'What did you tell him then?'

'I told him Alan would be back at work next day, so he'd have to make do with that.'

Yes, they'd made do with that all right...

'And the letter? You gave him the letter?'

'The letter? That was just lying on the hall table – I was going to take it in to Lewes for him. I said to him – to Alan's friend – that the new address might be in there, but he said it'd be a bit much to open it because it was marked 'private'.'

Roskill closed his eyes. The room seemed still and airless and close, but there was a chill down his back. She had killed him. She had killed him in innocence, but as surely as if she'd planted the T.

P.D.X. with her own hands.

'Hullo, Hugh – are you still there?'

He blinked. 'Yes, Penelope. So you gave it to him.'

'Well, he said we shouldn't open it. But he was going straight back to London and he'd post it there. So I gave it to him, of course. I suppose the clot's forgotten all about it. I'm sorry if it was important, but he seemed a sensible type.'

A sensible type of killer, certainly. And lucky too.

'What was he like?'

The friend – he was dishy. Dark hair and a super tan – very Mediterranean. But dressed like a bank clerk, all grey suit and striped shirt and cuff links, you know.'

dummy2

If it came to the pinch he could take her up to the gallery in Records, but the fellow might not even be in them, not if he was one of Hassan's men, and in any case was probably long gone by now.

More immediately, Penelope had turned their suspicions into fact.

And not only fact, for she had given the killers the solid motivation they had needed to take such risks and to plan so elaborately: they had known what Alan had seen and what he planned to do about it.

So they had moved to eliminate not a risk, but a certainty.

'It was an accident, was it?'

Mary was staring at him.

'An accident?'

'I'm not blind, Hugh. The look on your face a moment ago – you looked as though someone had read your death sentence. But it was Alan's, wasn't it – that letter the man took away – it was Alan's.'

The risk had been there from the start, that she would suspect there was more to Alan's death than mere accident the moment he started asking questions. But now she too had more than suspicion on which to work.

'Hugh. I know very well that Alan worked for some branch of security. I knew it because he never talked about his work, when he always told me about everything else. But I didn't know it was dangerous.' She looked at Roskill questioningly, almost pleadingly.

'I accept you can't tell me why – if that's your job, I do understand dummy2

it, Hugh. But at least you can tell me how he really died.'

He said softly, 'Does it matter, Mary?'

'It matters to me. Of all of them, Hugh, Alan was my special one.

Betty was ill when he was little, and I practically brought him up.'

She paused. 'I'm not bargaining – I'll tell you everything I know.

But I'd – I'd feel better if I knew that he died to some purpose, and not because of a silly mistake he made in his work.'

The rules said 'no'. The rules said he must always wear a double face and tell outsiders nothing more than was needed to make them co-operate. But the rules were not ends in themselves, just as the interest and security of the realm was not an end in itself.

So to Mary the rules must say 'yes', or go straight out of the window: her peace of mind was what it was all about.

'It wasn't an accident.' He put his hand over hers. 'It looked like an accident, but it wasn't. And I don't believe it had anything to do with his job, Mary. It wasn't a particularly dangerous job. But he saw something, or maybe heard something, while he was down here on leave, and he was killed before he could report it. And he didn't feel a thing – I promise you.' Mary remained silent for a moment.

'Thank you, Hugh,' she said at length. 'I'll never tell anyone what you've told me, not even Betty.' She drew a deep breath. 'And now you must ask me your questions – you want to know what Alan did on his leave.'

'I think it's just that Tuesday morning that matters – the day he left.

He left in a hurry, didn't he.'

dummy2

'In a frightful rush,' Mary nodded. 'He was going to go after lunch, but when he came back from the Beacon he'd changed his mind.'

'He'd walked up to the Beacon?'

'He rode up on Sammy – Penny's horse. She's half his horse, actually. She was, I mean ... He paid half Sammy's bills on condition he had first choice during his leaves. He always used to take Sammy out on the hills first thing in

Вы читаете The Alamut Ambush
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату