‘You shake me to my core in surprise, Joyce,’ says Pauline. ‘Do you think you will want your eclair? I could swap it for a beef and horseradish?’
They make the trade.
‘I keep thinking back to the notes that Mike mentioned,’ says Joyce.
‘OK,’ says Pauline. ‘Do you think you’ll want your lemon tart by the way?’
‘No, please,’ says Joyce. ‘It’s just that you don’t always find things in the most obvious place, do you? I lost my tape measure the other day, for example, and it’s always in my kitchen drawer. Always. But I needed it, to settle an argument with Ibrahim about whose television was bigger, and I opened the drawer, and was it there? It was not. It was not in the obvious place. In the end it was on the bookshelf, heaven knows why. I didn’t put it there, and it certainly wasn’t Alan, was it?’
‘Have you lost your train of thought, Joyce?’
‘Not a bit of it,’ says Joyce. ‘I just mean that while everyone is off looking at Jack Mason, I wondered if I might look at South East Tonight, and see if anyone there might have killed her? For an entirely different reason. Does that make sense?’
‘As much sense as any of you make,’ says Pauline. ‘Ask me anything.’
‘So someone was leaving threatening notes for Bethany. In her bag, on her desk.’
‘So I hear,’ says Pauline.
‘Could it have been you?’
‘No.’
Could it have been Fiona Clemence?’
‘Could have been Fiona Clemence,’ says Pauline. ‘I doubt it, but not impossible.’
‘Jealousy?’
‘I don’t think jealousy is the right word,’ says Pauline. ‘They were both strong women. And in those days people liked to make strong women compete with each other. Like you couldn’t have two strong women in the same room at the same time. The world would explode.’
‘Perhaps I should speak to Fiona Clemence,’ says Joyce. ‘Do you think?’
‘I think you would like to speak to her, Joyce. That’s what I think.’
Joyce passes Pauline her lemon tart. ‘No harm in it. Now, the other day. What were you saying about Bethany’s clothes?’
‘I’ve no idea,’ says Pauline.
‘Houndstooth jacket and yellow trousers,’ says Joyce. ‘You asked who would wear that?’
‘Well, you know,’ says Pauline.
‘I don’t know,’ says Joyce. ‘Why mention it?’
‘Can I tempt anyone to another Prosecco?’ asks a waiter.
‘Yes, please,’ say Joyce and Pauline. As he pours, the two women are politely silent, save for the odd ‘ooh’ as the glasses fill.
‘Odd thing to wear, is all,’ says Pauline, and takes a healthy glug. ‘Not her style.’
‘Pauline,’ says Joyce. ‘Do you know something you’re not telling me?’
‘I think you’d work that out, don’t you?’
‘I’m not sure I would with you, no,’ says Joyce. ‘You’re not protecting someone?’
‘By talking about Bethany’s clothes? No,’ says Pauline. ‘I’m just interested in clothes. That’s the thing I would look at.’
‘They’re all concentrating more on offshore accounts than trousers,’ says Joyce.
‘Well, that’s why you’re a gang,’ says Pauline. ‘You don’t all have to concentrate on the same thing.’
‘And you mentioned that the CCTV was very blurry? That was an unusual thing to say.’
‘Joyce,’ says Pauline. ‘You were all sitting around with your theories and I just wanted to join in. Just wanted to have something to contribute. You’re quite an intimidating bunch when you get together.’
Joyce laughs. ‘I suppose. That’s mainly Elizabeth though, not me.’
‘Sure,’ says Pauline. ‘Tell me about Ron.’
‘What do you want to know?’
‘The bad stuff,’ says Pauline. ‘Anything I’ve missed while I’ve been staring into those beautiful eyes.’
‘Where to begin,’ says Joyce. ‘He can’t dress, he refuses to eat healthily, you can’t disagree with him, he’s too loud sometimes, especially in public, some of his attitudes are outdated, and he once gave me an hour-long lecture when I said I’d voted Lib Dem at the local elections.’
‘But is –’
‘Sometimes he teases me, although when he teases Elizabeth I like it, so perhaps that’s not a fault. He’s very slow at responding to messages, he gets grumpy easily, especially if he hasn’t eaten. He passes wind often. He once sulked for an entire day because we didn’t ask him to see the corpse of an assassin someone had shot at Coopers Chase. He has terrible taste in music and, if he ever comes round in the evening, he talks when the TV is on.’
‘There was an assassin at Coopers Chase?’
Joyce waves this away. ‘If you ever send him to the shop, he’ll get the wrong thing. And I don’t mean dark chocolate digestives instead of milk chocolate digestives. I mean you’ll ask for a four-pack of loo roll and you’ll get a pineapple.’
‘That’s fairly comprehensive,’ says Pauline. ‘Any good points?’
‘That’s a longer list,’ says Joyce. ‘So I’ll boil it down for you. He’s loyal, he’s kind, he’s funny, and I am very, very proud that, for whatever reason, he has chosen to be my friend. He is, and this is just an opinion, a prince. I sometimes daydream, and this will sound silly, but I sometimes daydream about Ron sitting there on my sofa, and Gerry is in his armchair, and the two of them just laughing and arguing until all hours. I can play the whole thing out in my head. Gerry would have loved him, and that’s the greatest compliment I have.’
There are tears in Joyce’s eyes, and Pauline takes her hand. ‘It sounds like you love him too, Joyce.’
‘Of course I do,’ says Joyce. ‘How could you not love Ron? I mean, he is not the man for me, Pauline, for the many reasons listed. But if you like pineapple, and you’ve already got enough loo roll, he’s the man for you.’
‘You know, you could just be right,’ says Pauline.
Joyce is smiling through her tears now. ‘How lovely, how lovely. I shall look for a wedding hat.’
‘Let’s not go that far,’ says Pauline, smiling. ‘Early days.’
Pauline lets Joyce’s hand go. But Joyce now places it over Pauline’s. She looks her directly in the eye.
‘You promise me you’re telling me everything, Pauline?’
‘It looks like you ladies might need another top-up,’ says the waiter.
‘Yes, please,’ say Joyce and Pauline.
31
‘You’ve put them through the old computer?’ Stephen asks. ‘Nothing doing?’
‘Nothing doing,’ says Elizabeth. A friend still in the Service had run the names for her. ‘Carron Whitehead’ throwing up no matches, ‘Robert Brown’ throwing up far too many. They have promised to look through them all, but there are only so many favours you can ask, and Elizabeth has asked rather a lot recently. Perhaps she should pay a visit to the Chief Constable, and see if he knew anything they didn’t? Could she get an appointment? There must be a way.
‘Your pal will crack it,’ says Stephen. ‘The one with the crosswords.’
Ibrahim. He and Stephen used to be good friends. Ibrahim still asks to come round, and Elizabeth still puts him off.
‘I’m trying to play chess here,’ says Bogdan. ‘There is a lot of talking.’
Bogdan has come down from the construction site at the top of the hill to keep Stephen company.
‘You still smell rather nice,’ says Elizabeth. ‘And the same smell as before. Almost as if you are seeing someone regularly?’ Elizabeth has room for more than one mystery at a time.
Bogdan makes a move and sits back. ‘What are you going to do about the guy you have to kill?’