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So there, she thought, and gathered up her papers and sat down. There seemed to be some applause, then someone else was speaking, and Kathy took a deep, deep breath of relief.
Afterwards, Robert came up to her. He was beaming with what looked like amus.e.m.e.nt.
'Well done, Kathy. That went down well.'
'Did it?'
'Oh yes. And I think you were right to spice it up with a few off-the-cuff thoughts of your own. Senior management likes to sniff a radical thought from time to time.
Makes them feel they're in touch.'
'Really?'
'Certainly. The DC thought it was very good. The last bit, against stereotypes, was especially brave.'
'Was it?' Actually, Kathy had felt she'd been stating the obvious.
'Well, I mean, look around you. Every person here represents some stereotype or other. Look at the members of your committee. If there were no stereotypes they'd have no const.i.tuencies and they'd all be out of a job!' He chuckled contentedly. 'So it gives them a bit of a buzz to hear somebody saying stereotypes are dangerous. Of course,' he said, bending closer to whisper, 'they haven't had your recent experiences, seeing how easily someone can turn from one stereotype into its opposite.'
Kathy looked at him in surprise. How did Robert know about Verge's transformation? And if he knew, who else did?
'What are you talking about, Robert?'
'Why, you of course! A policeman one minute and a criminal in a Spanish jail the next. Oh, many odd things cross my desk, Kathy; don't worry, I'm the very soul of discretion. But perhaps it should make you think about your own position. Maybe you're the one stuck in a stereotype.'
'How do you mean?'
'Oh, Brock's acolyte, working in the shadow of the great detective. One way and another, you've been noticed over the past days, Kathy.'
'Mostly for the wrong reasons.'
'Maybe at first, but it's a fine line between dangerous insubordination and daring initiative, and people have been impressed, believe me. It's time you moved on, into frontline management. You need someone to advise you on your career. Someone like myself.'
He's coming on to me, she thought with a sigh, and was saved from replying by Jay, who was pus.h.i.+ng through the crush towards them.
An old man was holding open the door of the village pub for his moth-eaten black dog as Kathy drove past. It seemed to be a major operation for both of them. She pulled up by the gate of Orchard Cottage, seeing the lights on in the windows. Charlotte seemed surprised but not unhappy to see her. Madelaine Verge, on the other hand, sitting in her chair by the fireside with a magazine on her lap, looked hostile and suspicious.
'We came across something during the course of our inquiries that I wanted to return to you, Charlotte,' Kathy said, handing her the photograph that Luz Diaz had given her.
'Oh, I remember this! Dad kept it in his wallet. Where did you get it?'
'It turned up among some other papers.'
The young woman stared at it sadly for a moment, then placed a hand on her tummy. 'Thanks. I thought you might have come about the terrible fire at Briar Hill. Isn't it awful?
Do they know yet what caused it? George says Luz may have left something on the stove, and then with her painting chemicals in the same area, it was bound to go up.'
'I don't know.'
'You do know about Luz leaving, don't you? We're all feeling sad about that, too.'
'Did Luz come to see you before she left?'
'Yes, on Sunday night. We were just about to go to bed, weren't we Gran? She called in to say she'd decided to go back to Spain for a while, but she didn't leave a forwarding address, and until she gets in touch again I don't know how they'll be able to contact her about the house.'
Kathy tried not to stare at Charlotte while she weighed every intonation, every s.h.i.+ft of expression. She didn't know, Kathy decided. She had no idea that the painter was her father.
But Madelaine was another matter. When Kathy met her eyes she thought she saw knowledge and anger that shouldn't have been there.
'We don't even know what caused Luz to go so suddenly like that,' Charlotte said.
'I think I do,' her grandmother said, in a voice as tight as the grip of her swollen fingers on the arms of her chair. 'I think she was driven away by the constant hara.s.sment of the police, isn't that right, Sergeant?'
Yes, Kathy thought, she knew, had always known.
'Oh, I'm sure that's not fair, Gran. She'll probably be back before long.'
'I don't think so, dear,' the old woman said, keeping her angry eyes on Kathy all the time.
'Well,' Kathy said evenly, 'I hope she does. I for one would really like to meet up with her again, Charlotte. I've become very interested in modern Spanish painting, and I'd love to contact her about it. Will you let me know if you hear from her?'
'Yes, certainly.'
'She's bound to be in touch when the baby arrives, don't you think?' Kathy added, watching the anger darken Madelaine's features. 'I'll expect to hear from one of you then, eh?'
The old dog was tied up outside the pub door when Kathy drove past for the last time. It looked fed up and she wondered how it had disgraced itself. She turned the corner into the lane leading back to the highway, then pulled onto the side as her phone rang.
'Is that you, Kathy? How are you?' She felt suddenly disconsolate to hear the Indian accent.
'I'm fine, Morarji. How are you?'
'Oh, not so bad, not so bad, all things considered. But I'm a little worried about that silly b.u.g.g.e.r of a son of mine.
You haven't been in touch with him lately, I take it?'
'No, why? Don't you know where he is?'
'Oh yes, I know where he is all right. He's right here, and that's the problem. He doesn't go out, you see. He's so down in the dumps. He had a friend-a man, you understand, not a girlfriend-he went around with for a short while, but they don't seem to be friends any more, and now he seems to have no one he can talk to.'
Leon's father was putting on his oh-my-what's-the-world-coming-to amused voice that tended to exaggerate his Hindu accent, but didn't hide his anxiety.
'The silly boy simply hasn't been himself since he and you broke up, Kathy. That's the truth of the matter. He's terribly confused, it seems to me. And I just wondered if there was the remotest chance that you might be able to speak to him? As a former friend, you know?'
Kathy could almost hear Morarji squirming with embarra.s.sment, and guessed that Ghita had told her husband to make the call.
'I'm sorry, Morarji. I'm afraid I can't help. I really am sorry. I have to go now.'
The phone rang again almost immediately. It was Brock.
'Kathy? Sorry I didn't get to your speech this afternoon.
I've been told it was very well received. Well done. I got caught up in something else, unfortunately. Something rather nasty. And I just wondered how you're placed now?'
'I'm free,' she said, taking a deep breath of the cool evening air.
'Good.' He sounded relieved, as if he'd expected a different answer. 'Incidentally, we checked out the field where Verge kept his glider. The plane's gone.'
'Ah.'
'So I'll see you soon then?'
'I'm on my way.'
Author's note.
The book which Brock notices in Sandy Clarke's office in Chapter 4, on the work of Ledoux, and from which the pa.s.sage on Doctor Tornotary is quoted, is Claude-Nicolas Ledoux: Architecture and Social Reform at the End of the Ancien Regime, by Anthony Vidler, The MIT Press, 1990.
The essay about architects and the great detective, which Gail Lewis refers to in Chapter 21, is 'Program versus Paradigm: Otherwise Casual Notes on the Pragmatic, the Typical, and the Possible', by Colin Rowe, in his book, As I Was Saying: Recollections and Miscellaneous Essays: Volume Two, The MIT Press, 1996.
Also by Barry Maitland.
The Marx Sisters.
The Malcontenta.
All My Enemies.
The Chalon Heads.
Silvermeadow.
Babel.
No Trace.
Spider Trap.