"I'll try again," I said, ignoring it, "but Vivien tried, and rubbed him up the wrong way so that he stuck his toes in. Malcolm's obstinate, the way we all are, and the more anyone tries to push him, the harder he'll resist."
"It's you that got him to buy horses. He wouldn't have thought of it on his own He was glaring at me. "Two million pounds for a bloody colt. Do you realise what two million pounds means? Have you any idea? Two million pounds for a four-legged nothing? He's raving mad. Two million pounds invested in any one of us would give us freedom from worry for the rest of our lives, and he goes and spends it on a horse. Retarded children are bad enough, half a million for retarded children… but that's not enough for him, is it? Oh no. He buys that bloody horse Blue Clancy, and how many more millions did that cost him? How many?" He was insistent, belligerent, demanding, his chin thrust aggressively forward. "He can afford it," I said. "I think he's very rich."
"Think!" Gervase grew even angrier. "How do you know he isn't flinging away every penny? I'll find a way of stopping him. He's got to be stopped."
He suddenly stretched out his free hand and plucked my half-full glass from my grasp.
"Go on, get out of here," he said. "I've had enough."
I didn't move. I said, "Throwing me out won't solve any problems."
"It'll make a bloody good start." He put both glasses on the table and looked ready to put thought into action.
"When Malcolm fled to Cambridge," I said, "did Alicia tell you where he was?"
"What?" It stopped him momentarily. "I don't know what you're talking about. Go on, get out."
"Did you telephone to Malcolm's hotel in Cambridge?"
He hardly listened. He embarked on a heartfelt tirade. "I'm fed up with your sneers and your airs and graces. You think you're better than me, you always have, and you're not. You've always weasel led into Malcolm's good books and set him against us and he's blind and stupid about you… and get out." He stepped forward threateningly, one hand in a fist.
"But you still want me to plead your case," I said, standing still.
His mouth opened but no words came out.
"Alicia tells you I sneer at you,"I said, "but I don't. She tells you lies, you believe them. I've never set Malcolm against you. You hit me now, and I might think of it. If you want me to try to get him to cough up, you'll put that fist down and give me my scotch back, and I'll drink it and go."
After a long staring pause, he turned his back on me. I took it as agreement to the terms and picked up one of the glasses, not sure whether it was mine or his.
It Was his! The drink was much stronger, hardly any water in it at all. I put it down and picked up the other. He didn't turn round, didn't notice.
"Gervase," I said dispassionately, "try a psychiatrist."
"Mind your own bloody business."
I drank a mouthful of scotch but as a token only, and put the glass down again.
"Goodbye," I said.
He still showed me his back, and was silent. I shrugged wryly and went out into the hall. Ursula and the two girls stood in the kitchen doorway looking anxious. I smiled at them lopsidedly and said to Ursula, "We'll get through it somehow."
"I hope so." Forlorn hope, she was saying.
"I'll be back," I said, not knowing if I meant it, but meaning anyway that anything I could do to help her or Gervase, I would do.
I let myself out of the front door quietly, and back at Cookham telephoned to the Canders in Lexington. I talked to Mrs Cander; Sally.
Malcolm had gone to Stamford, Connecticut with Ramsey, she said. She thought they were fixing some kind of deal. She and Dave had really enjoyed Malcolm's visit and Malcolm had just loved the horse farms. Yes, of course she had Ramsey's phone number, he was an old friend. She read it out to me. I thanked her and she said sure thing and to have a nice day.
Ramsey and Malcolm were out. A woman who answered said to try at five-thirty. I tried at five-thirty Connecticut time and they were still out. The woman said Mr Osborn was a busy man and would I like to leave a message. I asked her to tell Mr Pembroke that his son Ian had phoned, but that there was no special news. She would do that, she said.
I went to bed and in the morning rode out on the Downs, and afterwards, from the house of the trainer whose horses I was riding, got through to Superintendent Yale's police station. He was there and came on the line.
"Where are you?"
"At the moment in a racing stable near Lambourn."
"And your father?"
"I don't know."
He made a disbelieving grunt. "What time could you meet me at Quantum House?"
I looked at my watch. "In riding clothes," I said, "in forty-five minutes. If you want me to change, add on an hour."
"Come as you are," he said. "Mr Smith says there's something to see."
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
At Quantum, the heap of rubble had reduced to merely a mess. I walked round to the back of the house and found two men in hard hats barely ankle deep as they methodically removed debris brick by brick from house to rubbish skip. The wind had abated and the clouds had relented to the extent that a pale sunshine washed the scene, making it to my eyes more of a wasteland than ever.
Superintendent Yale stood beside a trestle table that had been erected on the lawn, with the explosive Smith in his beige overalls and blue hat standing close beside him, heads bent in conference. There were no spectators any more on the far side of the rope across the lawn, not even Arthur Bellbrook. I walked over to the experts and said good morning.
"Good morning," they said, looking up.
"Glad you came," Smith said.
He stretched out a casual hand and picked up an object from the table, holding it out to me. "We've found this," he said. "What do you think?"
I took the thing from him. It had been a coil of thin plastic- coated wire, but the coils had been stretched so that the wire was straighter, but still curled. It was about eighteen inches long. The plastic coating had been white, I thought. About an inch of bare wire stuck out of the plastic at each end. Onto the plastic, near one end, someone had bonded a hand from a clock. The hand pointed to the bare wire, so that the wire was an extension of the hand.
I looked at it with despair, though not with shock. I'd been fearing and hoping… trying not to believe it possible.
When I didn't ask what it was, Yale said with awakening suspicion, "Does your silence mean that you know what it is?"
I looked up at the two men. They hadn't expected me to know, were surprised by my reaction, even astonished.
"Yes," I said drearily. "I do know. Did you find any other bits?"
Smith pointed to a spot on the table. I took a step sideways and stared down. There were some pieces of metal and plastic, but not those I'd expected. No cogwheels or springs. A grey plastic disc with a small hole in the centre. "Was this a clock?" I said dubiously.
"A battery-driven clock," Smith said. "There's the coil from the electric motor."
The coil was tiny, about a centimetre in diameter.
"How did you find it in all this rubbish?" I asked. "We found various remains of the padded box which used to stand at the foot of Mr Pembroke's bed. These small pieces became embedded in the lid when the box blew apart. The wire with the clock's hand on it, and this" – he picked up the flat plastic disc – "were in the same area." He turned the plastic disc over to reveal a clock face on the other side. "There should also be at least one other piece of wire somewhere, and some of the clock case and a battery or two, but we haven't found those yet. This was not actually an alarm clock, I don't think. We've found no sign of an alarm mechanism."
"No, it won't have been an alarm clock," I said.