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And above all, on the need for absolute and total dedication and integrity and honesty. This last with a glance in Argan’s direction.

All delivered in a gentle, regretful, calm tone, and sheer music to the ears of the police members of the committee, who were regarding him almost with veneration by the time he’d finished. The mood of the meeting was entirely reversed. Now it was Argan’s natural allies who found themselves unable to look steadily in his direction. They would be back, advocating reform, in due course. But they were not going to be shot to pieces defending a man who had so rashly led them into an ambush.

Bottando’s vote of confidence was unanimous. Oddly, only Flavia still seemed unhappy. It must be the strain of it all, Bottando thought. It would take her a few days to recover, and for it to sink in what an extraordinary job she’d done.

Even Argan congratulated him on a fine piece of work. Bottando almost felt sorry for him.

Well, not really.

17

Bottando’s triumph was Jonathan Argyll’s nightmare. When Flavia left him at Norwich railway station, he’d been feeling quite content. He had, in his opinion, given good, if unorthodox, advice, the result of thinking through a process in a fashion that would end up to everyone’s advantage. He had been quick, ruthless and decisive as recommended by all and sundry. He felt a little uncomfortable with this new and thrusting persona, but had no doubts that he would get used to it. Now all that remained was to transfer it to his job as a dealer and everything would be delightful. Soon he would have to talk to Mary Verney about the Leonardo. The mood lasted all the way back to Weller House, accompanied him to bed and sent him off to an exceptionally good sleep.

It did not, however, last very long in the morning; survived until he was halfway through his morning egg, in fact, at which point Mary Verney stuck her head through the door and summoned him to the telephone.

“Inspector Manstead,” she said. “Wants to say hello.”

Manstead, being a courteous man, had rung solely for the purpose of thanking Argyll for his assistance, and to tell him how enormously impressed he was, by Flavia’s deductive skills.

“I never really believed Forster was a thief, you know,” he confessed. “Just goes to show how wrong you can be. I doubt we’ll ever figure out how he died,” he said. “But that list of pictures you found is dynamite. A pity you didn’t notice it the first time you looked through his desk. But at least you had the gumption to look again.”

“Ah, yes,” Argyll said. “I left my pen behind. In the desk. I was just getting it back.”

“Amazing piece of luck it wasn’t burnt with all the rest of the papers. That damned wife of his. If it wasn’t for Flavia’s plea for clemency I’d nail Jessica Forster to the wall, the time she wasted.”

“Mercy is a fine thing,” Argyll said. “She suffered enough living with him, I think.”

“True. And she’s all but penniless, I gather. God only knows where Forster’s money went. He must have netted a packet from all the things he nicked.”

“Someone said something about gambling,” Argyll offered.

“Did they?” Manstead said in surprise. “I’d not heard that. I suppose that’s art dealers’ gossip, is it?”

“That sort of thing.”

“It’s not really important. If we recover the Pollaiuolo, that will be more than sufficient reward. I mean, we knew where it was, but now we have more indication that it was knowingly bought as a stolen painting it’ll be easier to get it back.”

“Was that on the list?” Argyll said with a sudden lurching feeling in his stomach as a penny dropped and clattered around somewhere at the bottom of his stomach.

“Of course. Why?”

“Nothing. Just that I didn’t notice. Too excited, I suppose. Tell me, was the Uccello on it as well?”

“Of course. The first one. Didn’t you read it at all? You must have been in a real daze.”

“Yes. A daze. That’s about it.”

His good mood dissipating fast as little details swept through his mind, laughing at him, he went back more sombrely to his half-cold egg. What had gone wrong? It was quite possible that he could make a mistake, but he didn’t believe that Flavia would have done. After all, she was good at this sort of thing. But of course, she was relying unusually heavily on information he had gathered. Left to her own devices, she would have made the connections. But as Argyll hadn’t detailed his burrowing in the Weller House archives, or his trips around graveyards, how could she possibly put the pieces together?

Still, maybe it was just a figment of his imagination, he told himself as he stared moodily at the toast. And maybe not, he added a few moments later when he opened and read a letter that the postman had delivered while he was on the phone. It delivered the coup de grâce.

It was from Lucy Garton, reporting that Italy Alex had finally taken a long lunch after an unprecedented period of devotion to duty, and she had grasped the opportunity to rummage through his files. It was not a happy letter. Peeved, in fact, as she reported that, despite Argyll’s firm belief, Geoffrey Forster had not sold any Italian paintings through her auction house.

Argyll more or less knew this by now, of course, so it came as no great shock. What did surprise him a little was the indignant announcement that in fact Forster had sold four pictures in the last couple of years and they had all been English. More to the point, one was attributed as being from the Weller House collection and it had been assessed by Lucy herself. She would stake her reputation on the assertion that it was, indeed, what he had said it was, and enclosed the auction catalogue to prove it. What, exactly was all this about, she went on? How was she supposed to win much-deserved promotion if Argyll didn’t deliver the goods? Did he realize how much that meal was going to cost him now?

Argyll looked at the indicated spot of the catalogue, and cursed the day he’d ever thought of going to see the damned woman. She had ringed lot forty-seven. A portrait, school of Kneller of Margaret Dunstan-Beaumont, sold for £1,250, provenance Weller House. A photocopied receipt for the sale was signed by Veronica Beaumont.

He shook his head in virtual disbelief. How could he have missed it? That bloody drawing had confused him, that was the reason, he thought. And it was just a question of simple arithmetic, really. Margaret Dunstan-Beaumont had died in 1680 at the age of sixty. Kneller had begun work in England in the mid-1670s. Therefore a Kneller portrait of Margaret Dunstan-Beaumont would have to show a woman of at least fifty-five.

His mind reeling with alarm as the implications came sweeping in on him, he walked down to the dining room and looked at the painting said to be of her with far more attention. It was filthy and still dark. Nonetheless, try as he might, there was no way he could persuade himself that it was the portrait of a fifty-year-old woman. The sitter was no more than twenty-five at best. So he looked closer, and even wetted his finger and rubbed it on the canvas.

Oh, you idiot, he thought miserably as the dirt thinned a little. It is a young woman. You don’t even need to clean it to see that. You even know what it is. You saw it on the wall of Bottando’s office a couple of years ago. Never again, he thought bitterly, will I think that good visual recall is a blessing.