23

Did you pass on the message, Mum?”

“Of course I did, Ryan. I did what you said.”

Audrey Barker was no actress. Her voice sounded flat and stilted, as if the words had been learned by heart for the dramatic society’s play.

“They have to reroute the bypass, you got that?”

“I got it, Ryan, and I passed it on. Like you said, Ryan.”

That stilted voice made him suspicious. “Is there anyone there with you?”

She almost screamed. “Of course not, of course not!”

“It has to be announced. Officially. By the government. And if it’s not Mrs. Struther dies. Have you got that? Before nightfall tomorrow or Mrs. Struther’s dead.”

“Oh, Ryan …”

“I think you’ve got someone there. I’m going to ring off. I won’t call again. Remember our cause is just. It’s the only way, Mum, it’s the way to save the planet. And when it’s a matter of saving the planet one woman’s life is of no account. I’m going now. Good-bye.”

That was the conversation Karen Malahyde heard directly. Later on Wexford was to listen to a tape of it, but before he could do so the call had been traced.

To the Brigadier public house on the old Kingsmarkham bypass.

*   *   *

It had started to rain. The rain, which had been gloomily forecast, which had been expected for days, fell rapidly out of swiftly gathered black clouds, then in torrents, fountaining, crashing rain. It held them up. They might have been there in fifteen minutes, that was the minimum it took, but the rain was the kind that doesn’t merely slow traffic, it drives it for safety’s sake off the road.

Pemberton, driving Burden and Karen, was forced to pull into a lay-by. It was like being under some great waterfall, he said, maybe Niagara Falls. Barry Vine and Lynn Fancourt, in the next car, caught them up and pulled in behind them. By the time the rain had lessened, had been reduced to a normal heavy storm, twenty minutes had passed. Half an hour had passed by the time they got to the Brigadier, roaring in over that crunchy gravel approach like cops in an L.A. car chase.

Twenty-five minutes to six and William Dickson had opened for the evening trade thirty-five minutes before. He was serving the couple in the saloon bar with a pint of Guinness and a gin and blackcurrant when the five policemen came in. Crashed in as hard as the rain, and Vine, with Pemberton behind him, strode across to the door into the public bar. Burden snapped, “Who else is in the house?”

“The wife. Me,” said Dickson. “What is this? What’s going on?”

Vine came back. “There’s nobody in the public.”

“Of course there isn’t. I said. There’s this lady and gentleman and me and the wife’s upstairs. What is all this?”

“We’ll take a look” said Burden.

“Suit yourselves. You might ask. Politeness never did no harm. You’re lucky I’m not asking to see your warrant.”

The couple in the bar, the woman at a table, her companion at the counter, preparing to pay for his drinks, stared with cautious pleasure. The man kept his eyes on Burden while pushing a five-pound note toward Dickson.

Vine went into the back hallway where the pay phone was. This was the phone Ulrike Ranke had used back in April and had made the last call of her life. He looked inside various rooms, an office with another phone, a small sitting room or snug. There was no one about. Karen followed him. Pemberton and Lynn Fancourt went upstairs.

The rain was coming down heavily again. Sheets of it, falling on the empty car park, almost obscured the outline of the dismal building Dickson called a ballroom. Burden told the man and the woman he was a police officer, showed them his warrant card, and asked them how long they had been in the pub.

“Now you wait a minute,” said Dickson.

Burden rounded on him. “Your wife is being fetched to take over the trade in here. I’d like you to go into that snug place of yours and wait for me. I want to talk to you.”

“What about, for Christ’s sake?”

“I regret having to speak to you like this in front of your patrons, Mr. Dickson, but you’ll go into that room now, or else I’ll arrest you for obstructing me in the execution of my duty.”

Dickson went. He kicked the doorstop in a petulant way, like a cross child, but he went. Pemberton came back with Dickson’s wife, a top-heavy blond woman of about forty wearing black leggings and high-heeled sandals. Burden nodded to her and asked the couple with the drinks if they would mind his joining them at their table. Rather bemused, the man shook his head. He said his name was Roger Gardiner and his friend’s was Sandra Cole.

Barry Vine said, “I’d like to ask you a few questions,” and repeated the one Burden had already asked.

“We came in when it opened,” Gardiner said. “We were early and we waited outside a bit. In the car.”

“Other people were here then. A boy of about fifteen? And others with him?”

“He was older than that,” Sandra Cole said. “He was taller than Rodge.”

“We were in here by then,” Gardiner said. “Been in here a couple of minutes. A man and a woman—well, a girl—they came in, they ran into the bar with the boy, and the girl asked the manager, the owner, whatever, if they could use the phone.”

“She said the boy was in something-shock, ana-something shock, and they had to get an ambulance.”

“Anaphylactic shock?”

“That’s it. It was urgent, she said, and the owner, he told them where the phone was …”

“I told them where the phone was,” Dickson said to Burden. “Not that pay one, the one in my office. It was urgent, see, she said the kid might die if he didn’t get to a hospital. So I reckoned they didn’t want to be messing about with a pay phone …”

“Developed a conscience since the Ulrike Ranke business, have you?”

“I don’t know what that’s supposed to mean. They went off into the office and I never saw them again.”

“Come on, Dickson, you can do better than that. You let them use your phone, you were worried the boy might die, but once you’d seen the back of them the whole thing went out of your head?”

“I did go in there,” said Dickson, “but they was gone. I asked the wife if she’d heard the ambulance because I hadn’t, but she didn’t know what I was on about.”

“Show me the phone.”

It was on the desk among the welter of papers and magazines, a brown telephone constructed of a substance that had a glossy surface.

“Has it been touched since?”

Dickson shook his head. A tic had started at the corner of his mouth.

“Don’t touch it. And close the place. Most likely you can open again tomorrow.”

“What’s all this about? I can’t close just like that!”

“You don’t have a choice,” said Burden.

He had heard a car arrive. You could hear anything on that gravel. A sparrow walking across it would have been clearly audible. He had heard a car and thought it was customers for the Brigadier but it was Wexford, driven up here by Donaldson. He was in the saloon bar, talking to Linda Dickson, who was now holding a diminutive Yorkshire terrier in her arms, its face pressed up against her brightly painted cheek. Gardiner and his girlfriend were doing their best to describe to Karen Malahyde the appearance of the man and the woman who had accompanied Ryan Barker.

“I never saw them,” Linda Dickson said. She looked around for her husband, but he was locking and bolting the front doors. “I thought I heard a car, but it must have been that lady and gentleman.”

“Why ‘must have been’?”

“You can hear everything on that gravel. If this was a free house I’d have that concreted, but the brewery won’t spend the money.”

“There’s no need to go over the gravel if you drive straight into the car park at the back, is there?”

“That’s what they must have done.”

“I’m not much of a hand at describing what people look like,” said her husband. “See too many of them, I reckon. The boy was tall, he was a very tall lad, tall as me …”

“We know what the boy looks like, Mr. Dickson,” said Wexford, his eye on the tattoo on the man’s left forearm. Butterfly? Bird? Abstract design? “The boy is Ryan Barker, one of the hostages. You keep asking what this is about—well, it’s about Sacred Globe. Do you think that will jog your memory when it comes to describing these people?”

Dickson’s mouth fell open. “You have to be kidding.”

“No, I don’t have to be. If I was in the mood for it I could think up a better joke than that.”

“Sacred Globe. Bloody hell. You do mean those lunatics that kidnapped those people and killed the girl?”

“Try describing those lunatics, will you?”

His description, when it finally came, tallied with those of Roger Gardiner and Sandra Cole. None of the three was particularly observant, none apparently much interested in his or her fellow human beings. The plausible tale of anaphylactic shock which, it now appeared, had been told solely by the woman, and which might have been expected to attract their interest, had registered only as an account of something alien and unpronounceable. They considered. Roger Gardiner had actually scratched his head. After a massive shrug of his heavy shoulders, William Dickson came up with the best he could do.

The woman was small but wiry and fit-looking. She wore no makeup and her hair was hidden under a baseball cap. She was young but no one could suggest her age more precisely than to describe her as between twenty and thirty. Her companion was a tall thin man, also wearing a baseball cap and a pair of dark glasses. Their clothes were so unremarkable that no one could specify what they wore. Jeans, perhaps, jackets of dark or neutral colors. No one had noticed eye color or a single peculiarity. The man had spoken. The woman’s voice was—just an ordinary voice.

“Like Eastenders,” said Roger Gardiner.

Wexford knew what he meant, or thought he did. London working class, only it wasn’t politically correct to use expressions like that these days. Cockney—did anyone use the word anymore? Or did he mean like an actor in a television sitcom? Asked, Gardiner didn’t know, couldn’t answer, could only repeat what he had said. Like Eastenders.

“I’d like to have a look outside,” Wexford said to Dickson.

“Be my guest, guv’nor. I hope I’m a reasonable man, I hope I know how to cooperate. Only there are some not a million miles from where I’m standing who don’t know the meaning of the word ‘manners.’ ”

The car park was awash. Puddles were more like shallow lakes and rain dripped off the eaves of the barracklike building, which loomed over the sheets of water. By now the rain had stopped but the dark gray sky was heavy with more to come. A wind had got up, tearing at the branches of the chestnuts in the meadow beyond the fence.

Wexford hadn’t much hope. The truth was that now he had no hope, but he was going to look inside that building just the same. A dance hall—well, if you stuck a few bits of neon on the outside, flung open those double asbestos doors, had some cheerful people selling tickets … No, it would always be a dreary dump, a cavernous barn of a place, and the best thing for it would be to pull it down.

“Cavernous” was right. The whole area must have been sixty feet by forty and the ceiling—or roof of girders and plasterboard—a good thirty feet high. There were metal framed windows all along both sides, a stage of sorts at one end. Vine opened the door that seemed to lead behind the stage and they trooped through. But nothing was to be seen apart from two lavatories, one with a picture of a peacock with fanned tail on the door, the other of a drab peahen—the most sexist thing she’d seen in years, Karen said angrily—a passage, and a large unfurnished room that might once have been used for making tea and even preparing food. The place was dusty and untended, and when Dickson said it hadn’t been used for years no one had any difficulty believing him.

Yet why had those two brought Ryan here? What was the point of it, returning to the main premises of the Brigadier? Wexford wondered if it might be from fear of returning to the phone or call box they had used three times before, while they obviously couldn’t use any phone that might be installed where the hostages were. Did they know the pub would be largely unfrequented at that time of day? That Dickson and his wife were scarcely perceptive people?

“You’ve closed up, Mr. Dickson,” he said. “You’ll be at a bit of a loose end this evening, so with your permission I think we’ll use it to have a talk about your patrons. Who comes here, who’s a regular, that sort of thing.”

Still clutching the Yorkshire terrier, Linda Dickson said shrilly, “You’re taking him to the police station?”

Wexford regarded her calmly. “Would that present a problem, Mrs. Dickson? But, no, I’m not. I thought we might talk here. In your office.”

Hennessy was unplugging the phone with gloved hands, dropping the instrument into a plastic bag.

“He can’t have my phone!”

“The property of Telecom, as a matter of fact, Mr. Dickson. We’ll clear it with them. You’ll soon have it back.” Wexford sat down without waiting to be asked. He was pretty sure he wouldn’t be asked. “Now, you’d never seen these people before, I take it?”

“Never. Not one of them.”

“Do many of the locals use the Brigadier or do you depend on a passing-through trade, people on their way to the coast?”

Once it was plain to Dickson that Wexford’s questions were not to involve him directly, not aimed at jeopardizing his livelihood or discouraging his clientele, he began to enjoy himself. People usually did, Wexford had found. Everybody likes imparting information, and the ignorant and unobservant correspondingly enjoy it more.

“Well, it’s all the lot, isn’t it?” said Dickson. “We get a lot of the young. There’s not many senior citizens, on account of you need transport to get out here and that they don’t have a lot of. Mr. Canning from Framhurst, he’s in here a lot.”

“He means Ron Canning from Goland’s Farm,” said Linda Dickson, putting the Yorkshire terrier on the floor where it stood shivering. “You know, him as lets those tree people use his field for their cars. If,” she added, “you can call them cars.”

The dog sniffed Wexford’s shoes, gave his left toecap an exploratory lick. He shifted his feet, not easy in so confined a space. “What’s that tattoo on your arm, Mr. Dickson? Some sort of insect, is it, or a bird, or what?”

“A swallow, it’s supposed to be.” To Wexford’s surprise, Dickson flushed. “I’m going to have it removed, the wife’s not keen on it. Haven’t got round to it yet, that’s all.” He picked up the dog, pressed its face against his red cheek, and reverted quickly to the original subject. “Those Weir Theatre people come in. From Pomfret. They call themselves the Friends of the Weir Theatre and the leading light in that’s a chap called Jeffrey Godwin. He’s like an actor.”

“Been in Bramwell,” said Linda. “No, I tell a lie, it was Casualty.”

“I don’t mind that, I can tell you,” said Dickson, holding the dog against his shoulder and rubbing its spine as if in an effort to bring up wind. “I mean, folks like him coming in. Attracts trade, that’s what it does. Lot of bettors come in just to get a look at him and I always point him out, the least I can do. I always say, ‘That’s Jeffrey Godwin, the actor.’ He’s very gracious, I must say.”

Dickson spoke as if he were the proprietor of a restaurant in midtown Manhattan where Paul Newman was frequently to be seen at a particular table. He smiled reminiscently, settled the dog on his lap, where it immediately fell asleep.

“Look at him,” said Linda fondly. “You can see he loves his daddy. Can I get you a drink, Mr. Wexford? I’m sure I don’t know what’s happened to my manners. Must be all this upheaval.”

Wexford refused.

“Little something for you, Bill?”

While Dickson was considering this offer, Wexford asked him if he’d noticed any newcomers recently who had become regulars. Did any of the protesters, for instance, use the Brigadier?

Dickson made no secret of his contempt for those involved in any kind of protest against, or even dissent from, totally orthodox convention. Wexford knew at once, from the expression on his face, from the curl of his lip, without his having to say a word, exactly what his attitude would be to those who attempt to save whales, ban foxhunting, prohibit chemical fertilizer, favor organic foods, be thrifty with water, use lead-free petrol, or recycle anything at all.

“Needless to say,” said Dickson, “I haven’t got a lot of time for those gentry. And don’t get me wrong, that’s not on account of they don’t drink, not to say ‘drink,’ because they’re the sort that imbibe a good deal in the way of your mineral waters and Britvics, and that’s where your licensee makes his profit, so no, it’s not that. It’s not that they’ve got no money for their Perriers and Cokes and whatever. I’ll tell you what it is, it’s like the way they’re interfering in life, our life, yours and mine, guv’nor. Life what has to go on, if you take my meaning. What has to go on. Right?”

He drew breath, reached for the tankard his wife had brought him. “Thank you, my sweetheart, that’s very kind of you. Now who else can I tell you about? Well now, there’s this lady Stan drives up here now and again. Don’t know her name—d’you know her name, Lin?”

“I don’t, Bill. Quite an elderly lady she is, from Kingsmarkham, and she comes up here regular Tuesdays and Thursdays to meet a gentleman. I said to Bill, that’s very sweet, I said, that’s touching, them being not a day under seventy. But I don’t know her name and I don’t know his. Stan would know.”

Wexford wondered what possible connection the Dicksons thought a pair of superannuated lovers who chose to meet in the Brigadier of all places—Was one of them married? Were both of them?—could have with Sacred Globe. “Stan?” he said.

“Stan Trotter,” said Linda. “Well, Stanley, to give him his full name. He drives her up here on account of her not driving herself, not having a license, I daresay. I say ‘drives her’ but it’s not been going on for more than—what would you say, Bill? A month.

“The first time, a Tuesday it was, Stan came into the lounge bar with her and that was the first time I’d seen him since April, as a matter of fact since the night that German girl got herself killed.”

Wexford looked at her and watched the color flood her face.