It also contained the desk of the secretary. Shawna Weedon greeted Swilley with a sort of self-conscious fluttering, and at once buzzed the intercom to her boss, invited Swilley to take a seat, and then got on ostentatiously with typing something on to the computer. Swilley stood, to make the point that her time was valuable, but she was not kept waiting more than a couple of minutes before the communicating door to the front room was opened and Candida Scott-Chatton invited her in with a, ‘Do come through, won’t you?’ as though it were a social visit.
The front room was even more splendid and spacious than the waiting-room, with a more elaborate fireplace, a lot more paintings on the walls, antique furniture, and a blue and white Chinese carpet over the same dark-blue wall-to-wall as the other room. There was a highly polished antique partners’ desk on which the computer looked the only out-of-place thing in the room, and there were huge flower arrangements in probably priceless vases, on a side table, on the hearth in front of the fireplace, and on a torchère stand in a corner. It was, Swilley thought with loathing, like something out of a National Trust stately home. She liked everything modern and minimalist; and besides, she had an old-fashioned chippiness about people with double-barrelled names.
Candida Scott-Chatton was tall, blonde and classically beautiful, exquisitely dressed in what Swilley would have liked to bet was a Chanel or Prada suit – something expensive and exclusive, anyway – with pearls at neck and ears. No hair of her smooth bob was out of place, and her make-up was so perfect that it gave her a kind of expressionless immobility, as if, having got herself to this state of perfection, she didn’t want to do anything else with her face for fear of spoiling it.
Swilley shook her hand (thin, extremely cold, with long fingers made longer by polished nails so perfect Swilley guessed they were false) and looked into her eyes. The blue eyes that looked back were as cold as a highland spring.
‘I’m sorry to disturb you at a time like this,’ Swilley said. ‘I gather you’ve heard what happened to Mr Stonax. You must be very upset.’
‘I’m devastated,’ said Candida Scott-Chatton. She didn’t meet Swilley’s eyes and her voice was rather high and strained, but it seemed to Swilley more like nervousness than grief. ‘Of course, we live in dangerous times and we all know something like that could happen to any of us, any time. But somehow you never expect it to happen to you, or to someone you know.’
She doesn’t care a jot, Swilley thought.
Perhaps something of the thought showed in her face, because Scott-Chatton turned away abruptly, went behind her desk, and with her back turned took out a handkerchief and seemed to attend to her nose and eyes with it. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said in a muffled sort of voice. ‘Will you give me a moment?’
‘Take your time,’ said Swilley, unmoving and unmoved.
When Scott-Chatton turned back her eyes did seem a little moist, but Swilley, determined to yield nothing, told herself that that was easy enough to fake.
‘Won’t you sit down?’ Scott-Chatton gestured to a leather upholstered upright chair by the desk, and Swilley sat. ‘I’m not sure that there’s anything much I can tell you, though I’m willing to help in any way I can. On the news they seemed to be saying it was a burglary that went wrong. Is that true?’
‘That’s what it looks like,’ Swilley said. ‘How well did you know Mr Stonax?’
‘We’ve been friends for some years. He was always interested in environmental and countryside issues, and of course he was environment correspondent at the BBC at one time, so we tended to meet in a professional way quite often.’
‘But you were more than friends, weren’t you?’
She seemed taken aback. She paused too long for the answer, whatever it was going to be, to look unstudied. ‘I don’t know what you mean,’ she said faintly, uncertainly.
‘I think you do,’ Swilley said, interested that she should want to deny the connection. She wasn’t married – Swilley had checked that in Who’s Who. ‘I should mention that we’ve spoken to his daughter.’
Was it relief that flickered through her eyes? She said now, in a calm voice, as if she had never prevaricated, ‘We’ve been lovers for about two years, if that’s what you mean.’
What else? Swilley thought. There was something here she didn’t understand. ‘When did you last see him?’
‘Oh – it would be last week. We went out to dinner. Wednesday evening, I think? Or Tuesday? No, Wednesday, the twenty-third. We both have busy lives, so we don’t – didn’t – get to see each other as often as we’d like.’
‘And how did he seem on that occasion?’
‘Just as usual.’
‘Was he worried about anything? Preoccupied?’
‘No, why should he be?’
‘What did you talk about?’
There was a hint of impatience in the reply. ‘Goodness, I can’t remember. Nothing in particular. Just what we always talked about. Why on earth are you asking me these questions? What relevance can our dinner conversation a week ago have to his being attacked by a burglar?’
‘It’s just routine,’ Swilley said soothingly. ‘We have to cover all possible angles. Someone might have overheard you saying something that helped them decide on the break-in.’
‘Well, we didn’t talk about his flat being full of valuables,’ she said with grim humour. ‘I think he talked about his daughter – he was looking forward to her visiting sometime soon – but otherwise I can’t think of anything specific.’
Swilley nodded and changed tack. ‘You say you both had busy lives. Do you know what Mr Stonax was doing that kept him so busy? As far as we know he didn’t have a job.’
Scott-Chatton would have frowned if she were a frowner. The eyes glittered frostily. ‘He was involved with several charities, and he always took an interest in our campaigns and wrote letters and went to see people. I can tell you he never sat around idly feeling sorry for himself. Ed wasn’t that kind of man. He’s a great, great loss, to the country, as well as to me personally. It’s awful to think of him being cut down in his prime for nothing more than the contents of his wallet. I hope you put every effort into catching this young thug, and putting him away for a long, long time.’
‘We will,’ Swilley said. ‘We are. Do you have a key to his flat?’
She threw the question in out of the blue and was gratified to see the faintest hesitation before Scott-Chatton replied, ‘I used to have one, but in fact I gave it back to Ed. We didn’t meet at his flat any more. Why do you ask?’
‘It’s just a routine question,’ Swilley said, her eyes unmovingly on Scott-Chatton’s alabaster face. ‘Something we have to ask people.’ There seemed to be no more forthcoming and Swilley stood up. ‘Well, thank you for your time. If there’s anything else we need to know I’m sure you won’t mind if I contact you again.’
‘No, not at all,’ Scott-Chatton said, seeming – to Swilley’s quiet pleasure – a little put out. She rose too and they walked towards the door.
‘I’m afraid the press will be hounding you soon, if they aren’t already,’ Swilley said with a sympathetic smile.
‘No, they haven’t troubled me yet,’ Scott-Chatton said absently. Then her gaze sharpened. ‘I hope nothing the police say or do will expose me to unwelcome press attention.’
‘We don’t talk to the press unless we absolutely have to,’ Swilley said, ‘and then we make a point of not telling them anything they don’t already know. Goodbye, and thank you again.’
In the outer room the secretary had flung Swilley a fleeting but searing look before going back to her typing, so she made a business of putting her notebook away and fiddling in her handbag until Candida Scott-Chatton had closed the door to her own room behind her. Swilley turned to Shawna Weedon, but before she could speak the girl flung a silencing finger against her lips, shoved a folded piece of paper across the table, and continued with her typing, having missed only a beat or two.