Authors: Jessica Stirling
âThere's a front moving in,' Vaizey said. âWe'll be in for a wet spell, I fear. Are you soaked?'
âJust damp.'
âDry yourself,' he said. âDon't mind me.'
âI do mind you,' Sylvie said. âWhat are you doing here?'
He shrugged.
âI take it this isn't a social visit?' Sylvie said.
âCall it what you like,' Vaizey said. âDid I scare the kiddies?'
âYes.'
âI didn't mean to.'
He rotated the hat, round and round, then lifted the cigarette to his lips and inhaled while Sylvie pulled a towel from the rack above the tin bath and, with her back to the window, began to dry her hair.
âI could do that for you,' Vaizey said.
She knew he was going to say it and it didn't jar. The offer reminded her of Fran, of what Fran had said and what Fran had done to her right here in this room all those months ago. She dabbed the towel to her throat, unfastened the hook at the collar of her blouse and dabbed the towel across the top of her breasts. She still had milk, would have milk for ages yet.
âI think I can manage,' she said.
He placed his hat on the quilt, reached for the candleholder and ground out his cigarette on the rim. He returned to his original position, knees apart, and hands â idle now â cupped on his thighs.
Sylvie rubbed her hair with the towel. She knew he was watching her, eyeing the shape of her under the blouse, under the skirt. She was still thick about the middle and her legs had fattened since Sean had been born. She had thought little enough of it. Sean was Fran's child and if Fran hadn't much liked how pregnancy had changed her then Fran had just had to lump it. But Vaizey's scrutiny made her aware that she was no longer lithe and attractive. She felt only contempt for the man for desiring her.
âWhere were you, you and the girl?'
âWhat business is it of yours?'
âI'm just making conversation,' Vaizey said.
âWe went to a séance.'
âDid you now? Where?'
âAt Madam Lomborosa's house.'
âThat old charlatan,' Vaizey said. âWho did she have on show tonight, the Indian in feathers and war-paint, or the African witch-doctor?'
âNeither,' Sylvie said.
âThey're all just the other woman, Amanda Crowe. She used to be a male impersonator on the variety stage until they teamed up together. They're Sapphos, you know.'
âAre they indeed?' said Sylvie.
âDon't you know what that means?'
âFemale poets?' said Sylvie.
Vaizey laughed, a soft purr in the throat. âI've always been curious as to what Sapphos do, how they achieve â satisfaction?'
âI have no idea,' said Sylvie. âMy posh school education didn't stretch quite that far.'
âDid Hagarty put in an appearance?'
âAlas, no.'
âIt's probably just as well,' said Vaizey.
âWhy do you say that?'
When he stood up she did not jump back. He did not have to stoop to kiss her. He did it tentatively, shyly, like a young boy with a first sweetheart. He touched her only with his lips, the moustache feathery against her cheek, then, to Sylvie's surprise, he sat down again.
âI'm not up for this,' Vaizey said. âI thought I would be, but I'm not.'
âWould you prefer me to resist?'
âI'd prefer you to button your blouse.'
âOh!'
âAnd sit somewhere else. Over there by the window.'
âBy all means,' Sylvie said.
âFlanagan wants his money,' the inspector said.
âHis money? What money?'
âYou don't know what I'm talking about, do you?'
âNo,' said Sylvie. âAnd that's the truth.'
âI don't doubt it,' Vaizey said. âYour friend Hagarty was never one for letting the right hand know what the left was doing. He was going to leave you, Sylvie, leave you and the girl, and the wife and the other familyâ¦'
âOther family?'
âHe has yet another family in Cork.'
âI find that hard to believe.'
âTwo sons to a priest's housekeeper.'
âHow did he find time for all of them?'
âI wish I knew,' said Vaizey.
âYou didn't shoot him on moral grounds, did you?'
âNo. Hagarty was no innocent bystander like some of the others who went to the wall,' Vaizey said. âHe was a money source for the brotherhoods and linked to a network of spies and gunrunners. He refused to trade with the Germans, I will say that for him. He dealt with us instead, with the British. He bought guns and ammunition from sources in England.'
âHow do you know so much about Fran?'
âWe had a very well-placed informer.'
Sylvie could feel the coldness of the window glass against the back of her neck. The secrets that Vaizey dealt in were not the same as her secrets. She understood now why he had refused to press his advantage over her.
âJohn James Flanagan?' she said.
Vaizey did not answer.
Sylvie said, âIf Flanagan's your informer why didn't you arrest Fran long ago? Why did you have to shoot him? No, wait, I think I understand. You're protecting Flanagan. You have to protect an informer as important and well placed as John James just to keep him out of the limelight. The only way you could be sure of doing that was to be rid of Fran once and for all?'
âHagarty wasn't the charming fellow you took him to be.'
âDid he believe in what he was doing?'
Vaizey sighed. âPerhaps. Probably. In the beginning.'
âWhy are you telling me all this now?'
âBecause Flanagan wants the house, this house. He feels he's entitled to it and, I admit, I tend to agree with him.'
âOf course you do,' said Sylvie. âWhen he whistles, you dance.'
âThat's harsh.'
âHarsh, is it?' Sylvie said. âIt'll be harsher still when your bully-boys arrive to evict us. How are you going to explain that to your superiors?'
âMy superiors won't be involved. Hagarty was in partnership with Flanagan in the ownership of property. Hagarty's American sponsors insisted on it and Flanagan had no option but to comply. We knew that the houses were used as arms dumps, of course, but the guns were harmless provided they weren't distributed.'
âIs that why Fran came to the Shamrock?'
âPart of the reason.'
âAnd the other part?'
âHe needed somewhere safe that Flanagan didn't know about. I don't think he entirely trusted John James by that time.'
âHe didn't bargain on meeting my husband, though?'
âNo, and he didn't bargain on meeting you.'
âMe?'
âHagarty saw no harm in mixing business with pleasure.'
âUnlike you?'
âYes,' said Vaizey, with another little sigh, âunlike me.'
âI was more than a fling to him,' Sylvie said. âI gave him a son.'
âHagarty had children everywhere.'
âWhat do you want from me?'
âI came to give you warning. I don't care what you think of me, really. I'm used to being disliked. But there are children downstairs and you have a baby and you aren't to blame for what happened.'
âAm I supposed to grovel and say thank you?'
âYou can't stay here, Sylvie, none of you.'
âCan we not?'
She leaned on the edge of the table. She could feel the typewriting machine behind her, the hood pressing against her buttocks. The machine was a symbol of all that Fran had stood for. From it had poured articles and reports, lies, half-truths and prevarications, all the perceptive warnings that he had thrown before the Irish people and to which they had turned deaf ears.
âI've persuaded Flanagan to find a place for you, to give you and the girl a room in a building in the Liberties. Your widow's pension will tide you over and in time â though I don't know when â you may get some money from the compensation board.'
âFlanagan doesn't have a partnership document, does he, Inspector?'
âFlanagan doesn't need a partnership document, not with Hagarty gone.'
âYou've come here tonight to make sure I don't have it either.'
âIt doesn't matter whether you do or notâ¦'
âWell,' Sylvie said, âI do.'
âPardon?'
âI do have your precious document,' she said.
âWhere is it?'
âHidden away safely. You don't think I'd leave it lying around, do you?' Sylvie said. âHowever, the existence of a partnership agreement will only become an issue if Fran's dead.'
âYou're not going to start that again, are you?' Vaizey said.
âI know he's dead and you know he's dead, but his wife â his legal wife in Huddersfield â doesn't and she might want a share of the proceeds of his estate. I imagine it wasn't your intention to inform her of Fran's death. After all, from what I gather Fran hadn't been in communication with her for years. She'll assume he's decamped to America and taken his cash with him and that she isn't going to see a penny of it. He has brothers, and a mother still alive, though I don't know where they are.'
âGalway,' said Vaizey. âThey want nothing to do with it. As far as they're concerned dear Francis has been dead for years.'
âBecause he was a black sheep, a renegade republican?'
âYes,' said Vaizey. âNow, where's this document?'
âWith a lawyer.'
âWhat are you telling me?'
âI placed it in safe-keeping with a lawyer,' Sylvie said.
âWhat's the lawyer's name?'
âNow that would be telling.'
He came at her suddenly, plunging across the room from the bed. His reaction took her by surprise. He clasped both hands around her waist, lifted her and held her, struggling just a little, above him.
âDo you know what I could do to you?' Vaizey said.
âI know what you'd like to do to me,' Sylvie said.
âI could make you vanish,' Vaizey told her. âI could make you disappear. And what would your daughter do then? Who would take care of your son? That girl downstairs? She can barely take care of herself.'
âYou're hurting me.'
âI'll hurt you a blessed sight more if you don't tell meâ¦' He lowered her, but did not release her. He leaned into her, pressing and aroused. âHow did you come by the document? Did Hagarty give it you?'
She lied without a blush. âYes.'
She was not about to blacken Fran's name further by telling the peeler that she had found the deed and its codicils in a box in the cellar. It galled her to think that Fran had been as careless in handling property as he had been with his women. She would not acknowledge the failing, though, no matter what Vaizey did to her.
âWhen?' Vaizey said.
âThree days before Easter.'
âWhy, why did he give it to you of all people?'
âI think he trusted me.'
âOh, you're a smart piece of work, Sylvie McCulloch, perhaps a bit too smart for your own good. Oh, I couldâ¦'
âWhat? Kiss me again?'
âSmack you,' said Vaizey
âIt would do you no good,' Sylvie said.
âFlanagan has to have that document, you know.'
âSo he can destroy it?'
âYes.'
âIt's too late.' Sylvie broke his hold on her. âI've read it. Now here's a wee surprise for you, Inspector, and for your friend the informer: Fran gave away his half-share in the partnership, signed it away on a witnessed document attached to the property deeds and the partnership agreement.'
âSigned his share to whom â to you?'
âOh no, not me,' said Sylvie. âFran might have been trusting but he wasn't stupid. He left his share to the Catholic Church. Your friend Flanagan is therefore in partnership with His Holiness the Pope, or his Dublin representative. If he wishes to challenge the validity of the documents then I reckon he'd better employ a very sharp team of lawyers.'
âYou're making this up?'
âI'm not,' said Sylvie. âI might just be a heathen Protestant but I feel a whole lot better being under the wing of the Catholic Church right now.'
âI â Flanagan â we'll need to see these documents.'
âOf course,' said Sylvie. âI'll have the lawyer deliver notarised copies within the week; unless you wish me to put you in touch with the archbishop who, I imagine, will be dealing with the matter personally.'
âSend them to Flanagan,' the inspector said.
âNot to General Sir John Maxwell?'
Vaizey let out his breath in a whistling sigh, then, not entirely to Sylvie's surprise, laughed. âBy God, you
are
a smart one. When did you waken up, Sylvie McCulloch? Tell me, just when
did
you waken up?'
âThe day you murdered Fran,' Sylvie said and, stepping past him, lifted his hat from the bed. âDoes that answer your question, Inspector Vaizey? Does that answer all your questions?'
âIt does. Alas, it does,' the inspector said, and, with a little shrug of resignation, gave up his pursuit of justice.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The babies were asleep. They lay side by side across Pauline's cot, a light blanket drawn over them. Maeve was seated at the table nursing a cup of tea and scanning a copy of the
Mirror.
Algie stood by her side, the chair leg still clenched in his fist like a cudgel. Pauline knelt by the mattress in the corner, soothing the children's fears and feeding them, each in turn, one pink fondant cream to bring sweet dreams.
âWhat did the bastard want?' Maeve asked. âWhat did he have to say?'
âAre â do weâ¦?' Pauline began. âTurned out?'
âNo,' said Sylvie. âWhat the inspector wanted, he didn't get. It's settled, or nearly so. Now, Pauline, I need you to give me the name of the priest.'