Prologue
"Watch you don't slip." Julia
pushed back the wisps of dark hair that had snaked loose
from her pony-tail, her brow furrowed with anxious concern.
The air felt dense, as thick and substantial as cotton
wool. Tiny beads of moisture slicked her skin, and larger
drops fell intermittently from the trees to the sodden
carpet of leaves beneath her feet. "We'll be late
for tea, Matty. And you know what Father will say if
you've not done your lessons in time for practice."
"Oh, don't be so wet, Julia,"
said Matthew. A year younger than his sister, as fair
and stocky as she was thin and dark, he'd physically
outstripped her in the past year and it had made him
more insufferably cock-sure than ever. "You're
a broody old hen. 'Matty, don't slip. Matty, don't fall,'"
he mimicked her nastily. "The way you carry on
you'd think I couldn't wipe my own nose." His arms
held shoulder-high, he balanced on a fallen tree trunk
near the edge of the swollen stream. His school haversack
lay where he'd dropped it carelessly in the mud.
Clutching her own books to her thin
chest, Julia rocked on the balls of her feet. Serve
him right if he caught it from Father. But the scolding,
even if severe, would be brief, and life in their household
would return quickly to normal--normal being that they
all behaved, to quote Plummy when she felt particularly
exasperated with him, "as if the sun rose and set
out of Matthew's backside."
Julia's lips twitched at the thought
of what Plummy would say when she saw his muddy bookbag
and shoes. But no matter, all would be forgiven him,
for Matthew possessed the one attribute her parents
valued above all else. He could sing.
He sang effortlessly, the clear, soaring
treble falling from his lips as easily as a whispered
breath. And singing transformed him, the gawky, gap-toothed
twelve-year-old vanishing as he concentrated, his face
serious and full of grace. They would gather in the
sitting room after tea, her father patiently fine-tuning
Matthew on the Bach cantata he'd be singing with the
choir at Christmas, her mother interrupting loudly and
often with criticism and praise. It seemed to Julia
that the three of them formed a charmed circle to which
she, due to an accident of birth or some inexplicable
whim of god, was forever denied admittance.
The children had dawdled on their way
home from school, enjoying the brief respite in the
weather. Cutting across the fields, they'd caked their
shoes with clay until they had to lift their heavy feet
deliberately, like visitors from a lighter planet. When
they reached the woods, Matthew had caught Julia's hand
and pulled her, slipping and slithering through the
trees, down the hillside to the stream nearest their
house.
Julia shivered and looked up. The day
had darkened perceptibly, and although the November
afternoons drew in early, she thought the lessening
visibility meant more rain. It had rained heavily every
day for weeks. Jokes about the forty days and forty
nights had long since grown stale; now glances at the
heavy sky were followed by silent and resigned headshaking.
Here in the chalk hills north of the Thames, water leached
steadily from the saturated ground and flowed into already
over-burdened tributaries.
Matty had left his tight-rope walking
on the log and squatted now at the water's edge, poking
about with a long stick. The stream, in ordinary weather
a dry gully, now filled its banks, the rushing water
as opaque as milky tea.
Julia, feeling increasingly cross,
said, "Do come on, Matty, please." Her stomach
growled. "I'm hungry. And cold." She hugged
herself tighter. "If you don't come I shall go
without you."
"Look, Julie!" Oblivious
to her nagging, he gestured toward the water with the
stick. "There's something caught under the surface,
just there. Dead cat, maybe?" He looked round at
her and grinned.
"Don't be disgusting, Matty."
She knew her prim and bossy tone would only fuel his
teasing, but she was past caring. "I really will
go without you." As she turned resolutely away
she felt an unpleasant cramping sensation in her abdomen.
"Honestly, Matty, I don't feel--"
The splash sprayed her legs even as
she whipped around. "Matty! Don't be such an--"
He'd fallen in, landing on his back
with his arms and legs splayed awkwardly. "It's
cold," he said, his face registering surprise.
He scrabbled toward the bank, laughing, shaking the
water from his eyes.
Julia watched his gleeful expression
fade. His eyes widened, his mouth formed a round 'o'.
"Matty--"
The current caught him, pulling him
downstream. "Julie, I can't--" Water washed
over his face, filling his mouth.
She stumbled along the bank's edge,
calling his name. The rain began to fall in earnest,
big drops that splashed against her face, blinding her.
A protruding stone caught her toe and she fell. She
picked herself up and ran on, only vaguely aware of
the pain in her shin.
"Matty. Oh, Matty, please."
Repeated again and again, the words formed an unconscious
incantation. Through the muddy water she could see the
blue of his school jacket and the pale spread of his
hair.
The ground descended sharply as the
stream widened and turned away from her. Julia slid
down the incline and stopped. On the opposite bank an
old oak teetered precariously, a web of roots exposed
where the stream had undercut the bank. Here Matthew's
body lodged, pinned under the roots as if held by a
giant hand.
"Oh, Matty," she cried, the
words louder now, a wail of despair. She started into
the water, a warm metallic saltiness filling her mouth
as she bit through her lower lip. The cold shocked her,
numbing her legs. She forced herself to go on. The water
swirled about her knees, tugging at the hem of her skirt.
It reached her waist, then her chest. She gasped as
the cold bit into her ribs. Her lungs felt paralyzed
from the cold, unable to expand.
The current tugged at her, pulling
at her skirt, shifting her foothold on the moss-covered
rocks. With her arms held out for balance, she inched
her right foot forward. Nothing. She moved a few feet
to one side, then the other, feeling for the bottom.
Still nothing.
Cold and exhaustion were fast sucking
away her strength. Her breath came in shuddering gasps
and the current's grasp seemed more insistent. She looked
upstream and down, saw no easier crossing. Not that
access to the other side would help her--it would be
impossible to reach him from the steep bank.
A little moan escaped her. She stretched
her arms toward Matty, but yards separated them, and
she was too frightened to brave the current. Help. She
must get help.
She felt the water lift and drag her
forward as she turned, but she plunged on, digging her
heels and toes in for purchase. The current slacked
and she clambered out, standing for a moment on the
muddy bank as a wave of weakness swept over her. Once
more she looked at Matty, saw the outline of his legs
twisting sideways in the current. Then she ran.
The house loomed through the dark arches
of the trees, its white limestone walls eerily luminous
in the dusk. Julia bypassed the front door without thinking.
On around the house her feet took her, toward the kitchen,
and warmth, and safety. Gasping from the steep climb
up the hillside, she rubbed at her face, slick with
rain and tears. She was conscious of her own breathing,
of the squelching sound her shoes made with each step,
and of the heavy, wet wool of her skirt scratching her
thighs.
Julia yanked open the kitchen door
and stopped just inside, water pooling around her on
the flags. Plummy turned from the Aga, spoon in hand,
her dark hair disheveled as always when she cooked.
"Julia! Where have you been? What your mother will
have to say . . . " The good-natured scolding faded.
"Julie, child, you're bleeding. Are you all right?"
She came toward Julia, spoon abandoned, her round face
creased with concern.
Julia smelled apples, cinnamon, saw
the streak of flour across Plummy's bosom, registered
in some compartment of her mind that Plummy was making
apple pudding, Matty's favorite, for tea. She felt Plummy's
hands grasp her shoulders, saw her kind and familiar
face draw close, swimming through a film of tears.
"Julia, what is it? What's happened?
Where's Matty?"
Plummy's voice was breathy now with
panic, but still Julia stood, her throat frozen, the
words dammed behind her lips.
A gentle finger stroked her face. "Julia.
You've cut your lip. What's happened?"
The sobs began, wracking her slight
body. She squeezed her arms tight to her chest to ease
the pain. A stray thought flickered disjointly through
her mind--she couldn't remember dropping her books.
Matty. Where had Matty left his books?
"Darling, you must tell me. What's
happened?"
She was in Plummy's arms now, her face
buried against the soft chest. The words came, choked
out between sobs like a tide released. "It's Matty.
Oh, Plummy, it's Matty. He's drowned."
Chapter One
From the train window Duncan Kincaid could
see the piles of debris in the back gardens and on the
occasional common. Lumber, dead branches and twigs,
crushed cardboard boxes and the odd bit of broken furniture--anything
portable served as fair game for Guy Fawkes bonfires.
He rubbed ineffectually at the grimy windowpane with
his jacket cuff, hoping for a better view of one particularly
splendid monument to British abandon, then sat back
in his seat with a sigh. The fine drizzle in the air,
combined with British Rail's standard of cleanliness,
reduced visibility to a few hundred yards.
The train slowed as it approached High
Wycombe. Kincaid stood and stretched, then collected
his overcoat and bag from the rack. He'd gone straight
to St. Marleybone from the Yard, grabbing the emergency
kit he kept in his office--clean shirt, toiletries,
razor, only the necessities needed for an unexpected
summons. And most were more welcome than this, a political
request from the A.C. to aid an old school chum in a
delicate situation. Kincaid grimaced. Give him an unidentified
body in a field any day.
He swayed as the train lurched to a halt.
Bending down to peer through the window, he scanned
the station carpark for a glimpse of his escort. The
unmarked panda car, its shape unmistakable even in the
increasing rain, was pulled up next to the platform,
its parking lights on, a gray plume of exhaust escaping
from its tailpipe.
It looked like the cavalry had been called
out to welcome Scotland Yard's fair-haired boy.
"Jack Makepeace. Sergeant, I should
say. Thames Valley CID." Makepeace smiled, yellowed
teeth showing under the sandy bristle of mustache. "Nice
to meet you, sir." He engulfed Kincaid's hand for
an instant in a beefy paw, then took Kincaid's case
and swung it into the panda's boot. "Climb in,
and we can talk as we go."
The car's interior smelled of stale cigarettes
and wet wool. Kincaid cracked his window, then shifted
a bit in his seat so that he could see his companion.
A fringe of hair the same color as the mustache, freckles
extending from face into shiny scalp, a heavy nose with
the disproportionate look that comes of having been
smashed--all in all not a prepossessing face, but the
pale blue eyes were shrewd, and the voice unexpectedly
soft for a man of his bulk.
Makepeace drove competently on the rain-slick
streets, snaking his way south and west until they crossed
the M40 and left the last terraced houses behind. He
glanced at Kincaid, ready to divert some of his attention
from the road.
"Tell me about it, then," Kincaid
said.
"What do you know?"
"Not much, and I'd just as soon you
start from scratch, if you don't mind."
Makepeace looked at him, opened his mouth
as if to ask a question, then closed it again. After
a moment he said, "Okay. Daybreak this morning
the Hambleden lock-keeper, one Perry Smith, opens the
sluicegate to fill the lock for an early traveler, and
a body rushes through it into the lock. Gave him a terrible
shock, as you can imagine. He called Marlow--they sent
a panda car and the medics." He paused as he downshifted
into an intersection, then concentrated on overtaking
an ancient Morris Minor that was creeping its way up
the gradient. "They fished him out, then when it
became obvious that the poor chappie was not going to
spew up the canal and open his eyes, they called us."
The windscreen wiper squeaked against
dry glass and Kincaid realized that the rain had stopped.
Freshly plowed fields rose on either side of the narrow
road. The bare, chalky soil was a pale brown, and against
it the black dots of foraging rooks looked like pepper
on toast. Away to the west a cap of beech trees crowned
a hill. "How'd you indentify him?"
"Wallet in the poor sod's back pocket.
Connor Swann, aged thirty-five, brown hair, blue eyes,
height about six feet, weight around twelve stone. Lived
in Henley, just a few miles upstream."
"Sounds like your lads could have
handled it easily enough," said Kincaid, not bothering
to conceal his annoyance. He considered the prospect
of spending his Friday evening tramping around the Chiltern
Hundreds, damp as a Guy Fawkes bonfire, instead of meeting
Gemma for an after work pint at the pub down Wilfred
Street. "Bloke has a few drinks, goes for a stroll
on the sluicegate, falls in. Bingo."
Makepeace was already shaking his head.
"Ah, but that's not the whole story, Mr. Kincaid.
Someone left a very nice set of prints on either side
of his throat." He lifted both hands from the wheel
for an instant in an eloquently graphic gesture. "It
looks like he was strangled, Mr. Kincaid."
Kincaid shrugged. "A reasonable assumption,
I would think. But I don't quite see why that merits
Scotland Yard's intervention."
"It's not the how, Mr. Kincaid, but
the who. It seems that the late Mr. Swann was the son-in-law
of Sir Gerald Asherton, the conductor, and Dame Caroline
Stowe, who I believe is a singer of some repute."
Seeing Kincaid's blank expression, he continued, "Are
you not an opera buff, Mr. Kincaid?"
"Are you?" Kincaid asked before
he could clamp down his involuntary surprise, knowing
he shouldn't have judged the man's cultural taste by
his physical characteristics.
"I have some recordings, and I watch
it on the telly, but I've never been to a performance."
The wide, sloping fields had given way
to heavily wooded hills, and now, as the road climbed,
the trees encroached upon it.
"We're coming into the Chiltern Hills,"
said Makepeace. "Sir Gerald and Dame Caroline live
just a bit further on, near Fingest. The house is called
'Badger's End', though you wouldn't think it to look
at it." He negotiated a hairpin bend, and then
they were running downhill again, beside a rocky stream.
"We've put you up at the pub in Fingest, by the
way, the Chequers. Lovely garden in the back, on a fine
day. Not that you're likely to get much use of it,"
he added, squinting up at the darkening sky.
The trees enclosed them now. Gold and
copper leaves arched tunnel-like overhead, and golden
leaves padded the surface of the road. The late-afternoon
sky was still heavily overcast, yet by some odd trick
of light the leaves seemed to take on an eerie, almost
phosphorescent glow. Kincaid wondered if just such an
enchanting effect had produced the ancient idea of "roads
paved with gold".
"Will you be needing me?" Makepeace
asked, breaking the spell. "I'd expected you to
have back-up."
"Gemma will be here this evening,
and I'm sure I can manage until then." Seeing Makepeace's
look of incomprehension, he added, "Gemma James,
my sergeant."
"Rather your lot than Thames Valley."
Makepeace gave something halfway between a laugh and
a snort. "One of my green constables made the mistake
this morning of calling Dame Caroline 'Lady Asherton'.
The housekeeper took him aside and gave him a tongue
lashing he'll not soon forget. Informed him that Dame
Caroline's title is hers by right and takes precedence
over her title as Sir Gerald's wife."
Kincaid smiled. "I'll try to not
put my foot in it. So there's a housekeeper, too?"
"A Mrs. Plumley. And the widow, Mrs.
Julia Swann." After an amused sideways glance at
Kincaid, he continued, "Make what you will of that
one. Seems Mrs. Swann lives at Badger's End with her
parents, not with her husband."
Before Kincaid could form a question,
Makepeace held up his hand and said "Watch now."
They turned left into a steep, high-banked
lane, so narrow that brambles and exposed roots brushed
the sides of car. The sky had darkened perceptibly toward
evening and it was dim and shadowed under the trees.
"That's the Wormsley valley off to your right,
though you'd hardly know it." Makepeace pointed,
and through a gap in the trees Kincaid caught a glimpse
of twilit fields rolling away down the valley. "It's
hard to believe you're only forty miles or so west of
London, isn't it, Mr. Kincaid?" he added with an
air of proprietary pride
As they reached the lane's high point,
Makepeace turned left into the darkness of the beech
woods. The track ran gently downhill, its thick padding
of leaves silencing the car wheels. A few hundred yards
on they rounded a curve and Kincaid saw the house. Its
white stone shone beneath the darkness of the trees,
and lamplight beamed welcomingly from its uncurtained
windows. He knew immediately what Makepeace had meant
about the name--Badger's End implied a certain rustic,
earthy simplicity, and this house, with its smooth,
white walls and arched windows and doors, had an elegant,
almost ecclesiastic presence.
Makepeace pulled the car up on the soft
carpet of leaves, but left the engine running as he
fished in his pocket. He handed Kincaid a card. "I'll
be off, then. Here's the number at the local nick. I've
some business to attend to, but if you'll ring up when
you've finished, someone will come and collect you."
Kincaid waved as Makepeace pulled away,
then stood staring at the house as the still silence
of the woods settled over him. Grieving widow, distraught
in-laws, an imperative for social discretion . . . not
a recipe for an easy evening, or an easy case. He squared
his shoulders and stepped forward.
The front door swung open and light poured
out to meet him.
"I'm Caroline Stowe. It's so good
of you to come."
This time the hand that took his was small
and soft, and he found himself looking down into the
woman's upturned face. "Duncan Kincaid. Scotland
Yard." With his free hand he pulled his warrant
card from his inside jacket pocket, but she ignored
it, still grasping his other hand between her own.
His mind having summed up the words Dame
and opera as large, he was momentarily taken aback.
Caroline Stowe stood a fraction over five feet tall,
and while her small body was softly rounded, she could
by no stretch of the imagination be described as heavy.
His surprise must have been apparent,
because she laughed and said, "I don't sing Wagner,
Mr. Kincaid. My specialty is Bel Canto. And besides,
size is not relevant to strength of voice. It has to
do with breath control, among other things." She
released his hand. "Do come in. How rude of me
to keep you standing on the threshold like some plumber's
apprentice."
As she closed the front door, he looked
around with interest. A lamp on a side table illuminated
the hall, casting shadows on the smooth, gray flagstone
floor. The walls were a pale gray-green, bare except
for a few large, gilt-framed watercolors depicting voluptuous,
bare-breasted women lounging about romanesque ruins.
Dame Caroline opened a door on the right
and stood aside, gesturing him in with an open palm.
Directly opposite the door a coal fire
burned in a grate, and above the mantle he saw himself,
framed in an ornate mirror--chestnut hair unruly from
the damp, eyes shadowed, their color indistinguishable
from across the room. Only the top of Dame Caroline's
dark head showed beneath the level of his shoulder.
He had only an instant to gather an impression
of the room. The same gray slate floor, here softened
by scattered rugs; comfortable, slightly worn, chintz
furniture; a jumble of used tea things on a tray--all
dwarfed by the baby grand piano. Its dark surface reflected
the light from a small lamp, and sheet music stood open
behind the keyboard. The bench was pushed back at an
angle, as though someone had just stopped playing.
"Gerald, this is Superintendent Kincaid,
from Scotland Yard." Dame Caroline moved to stand
beside the large, rumpled-looking man rising from the
sofa. "Mr. Kincaid, my husband, Sir Gerald Asherton."
"It's a pleasure to meet you,"
Kincaid said, feeling the response inappropriate even
as he made it. But if Dame Caroline insisted on treating
his visit as a social occasion, he would play along
for a bit.
"Sit down." Sir Gerald gathered
a copy of the day's Times from the seat of an armchair
and moved it to a nearby end table.
"Would you like some tea?" asked
Dame Caroline. "We've just finished, and it's no
trouble to heat up the kettle again."
Kincaid sniffed the lingering odor of
toast in the air and his stomach growled. From where
he sat he could see the paintings he'd missed when entering
the room--watercolors again, by the same artist's hand,
but this time the women reclined in elegant rooms and
their dresses had the sheen of watered silk. A house
to tempt the appetites, he thought, and said, "No,
thank you."
"Have a drink, then," Sir Gerald
said. "The sun's certainly over the yardarm."
"No, I'm fine. Really." What
an incongruous couple they made, still standing side-by-side,
hovering over him as if he were a royal guest. Dame
Caroline, dressed in a peacock-blue silk blouse and
dark, tailored trousers, looked neat and almost childlike
beside her husband's bulk.
Sir Gerald smiled at Kincaid, a great,
infectious grin that showed pink gums. "Geoffrey
recommended you very highly, Mr. Kincaid."
By Geoffrey he must mean Geoffrey Menzies-St.
John, Kincaid's Assistant Commissioner, and Asherton's
old school mate. Though the two men must be of an age,
there any outward resemblance ended. But the A.C., while
dapper and precise enough to appear priggish, possessed
a keen intelligence, and Kincaid thought that unless
Sir Gerald shared that quality the two men would not
have kept up with one another over the years.
Kincaid leaned forward and took a breath.
"Won't you sit down, please, both of you, and tell
me what's happened."
They sat obediently, but Dame Caroline
perched straight-backed on the sofa's edge, away from
the protective curve of her husband's arm. "It's
Connor. Our son-in-law. They'll have told you."
She looked at him, her brown eyes made darker by dilating
pupils. "We can't believe it's true. Why would
someone kill Connor? It doesn't make sense, Mr. Kincaid."
"We'll certainly need more evidence
before we can treat this as an official murder inquiry,
Dame Caroline."
"But I thought . . ." she began,
then looked rather helplessly at Kincaid.
"Let's start at the beginning, shall
we? Was your son-in-law well liked?" Kincaid looked
at them both, including Sir Gerald in the question,
but it was Caroline who answered.
"Of course. Everyone liked Con. You
couldn't not."
"Had he been behaving any differently
lately? Upset or unhappy for any reason?"
Shaking her head, she said, "Con
was always . . . just Con. You would have to have known
. . ." Her eyes filled. She balled one hand into
a fist and held it to her mouth. "I feel such a
bloody fool. I'm not usually given to hysterics, Mr.
Kincaid. Or incoherence. It's the shock, I suppose."
Kincaid thought her definition of hysteria
rather exaggerated, but said soothingly, "It's
perfectly all right, Dame Caroline. When did you see
Connor last?"
She sniffed and ran a knuckle under one
eye. It came away smudged with black. "Lunch. He
came for lunch yesterday. He often did."
"Were you here as well, Sir Gerald?"
Kincaid asked, deciding that only a direct question
was likely to elicit a response.
Sir Gerald sat with his head back, eyes
half closed, his untidy tuft of gray beard thrusting
forward. Without moving, he said, "Yes, I was here
as well."
"And your daughter?"
Sir Gerald's head came up at that, but
it was his wife who answered. "Julia was here,
but didn't join us. She usually prefers to lunch in
her studio."
Curiouser and curiouser, thought Kincaid.
The son-in-law comes to lunch but his wife refuses to
eat with him. "So you don't know when your daughter
saw him last?"
Again the quick, almost conspiratorial
glance between husband and wife, then Sir Gerald said,
"This has all been very difficult for Julia."
He smiled at Kincaid, but the fingers of his free hand
picked at what looked suspiciously like moth-holes in
his brown woolen sweater. "I'm sure you'll understand
if she's a bit . . . prickly."
"Is your daughter here? I'd like
to see her, if I may. And I will want to talk to you
both at more length, when I've had a chance to review
the statements you've given Thames Valley."
"Of course. I'll take you."
Dame Caroline stood, and Sir Gerald followed suit. Their
hesitant expressions amused Kincaid. They'd been expecting
a battering, and now didn't know whether to feel relieved
or disappointed. They needn't worry--they'd be glad
to see the back of him soon enough.
"Sir Gerald." Kincaid stood
and shook hands.
The watercolors caught his eye again as
he turned toward the door. Although most of the women
were fair, with delicate rose-flushed skin and lips
parted to show small, glistening white teeth, he realized
that something about them reminded him of the woman
he followed.
"This was the children's nursery,"
Dame Caroline said evenly, her breathing steady and
even after the three-flight climb. "We made it
into a studio for her before she left home. I suppose
you might say it's been useful," she added, giving
him a sideways look he couldn't interpret.
They'd reached the top of the house and
the hall was unornamented, the carpeting threadbare
in spots. Dame Caroline turned to the left and stopped
before a closed door. "She'll be expecting you."
She smiled at Kincaid and left him.
He tapped on the door, waited, tapped
again and listened, holding his breath to catch any
faint sound. The echo of Dame Caroline's footsteps had
died away. From somewhere below he heard a faint cough.
Hesitating, he brushed his knuckles against the door
once more, then turned the knob and went in.
The woman sat on a high stool with her
back to him, her head bent over something he couldn't
see. When Kincaid said, "Uh, hello," she whipped
around toward him and he saw that she held a paintbrush
in her hand.
Julia Swann was not beautiful. Even as
he formed the thought, quite deliberately and matter-of-factly,
he found he couldn't stop looking at her. Taller, thinner,
sharper than her mother, dressed in a white shirt with
the tail out and narrow black jeans, she displayed no
softly rounded curves in figure or manner. Her chin-length,
dark hair swung abruptly when she moved her head, punctuating
her gestures.
He read his intrusion in her startled
posture, felt it in the room's instantly recognizable
air of privacy. "I'm sorry to bother you. I'm Duncan
Kincaid, from Scotland Yard. I did knock."
"I didn't hear you. I mean, I suppose
I did, but I wasn't paying attention. I often don't
when I'm working." Even her voice lacked the velvety
resonance of Dame Caroline's. She slid off the stool,
wiping her hands on a bit of rag. "I'm Julia Swann.
But then you know all that, don't you?"
The hand she held out to him was slightly
damp from contact with the cloth, but her grasp was
quick and hard. He looked around for someplace to sit,
saw nothing but a rather tatty and overstuffed armchair
which would place him a couple of feet below the level
of her stool. Instead he chose to lean against a cluttered
workbench.
Although the room was fairly large--probably,
he thought, the result of knocking two of the house's
original bedrooms into one--the disorder extended everywhere
he looked. The windows, covered with simple, white ricepaper
shades, provided islands of calm in the jumble, as did
the high table Julia Swann had been facing when he entered
the room. Its surface was bare except for a piece of
white plastic splashed with bright daubs of paint, and
a Masonite board propped up at a slight angle. Before
she slid on to the stool again and blocked his view,
he glimpsed a small sheet of white paper masking-taped
to the board.
Glancing at the paintbrush still in her
hand, she set it on the table behind her and pulled
a packet of cigarettes from her shirt pocket. She held
it toward him, and when he shook his head and said,
"No, thanks," she lit one and studied him
as she exhaled.
"So, Superintendent Kincaid--it is
Superintendent, isn't it? Mummy seemed to be quite impressed
by the title, but then that's not unusual. What can
I do for you?"
"I'm sorry about your husband, Mrs.
Swann." He tossed out an expected opening gambit,
even though he suspected already that her response would
not be conventional.
She shrugged, and he could see the movement
of her shoulder-blades under the loose fabric of her
shirt. Crisply starched, buttons on the left--Kincaid
wondered if it might have been her husband's.
"Call me Julia. I never got used
to 'Mrs. Swann'. Always sounded to me like Con's mum."
She leaned toward him and picked up a cheap, porcelain
ashtray bearing the words Visit the Cheddar Gorge. "She
died last year, so that's one bit of drama we don't
have to deal with."
"Did you not like your husband's
mother?" Kincaid asked.
"Amateur Irish. All B'gosh and B'gorra."
Then she added more affectionately, "I used to
say that her accent increased proportionately to her
distance from County Cork." Julia smiled for the
first time. It was her father's smile, as unmistakable
as a brand, and it transformed her face. "Maggie
adored Con. She would have been devastated. Con's dad
did a bunk when Con was a baby . . . if he ever had
a dad, that is," she added, only the corners of
her lips quirking up this time at some private humor.
"I had the impression from your parents
that you and your husband no longer lived together."
"Not for . . . " She spread
the fingers of her right hand and touched the tips with
her left forefinger as her lips moved. Her fingers were
long and slender, and she wore no rings. "Well,
more than a year now."
Kincaid watched as she ground out her
cigarette in the ashtray. "It's a rather odd arrangement,
if you don't mind my saying so."
"Do you think so, Mr. Kincaid? It
suited us."
"No plans to divorce?"
Julia shrugged again and crossed her knees,
one slender leg swinging jerkily. "No."
He studied her, wondering just how hard
he might push her. If she were grieving for her husband,
she was certainly adept at hiding it. She shifted under
his scrutiny and patted her shirt pocket, as if reassuring
herself that her cigarettes hadn't vanished, and he
thought that perhaps her armor wasn't quite impenetrable.
"Do you always smoke so much?" he said, as
if he had every right to ask.
She smiled and pulled the packet out,
shaking loose another cigarette.
He noticed that her white shirt wasn't
as immaculate as he'd thought--it had a smudge of violet
paint across the breast. "Were you on friendly
terms with Connor? See him often?"
"We spoke, yes, if that's what you
mean, but we weren't exactly what you'd call best mates."
"Did you see him yesterday, when
he came here for lunch?"
"No. I don't usually break for lunch
when I'm working. Ruins my concentration." Julia
stubbed out her newly lit cigarette and slid off the
stool. "As you've done now. I might as well quit
for the day." She gathered a handful of paint brushes
and crossed the room to an old-fashioned washstand with
basin and ewer. "That's the one drawback up here,"
she said, over her shoulder, "no running water."
His view no longer blocked by her body,
Kincaid straightened up and examined the paper taped
to the drawing board. It was about the size of a page
in a book, smooth-textured, and bore a faint, pencil
sketch of a spiky flower he didn't recognize. She had
begun to lay in spots of clear, vivid color, lavender
and green.
"'Tufted vetch'," she said,
when she turned and saw him looking. "A climbing
plant. Grows in hedgerows. Flowers in--"
"Julia." He interrupted the
rush of words and she stopped, startled by the imperative
in his voice. "Your husband died last night. His
body was discovered this morning. Wasn't that enough
to interrupt your concentration? Or your work schedule?"
She turned her head away, her dark hair
swinging to hide her face, but when she turned back
to him her eyes were dry. "You'd better understand,
Mr. Kincaid. You'll hear it from others soon enough.
The term 'bastard' might have been invented to describe
Connor Swann.
"And I despised him."