began to tell me.'

'And when she left work?' Kincaid prompted.

'I went to see her. Every day if I could. No one else did.' Margaret sounded indignant even now. 'Oh, they'd club together on cards or a basket, but no one ever put themselves out to visit her.'

'Did Jasmine mind?'

Margaret's wide brow creased as she thought about it. 'I don't think so. She didn't seem to have any really close friends at work. No one disliked her, but they weren't chummy either.' Margaret smiled at Kincaid a bit ironically. 'She talked about you most often.'

Kincaid stood up and took the few steps to the window.

He had put off telling her the p.m. results long enough, and he tried to frame a gentle way to tell her that Jasmine had not died quietly in her sleep.

'Look.' Margaret's voice came from behind him. 'I know you didn't come here just to look after me. Jasmine didn't keep her promise, did she?'

Kincaid thought Margaret might have read his mind. He sat down opposite her again and searched her face. 'I don't know. Her system contained a massive amount of morphine.'

Margaret slumped back in the chair and closed her eyes. Tears welled from beneath her eyelids and ran down the sides of her nose. After a moment she leaned forward and rubbed her face with the crumpled flannel. 'I should never have believed her.' She barely whispered the words as she rocked her body backwards and forwards.

'Look, Meg. If Jasmine were determined to kill herself, there's no way you could have prevented her. Oh, for one night, maybe, but not indefinitely.' When Margaret continued rocking, eyes closed, he leaned closer. 'Listen, Meg. There are some things I need to know, and you're the only one who can help me.'

The rocking slowed, then stopped. Margaret opened her eyes but stayed hunched over, arms crossed protectively over her stomach.

'Tell me why Jasmine needed your help.'

'She didn't-' Margaret's voice caught. She reached for the cold dregs of her tea and swallowed convulsively, then tried again. 'She didn't. Not really. I helped her figure the dosage-she was morphine dependent so we knew it would take a lot-but she could have done it herself. There was enough morphine, because she'd been maintaining the level she actually used while telling the nurse she needed her dosage increased. And the catheter would have held traces anyway.'

'Then why?' Kincaid asked again, holding her gaze with his.

'I don't know. I suppose she just didn't want to be alone at the last.'

Had Jasmine given in to weakness by asking Margaret's help, wondered Kincaid, and then found unexpected strength? He shook his head. It was possible, probable, logical, and yet he still couldn't believe it.

'What is it?' asked Margaret, sitting up a bit.

'Did Jasmine have-' Kincaid stopped as the door opened soundlessly. A man stepped into the room, regarding Kincaid and Margaret with an expression of amused contempt.

Margaret, sitting with her back to the door, frowned at Kincaid in bewilderment and said, 'What's the-'

'Well.' The man spoke, the single syllable dripping with unsavory implications.

Margaret jerked at the sound of his voice and leapt to her feet, her face flushing an unbecoming, splotchy scarlet. 'Rog-'

'Don't get up, Meg. I didn't expect you to be entertaining.' Apart from a brief glance in Margaret's direction, all his attention was fixed on Kincaid.

Returning the scrutiny with interest and an immediate dislike, Kincaid saw a slender man of middle height, in perhaps his late twenties, wearing designer jeans and an expensive white cotton shirt open part way down the chest, cuffs turned back. He wore his light red-brown hair pulled back in a ponytail and his features were clearly cut. He was, Kincaid thought wryly, smashingly good-looking.

Margaret stood rigidly, gripping the back of her chair, and when she spoke her voice was high and uncontrolled. 'Roger, where have you been? I've been wait-'

'Why the panic, Meg?' Roger didn't move from his slouching stance in the middle of the room, and made no effort to touch or comfort Margaret. 'Don't you think introductions are in order?'

Kincaid took the initiative before Margaret could blurt anything out. 'My name's Kincaid.' He stood and held his hand out to Roger, who shook it with no great enthusiasm. 'I'm a neighbor of Margaret's friend Jasmine Dent.'

'Jasmine's dead, Rog. She died on Thursday night. I couldn't reach you anywhere.' Margaret trembled visibly.

Roger's eyebrows lifted. 'Is that so? And you came to tell Margaret?'

'I came to see how she was getting on,' Kincaid said mildly, leaning back against the edge of the table and folding his arms.

'How kind of you.' Roger's public-school accent expressed sarcasm well. 'Poor Meg.' For the first time he took a step toward her, reaching out and pulling her stiff body to him in a brief embrace. He swiveled her around toward Kincaid again and rested a hand lightly on the back of her neck. 'It must have been a shock, her going sooner than anyone expected.'

'It wasn't like that. Jasmine died from an overdose of morphine,' Margaret said, watching Kincaid's face as she spoke, seeking support. Roger let her go abruptly and she moved away from him.

'That's too bad, Meg. I'm sorry she-'

'Duncan knows about the suicide,' she jerked her head toward Kincaid, 'so don't bother to say you're sorry, Rog. I know you're not. No need for you to worry now.'

'Worry? Don't be absurd, Meg.'

Roger's voice was light, almost playful, but Kincaid sensed wariness replacing the nonchalance. 'There is another possibility, you know,' Kincaid said into the tension that vibrated in the room. Both faces turned toward him, Meg's bewildered, Roger's alert. 'Someone might have given Jasmine help she didn't want.'

'I don't…' Margaret began, then looked at Roger who, Kincaid thought, understood all too well.

The silence lengthened, until Kincaid straightened up and stretched. 'I'm afraid I never caught your last name,' he said to Roger.

Roger hesitated, then volunteered grudgingly, 'It's Leveson-Gower.' He pronounced it 'Loos-n-gor.'

How fittingly posh, Kincaid thought. He moved toward the door, then turned back to Margaret. 'I'll be off, then. Are you sure you'll be all right, Meg?'

Margaret nodded uncertainly. Roger wrapped an arm around her waist, and with the other ran his fingernails slowly up her bare arm. Kincaid saw her nipples grow hard under her thin cotton shirt. She looked away from him, flushing.

'Meg will be just fine, won't you, love?' said Roger.

Kincaid turned back to them as he opened the door. 'By the way, Roger, where were you on Thursday night?'

Roger still held Margaret before him, part shield, part possession. 'What's it to you?'

'I've a bad habit of liking people to account for themselves. I'm a copper.' Kincaid smiled at them both and let himself out.

Chapter Six

The east side of Carlingford Road lay in deep shadow when Kincaid drew the Midget up to the curb. He rolled up the windows and snapped the soft top shut, then stood for a moment looking up at his building. It seemed unnaturally still and silent, the windows showing no light or signs of movement. Kincaid shrugged and put it down to his own skewed perception, but halfway up the stairs to his flat he realized he hadn't seen the Major since yesterday evening.

His heart gave a little lurch of alarm and he told himself not to be an ass-there was no reason anything should have happened to the Major. Death hadn't stayed lurking in the building like some gothic specter. Nevertheless, he found himself back downstairs, knocking on the Major's door.

Вы читаете All Shall Be Well
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