and shortly thereafter DI John Stewart accosted him in the corridor and handed over a copy of
On page one of the tabloid was a very large and extremely soulful picture of Hadiyyah Upman gazing out of a window, below which were arrayed a large collection of highly recognisable succulents. The picture was accompanied by a story headlined
The other DI made this point clear when he said, “What’s it to be, Tommy? Do I give this to the guv or do you? If you want my opinion on the subject, she’s been in bed with
Lynley said, “You carry your aversions too openly, John. I’d advise you to back off.”
Stewart’s lips formed a sneer that was as amused as it was all-knowing. “Would you indeed?” he said. “Right. Well, I suppose you would.” He glanced in the direction of Isabelle Ardery’s office to indicate the subject of his next point. “She’s met with CIB1, Tommy. The word’s out on that.”
Lynley said calmly, “Then obviously your sources are far better than mine.” Tapping the tabloid against his palm, he concluded with “May I keep this, John?”
“Many more where that came from, mate. Just in case it doesn’t end up on . . . on
Lynley watched him go. He gazed at the tabloid’s page-one story once he was alone. It was vintage material from
Much space was taken up with the recap of what had happened to Hadiyyah since the previous November. Interestingly, though, there was no mention of anyone from New Scotland Yard being sent there to liaise for the troubled child.
That, Lynley knew, was a telling detail. The tale it told was one of collusion between the journalist who had written the story and Barbara Havers. For if he named her, he named his source, and he wasn’t fool enough to do that. Yet Barbara was the only way he could have located Hadiyyah. And only through Barbara’s cooperation could he ever have managed to get a picture of the child.
This article, Lynley knew, put the lie to everything Barbara Havers had said about her interactions with Corsico. She wouldn’t be the first cop to have been exposed as on the take from a tabloid. In recent years, cops on the take had become just another part of the landscape of what was a growing national scandal involving the gutter press. But in combination with every other black mark against her, this was going to finish her.
He went to Isabelle’s office. The fact that she’d requested CIB1’s involvement was an indication of her confidence in the case she was building against Barbara. But there had to be a chance that this tabloid article could be painted another way.
He tossed his copy of
Isabelle’s office door stood open, but she wasn’t inside. Dorothea Harriman, however, was. She was in the midst of arranging a stack of files on the superintendent’s desk. When she saw Lynley, she said merely, “Tower Block.”
“How long?”
“It’s just gone an hour.”
“Did he phone her or did she phone him?”
“Neither. It was a scheduled meeting.”
“CIB1?”
Harriman looked regretful.
“Blast,” he said. “Did she take anything with her?”
“She had a tabloid,” Dorothea said.
Lynley nodded and headed back to his office. There he placed his call to Salvatore Lo Bianco. If Barbara had indeed gone bad, then he owed it to his Italian colleague to warn him.
When Lo Bianco answered, he was still at home. Chattering in Italian was going on in the background. This faded as Salvatore stepped out of the room to speak to Lynley.
The Italian brought Lynley up-to-date on everything: his call upon DARBA Italia, his discoveries there, his subsequent interviews with Daniele Bruno, the
Lynley said, “And the child? She’s with Barbara Havers?”
“She is well and she is with Barbara.”
“Salvatore, tell me. This is an odd sort of question, but can you tell me . . . is Barbara in Lucca alone?”
“How do you mean?”
“Have you seen her in the company of anyone?”
“I know she has been in the company of Aldo Greco. He is the lawyer of Taymullah Azhar.”
“I’m speaking of an Englishman,” Lynley said. “He might be dressed like a cowboy, actually.”
There was a pause before Salvatore chuckled. “A strange question, my friend,” he said. “Why do you ask this, Tommaso?”
“Because he’s a tabloid journalist from London and he’s written a story that indicates to me he’s there in Lucca.”
“But why would Barbara be in the company of a tabloid journalist?” Salvatore asked, not unreasonably. “And what is this tabloid?”
“It’s called
Salvatore didn’t ask why Lynley simply didn’t ring Barbara and pass on the information. He said instead, “And he looks like a cowboy?”
“He wears a cowboy kit. I’ve no idea why.”
Salvatore chuckled another time. “I shall pass this information to Barbara when I meet with her today. But I myself have not seen such a person as this. A cowboy in Lucca? No, no. I would remember had I seen him.”
LUCCA