‘Yes, I see.’
‘Anyway, I reckon that was Errol’s mid-life crisis, brought on by his Mum’s passing. There won’t be any more Alex Petrous in Errol’s life.’
Kathy raised her glass. ‘I’ll drink to that, Jerry.’
‘You haven’t told me why you’re down in the dumps, Kathy.’
‘Oh … I think I screwed up. And got a friend into trouble in the process.’
‘Not that nice boy who got on to me in the first place, was it?’
‘Gordon Dowling? No, not him.’ Kathy laughed. ‘You thought he was a nice boy?’
‘Sure of it, Kathy. Can’t see him making a go of it in the police, though. Can you?’
‘Well, he’s not all that bright.’
Jerry chuckled briefly, then checked himself. ‘Sorry, Kathy, but I didn’t think that would be a disqualification. No, I meant his being gay.’
‘Gay?’
‘Yes. Didn’t you know?’
Kathy looked at him, surprised. ‘No, I had no idea.’
‘That’s how he got on to me, you see. At the Jolly Roger.’
‘Of course, yes. I should have thought.’
‘Well, it’s not important anyway. Unless some of those butch bastards he’s got for workmates cottoned on to it.’
Kathy was aware of a sick feeling in the pit of her stomach. Kathy had two phone calls on Friday evening. She was sitting in the kitchen with Jill, Mervyn and Patrick, all eating a Lancashire hot-pot which Patrick had cooked, when Penny Elliot rang. She had little new to tell Kathy. According to one of the clerks in Personnel, Gordon Dowling had left for three weeks’ leave about ten days before. No one seemed to know where he’d gone. Penny had a couple of addresses of next-of-kin taken from his file. She had discovered next to nothing about the progress of Rose’s murder investigation, beyond a rumour that rope identical to that used to hang Petrou had been found somewhere — the stories were conflicting as to precisely where — that appeared to incriminate Parsons.
Kathy, puzzled, thanked her and returned to the kitchen. She chewed a mouthful of stew, then said suddenly, ‘Patrick, this is really good. Maybe we could do a deal: you cook and I’ll clean the kitchen.’
‘Done.’ He smiled.
A few minutes later the phone rang again. Jill ran out to the hall, hoping it was her boy-friend, with whom she’d had a quarrel. She reappeared a few moments later, barely hiding her disappointment, to tell Kathy that it was for her again. It was Brock.
‘He sounds happy,’ she added.
He did sound cheerful, and the line was so clear that Kathy assumed he must have returned to London until he corrected her.
‘No, no, I’m still in Rome. You sound a bit flat, though. Things difficult?’
‘Oh, just frustrating. Have you heard that they’ve arrested Geoffrey Parsons?’
He listened for a few moments as she started to tell him what she knew, then interrupted her. ‘Kathy, I can’t talk long. Look, I’d like you to come over here, tell me everything.’
‘Over there?’ Kathy didn’t get it. ‘There’s not a lot to tell — ’
‘Your passport in order, is it?’
‘I think so.’
‘Look, get down to Heathrow tomorrow morning, terminal two. You’re booked on an Alitalia flight to Rome leaving at 8.35 a.m.’
‘I am?’
‘You can pick up the ticket at the check-in counter.’ ‘Brock, I — ’
‘You sound as if you could do with a change of scenery. It’s splendid here. The spring’s arrived in earnest. I’ll be waiting for you at the airport. OK?’
The line went dead.
Kathy returned to the kitchen, bemused. ‘All right?’ they asked her.
‘I don’t know,’ she said. ‘I think my friend’s gone round the twist. He wants me to meet him in Rome tomorrow morning.’
‘Wish I had friends like that,’ Jill said wistfully.
After they had cleared up, they dispersed to their rooms, the other three to prepare for a Friday night out. Kathy hesitated at her door, then called out after Patrick. She pulled something out of the pocket of her jeans and gave it to him.
‘I had a spare key cut,’ she said. ‘Maybe you’d look after it for me, would you? In case some waif needs a room while I’m away.’
He grinned and gave her a peck on the cheek. ‘Have fun,’ he said.
21
Brock was right about the spring. The sun was blazing down over Rome and sparkling on the aircraft bodies on the tarmac. The sense of unreality, of not knowing what she was doing there, whether on a treasure hunt or a wild-goose chase, was heightened by the sight of Brock waiting for her beyond the barrier, beaming in shirt-sleeves and a pair of dark glasses like one of the Blues Brothers or a mafioso.
‘Any bags?’
‘No, just this. I wasn’t sure how long I’d be staying.’
He gave her a big smile and led her out to the short-stay car park, where he fished out the keys for a Polo convertible and threw her bag in the boot. She noticed his cases were in there too. From the airport they drove out towards the autostrada and on to the Ai, heading north.
‘We’re not staying in Rome, then?’ she shouted.
He shook his head. The open top discouraged conversation, so she settled back in her seat to enjoy the unfamiliar countryside sliding past in the bright sunlight, happy to substitute the Autostrada del Sol for the usual Motorways of Murk.
After less than an hour he signalled right and took the exit for Orvieto, and she sat up and watched as the little city, perched on the flat top of its volcanic plug, came into view. They wound their way up the surrounding cliff and parked behind the cathedral.
‘I thought you might be ready for some lunch before we go any further. Let’s stretch our legs.’
They walked through the cathedral with its blue-and-white candystripe nave, and then down a narrow lane until they reached the main street in the city centre, and finally found a table outside a small restaurant, overlooking the stream of people passing by.
Brock rubbed his hands. ‘We must try the local wine.’
He ordered a bottle while they examined a menu. Kathy settled for lasca, a speciality from nearby Lake Trasimeno, and Brock chose cannelloni. He asked her about her flight, her flatmates and half a dozen other unimportant things until the wine arrived. Then he raised his glass in a toast: ‘To absent friends.’
He didn’t offer an explanation, and she sipped at the wine, cool and fragrant.
He set down his glass and sighed. ‘Well, you’d better tell me what’s been going on,’ and she told him what she knew.
He shook his head when she had finished. ‘You can never be sure, I suppose, but I wouldn’t have thought him capable of it. Not like that. Dear God, it was savage, Kathy, the way her throat was cut. One single stroke, hard, decisive, absolutely unflinching. Her head was almost off. That’s not Geoffrey Parsons in a month of Sundays.’
She nodded agreement, and they sat in silence for a while until the waiter approached.
‘How did your paper go down, anyway?’ Kathy asked, brightening with the appearance of the food.
‘Oh, quite well. I’d been dreading the whole thing actually, but it was quite fun, as it turned out.’
‘Fun? A conference on catching serial killers?’
He managed a laugh, even though his mouth was full of pasta.
‘There was a good paper from a young American on chance and coincidence. I suppose somebody had to work chaos theory into it somehow, but he did it very well. He went back to Jung and Koestler and so on, and he had the most fascinating case-studies from America in which completely convincing but quite inexplicable coincidences appeared, which either misled or guided the police. With a long series of murders, of course, you get more opportunities for random things to creep in. But some of them were extraordinary, almost as if a third hand were at work. That’s the thing about life, I suppose, as against fiction. Quite strange but innocent coincidences do
happen. You’re trying to construct a logic to lead you along the hidden thread, and you have to remember that sometimes the most beautiful alignment of events may actually be quite meaningless.’
Brock paused for another sip of the Orvieto wine, then continued.
‘Like the fact that the translation of Alex Petrou’s physiotherapy certificate was authenticated by the British embassy in Rome, not Athens — do you remember that? I thought at the time, What a coincidence, that’s where I’m going in a few weeks. Of course that was a meaningless coincidence, except that it did mean I could ask one of the Italian people I got to know here to try to find out what Petrou had been doing in Rome a year ago, just before he came to England. It wasn’t likely to be important, except that, when he came back with the answer, it suggested all sorts of other coincidences that were so beautiful, just like in the young American bloke’s paper, that I couldn’t resist finding out more.’
And finally Kathy realized that Brock wasn’t just wasting time, and with an enormous sense of relief she put down her knife and fork and stared at him. ‘You’ve found something out.’
‘Well, now, try this one. Petrou had been in Italy for six months. He had come from Greece and before that from the Lebanon, where his family had businesses. They finally quit Beirut about four years ago and moved back to Athens, where Alex trained as a physio. I don’t know why he came to Italy originally, but he got a job at a clinic, not in Rome but in Vicenza, up in the north. Now that is a rather promising coincidence, wouldn’t you say?’
Kathy shook her head, ‘Not off-hand.’
‘Vicenza was the home of Palladio, the sixteenth-century architect of the Malcontenta, the house which was the model for Stanhope House, the place where Alex was next going to show up.’
Kathy frowned doubtfully.
‘Too thin?’ Brock asked. ‘Well, let’s go on. The reason why Stephen Beamish-Newell established his clinic in the English Malcontenta was that his first wife found the place for him and was attracted to it because she recognized its source. And she recognized its source because she herself came from …’
‘Vicenza,’ Kathy whispered, feeling a prickling along her spine.
‘Right, Vicenza. Her family has lived in the city for generations. When she was eighteen they sent her to polish up her English at one of the language schools in Cambridge, and there she fell in love with a charismatic medical student. They married and eventually her family, being well off, provided the funds for them to set up their clinic. When her marriage fell apart, Gabriele returned to her family home and reverted to her maiden name, Montanari.’
‘And she was there when Alex Petrou was there?’
Brock nodded. ‘She still is.’ He took a folded sheet of paper out of his pocket and spread it on the table. It was a photocopy of a newspaper photograph of an attractive middle-aged woman in evening dress climbing the front steps of a building, accompanied by an older man in black tie. ‘Gabriele Montanari and her father, at their last public appearance, for a charity ball in Padua last Christmas.’
‘Do we know if she met Petrou?’
Brock shook his head. ‘No, we don’t know that. But, there’s a final coincidence: Papa Montanari turns out to be a shareholder of the clinic where Petrou was working.’
Kathy smiled. ‘They must have met.’
‘We do know that Petrou was getting himself into trouble in Vicenza. There were complaints to the authorities, suggestions of extortion. He lost his job at the clinic and would probably have been picked up by the local police if he hadn’t suddenly left Italy of his own accord. So what do you think of those coincidences?’
‘Compelling.’
‘I made a call home to Immigration and discovered that Petrou entered England at Dover, on a cross-Channel ferry from Calais. I’m also told that he bought the ticket at Calais, which suggests he didn’t have a through ticket on a train. In other words, someone might have driven him up from Vicenza and put him on the boat.’
‘What date was that?’
Brock consulted his notebook. ‘April Fool’s Day, last year. He started at Stanhope Clinic two days later.’
‘Quick work, if he didn’t have any contacts.’
‘Quite. And Stanhope isn’t exactly just off Piccadilly. It’s not the sort of place you’d run into by chance.’
They finished their meal and prepared to make a move.
‘Was she the absent friend you toasted?’ Kathy asked suddenly.
‘Who?’ Brock looked startled.
‘Gabriele Beamish-Newell’
‘Oh no. Someone else.’
‘Someone you’d like to be sharing a bottle of Orvieto with in some Italian hill-town.’
Brock gave a little nod and turned to go.
They reached Vicenza in the late afternoon. Brock had some scribbled notes by means of which he got them to the west gate of the old city, the Porta del Castello, and into the Piazza del Castello just beyond. There Kathy was introduced to her first Palladian building, the unfinished Palazzo Giulio Porto, in front of which they left the car and went in search of their hotel on foot. The owner of the Albergo Tre Re, when they eventually found it, advised them of a more suitable parking spot, and by dusk Kathy was unpacking her small bag in a tiny but charming room with a partial view of the dome of the cathedral. She thought of the elegant woman in the photograph and wished that she had brought more clothes.
The following morning they strolled down the main street, the Corso Andrea Palladio, until Brock, consulting his notes, led them down a side-street to a small square. There they established themselves at a table outside a small cafe and ordered breakfast. Brock pointed to a dark-brown building on the far side of the square. The Palazzo Trissino-Montanari. The family home.’
‘A palazzo?’ Kathy was impressed, although the dour mass of the building didn’t stand out from its neighbours. ‘What do we do?’
‘We wait, I think. I’m rather afraid,’ he added regretfully, ‘that I’m going to have to tell lies again, Kathy. I didn’t realize how difficult it is pretending you’re not what you are. I thought I’d enjoy it, but it’ll be a great relief to be able to come clean with people again.’
‘Can’t you just tell her the truth?’
‘I think she’d clam up and call the old family lawyer in ten seconds flat. No, it’s got to be lies, unfortunately. And I’m afraid we’re going to have to be somewhat unfair to Dr Beamish-Newell.’
‘Play the “hell hath no fury” angle, you reckon?’
‘Very possibly.’
They spent the whole day, singly and together, in and around the cafe, without catching sight of anyone leaving the Palazzo Trissino-Montanari.
‘She could be anywhere,’ Kathy said, as the puzzled cafe proprietor finally presented their bill.
‘Yes. But it’s Sunday today. Maybe tomorrow will be different.’
‘If we’re doing this again, I’m going to bring a cushion. These metal chairs are all right for half an hour — no more.’
Brock nodded. ‘They design them that way on purpose.’
By the following mid-morning they had finished the previous day’s Sunday Times which Kathy had found on sale at a kiosk nearby, and were beginning to have doubts. Not a single person or vehicle had passed through the stone archway into the palazzo. And then, suddenly, she was there, stepping out into the sun.
She looked elegant and poised — a simple skirt and silk blouse, cashmere jumper loose over her shoulders, to which her auburn hair just reached. She paused and felt for the dark glasses resting on the crown of her head and brought them down on to her aristocratic nose.
‘I knew I should have brought more clothes,’ Kathy muttered.
‘Keep on her tail while I settle up with Gregorio,’ Brock said, and disappeared into the cafe.
A couple of minutes later he was hurrying along in the direction he had seen them take. At last he spotted Kathy standing at a shop window, staring at the clothes inside.
‘They’r
e lovely,’ she said, ‘but I couldn’t afford a single thing.’
‘Where is she?’ he puffed.
‘Other side of the street, in the hairdresser’s.’
‘Oh no, she could be hours.’
They found another cafe and resumed their watch, this time insisting on paying as soon as they were served. Towards one o’clock Gabriele reappeared, her hair not noticeably shorter, and they set off again, following her into the great Piazza dei Signori, through the colonnades of Palladio’s Basilica and into a small piazza on the other side. Here, outside the Ristorante del Capitanio, she found an empty table with a white linen tablecloth, inside an area enclosed by neatly clipped, boxed hedges. It was the last free table.
‘What now?’ Kathy joined Brock at a postcard stand beneath the colonnade.
‘Follow me,’ he said, and set off towards the restaurant.
At the door the proprietor vaguely indicated that he might be willing to attend to them in due course. Brock began to speak, then paused. ‘Momento; he said, and approached Gabriele’s table. With a little bow he said, ‘Scusi … excuse me. It isn’t Mrs Beamish-Newell, is it? Gabriele Beamish-Newell?’
She looked up, surprised at first, then doubtful.
‘Brock,’ he beamed, ‘David Brock. You remember? I was one of your patients, years ago, at Stanhope! Must have been ‘80 or’81.’
She removed her sunglasses slowly and looked at him coolly. Her eyebrows were fixed in that half-way position when you’re not sure but don’t necessarily want to give offence-yet.
He laughed. ‘Of course, I didn’t have the beard then.’
‘Ah.’ Her face lightened a little, but not much.
‘You look wonderful, if you don’t mind me saying, Mrs Beamish-Newell. What an amazing surprise to see you like this! But then this is your part of the world, isn’t it? I’ve often thought of you, you know, and what a wonderful job you did for us all at Stanhope. I was thinking that only last week in fact, when I was there, and considering how much things had changed since your day.’ He shook his head a little sadly.
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