Belinda looked up at the wall clock. âShit! ... Sorry for that!'
âApologies for what I suppose is not even called swearing these days?'
âI've only five minutes to get to the station and the car's been acting stupid and trying not to start.'
âYou haven't had a word with the garage?'
âTypically they say there's nothing wrong since the engine's warmed by the time I get there and when they try, it starts at once ... Too much work in hand to bother.'
She finished the meal in two large mouthfuls and rushed out through the doorway, flinging on her coat as she did so.
As the car drew away, Mrs Draper refilled her mug. She wondered if the use of the Christian name, David, held any significance.
Monday was sunny; global warming, melting icebergs, growing pineapples in Sussex returned to the newspapers. The manager of the third bank Belinda rang was tight-lipped even by normal bank standards and would not say if David Ansell was a client, but suggested she came along and had a chat.
Flavin was pleasant and prepared to be helpful, but as she had already discovered, he observed every rule and regulation with determination. âI am sorry, Constable Draper, but I am not at liberty to give you the information for which you ask without the requisite authorization.'
âSurely you can at least say whether he has an account with you?' she enquired.
âI am afraid not.'
âSuggesting I came here does make it seem he does have one.' Belinda tried to prise the information out of the unforthcoming bank manager, allowing him to circumvent his own strict rules without actually giving anything away.
âI must leave you to make such judgement. Return with the necessary authorization and I will give you all the assistance I can.'
âThank you.' For very little, she silently added as she stood up to leave.
There was a knock on the door. A man in his middle twenties, his unusually high forehead drawing attention, entered.
âWhat is it, Jackson?'
âSorry to interrupt, Mr Flavin, but someone said there was a detective here.'
âConstable Draper,' Flavin said, as he indicated Belinda while wondering why there should be an interest in her presence. He mentally and pessimistically propounded a discovery of fraud, a significant and perhaps criminal error in one of the clerks' accounts, a failure of the number of used notes being returned for destruction to match the figure accompanying them ... âWhy do you ask?'
âTo know if she'd want the box.'
âWhat box?'
âI've been helping with the checking of the contents of the vaults and there's a strongbox in the name of Mr and Mrs Ansell. After what's happened, we thought the police might want to know about it.'
Flavin looked at Belinda.
âYes. I'd like to see it,' she said.
âWill you bring it up here, please,' Flavin said.
Moments later, a medium-sized strongbox was placed on the desk after a newspaper had been spread out in preparation.
She used a handkerchief to check it was locked. âDoes the bank hold the keys?'
âNo,' Flavin replied sharply. Had it done, he would have conceived circumstances in which it might be thought he had unlocked the box in order to see what it contained.
âI'll need to take this so I'll organize transport.'
âYou'll need authorization.'
âOf course. Do you mind looking after it until I arrange things?'
âI hope that will not take too long?'
âI'll get it arranged as quickly as possible,' she assured him. âAnd will you make certain no one else touches it?'
After she had left, the clerk said, âIs it staying on your desk, Mr Flavin?'
âBecause of what she said, I suppose it has to.'
The clerk did not leave.
âIt doesn't need two of us to keep an eye on it,' Flavin said. âYou can return to work.'
âBut ...'
âWhat is delaying you?'
âI just wondered ... Shouldn't you sign for the removal from the vault?'
Flavin was very annoyed that, because of unusual events, he had been sufficiently confused to ignore required protocol and, even more unwelcome, had been observed to do so.
Abbotts was met at divisional HQ by Glover. They went up to the conference room which had a slightly raised level at one end, large oblong table in the centre, blackboard on one wall, noticeboard on another, and a single window through which could be seen the unedifying view of part of a suburban road. Vane, a SOCO, a photographer, the two constables who had brought the strongbox from the bank, and a locksmith were waiting, the civilians with growing impatience. Abbotts and Glover finally entered, quickly followed by Belinda.
Told to open the strongbox after it had been checked for prints, the locksmith did so with such apparent ease, it would have seemed to anyone without the necessary experience that the locks had been weak. He replaced the tools he had used in the large leather folder and went to raise the lid.
âLeave it,' Glover said sharply.
âSorry, mate,' was the resentful response. âIs there anything more to do?'
âNo.'
âI'll be off, then.'
He left, unregarded by any of those present.
DC Vane spread out on the unoccupied part of the table a square of specially prepared material which would catch and hold any particle, however small, even dust, which fell onto it. Gloved, he opened the lid of the strongbox and brought out an object wrapped up in newspaper. He placed that to the side of the strongbox, then lifted out the other contents which consisted of jewellery, which made those watching wonder what it was worth if genuine, and four files.
âFind out what's in the newspaper,' Abbotts ordered.
Vane carefully unwrapped the pages of newspaper to expose a fluffy toy monkey made from material.
Belinda exclaimed, âThat must be Georgie!'
âGood God!' Glover muttered.
âIt would seem this was not expected,' Abbotts remarked ironically. He spoke to the SOCO. âWhat about prints?'
âI'll go over the newspaper sheets later, sir. As to the monkey, I'll have a try, but with that fur, there'll only be one or two very small areas able to record.'
âDo we open up the ape, sir?' Glover asked, his mind accepting it might not contain diamonds, but hoping to hell it did.
âYou suggest wasting time having it X-rayed?' Abbotts replied sharply.
âNo, sir.'
There was fresh stitching on the base of the ape. Vane cut through this, eased out the contents on to the square of material. There were small pellets of foam and a plastic bag. The bag was checked for prints; there were none. It was opened. Seven irregularly shaped, dull, greasy âpebbles', with not a glitter from any of them, were inside.
Each diamond was put into an exhibits bag; on the tag of each bag was written the time, date, place of discovery and then was signed by Glover.
âIt seems,' Glover said as he and Belinda went up the stairs to the offices, âthat Sergeant Frick made a very valid point.'
She was silent.
âIntuition is as valid as yesterday's ticket to the Cup Final.'
They topped the stairs, walked along the corridor. Glover stopped by his office. âI wonder what the lads at CPS will go for â murder or manslaughter?'
âYou're presuming Ansell deposited the ape in the strongbox?'
âI doubt I'm being fanciful to think that since it was his strongbox in which the ape was found, that is a valid presumption.' He opened the door and went in.
She stood in the open doorway. Once seated, he looked up. âWell?'
âThere were several slits in the body of the ape, probably caused by a knife.'
âYou may accept I noticed them.'
âWhy was it stabbed?'
âChecking the diamonds were there.'
âOr were they an expression of hatred?'
âYou are in an imaginative frame of mind?'
âI don't think so.'
âThen what are you suggesting?'
âThat maybe this to some extent mirrors what happened in the old days.'
âSuch as?'
âIf you hated someone, you modelled him in clay, drove a knife or needle into the image to ensure his death or serious illness.'
âA very imaginative frame of mind.'
âWe Aussies don't keep our minds tied down to the ground.'
âI thought you told me only one of your parents was Australian.'
âThat's right.'
âThen I suggest whilst in England you respond only to your English genes and learn to show at least some respect for your seniors.'
âI bow each time I say, Yes my Lord Inspector.'
She was surprised when he laughed.
Ansell replaced the phone. He went along to the kitchen and larder, poured himself a gin and tonic, less strong than he wished because he had forgotten to buy another bottle of gin the previous day. The pressure of events was making him forget many things.
He settled in an armchair â one which Eileen had intended to replace because she had decided it had become shabby. He drank.
Detective Inspector Glover would be grateful if he was at the divisional HQ tomorrow morning at ten. He had asked the reason for the request. There were one or two matters to discuss ... Such as? The speaker had replied that it wasn't possible to say what these were over the phone.
He had said he would be at work.
It was suggested that perhaps he would explain to his employers why he might be late?
Tell them the police wanted to question him and they would immediately, being PR men, assume he was heading for jail.
âAnd if I refuse?' he had asked.
âYou might find reason to consider that to have been unwise, Mr Ansell.'
He returned to the larder, but the bottle of gin remained empty. He filled a small glass with sweet Cinzano. Mixing drinks might prove more efficacious than a second gin in rolling back reality. Back in the sitting room, he stared at the blank screen of the television set. Life was a roller-coaster. Having to accept he would never be a good novelist. A good position with the PR company. Marriage in the name of love. A less than cheerful, loving wife. An exhilerating relationship at sea. Having to accept Eileen could have told him where Georgie was and saved Melanie's and her own death.
A
nsell gave his name to the duty constable at the front desk, was shown into an interview room â dull, poorly furnished, the only reading matter a framed list of interviewees' rights.
Glover, closely followed by Belinda, entered. Glover offered a toneless greeting. Belinda, a more welcoming one. They sat, Ansell on one side of the table, Glover and Belinda on the other.
âWe asked if you'd come along, Mr Ansell, to help us answer one or two questions,' Glover said.
Was ironic politeness their trademark? Ansell wondered.
âYou have said on one or two occasions that you did not know Melanie Caine when you were both on the cruise ship, MV
Helios
?'
âYes.'
âWould you like to alter this evidence in view of the fact that you have previously as good as admitted you knew her.'
âI have never said I did.'
âYour previous evidence would be an admission to most. The steward in Bar Orpheus on the
Helios
has sworn on oath that you and Miss Caine were frequently together in the bar; that you, in his opinion, enjoyed a very amorous friendship with her.'
His denial was immediate and sharp because Belinda was there and he did not want her to have to accept he had been duped by sex. A futile wish in the face of the evidence. âHe is either half-seas over or bloody well lying.'
âHe has identified each of you from photographs.'
âThen he is lying.'
âCan you suggest why he should lie, knowing this was a police investigation and one in which he had no immediate interest and therefore no motive to lie?'
âPeople can say something without rhyme or reason for doing so. In his case, perhaps it was the thought of possibly gaining publicity.'
âDid Melanie Caine telephone you at your home after the cruise was over?'
âShe was hardly likely to have done so since we'd never met.'
âTelephonic records prove she did phone your home and the call was answered.'
âThe records have to be wrong.'
âI think you should accept that that is very unlikely. Whilst on the cruise and berthed in Gibraltar, did you buy a tourist attraction in the form of a Barbary ape?'
He did not answer.
âMrs Morley has mentioned that you did.'
âWhen she was not on the cruise?'
âDid you buy it for Miss Caine?'
âHow often do I have to say I did not know her?'
âThen the ape was for your wife?'
âFor myself.'
âYou collect mementoes from your journeys?'
âYes.'
âThen you will have a large number of them since I understand your job demands considerable travel. Where do you keep all such mementoes?'
Growing concern and panic began to negate common sense. âIn my house.'
âThat was searched and there was no such collection. Did you buy the ape for Melanie Caine?'
âI've already said why that's impossible.'
âDid she handle it?'
âFor God's sake, do you want me to write in six-inch high letters that I did not know her?'
âMrs Morley has told us that when she saw the ape on your bed, she picked it up. On it was a scent which she had reason to be certain was not used by your wife.'
âBabs is a tittle-tattle and expert trouble raiser. When she hasn't any dirt to pass on, she makes it up.'
âShe noted some blonde hairs on the ape. Your wife's hair was of a different shade. Where do you think those hairs came from?'
âEither the woman who sold it or Barbara's imagination.'