She regarded him steadily for a moment then said, ‘And if that was my motive, why on earth would I be sitting here talking to the local king of the cops?’
‘Wasn’t your idea to contact me, luv. It was Mick Purdy’s.’
‘So I’m keeping stuff from Mick too?’
Dalziel shrugged and said, ‘All women keep stuff from their men. And vice versa. As you found out. Usually doesn’t matter. No, the big test will come if you find Alex and get faced with the choice: do I take off with the bad cop who’s got the big bucks, or do I stay true to the good cop who’s just got his pension to look forward to.’
‘Is that what you really think might happen, Mr Dalziel?’ she said.
‘How should I know? This show’s been running for seven years and I’ve just strayed in from the wings.’
A waitress who had been hovering said, ‘Are you ready to order yet, or would you like a little more time?’
Gina said, ‘I’m fine. I’ll just have the beef carpaccio with a green salad.’
‘I’ll have beef as well, luv,’ said Dalziel. ‘But I’ll have mine roast with Yorkshire pud and lots of spuds. And we’ll have a bottle of Barolo to wash that down.’
‘Actually I’d prefer a white, a Montana sauvignon blanc, perhaps,’ said Gina.
‘Fair enough. We’ll have one of them too,’ said Dalziel.
They sat in silence for a while after the waitress had gone. There was a buffet party going on in the gardens. The chatter reached them, not loud enough to be distracting, more like a treeful of birds or the babbling of a brook. And there was music, too; classical but tuneful with it and live not canned-this was, after all, the Keldale. He traced its source to a small group playing in the pagoda.
‘That Bach?’ he said.
‘Mozart,’ she said. ‘Mr Dalziel, let’s talk straight. One way and another I know cops. I reckon a good police technique here would be to start with a bit of provocation to see if it would shake anything out of me. Then lull me with a bit of idle chit-chat about music, say. Then try to catch me with some more provocation. Eventually, over coffee, we might get down to some constructive talk. Good technique, perhaps, but it won’t make for a very enjoyable lunch.’
Dalziel’s mobile rang. He took it out of his pocket, glanced at the display then put it to his ear and said, ‘Yeah?’
He listened for a moment then said, ‘Thanks for that. Just keep a close eye on him OK? A very close eye.’
He replaced the phone and smiled at the blonde.
‘You don’t look the shakeable type to me,’ he said. ‘So let’s drink to constructive talk.’
He picked up the heavy crystal water jug and topped her glass up, then did the same with his own. There was still some water left in the vessel, but he raised it above his head and waggled it at a waitress who was serving a nearby table and called, ‘Refill here, luv, when you’re ready.’
Gina Wolfe watched him, puzzled. He didn’t look like a man who made toasts in water. A change in the buffet music from lively Mozart to dreamy Strauss drew her attention to the party in the garden. They seemed to be enjoying themselves. There was a colourful semi-formalism about the way they were dressed. Not a wedding party; no buttonholes, no one in morning suits. Then she saw a woman holding a baby. The child was wrapped in a long white robe that floated in the gentle breeze.
A christening. Her heart made a little movement in her breast and she felt tears forcing their way upwards into her eyes.
Then her breathing stopped and she blinked furiously to try to remove the watery veil through which she was peering.
And at that moment the jug slipped from Dalziel’s fingers and crashed on to the table.
12.15-12.25
The claims to quality made by the Keldale were more than justified by the noise produced by the shattering jug.
No unbreakable plastic this, nor cheap glass which dissolves into powder, but genuine high-tensile crystal that exploded in a scintillation of diamantine fragments, turning heads not only on the terrace but in the garden too.
Peter Pascoe was already on his third glass of champagne and his sixth lobster ball.
‘Enjoying yourself,’ said Ellie, coming up alongside him.
‘You know, I do believe I am,’ he said. ‘These fish fingers are really rather nice. As for the bubbly…you did say you were driving us home, right?’
‘Yes. My turn. I’m measuring the units carefully, which, considering the quality of this stuff, is a real sacrifice. I may expect to be rewarded for my relative temperance when we get home, so don’t go over the top, so to speak.’
‘You interest me strangely,’ said Pascoe. ‘Talking of temperance, I hope Rosie’s sticking to the juice. We don’t want her doing her Gigi act.’
‘No problem. Nothing alcoholic or even bubbly with her performance coming up.’
‘Performance?’ said Pascoe, alarmed. ‘You didn’t say anything about a performance.’
‘Didn’t I?’ said Ellie innocently. ‘It’s just a little clarinet duet Ali put together for Rosie and another star pupil. It’ll give the Sinfonietta quartet the chance to get some refreshment.’
‘Oh God. I need another drink.’
As if in response, Ed Muir approached with a champagne bottle at the ready.
‘Top up, Peter?’ he asked.
‘You bet.’
He watched approvingly as the man took his glass. He’d only met Muir a couple of times previously, hadn’t felt able to relate very closely to him, perhaps because of the gap between his appearance and his manner. With his shaven head and five-o’clock shadow he looked like someone you’d step aside for if you met him on a lonely street. But his quiet speech and self-effacing manner faded him into the background when you met him in a group. Today, however, at his daughter’s christening, he was so full of joy and pride that he generated more warmth than the pleasant autumn sun.
And if any doubt about his clubbability remained, the way he tipped a champagne bottle tipped the balance.
Ali Wintershine had picked well!
‘Great party, Ed,’ said Pascoe effusively. ‘The perfect way to launch little…’
For a moment the baby’s name escaped him. Then he saw Ellie mouthing something at him.
‘…Lolita,’ he concluded triumphantly.
Ellie rolled her eyes upwards in exasperation while Muir looked slightly puzzled as it came to Pascoe that the child’s name was Lucinda.
To correct or not correct? But before he could reach a decision God intervened in the form of an explosion somewhere behind him.
Sensitized by the anti-terrorist briefings which were now a staple of police life, Pascoe span round.
Whatever had happened had happened at a table right on the edge of the terrace. Attention centred on a large fat man and a willowy blonde, both on their feet, she looking a touch damp down the front of her dress, he mouthing what were presumably apologies as he tried to wipe her dry with his napkin.
‘Oh my God,’ said Ellie. ‘Et in Arcadia ego!’
‘What the hell’s he doing at the Keldale?’ said Pascoe, assuming the high tone of the habitue. ‘And who’s that with him?’
‘I don’t know, but if he doesn’t stop trying to massage her tits, I think he might get his face punched,’ said Ellie hopefully.
This entertaining possibility was unhappily brought to nothing by the rapid arrival of a darkly handsome young man who, assisted by a couple of waitresses, smoothly restored calm and order to the table. Pascoe worked out