her – not to mention Deborah's description – must be virtually meaningless. She's a chimera, isn't she? False fingernails. False hair.' She glanced at the chest of drawers. Something seemed to occur to her, for she went to them, pulled one open, and fingered through the undergarments. She held up a black brassiere. 'False everything else.'
St James joined them. He took the wig from Lynley and carried it to the window where he opened the curtains and held it under the natural light. The texture told him that the hair was real.
'Did you know she wore a wig, Deb?' Lynley asked.
'No, of course not. How could I have known?'
'It's a high-quality piece,' St James said. 'You'd have no cause to think it a wig.' He examined it closely, running his fingers across the inner webbing. As he did so, a hair came loose – not one of those which comprised the wig, but another shorter hair that had detached itself from the wearer, becoming caught up in the webbing. St James plucked it completely free, held it up to the light, and handed the wig back to Lynley.
'What is it, Simon?' Lady Helen asked.
He didn't reply at once. Instead, he stared at the single hair between his fingers, realizing what it had to imply and coming to terms with what that implication had to mean. There was only one explanation that made any sense, only one explanation that accounted for Tina Cogin's disappearance. Still, he took a moment to test his theory.
'Have you worn this, Deborah?'
'I? No. What makes you think that?'
At the desk, he took a piece of white paper from the top drawer. He placed the hair on this and carried both back to the light.
'The hair,' he said. 'It's red.'
He looked up at Deborah and saw her expression change from wonder to realization.
'Is it possible?' he asked her, for since she was the only one who had seen them both she was also the only one who could possibly confirm it.
'Oh, Simon. I'm no good at this. I don't know. I don't
'But you saw her. You were with her. She gave you a drink.'
'The drink,' Deborah said. She dashed from the room. In a moment, the others heard her door crash back against the wall of her flat.
Lady Helen spoke. 'What is it? You can't possibly be thinking Deborah has anything to do with all this. The woman's incognita. That's all it is, plain and simple. She's been in disguise.'
St James placed the piece of paper on the desk. He placed the hair on top of it. He heard over and over that single word.
'My God,' he said. 'She was telling everyone she met. Tina Cogin.
Deborah flew into the room, in one hand the photograph she had brought with her from Cornwall, in the other hand a small card. She handed both to St James.
'Turn them over,' she said.
He didn't have to do so. He knew already that the handwriting would be identical on each.
'It's the card she gave me, Simon. The recipe for her drink. And on the back of Mick's picture…'
Lynley joined them, taking the card and the photograph from St James. 'God almighty,' he murmured.
'What on earth is it?' Lady Helen asked.
'The reason Harry Cambrey's been building Mick's reputation as a real man's man, I should guess,' St James said.
Deborah poured boiling water into the teapot and carried it to the small oak table which they had moved into the sitting area of her flat. They took places round it, Deborah and Lynley sitting on the day bed, Lady Helen and St James on ladder-back chairs. St James picked up the savings book which lay among the other items attached to Mick Cambrey's life and his death: the manila folder entitled
'These ten withdrawals from the account,' Lady Helen said, pointing to them. 'They match what Tina – what Mick Cambrey paid in rent. And the time works right with the facts, Simon. September to June.'
'Long before he and Mark began dealing in cocaine,' Lynley said.
'So that's not how he got the money for the flat?' Deborah asked.
'Not according to Mark.'
Lady Helen ran her finger down the page which listed the deposits. She said, 'But he's put money in every two weeks for a year. Where on earth did it come from?'
St James flipped to the front of the book, scanning the entries. 'Obviously, he had another source of income.'
The amount of money comprising each deposit, St James saw, was not consistent. Sometimes it was significant, other times barely so. Thus, he discounted the second possibility that had risen in his mind upon noting the regularity of the payments into Mick's account. They couldn't be the result of blackmail. Blackmailers generally increase the cost of suppressing a damaging piece of information. Greed feeds on itself; easy money begs for more.
'Beyond that,' Lynley said, 'Mark told us that they'd reinvested their profits in a second, larger buy. His taking the
Deborah poured the tea. St James scooped up his customary four spoonfuls of sugar before Lady Helen shuddered and handed the bowl to Deborah. She picked up the manila folder.
'Mick must have been selling his share of the cocaine in London. Surely, if he'd been doing so in Nanrunnel, someone would have discovered it eventually. Mrs Swann, for instance. I can hardly think she would have let something like that go unnoticed.'
'That makes sense,' Lynley agreed. 'He had a reputation as a journalist in Cornwall. He'd hardly have jeopardized it by selling cocaine there when he could just as easily have done so here.'
'But I've got the impression he had a reputation here in London as well,' St James said. 'He'd worked here, hadn't he, before returning to Cornwall?'
'But not as Tina Cogin,' Deborah pointed out. 'Surely he must have sold the drugs as a woman.'
'He became Tina in September,' Lady Helen said. 'He took this flat in September. He began selling the following March. Plenty of time to amass a list of buyers.' She tapped her fingers against the folder. 'We were wondering what was meant by 'prospects', weren't we? Perhaps now we know. Shall we see what sort of prospects these really are?'
'If they're prospective cocaine buyers,' Lynley said, 'they're hardly going to admit the fact.'
Lady Helen smiled serenely. 'Not to the police, Tommy darling. Of course.'
St James knew what that angelic smile meant. If anyone could wrangle information from a total stranger, it would be Lady Helen. Light-hearted chitchat leading down the primrose path to disclosure and co-operation was her special talent. She had already proved that with the caretaker of Shrewsbury Court Apartments. Obtaining the key to Mick's flat had been child's play for her. This list of prospects was merely one step advanced, a moderate challenge. She would become Sister Helen from the Salvation Army, or Helen the Saved from a drug rehabilitation programme, or Helen the Desperate looking for a score. But ultimately, in some way, she would ferret out the truth.
'If Mick was selling in London, a buyer may have followed him to Cornwall,' St James said.
'But, if he was selling as Tina, how would someone know who he really was?' Deborah asked.
'Perhaps he was recognized. Perhaps a buyer, who knew him as Mick, saw him when he was posing as Tina.'
'And followed him to Cornwall? Why? Blackmail?'
'What better way to get cocaine? If the buyer was having a hard time coming up with the money, why not blackmail Cambrey for a payment in drugs?' St James picked up items one by one. He studied them, fingered them, dropped them back on the table. 'But Cambrey wouldn't want to risk his reputation in Cornwall by giving in to the blackmail. So he and the buyer argued. He was hit. He struck his head and died. The buyer took the money that was in the cottage sitting room. Anyone who's desperate for drugs – and who's just killed a man – is hardly going to draw the line at taking money lying right in the open.'