She took a swig of orange juice. ‘I’d like to help.’
Got away with it! His pulse was racing, but he’d not lost his touch. Seriously, this was better than sex.
‘You help me just by being you.’ He touched her hot hand, trying to keep the triumph out of his voice. ‘Thanks for being so understanding. I think you realise — it will take a long time for me to trust someone completely again.’
A light shone in her eyes. He knew she was making up her own happy ending.
At first, Hannah had dismissed Jeremy’s suggestion that she consult Alban Clough about the Arsenic Labyrinth, but on reflection it wasn’t such a bad idea. She headed back to the Museum of Myth and Legend while Les and the CSIs debated the risk assessment for the exploration of Mispickel Scar. She doubted whether the small print of the Health and Safety at Work Act required a Senior Investigating Officer to check the crime scene for curses. But if you never asked, you never found out.
Alban saw her in his daughter’s chilly office, under the watchful eyes of Armstrong and Betty Clough in their gilded frames. What must it be like to belong to a dynasty? Family expectations might be claustrophobic, but inheriting a fortune eased the pressure. Alban didn’t seem to have felt any duty to conform. After the sale of the business, he’d been free to pursue his dream. On the phone, Hannah hadn’t explained why she wanted to see him and when she asked about the Arsenic Labyrinth, his tufted eyebrows rose.
‘Why would a busy police officer investigating a ten-year-old disappearance want to bother her head about a half-forgotten old legend?’
‘I was fascinated by your story about Gawain and the Loathly Lady.’ Tongue in cheek, but she could play games just like this strange old satyr. ‘The labyrinth is associated with the Inchmore family. I thought I should consult the oracle.’
‘You are right, Chief Inspector, to proceed on the basis that flattery will get you — almost everywhere. But what you say is hardly an answer.’
‘I’m afraid that’s as close as it gets.’ She half-rose from her chair. ‘Of course, if you’re not able to help, I will quite understand. Apologies again for intruding on your Sunday.’
‘Please sit down. You must forgive my curiosity.’ He bared his teeth. ‘I am really quite insatiable. But of course I’m willing to offer assistance. It’s a pleasure to see you once more so soon after our last little chat. Which I much enjoyed, by the way. Besides, I don’t want you to arrest me for obstructing you in the course of your duty.’
Hannah gave a tight smile and waited. He breathed in noisily and lifted his head, as if seeking inspiration in the carved ceiling. It occurred to her that he relished having an audience. Was he lonely, this rich man in his castle, despite the presence of his daughter and the vast rooms crammed with displays representing a lifetime’s work?
‘Do you see me as a foolish, fond old man, Chief Inspector?’ His words had a sharp bite. ‘I regard myself as more sinn’d against than sinning.’
To me, you’ll always be King Leer. ‘I’m not so naive as to regard you as foolish, Mr Clough. And I can’t imagine who would dare to sin against you.’
He lifted his head and launched into a speech so fluent that she was sure he’d made it many times before. ‘My enemies, Chief Inspector Scarlett, are the social engineers, the dolts who chide me for not making this place more socially inclusive. How absurd. Why should I pander to the unwashed and uneducated masses? What do they care for the lore of our green and pleasant land? And then there are the faceless bureaucrats. The planning authorities, the safety apparatchiks, the council flunkeys who impose pettifogging rules upon us and Draconian penalties for any failure to comply. This is not the V amp; A, nor even the Abbot Hall, but I am expected to pay out a king’s ransom for building insurance, to say nothing of installing a new sprinkler system. My preference for candle-light rather than punitively priced electricity caused such a disagreement with the chief fire officer that I was forced to ask him to leave my home before I threw him out on his ear. After devoting more than half a century to my collection, I am treated as a pariah because I loathe paperwork and tick-boxes as much as I detest the vogue for interactive gadgets to keep tiny minds amused.’
When he paused for breath, she said, ‘Isn’t paperwork your daughter’s department?’
He nodded. ‘Without her calm efficiency, the museum would have closed years ago. But not even a woman as astute as Alexandra can cope with everything. This museum celebrates the truth that there is a logic in lore and legend more pertinent than anything to be found in the statute book. Yet the absurdities of modern legislation are such that, if we fail to obtain a substantial grant towards the cost of so-called improvements, we will have to close our doors to the public.’
‘You’ve run out of funds?’
Alban Clough glanced over his shoulder at the stern likeness of his father. ‘I was left well provided for after the family business was sold, Chief Inspector, and it has been my proud boast that the museum has made a loss in each year of its existence. Were it otherwise, I would have failed in my duty to educate those who come here to learn something of our magical heritage. We sell neither ice creams nor fridge magnets. As visitor numbers have fallen, I have rejoiced. At least we may concentrate our energies upon those who really care for what we do. The admission fees don’t even cover the utilities bill. I confess that, unlike my forbears, I am no businessman. But it would take a Croesus to cope with the demands of the pen-pushers. If I do not call a halt soon, I shall be bankrupt and my daughter will be left not only without a job but also without a penny to her name. It is a scandal! An outrage!’
He closed his eyes, as if raising his voice had exhausted him. Or perhaps he was simply brooding in silence. Hannah coughed, wanting to get back to the point.
‘The Arsenic Labyrinth?’ she prompted.
‘Perhaps it doesn’t matter,’ he murmured. ‘These tales of the past, handed down through the generations. The sophisticates who live in our towns and cities have no truck with the tales and traditions of the countryside. Why should they, when they have broad minds and broadband? England’s green and pleasant land is an irrelevance, fast being submerged by cheap houses and shopping malls. But it wasn’t always thus, Chief Inspector. Once upon a time, folk recognised the need for balance between progress and preservation of the past. That was what George Inchmore never understood. His folly led to his downfall and that of his family.’
‘Tell me.’
He heaved himself upright in his chair. ‘Many legends are associated with mining in the fells, Chief Inspector. Think of Simon’s Nick, by the Levens Water cascade, named after a Cumbrian Faust who sold his soul for riches in copper. Or the Knockers, little goblins whose tapping was supposed to direct miners towards the profitable ore. They kept quiet at Mispickel Scar, even when a company set up by Quakers dug for copper in the hillside. Different firms tried their luck, until a roof collapsed and killed a couple of men.’
‘Was that when the mines were abandoned?’
He nodded. ‘Succeeding generations spoke of a jinx upon Mispickel Scar and those who ventured there. Clifford Inchmore was a prudent man who kept a safe distance, but his son thought he knew better. My grandfather warned him that he was deluding himself if he thought he would ever be able to compete with the Cornish arsenic traders. George being George, that made him all the more determined to proceed. He persuaded himself that my grandfather was motivated by envy rather than entrepreneurial wisdom.’
‘And George’s failure lent credence to talk of the curse?’
Alban nodded. ‘In the nineteenth century, arsenic was associated in the popular imagination with malice and murder. Rumour had it that the land in the vicinity of the labyrinth was poisoned. When the works closed, George ordered his few remaining employees to raze the buildings to the ground. A cathartic act of destruction, but it availed him naught. His business was declared insolvent a fortnight later. My grandfather was on hand to buy up the surviving equipment for scrap prices.’