“I suppose it did,” said Edwina. “Cedric was a good driver, and there was no investigation.”
“So when Laurence also died under suspicious circumstances, it occurred to you that there might be a connection?”
“I asked Dicky Hawkins at the time of Cedric’s death. Of course he denied it, but there was something in his manner, body language . . .
I don’t know.”
“So you think Cedric might have been killed?”
“That’s the problem with these people, Mr. Banks,” Edwina said.
“You just never really know, do you? And now I really must go. I’m tired. Good night.” She hung up.
When Banks put the phone down he could hear Sarabeth Tucek singing “Stillborn,” one of his favorites. So the Hardcastle-Silbert case, such as it was, was over, even if it had been all Derek Wyman’s malicious doing. They’d let Wyman walk out, a free man. There was nothing they could charge him with, and no matter what Edwina Silbert thought, no way they could refute his story, though Banks did suspect that there was more to it than he had told them, that what they had witnessed in the interview room was more of a performance than a confession, and that Wyman had simply managed to stay one step ahead and come up with a foolproof explanation when he needed one.
Hardcastle and Silbert were dead, Wyman was responsible for their deaths, whether intentionally or not, and he had walked away.
Now that he was finished with Wyman, he could devote more thought to his other problem: Sophia. It couldn’t be insurmountable, he believed; there had to be a way of salvaging the relationship, perhaps it was even as simple as just letting a little time pass. Maybe it would also help to convince her that he wasn’t responsible if he let her into one or two more details of the case, including his conversation with Burgess. And a present wouldn’t go amiss, he was certain. Not a CD, but something unique, something that could become a part of her 3 1 0
P E T E R R O B I N S O N
“collection.” He couldn’t replace what she had lost, of course, but he could offer something new, something that, in time, would grow into its own story, would acquire its own pedigree and tradition. By finding the right object, he could demonstrate that he
Nearly an hour passed, and Banks had just switched Sarabeth for Cat Power’s
when his phone rang. He didn’t immediately recognize the voice.
“Alan?”
“Yes.”
“This is Victor, Victor Morton. Sophia’s father. How are you?”
“I’m fine,” said Banks. “What can I do for you?”
“You can tell me what’s going on, for a start.”
Banks’s heart lurched into his throat. Christ, had Sophia told her father about the break-in? Was Victor going to blame Banks, too?
“What do you mean?” he asked, with a dry mouth.
“I had a very interesting conversation with an old colleague yesterday,” Victor went on. “We met just by chance in the street, if you can believe that, and he suggested we have a drink together.”
“Who was it?”
“His name doesn’t matter. It was someone I knew from Bonn, someone I never liked, always suspected of being a bit . . . well, rather like the fellow we were talking about the other day.”
“Like Silbert? A spy?”
“Do you have to spell everything out for whoever’s listening?”
“It doesn’t matter,” said Banks. “The case is closed. Hardcastle suspected Silbert was having an affair and hired someone to get the evidence. Official version. It was just plain lover’s jealousy, after all, and it went terribly wrong. It’s over.”
“Well, perhaps someone should tell my colleague that.”
“What do you mean?”
“It started off as a pleasant-enough conversation, old times, retirement, pension plans and the like, then he started to ask about you, A L L T H E C O L O R S O F D A R K N E S S
3 1 1
what I thought about you as a detective, how I felt about your relationship with my daughter.”
“And?”
“I don’t like being grilled, Alan. I told him nothing. Then he moved on, in a roundabout sort of way, started talking about how it is in consulates and embassies all over the world, how you pick up odd bits of information, pieces of the puzzle, things that are usually best forgotten. I simply agreed with him. Then he asked me if I knew anything about a man called Derek Wyman. I said no. Do you know this person?”
“He was the one,” Banks said. “The one who Hardcastle asked to get the evidence. But it was nothing to do with secrets, at least not the government kind. As I said, it was all to do with jealousy.”