“Yes. She told me about your little visit yesterday.”
“Charming woman,” Banks said.
“Are you?”
“Don’t you think it would be better coming from you?”
“So you haven’t told Annie yet?”
“No. I haven’t told her anything. I’ve been trying to decide. Maybe you can help me.”
“How?”
“Convince me you’re not a lying, cheating bastard.”
Keane laughed. “Well, I
“You know what I mean.”
“Look,” Keane went on, “the relationship Helen and I have is more like that of friends. We’re of use to one another. She doesn’t mind if I have other women. Surely she told you that?”
“But you
“Yes. We had to get married. I mean, she was an illegal immigrant. They’d have sent her back to Kosovo. I did it for her sake.”
“That’s big of you. You don’t love her?”
“Love? What’s that?”
“If you don’t know, I can’t explain it to you.”
“It’s not something I’ve ever experienced,” Keane said, studying the whiskey in his glass. “All my life I’ve had to live by my wits, sink or swim. I haven’t had time for love. Sure you won’t have a drop of this?” He proffered the bottle.
Banks shook his head. He realized his glass was empty and poured a little more Laphroaig. He was already feeling its effects, he noticed when he moved, and decided to make this one his last, and to drink it slowly. “Anyway,” he went on, “it’s not a matter of whether Helen minds if you have other women or not; it’s how
“Still her champion, are you? Her knight in shining armor?”
“Her friend.” Banks felt as if he was slurring his words a bit now, but he hadn’t drunk much more since he’d poured the third glass. There was also an irritating buzzing in his ears, and he was starting to feel really tired. He shook it off. Fatigue.
Keane’s mobile played a tune.
“Aren’t you going to answer it?” Banks asked.
“Probably work. Whoever it is, they can leave a message. Look, Alan, if it makes you feel any better, I’ll explain the situation to Annie,” said Keane. “She’s broad-minded. I’m sure she’ll understand.”
“I wouldn’t be too certain of that.”
“Oh, why? Know something I don’t?”
“I know Annie, and deep down she’s a lot more traditional than you think. If she’s got strong feelings for you, she’s not going to play second fiddle to your wife, no matter how convenient the marriage, or how Platonic the relationship.”
“Well, we’ll just have to see, won’t we?”
“When?”
“The next time I see her. I promise. How’s the case going?”
Banks wasn’t willing to talk about the case to Keane, even though he had assisted as a consultant on the art forgery side. He just shrugged. It felt as if he were hoisting the weight of the world on his shoulders. He took another sip of whiskey – the glass was heavy, too – and when he put it down on the arm of the sofa he felt himself sliding sideways, so he was lying on his side, and he couldn’t raise himself to a sitting position again. He heard his own telephone ringing in the distance but couldn’t for the life of him drag himself off the sofa to answer it.
“What about this identity parade you mentioned?” Keane said, his voice now sounding far away. “I’ve been looking forward to it.”
Banks couldn’t speak.
“It was very clever of you,” Keane said. “You thought your witness would identify
Banks still couldn’t make his tongue move.
“What’s the problem?” Keane asked. “A bit too much to drink?”
“Go now,” Banks managed to say, though it probably sounded more like a grunt.
“I don’t think so,” said Keane. “You’re just starting to feel the effects. See if you can stand up now. Just try it.”
Banks tried. He couldn’t move more than an inch or two. Too heavy.
“Eventually, you’ll go to sleep,” Keane said, his voice an echoing monotone now, like a hypnotist’s. “And when you wake in the morning, you won’t remember a thing. At least you wouldn’t remember a thing if you
“What’s wrong, Guv?” Winsome asked, leaning over her.
“This number.” Annie pointed. “I know it. It’s Phil’s BMW.”
“Are you certain?”
“Yes. I don’t know why. I just remember these things. There’s no mistake. He got a parking ticket two streets away from Kirk’s Garage on the seventeenth of September.”
Winsome checked with her file. “That’s one of the times Masefield rented the Jeep Cherokee,” she said. “Look, it doesn’t make sense. Maybe the bloke who wrote the ticket made a mistake?”
“Maybe,” said Annie, as the thing that had been bothering her rose to the surface of her mind. Banks had said during their argument that morning that he had met Phil a
It might be nothing. An easy mistake to make. But now this. The BMW number. And it was true that Phil had only come onto the scene last summer, when both Roland Gardiner and Thomas McMahon had told people their fortunes were on the rise. Annie had only met him herself at the Turner reception, and he had phoned her a month or so later, determined not to take no for an answer.
Annie didn’t like the direction in which her thoughts were turning, but even as she fought against the growing realization, she found herself remembering the night she was called away from her dinner at The Angel with Phil to the Jennings Field fire. Of course the accelerant didn’t match the petrol from the Jeep Cherokee’s fuel tank. Phil had been in his own car that evening, the BMW. He could hardly turn up for dinner in the rented Cherokee the police were all looking for, and he wouldn’t have had time both to return it and to get cleaned up. Worth the risk for the alibi. Annie herself. A perfect alibi. And a source of information on the shape the investigation was taking. The horse’s mouth. Horse’s arse, more likely.
“There could be a simple explanation,” Winsome suggested. “It was well before the murders, too. Maybe it’s just coincidence?”
“I know that,” said Annie, remembering that it was also around the time he had phoned and asked her out for the first time. “But we have to find out.”
Her hand was shaking, but she dialed Phil’s mobile number.
No answer. Just the voice mail.
She phoned Banks at home.
No answer. After a few rings she was patched through to the answering service. She didn’t leave a message. She tried his mobile, too, but it was turned off.
That was odd. Banks had