Common, ain't it?' she'd added, tossing down her nail file and picking up the buffer.)
Inside the cabinet were two or three bottles each of Remy, Tanqueray, Black Bush and aged Scotch, fallen off backs of vans (according to Fiona): gifts from villains that Racer had done little favors for. There was a miniature replica of a beer keg with a spout and a small cup for catching the whiskey. Right at eye level, if you were a cat. Cyril often wandered from the inner to the outer office in a weaving, wondering way.
'He'll get sick,' Fiona had said after one of the booze bin jaunts.
'Cyril? You know he's only doing it to drive Racer crazy.'
'Maybe he should have a liver test.'
'If you want my opinion,' said Fiona, nodding toward her beloved (now sick) superintendent, 'a couple of weeks off-'
'No, I do not want your opinion, Miss Clingmore. I cannot recall the last time-if ever there was one-that I wanted your opinion.' He was still twirling his thumbs, looking from his secretary to his superintendent with that
Fiona pursed her bright red lips and said, hefting the pile of papers, 'So you want me to shred this lot, I expect.' She quietly chewed her gum and regarded him, poker-faced.
Racer's already alcohol-mottled face flushed a rosier red. '
'No? What about all them-those-letters to the commissioner last year. You surely didn't tell me to file-'
'Take those papers and your jeweled talons,' (Fiona was deeply into nail art) 'out of here. And see if that cat's roaming the halls and walking across the forensics lab tables.
With the weight of the papers, she still managed an indifferent shrug. 'Well, I still say anyone that's not had sick leave in fifteen years deserves more consideration.' Turning to go, she added, 'I'll just take these to the shredder.' Fiona exited to the tiny tinkle of glass on glass.
Wiggins was still holding a copy of
Jury just shook his head. That Wiggins had got to the point where he could measure his medications without even looking up from his reading was proof of a practiced hand indeed. 'I'm not talking Fisherman's Friends and charcoal biscuits, I'm talking
Wiggins stopped tapping his honeyed spoon against the glass and looked from
'Two weeks off, flat on my back. More or less.' Jury scratched his head over the wording of a question.
Jury scratched away, half-conscious of the sergeant's rather ragged breathing. Practicing for the doctor himself, perhaps? He looked up; Wiggins was looking at Jury sadly. Across the corner of the entertainment magazine he held was a banner saying,
Wiggins said, 'My doctor suggested just that a while back. A year or two ago.'
Jury smiled at the fact that now Wiggins sounded somewhat envious. '
Jury nodded toward the magazine. 'Or Time Out. Nervous collapse, how about that? He certainly looks as if he might have one.'
Wiggins flipped the magazine over, looked at the cover, said, 'Well, apparently he thinks he is. 'The Last Wind Blows.' It's his last concert.'
'Whose?' Jury looked up. Where had he seen the face?
'Charlie Raine's. He's lead guitarist for this rock group, Sirocco. Surely you've heard of them.'
That was it. Posters tacked up around London. 'Last
'A shame, isn't it?'
Jury penned in another answer to another inane question. 'A publicity stunt, more likely.'
'I don't know, sir. Actually, when you think of it, success is pretty hard on a person.'
Putting aside his pen, Jury said, 'We should know.'
'What sea and what sands are you going to?' His smile was like the last tiny sliver of waning moon.
'Yorkshire.'
The magazine fell to the desk; the pen dropped. They had been across the North Yorkshire moors years ago. It was not the high point in Sergeant Wiggins's career.
'
Wiggins gave him a sickly smile.
Jury rose, stretched, and got out a cigarette. He went round to Wiggins's desk and added, looking down at the picture of the young singer, 'And maybe awhile in Cornwall. Don't you have a day or two of leave coming up?' Jury nodded at the form. 'Why don't you take it?'
Wiggins took fright momentarily. 'I expect you could call that sea and sand,' he said with an unusual turn of mild humor.
Jury lit a cigarette, looked at the face on
'Heathrow was flooded with fans. They had enough police for a terrorist attack. Carole-anne was probably there,' said Wiggins.
'Living Hell seems to be her group.'
'Oh, that's hard to believe. They're passe.'
Sergeant Wiggins often surprised him with a knowledge of unusual or arcane subjects, totally unrelated to his work.
'She's been poring over maps and timetables for a week now in her spare time.'
'Is she taking a trip, then? I'll miss her.'
Wiggins could move quickly from speculation to a
'Goodall, sir. He's passed away, sir.' Wiggins looked into his glass as if it were the funeral wine. 'Last year it was. I got a chief detective inspector, though.'
'What did he say?'
Wiggins took a large swallow from his glass of honey-vinegar elixir before answering. 'Nothing very helpful; he seemed reluctant to go into it. That it had been over eight years, after all. Couldn't dredge up the details off the top of his mind.'
'No one's asking for the top of his mind.' Jury leaned back, looked up at the ceiling molding. A spider was swinging precariously from a thread of its broken web. 'They must have a fairly thick dossier on that kidnapping; even I remembered the essentials, and I wasn't in Cornwall. Couldn't he take the trouble to have one of his lackeys open the files?'
'He was at home, sir. In Penzance. Said I'd got him in from his garden. Staking up some ornamental trees, or