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Dan looked at him with a surprised quickness. "Protect Johnny? From what?"
"Sorry. I'm just playing devil's advocate. I had no reason for saying that. I don't know her, of course; I've never met her. But I've certainly got the impression she loves him a lot, and for his part-well, his feelings for her seem to stop just one step short of wors.h.i.+p."
"Yes. She certainly does love him. Still." He ran his hand through his straight light-brown hair, which had a way of standing up in ridges when he did this. And this gesture too made him look young, like the boy he must have been. That was one more thing about him, a boyishness that would have appealed to women. His s.e.xuality would simply bowl women over. He had a force and a heat about him a woman would feel like the siroccos that blow across the dunes.
"Let's have another," said Melrose, heading for the drinks table again. When he was back in his seat, he turned the talk to something less volatile, telling Daniel how the house had affected him the first time he'd seen it.
Dan laughed. "The Uninvited. I thought I was the only one who remembered that film. It must have been a rerun on the telly. I have to confess one thing: I loved that background music."
Melrose waved his gla.s.s and hummed the tune. Was he drunk?
Dan drained his gla.s.s, stood up, and said, "Come on. And bring the decanter."
"Where?"
Dan was already out of the room. "Upstairs," he called back over his shoulder. "The piano's still there, isn't it?"
Following him up the stairs, Melrose said, "I was trying to play it."
Dan stood looking around the nearly empty room as if long absence might have altered things irrevocably. "How I missed this room. I could stand where you are now for what seemed like the entire day watching the water, getting the rhythm of it, thinking music. G.o.d, what a cliche." He set his gla.s.s on the corner of the piano and sat down on the bench.
Melrose recalled how Daniel's gaze had traveled the length of the rosewood banister the moment he'd set foot in the house. He was speaking the truth when Dan had said he'd come to console his father, but Melrose wondered if this house and this room hadn't been part of what pulled him back. As there must be for Daniel Bletchley many rooms and countless pianos, Melrose wondered about his attachment to this one. Or, rather, if the attachment were so strong, could anything have driven him away?
The music happened so suddenly and with such force that Melrose had to take a step backward. Waterfalls of music, cascading notes, a whole rich canvas of that song Melrose had tried to pick out with a finger. He stood looking out the window as if the music might be rus.h.i.+ng against the rocks, shaking the waves in some violent rapprochement with the elements.
And the thing about it was, the original composition, though vastly appealing, was not great music, not complex, not textured, but a sentimental song with rather predictable crescendos and diminuendos. Yet this was such felt music. The sheer volume made it seem as if all of the air had been drained from the room and gone to swell the music. Were he truthful, he thought, there were only two responses to such a sound: to faint or to weep. He was not truthful and did neither.
" 'Stella by Starlight,' " said Daniel. "Do you know what I did? I was eleven or twelve when I heard it. I wrote to the composer and told him how much I liked it. He sent me his original score. I never got over that." He shook his head as he fingered the opening bars again.
"But that's wonderful. You must have been very persuasive as a lad. Not to say very talented. Play something of yours."
"Of mine? I just did."
"I thought you said-"
Daniel smiled. "Sorry. I'm being enigmatic." He sighed, thought for a moment, and began to play an etude.
Melrose thought it was technically very fine, yet it didn't have the weight of the Stella he'd just played. Although "Stella by Starlight" was, no matter how beguiling the melody, sentimental stuff, whatever it lacked in complexity was more than made up for by the complex emotions of the man who played it.
Lost in these reflections and the water below, Melrose jumped when he heard the door knocker.
Dan stopped playing. "Your aunt?"
Melrose looked at his watch and answered, ruefully, "My aunt."
Talk about the Uninvited.
41.
Before she was even over the doorsill, Agatha was running on about the shooting at the Hall. "It's not hard to see it, I've done a little-how d'you do?" she said, acknowledging Daniel Bletchley's presence, before herding herself into the living room on the right, talking a mile a minute as she went through, unaware that Melrose wasn't with her. Talk talk talk.
"Listen, thanks for the drinks," said Daniel.
"Thanks, dear heavens, for the music!"
"My pleasure." Daniel went out the door and turned. "You'll come to the funeral?"
"Yes, of course."
"Ah. Good. You're really a part of all this. You knew him. Anyway, please come." With that, he trudged across the gravel to his car.
Agatha was at the window, watching Daniel Bletchley drive away. "Who is that man?"
"Daniel Bletchley. You just met him, remember?"
"That's the name of the person who runs that depressing home."
"He's Morris Bletchley's son."
Agatha hugged herself and made a shuddery sound. "It's freezing in here. You could at least have laid a fire. You knew I was coming for tea."
"True. We're not having it in here. Come along."
Complaining all the way across the foyer and down the short hall-about the temperature, the size of the place, the velvet hangings in the dining room she pa.s.sed, the drafts, the prospect she glimpsed through a round window facing the bay, the bay itself, the coast of England, all of England, and the world-she finally came to rest on the small sofa by the fire. The air through which she'd pa.s.sed hummed and vibrated with the tinny sound of a plucked banjo string.
Melrose said, "I'm surprised you didn't recognize Bletchley. He's a pianist. He played that white piano in Betty's or Binkey's or whatever that tearoom was called."
"What are you talking about?"
It was as good a story as any. "Harrogate, dear aunt. Don't you recall staying at the Old Swan with your friend Theodore?"
"You mean Teddy."
"Well, she looked like a Theodore." Sighing with genuine pleasure, Melrose recalled that wonderful twenty minutes of conversation when he had set himself the challenge of not speaking a word, yet all the while giving the impression of a man with brilliant conversation. Wasn't it amazing how blind people could be to the world outside of their own egos?
"You mean that man was the afternoon-tea-hour pianist at Betty's?"
Betty's was a Harrogate landmark. Agatha was impressed; she always was by the wrong things.
"Yes. I was trying to talk him into playing in the Woodbine. Well, excuse me while I put the kettle on." Melrose turned to go.
"You mean the tea's not ready?" Her sigh was pained. "Oh, honestly, men!"
She seemed to have forgotten that oh-honestly-men had been producing her tea daily at Ardry End without fail or error. He put the kettle on the hob and was back in the library quick as one of young Johnny's card tricks.
"I was telling you about my own little investigation. We cannot leave it to doltish police such as that Constable Evans!"
"There are some distinctly un-doltish police on the job. Mr. Macalvie, mainly."
She straightened the ruffle of her fussy flowered blouse. "Of course, they're all barking up the wrong tree."
"Which tree is that?"
Ignoring the tree, she leaned forward and whispered-who ever she thought might be overhearing, Melrose didn't know-"What we need to search for is your local h.o.m.ophobic, and I think I've got him!"
The kettle screamed.
No wonder.
Melrose was out and back barely in time for the tea to steep. This announcement of his aunt's might prove to be entertaining. He told her that her h.o.m.ophobia was misplaced, since the killer hadn't even intended to kill Tom Letts. "It was Morris Bletchley he or she was after."
"That's patently absurd. That's the trouble with you so-called intellectuals, you can't see what's right under your noses. What I heard was"-again she leaned toward him and said in a whispery hiss-"he has AIDS-full blown AIDS! Can't have that in a village. And it wouldn't surprise me at all if that Pfinn person shot him. If ever there was a h.o.m.ophobic, it's that man!"
Melrose had a hard time of it not to pour scalding tea down her neck. He was never a proselytizer of gay rights or anything else; he didn't care much one way or the other. But for Tom, yes, he would proselytize. "Your bigoted nature-"
"What?" Sheer amazement sat on her features at the realization that Melrose was overtly criticizing her.
"-precludes any possibility of your seeing a person's true worth. All you're doing is projecting your own fears on another person or situation. That's what h.o.m.ophobia is, isn't it? Projecting one's own fear of partaking of other men's needs and desires? That's what phobia in general is, a fear of being the Other. Anyway, you didn't know Tom Letts. I did, and I liked him very much."
Agatha looked all around, as if the dread virus might have infiltrated Seabourne. The look made Melrose laugh; it was so much the look that would be called forth by the doors cras.h.i.+ng open upon them. The Uninvited!
"I don't see it's anything to laugh about."
Too bad. "As for your chosen h.o.m.ophobic-Mr. Pfinn, is it?-I don't know how you come to that remarkable conclusion, since Mr. Pfinn engages in conversation only to be contradictory. He stays away from words."
"Well, he didn't with Esther and me. Of course, people do tend to confide in me, you've noticed."
Melrose felt his eyes open as wide as any cartoon character. As did Mr. Pfinn, Melrose stayed away from words.
Agatha leaned forward, balancing a biscuit on her knee. "The man absolutely loathes h.o.m.os.e.xuals!"
"Mr. Pfinn loathes everyone. Loathing is not a criterion by which to judge Mr. Pfinn."
42.
Pfinn was living up to Melrose's a.s.sessment of him (splenetic, peevish, and unaccommodating) that night in the Drowned Man by refusing to allow Brian Macalvie another drink in the saloon bar.
"Just you order another at dinner," commanded Pfinn. "But get your skates on. Can't keep the cook around all night, can I?"
Dinnertime thus determined, they had gone into the dining room, where Melrose was now picking another bone out of his turbot. This had been served by a humorless middle-aged lady he had never seen before. Johnny was not around. "You say the same gun killed both of them?"
"Yeah, but we already knew that. Smith and Wesson twenty-two." Macalvie had stopped eating five minutes before and was smoking a cigarette, having considerately asked Melrose's permission.
"We didn't know anything. You apparently did."
"Did you really think there were two shooters involved?"
"I-"
"There are too many similarities between the shootings to believe that." Macalvie pierced a piece of aubergine and held it on the tine of his fork as if it were a little green world he needed to decipher. He gave his fish a poke, put his fork down again, and looked around for the waitress. "We're the only ones in here, for G.o.d's sakes, so why can't we get service? I want another beer. Has it occurred to you, Plant, that everything significant in the background of these two cases-three if we count the little kids-happened four years ago, give a month, take a month? Listen: Sada Colthorp turns up here four years ago; the kids died September four years ago; Ramona Friel died in January four years ago."
Melrose drank his wine, a Meursault at some outlandish price, but he felt he deserved it. Why, he wasn't sure. "That bothers you?"
Macalvie's head turned from the dining room search and cut Melrose a glance. "Doesn't it disturb you? You don't think it's coincidence, do you?"
Actually, Melrose hadn't worked out that there was a list of events to consider. He watched the waitress trudge grimly toward their table, thinking not about Macalvie's list but about where Johnny was.
Macalvie told the woman what he wanted and she trudged grimly off again. "The night the little kids died, the housekeeper thought she heard a car, woke up, but went back to sleep again. Why did she do that?"
"I don't follow you."
"You're an elderly woman of a nervous disposition, alone with two little kids in an isolated house-"
"Turn of the Screw, as I said."
"Uh-huh. A car drives up or drives off. Wouldn't this keep you from going back to sleep? It would me, and I've got a gun. I'd be pumping adrenaline-unless, of course, the sound was familiar."
"You mean one of the family cars?"
"There were three: Daniel's sporty Jaguar, Karen's BMW, Morris Bletchley's Volvo."
Melrose recalled his visit to Rodney Colthorp. "Or Simon Bolt's. If she heard a familiar car, it didn't have to be Dan Bletchley's. Bolt had the same make; Dennis Colthorp tried to buy it, remember? The car would have to have been leaving, not arriving, because Mrs. Hayter went to investigate."
"Right. That's possible. Too bad Bolt's not around to question. He died three years ago." Macalvie paused. "So Daniel and Karen were out on the razz. Don't give me that alibi look. Daniel's fell apart pretty quickly. Karen's lacks the essential watertightness we cops hate; her dinner companions said they actually hadn't seen her every minute as they went on to a concert after dinner. Tickets were hard to get, so they had to sit apart. I only got this from them, mind you, when I questioned them again."
"So they didn't really know where she was for some time."
"An hour and twenty minutes. They were vague. I went back and checked up on that particular event."
"What you're saying is that one of the Bletchleys came back?" Melrose's scalp p.r.i.c.kled.
Macalvie shrugged. "Not necessarily. I don't know. Even so, it doesn't mean one of them was responsible for the kids' deaths."
"And Mrs. Hayter only now mentions the car?"
Macalvie nodded. "She said, 'It could never be Mr. Bletchley, as he was in Penzance with his business friend.' "