘Leon’s a bit … troubled, but pleasant enough. Diego did some repairs for him quite recently. I know because he told me all about it on his visit and about Leon’s girlfriend. He said she was beautiful, but he didn’t trust her.’

  ‘Why not?’

  ‘He knew her already,’ Carlos continued. ‘Diego said that she didn’t remember him, but he’d done some urgent repair work for Gabino Ortega in Madrid – and she’d been Gabino’s girlfriend at the time. He remembered her because they’d argued and Gabino had ended the affair and she’d taken it badly. Threatened him, said she’d pay him back.’

  ‘What’s her name?’

  ‘Gina … I don’t know her surname. Diego would know …’ He trailed off, biting his lip to stop himself crying. It took him several seconds before he could speak again. ‘On his last visit, my son seemed different. He said he’d just seen Leon Golding and that he’d done him a favour.’

  ‘A favour? What kind of favour?’

  ‘Diego found something in the cellar of an old house in the centre of Madrid. They had been digging up the floor, which hadn’t been touched for centuries, and he found this skull. It was interesting because Diego knew the history of the house, knew that Goya had stayed there.’

  She was baffled. ‘Goya?’

  ‘The painter, Goya. He’d lived there for a little while,’ Carlos went on. ‘The skull had been hidden for a long time and when Diego found it he thought it might be the painter’s … Leon had talked to Diego about Goya for years, so he gave it to him. Our whole family owed them a debt. I mean, I paid back the money a long time ago, but there was more to it than that. Leon was the right person to give the skull to. And besides, Diego knew how much it would mean to him.’

  Roma studied the old man. ‘I don’t understand. Why would it mean so much?’

  ‘Leon Golding’s an art historian, very well known. An expert on Goya.’ He took in a breath, tugging at his keys, making them jingle erratically. ‘Diego said he was over the moon with it. Thought it would make his name. Leon took Diego out for dinner as a thank you.’

  Was this the time to tell him that Leon Golding was dead? Roma wondered. He had just found out his son had been murdered – did he need to know about Leon? Thoughtful, she glanced away, making some notes. So there was a link between Ben Golding and the victim. More than a link – a bond. And he’d denied it. Why?

  ‘I was going to come and talk to the police anyway,’ Carlos said quietly, lifting his head and fixing his eyes on Roma. ‘Diego wouldn’t say anything, but he was being followed.’

  ‘Did he know who was following him?’

  ‘No. It was in Madrid.’ Carlos sighed. ‘He came to London to see me, but also to get away from Spain. He said his house and his business had been watched. He was scared. Really scared. I told him to go to the police, but he wouldn’t.’

  ‘Did he say why he thought he was being watched?’

  ‘The skull,’ Carlos said flatly. ‘It’s worth a fortune. The art world would want it, and private collectors. I know because of the conversations I used to have with Miriam Golding. She said that one day the skull would turn up—’

  ‘Why isn’t it with the body?’

  ‘It was stolen,’ Carlos said. ‘A long time ago. The story’s well known in Spain. Not over here, but at home, yes. Goya’s our most famous painter and the tale of the skull’s a legend. You know, folklore. People have been looking for it for a long time. They say it’s cursed, but who knows …’ Again he trailed off, remembering his son. ‘Maybe they were right.’

  ‘Did your son say anything about the people he thought were following him? Any descriptions?’

  ‘No, nothing like that.’

  ‘Did he receive any phone calls? Messages?’

  ‘Not that I know of.’

  ‘Did you know that Diego had Ben Golding’s card in his pocket?’

  He didn’t react as Roma reached into her desk drawer and pushed the evidence across to him. After another moment, she flipped the card over to reveal the mobile number on the other side.

  ‘D’you know this number?’

  ‘Of course I do. It’s Leon’s number. Leon Golding’s.’

  She sighed deeply, the old man watching her. ‘I’m very sorry to have to tell you this, Mr Martinez, but Leon Golding is dead.’

  39

  In the Whitechapel Hospital Ben was walking down the Loggia with Sean McGee’s file under his arm, Megan Griffiths running behind to keep up. The boy’s operation had been a success, but Ben was late for his afternoon clinic and had missed lunch. Having stood in for Ben when he was in Madrid, Megan was surprised to see a file she didn’t recognise – the notes on the Little Venice murder.

  ‘Can I look at it?’ she asked.

  Ben shook his head. ‘No, it’s confidential.’

  ‘It’s all over the newspapers. It can’t be that confidential.’

  ‘My part in it is,’ he replied, putting the file into his briefcase.

  Expecting his registrar to leave, Ben was surprised to find Megan hovering as they reached his consulting rooms.

  ‘You were asked for your medical opinion, weren’t you? Can I help?’

  ‘I’ve already done the examination,’ Ben replied, curious. ‘Why do you want to be involved?’

  ‘It’s not the kind of thing that happens every day. Murder, involving a patient who had had facio-maxillary surgery—’

  ‘Which is something you couldn’t have known unless you had already looked at the file,’ Ben replied, infuriated. ‘I’ll have to put that in your assessment, Dr Griffiths–’

  ‘Don’t tell me you wouldn’t have done the same!’

  ‘I probably would have, yes,’ he admitted, ‘but not for the same reasons. I suppose you want to write up the case?’
<
br />   She nodded, holding his gaze defiantly. ‘It would be the chance of a lifetime. You know how difficult it is to get a posting at a good hospital. A doctor needs every bit of help they can find. And an innovative paper, with a well-known case, would help me a lot.’

  Sighing, Ben moved behind his desk and sat down. He knew that if he tried to stop her, Megan Griffiths would do the paper anyway. She would gamble on the notoriety of her work outweighing her mentor’s disapproval. He was tired and under stress, and her interference rankled.

  ‘You realise that it would be unethical for you to publish anything until the murder becomes public knowledge? Or until it has been solved?’

  ‘What if it isn’t solved?’

  ‘There’s nothing to stop you from writing it up anonymously,’ Ben replied, ‘but that would defeat the point, wouldn’t it?’

  Defiant, she went on the attack. ‘You don’t like me, do you?’

  ‘You’re right, I don’t.’

  Without saying another word, she turned on her heel and left.

  For the remainder of the day Ben regretted the altercation and he knew he had made an enemy out of a colleague – something he would normally have avoided at all costs. But life wasn’t normal at the moment. Leon was dead and the police were asking him questions, and instead of seeking their help, Ben was lying to them.

  Returning home later that evening Ben paused at the doorway, almost reluctant to enter. When he did walk in and turn on the light, he half expected his house to be broken into again. But the furniture was in the same place as it always was, the post on the mat at his feet. As he bent to retrieve it, he could hear the answerphone clicking off in the study.

  By the time he got to it, the caller had rung off, the red light flashing three times. Three messages. Checking the room, he pulled the curtains closed, then flicked the PLAY button.

  ‘Ben, hi, it’s me …’

  He relaxed at the sound of Abigail’s voice.

  ‘… I just wanted to say hello. I wondered when you were coming round. Anyway, phone me when you get in.’

  A pause followed, then her voice again, gentle.

  ‘I miss you. Bye.’

  Saving the message, Ben played the next, smiling when he heard Francis Asturias’s booming voice. His tone was pretend outrage, mock angry.

  ‘Bloody Golding! Call me back, you prick. I’ve got some news.’

  Replaying both messages, Ben realised that Abigail would be safer if she returned to France and stayed with her father. In France she would be away from him. In France, she would be safe … An unexpected noise behind him made him turn, but it was only a pigeon on to the window ledge outside. Rolling his head to loosen his neck muscles, he clicked on the answerphone to access his last message.

  The voice was a man’s. Disguised and ominous.

  ‘I’ve got the skull, Mr Golding …’

  Ben stared at the phone as the muffled voice continued.

  ‘If you’re tempted to talk to the police, remember Leon. Remember your brother and what happened to him.

  ‘I’m watching you.’

  40

  There are fifty-nine steps leading from the back exit of the Whitechapel Hospital to the laboratory. There is a lift but it’s seldom used, too erratic to be trusted. Staff climb the stairs or take a short cut through the main body of the hospital, via Reception. The fifty-nine steps at the back are divided into dozens, a landing after every twelve except for the last flight. No one knows why there are only eleven steps here, but the last leads to a landing, the laboratory and, off that, storage.

  Baffled, Francis Asturias stood in the storage room of the Whitechapel Hospital. He thought at first that he was imagining things, but then opened the box marked CAUTION – ANIMAL REMAINS again and felt inside. It was empty. The skull was gone. Tipping up the box, he rummaged through the shredded paper, but he could see at once that there was nothing there and glanced back to the shelf. It was definitely the right box. It was the only box marked CAUTION – ANIMAL REMAINS.

  Reaching for a cigar stub in his pocket, Francis remembered that he couldn’t light up inside the hospital and chewed the end of the smoke instead. The skull had been there the previous day – he had checked – but now the box was empty. Preoccupied, he moved over to the door, fingering the key. Perhaps he had left the storage room open? He dismissed the idea immediately. For over thirty years Francis Asturias had locked up at night. The laboratory and the storage room. He’d never missed once.

  So maybe there was another key. But who would have access to another key? And even if they did, why would they bother to go into a storage room which was just a repository for old files and junk? How would they know what to look for? Deep in thought, he walked downstairs to the back of the hospital and then moved behind a row of waste bins. Lighting up, he inhaled morosely on his cigar and nodded to a colleague who passed on his way to the car park. The evening was unseasonably cold and Francis shivered and pulled his white coat around him.

  Inhaling again, he felt the bite of the tobacco on his tongue and glanced towards the main body of the hospital, lit up against the wintry dark. Half hidden in the shadow of the bins, he finished his smoke and moved back up to the laboratory. It was empty, no one due until the morning, but he had one more thing to do before he went home.

  Flicking on a desk light over the workbench, Francis took out his mobile and dialled a number.

  Ben picked up on the third ring, having obviously read the caller ID. ‘Francis, how goes it?’

  ‘Well …’ He shuffled his badly scuffed shoes. ‘I’ve got a bit of a problem. The skull’s gone.’

  ‘Shit! I forgot to tell you.’

  ‘Tell me what?’

  ‘I took it from the hospital.’

  ‘You took it?’

  ‘When I came back from Madrid.’ He paused. ‘I’m really sorry – I forgot. I should have told you.’

  ‘Arsehole,’ Francis said distantly. ‘I was dreading telling you, thought you’d go mad—’

  ‘The whole thing’s academic anyway. I’ve been burgled. Whoever broke in took the skull.’

  He could hear a low whistle coming down the line, Francis obviously gathering his thoughts. ‘So you took the skull from the hospital? But now someone’s taken the skull off you?’

  ‘That’s about the measure of it.’

  ‘I see …’

  Curious, Ben prompted him. ‘What is it?’

  ‘It’s funny, I kept thinking about our conversation the other day and what you’d said,’ Francis went on. ‘About the skull being dangerous, and how you didn’t want anyone to know about it. Or even where it was. And then a thought came to me. I mean, I’d handled the Goya skull, and the pathologist had seen it. Of course I’d told him to keep it a secret, but he might have told his secretary, might have left a note hanging about. People in hospitals gossip all the time …’

  ‘So?’

  ‘… And then Leon died, and you started talking about how you thought someone had killed him. That was scary, Ben, fucking scary. And now you’re saying that you’ve been burgled.’

  ‘What is it, Francis?’

  ‘You went off to Spain in such a hurry I didn’t have time to tell you before you went. And you never return your bloody messages—’

  ‘Tell me!’

  ‘I swapped skulls. I have the Goya. Whoever robbed you got a fake.’

  At the other end of the line, Ben flinched. ‘So where’s the real skull?’

  Francis was about to tell him. He was forming the words. But although his lips moved, no sound came from them. Instead a sudden and tearing pain made him drop the mobile, his left hand going to his throat, arterial spray drenching his fingers as he tried to breathe. As his knees gave way, Francis made one desperate last effort to hold together the gaping wound. But bubbles of bloodied foam came from his mouth and he slumped to the ground, the knife coming down again and severing his spinal cord.

  The last thing Francis Asturias saw before he
died was his mobile being turned off, and then dropped into the pool of his own blood.

  41

  Passing the monkey’s cage at the back of the health shop, Emile Dwappa paused, glancing through to where Mama Gala was sitting, picking her nose. Her bulk, hot in all its fleshy weight, sagged in the chair, her feet in wide sandals, the toenails long and ridged. Around her head she had, as always, a tightly woven turban. Dwappa knew why. It wasn’t some cultural fashion – it was to cover the fact that she was virtually bald. Only once had he caught her without the turban and stared, fascinated, for a long time, watching through the door of her bedroom. Her head had been covered with the scars of old sores, the back of her neck criss-crossed with lesions.

  Outside, the rain had emptied the street, only a few school kids hurrying home, Mama Gala watching them. Under her arms the sweat patches swelled into dark half-moons, and her black eyes, with their yellowing whites, were alert. Shifting her position in the chair, she picked some matter from the corner of her left eye and stared at her son, her expression full of malice. He knew she was angry, looking for a reason to be provoked to violence. So strong was the sense of imminent menace around her, it leached from the floorboards of the shop, over the dried herbs and the packets of health foods, staining the labels and smearing the cheerful red lettering outside.

  ‘So?’ she said slowly.

  ‘What?’

  ‘You said you were going to get us out of here.’ She picked her nose again listlessly. ‘What happened to the big idea? I don’t see no big money coming in.’

  He smiled, thinking of Bobbie Feldenchrist. ‘It’s working out – have a little more patience.’

  She was surprised, and showed it. ‘How much patience I need?’

  ‘How much money you want?’

  Her gaze moved over to him again, fixed him, made him remember the times he had wet himself when he was a child, so terrified of her he could hardly breathe.

  ‘You said we were moving,’ Mama Gala went on. ‘We should move on, get out of here soon. I don’t like being poor. I don’t like living like this.’ She studied him. ‘Don’t you hold out on me, boy. Don’t you think you can make money and run off and leave me here.’

 

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