It must be very hard for HG, having a nerd for a son. I mean, at an age when he should have been cutting his first album and generally treading in his father's footsteps, he was
designing software
. Too embarrassing.
Brie looked up thankfully as we sat down. âWhat've you guys been doing?' she asked.
âChecking up on the castle ghosts,' said Roo.
I hadn't wanted to mention it. I knew Brie would start intuiting as soon as the subject came up.
She did.
âHave you figured out what it was that I saw the other evening? It was like, this looming
shape
, just standing there, in the darkest part of the hall. It was only there for a second, but I saw it quite clearlyâ'
âMan or woman?' I said, helping myself to coffee. I knew an urge to upstage her with my dream, but I didn't want to sound all New-Age phoney about it.
âI don't know. I told you, it was just this
shape
 . . .'
âWell,
what
shape?'
âI couldn't tell; it was dark. The shape was dark and the hall was dark and the evening was getting dark . . .'
âThen how could you see it?'
Dorian interrupted, which was probably just as well. The business of the dream was making me twitchy and suddenly I wanted all the ghost stuff to be nonsense. âThat actress woman saw something too; she said it was a man in Highland dress â but then, she
would
say that. And Morag's seen things.'
âAwful old hag.' Brie shuddered. âIn her case, it was probably DTs. That sort always drinks on the quiet.'
âShe thinks strong drink is an instrument of the devil,' Dorian said. âExcept for whisky.'
Roo stood up abruptly, leaving her coffee untouched. âI'm going for a walk,' she announced. âI need some air.'
âYou'd better be careful,' Dorian said. âIt can be dangerous if the mist comes down. I'll come with you. We can ask Dougal about the weather.'
That's what happens if you're a good listener. You get saddled with people who want to be listened to. Roo and Dorian went off together, and I took the opportunity to pump Brie about Ash.
âHe's gay,' she said. âHe's got to be. One, he's absolutely beautiful, in a gay sort of way, and two, he never made even a flicker of a pass at me.'
My feelings exactly.
It was a strange sort of day and, though I didn't know it, about to get a lot stranger. Sundays are always a little weird when you're on location, because you feel you ought to be working and you're not, and at Dunblair there wasn't much to do. Alex had found a small room with a large TV screen and ensconced himself on the sofa in front of it, cuddling Fenny and saying he didn't feel well, so I went to the bedroom to paint my nails and do some serious thinking, though I wasn't certain what about. The disappearance of Elizabeth Courtney, Roo's love life (lack of), the niggling fact that Alex and I
still
hadn't had sex since he came to Dunblair. I decided to have some tea so I could order Winkworth about, but when I picked up the phone (all the bedrooms had one, like a hotel) a broad Scots accent told me he wasn't available.
âIt's his day oot,' said the accent, possibly Dougal. âAnd Morag's i' the kirk. One of the girrls is here tae cover for them. If there's something ye were wanting, I daresay ye could ask her.'
âTell her to bring me some tea,' I said. âEarl Grey.' I didn't really want it, but the germ of an idea had come to me, and I needed to talk to the girl.
When the tea arrived, it tasted more like PG Tips, stewed rather than brewed, dark and strong and bitter. But I didn't complain.
âWinkworth took my shoe to be mended,' I said, improvising. âThe heel came off. D'you know what he's done with it?'
The girl â Margaret, I think her name was â looked dumb. It wasn't difficult.
âPerhaps it's in his room,' I said. âCould you look?'
âI'm no siccar . . .'
âI'll come with you,' I said. âI know what it looks like.'
Fortunately, it didn't occur to her to point out that Winkworth would be unlikely to keep many women's shoes in his room. Although you never know with some guys . . .
Once we had found the room (but not the shoe), I dismissed her. âDon't worry about it,' I said airily. âI'll ask him myself.'
When I was sure Margaret had gone, I slipped back along the corridor and went in. It was a good thing doors weren't kept locked at Dunblair. I was slightly nervous â in detective thrillers, whenever the heroine goes to search a suspect's room, they're guaranteed to turn up in the middle. âHe's out,' I reassured myself. âI've got plenty of time.' I didn't really know what I was looking for, or where to start, but it's customary to open drawers, so I did. It was a large room, lacking the Basilisk touch, comfortable and, for a man, fairly tidy. The drawers contained the usual things you find in men's drawers: socks, sweaters, boxer shorts. (Why do men always have so many socks? I swear they have more than women have tights or stockings.) In the cupboard, shirts, jeans, jackets, a couple of suits, a few ties. Owing to the informal lifestyle obtaining at Dunblair, he didn't normally wear a tie. In the shoe rack, mostly outdoor footwear and trainers. No pyjamas anywhere (he obviously slept naked or in his boxers), but a burgundy towelling bathrobe hung on the door to the en suite. In the bathroom, toothpaste, razor, Hugo Boss eau de cologne. In short, everything you would expect.
âThis is boring,' I said out loud. âWhy isn't there any personal stuff?'
There were a couple of books by the bed: a Michael Marshall thriller and a book on Middle Eastern politics by someone called Adel Darwish who, from the jacket shot, appeared to be male. Also
Private Eye
and
The Economist
. What butler reads
Private Eye
and
The Economist
? He ought to have a trade publication,
Butling Weekly
or something. And the
Mail
, or the
Sun
, or . . .
Why wasn't there any personal stuff?
No diary, no address book, no laptop. (Presumably he carried his mobile with him, since there was a recharger plugged in at the wall.) No photographs. If he had a wife and two kids, there should be pictures. I
knew
he wasn't married . . .
Even so, there ought to be photographs of
somebody
. His mother, his sister, himself in school uniform, himself as a child with pet gerbil/kitten/tarantula. We all keep those photos, even the embarrassing ones. I've got my best PR shots framed at the mews, plus snaps of me with every famous person I've ever met, ready to include them in my autobiography, but back at my own flat there's a pin-up board with all the family ones. Me as a baby, Pan as a baby, Roo and me as kids on the beach, Roo and me in fancy dress, Mummy in the garden with assorted dogs and children, my grandparents, an aunt, some cousins. Me in a leather jacket on Ben Garvin's motorbike. Roo and me, respectively sixteen and eighteen, dolled up for a party. Me at drama college, as Juliet. Roo's graduation. I've even got some old sepia pictures of relatives long deceased, in the cloche hats and dropped waists of the 1920s, or in one case an Edwardian tea gown.
Winkworth had none. Very, very suspicious. I couldn't wait to tell Roo.
I found the briefcase under the bed. It was one of those multisectioned efforts with an optional shoulder strap, quality leather, unmistakably expensive. Not at all appropriate for a butler, I decided. And it was heavy, suggesting technology inside. The missing laptop.
It was also locked.
A fictional detective would know how to pick the lock, but I hadn't a clue. You were supposed to use a hairpin, only I'd never worn a hairpin in my life, and I wouldn't know what to do with it if I had. Or a nail file (I had those, though not on me). But this lock didn't look easily picked. It was much too efficient a lock for the requirements of a mere butler.
âI
knew
he was a fraud,' I said, feeling vindicated. A genuine butler would have
Butling Weekly
at his bedside, and pictures of his sweet, white-haired old mother in Surbiton, and the laptop on the desk, open for all the world to see. He wouldn't have a briefcase hidden furtively under the bed, with a lock on it that would have defeated James Bond . . .
I heard the footsteps just in time. (Thank God the corridor was uncarpeted.) I shoved the briefcase out of sight and, reduced to desperation, dived after it. Happily the bed was well off the floor and there was a frill screening me from view. I lifted it enough to see feet â girl's feet, in pink trainers. Margaret? I hadn't noticed her footwear, but pink trainers seemed likely. They padded towards the bathroom, did something meaningful there â changing the towels? â then returned towards the door and departed.
I wriggled out, feeling horribly shaky, waited a minute or two, and left.
Roo wasn't around, so I sent her a text. âSerched Ws rm. Defnitly fake. Tell u al latr.' Then I hung about, feeling impatient. I'm not good at waiting.
Roo got back around lunchtime.
âWhat have you done?' she demanded, panicking unnecessarily. âYou can't go around searching people's bedrooms just because you don't get on. It's . . . it's invasion of privacy.'
âHe's invading our privacy,' I said, âby pretending to be a butler when he isn't. Anyway, there's no point in flapping over something I've already done.'
âWhat did you find?'
âIt's what I
didn't
find,' I said, and told her all about it.
âIt's odd,' she conceded, âbut it isn't conclusive. Maybe the family photos are in the attic of his house in Kensington. Maybe his wife has them. She could have left him, and taken the children
and
the pictures. Or maybe they're in his briefcase.'
âRubbish,' I said. âPeople don't keep personal pix in a locked briefcase . . . unless they're actually incriminating. Perhaps he really
is
planning to rob the place, and the pictures show him with notorious Mafiosi.'
âYou're getting carried away,' Roo said. âHarry isn't the criminal type. He's justâ'
âHe's up to
something
,' I declared. âWe have to find out what. HG will be very grateful.'
âThere's nothing else we can do.'
âYes there is. We can open that case.'
âLock-picking isn't one of my talents,' Roo said. âNor yours. Soâ'
âThere's a gun room here somewhere. We could shoot the lock off.'
âYou know, I don't need mousse or hair gel,' Roo remarked. âWith you around, my hair stands on end by itself. Of course we can't
shoot the lock off
. For one thing, it would be awfully noticeable afterwards. Not to mention the noise involved.'
I waved aside
afterwards
. âOnce we know the truth about him, it won't signify.'
âSupposing the truth is that he's just a normal butler? It isn't a crime to lock your briefcase, particularly with people like you around.'
âYou can't keep changing your position,' I said. âYou've admitted it's odd about the photos. It might be far-fetched to suggest he's a crook, but he
is
likely to be an undercover reporter.'
âWhich reminds meâ'
âAnything he's written will be on the computer, which is why he's locked it away. We can get Dorian to hack in and retrieve it. He's pretty keen on you.'
âDon't,' Roo said, with a shudder. âHe tried to kiss me today. He says he likes older women â it's not as if I'm
that
old, either â and we have a connection, and I really understand him. I should never have let him show me his computer game.'
I burst out laughing. âThat's what comes of being a good listener. I
knew
I was right to give it a miss.'
âAnyhow, never mind about Dorian â or Harry. We've got a real problem to sort out. We heard this morning that there are a couple of journos in the village. They were in the pub the other night, only I didn't realise. They're flashing cheque books and trying to get the inside story on your row with the Basilisk.'
âIt doesn't matter if they do,' I said. âI won.'
âIt
does
matter. If anything got into the gutter press, HG would hate it, and you can't blame him. Basilisa
is
his wife, after all. And without HG we have no series.'
âThere's nothing we can do,' I said. âYou're not used to working with celebs, are you? We have the paparazzi on our tails all the time; it goes with the territory. We can always leak them something about my wedding to keep them happy.'
âI think they'd prefer the fight,' Roo said. âViolence beats romance in the popularity stakes, any day.'
 Â
Ruth
Sunday was usually a quiet day, time to have a lie-in and do nothing, a vital oasis of calm in the chaos of the working week. There was little to show that this Sunday was going to be any different, no forewarning of the drama that was to come. I lost my lie-in to Delphi's dream-phantoms, my solitary walk to Dorian's determination to keep me company. HG, he told me, had taken Basilisa away for a day or so to placate her, visiting an exclusive hotel with designer cuisine, deluxe indoor pool and spa, beauty therapy (for the Basilisk) and golf (for HG). The thought of having to work with her again appalled me, but that was my job, I would do it if it killed me, and in the meantime I tried to clear my mind of worry and anticipation and enjoy my day off. I was succeeding so well that Dorian's amorous advances went unnoticed until he flung his arms round me and attempted to eat my face.