I don’t think either of us has benefited much from the experience.’ I stood up. ‘Now, if you’ll excuse me.’

‘I have something for you…’ she said conspiratorially. She sure did have something for me, but our little exchange had revealed I wasn’t going to get it. Nor had Andrew Ellis, apparently. ‘I’ve been asked to give you this.’ She reached into her handbag and laid a package on the table. It was a slab about four inches by six and an inch or so thick, wrapped in brown parcel paper and bound with string.

‘What is it?’ I asked.

‘I honestly do not know,’ she said. ‘It is from Ferenc, and I was told to tell you that he will be in touch to discuss its significance.’

I picked it up. It was light and had a little give in it, like it contained paper. I made to untie it when she laid a hand on mine. A warm, firm hand that sent an electric current through me.

‘Do not open it now. Ferenc tell me that you must open it only in private. It explains everything…’

‘Okay…’ I slipped the package into my coat pocket. ‘But my mother always told me never to accept presents from pretty girls…’

She looked at me blankly. Magda was one of the sexiest women I had ever clapped my eyes on — and my eyes really were clapped on her — but she had absolutely no sense of humour. For some reason I could never understand, a sense of humour in a woman was important to me. Maybe because she’d needed it to go to bed with me.

I shrugged. ‘Well, Magda, we seem to have run out of things to say. It’s a pity Ferenc couldn’t have showed up in person, and I will have a look at what he sent me, but I don’t see that we have any more business together.’

‘You stay here,’ she said, rising from her chair. ‘Drink another coffee. It is best that we are not seen leaving together. I will go first but I suggest you wait at least ten minutes before you follow.’

‘Okay…’ I resisted the temptation to smirk. It was all too Orson Welles for me. This was Glasgow, not Vienna or Budapest.

I watched her go. She had the kind of figure you watched go.

As soon as she was out of sight, I looked at my watch and decided I had better things to do than play secret agent. Without waiting, I drained my cup, got up and headed out of the station and darted through the chill rain and across the street to my office.

The stairwell that led up to my office was narrow; wide enough to allow two people to pass each other if they angled shoulders appropriately. The two large figures who came charging down the stairs did so so fast that I had to flatten myself against the wall. Even with that, the shoulder of the second one slammed painfully into me. I expressed myself loudly and in eloquent Anglo-Saxon and grabbed his raincoat as he passed. I am pretty quick on my feet and I was ready to get chummy but he moved with professional speed, arcing his arm up and around mine and locking it, the heel of his other hand hammering home into the side of my jaw. His buddy joined in and within a second I was down on the steps with blows raining down fast. I was stunned but not out and it gave them the time they needed to get down the stairs and out of the door. I pulled myself up into a sitting position and put a shaking hand up to my face. My nose was bleeding but not broken.

There was no point in chasing after them. They could have headed in any direction when they hit the street and, anyway, there was always the danger I might catch up with them.

And, looking up the stairwell towards my office landing, I decided it might be more beneficial to find out where they had come from, rather than where they were headed.

The last person I expected to find waiting for me when I returned to my office was Andrew Ellis. After all, it had been his wife who’d been my client, not him.

But, on balance, that wasn’t the most discomfiting thing about Ellis’s presence in my business premises.

Alarm bells had begun to ring as soon as I found my office door unlocked. Not jemmied or forced, unlocked. Archie had a set of keys, of course, but I wasn’t expecting him back until later that afternoon. As I had suspected, this was where my stairwell dance partners had come from.

I stepped into my office and found it trashed. Not as if someone had been rifling through it, more as if Rocky Marciano and Jersey Joe Walcott had decided to hold a rematch there.

And then there was Ellis.

I heard him before I saw him: short, shallow urgent breathing. I found him behind my desk, next to where my captain’s chair had been tipped over and paper and the shattered glass shade of my desk light lay scattered on the bare boards of the floor. He was staring up at the ceiling, the expression on his face one of intense concentration, like a track athlete focusing on the race. But Ellis wasn’t going to win a Melbourne gold. This was a race he was going to lose.

There was blood everywhere, welling up from the wound on his chest, a vast bloom of crimson on the white of his shirt-front. The weapon lay next to him: a broad-bladed hunting-style knife. The sight of the knife did nothing to cheer me up; not just because the size and type of blade would have done the maximum damage.

It was my knife.

The one I kept in my office drawer and never used for anything more violent than rendering open my rent bill.

I knelt down beside Ellis and applied some pressure to the wound with a handkerchief that I folded into a pad. I looked around for the ’phone; it lay thrown across the room, the lead ripped from its connection box on the skirting board. Not that that mattered much. I probably wouldn’t have made the call to summon an ambulance then anyway. In the war, and on one occasion after, I had stayed with a man to ease his way out; and that was my job here. But I needed to know something first.

‘Who did this to you, Andrew?’ I asked.

He turned his intense gaze from the ceiling to my face, moving his eyes only and keeping his head still, as if held in place by a vice. His breathing came even faster, as if he was summoning up the energy to speak. He moved his pale lips but nothing came out. Ellis had started to shiver, a sign that he had passed that point where there was enough blood left in him to maintain body temperature. He tried again, and this time when it came out, it was short and hissed and I couldn’t make out what he said.

‘Who?’ I repeated. ‘I couldn’t hear you.’ I could feel the handkerchief warm and wet under my hand. I felt damp seep into the fabric of my suit trousers, at the knee, and realized I was kneeling in a pool of Ellis’s blood. Not long.

‘Tanglewood.’

‘Who is Tanglewood? What is Tanglewood?’ I asked. He shook his head. Small, sharp, urgent movements.

‘Tanglewood. You’ve got… to get… to Tanglewood…’ He reached up with his right hand and grabbed the collar of my coat, pulling me close to him. His breath spilled in my face and I could feel there was no warmth in it. His eyes were locked on mine, urgent, pleading, desperate. Then, in a second, like I had seen so many times before, the light went from them.

And it was in that pose, his hand slipping from its grasp on my collar, his face still close to mine, which itself was bruised and bloodied from my encounter on the stairs, and looking for all the world like Ellis and I were in the last stages of a fight to the death, that the coppers burst in through my office door.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

I was given the third degree by Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.

The balding, fat Detective Inspector, who did most of the talking, didn’t introduce himself or the skinny, vacant-looking Detective Sergeant next to him who did none of it. Throughout the questions about when I was supposed to have gotten back to my office and found Ellis, and what my supposed connection with him was, and where and when I was supposed to have been when Ellis was being filleted with my knife, I half expected the Detective Sergeant to unfold a handkerchief, tap a hard-boiled egg on the desktop and start peeling it, only to have the fat senior copper slap it out of his hands. I knew I was being too glib, too flippant about the position I was in, but there were too many people to back up my story for them to seriously believe I had murdered Andrew Ellis.

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