âTry “Kylie”,' said Bea. âThat's the name of his latest.'
Mr Cambridge huffed out a laugh. âClever girl.'
Bea did not like being patronized. âHad he no laptop or other notebook? In his position, I'd have expected him to flourish both, and that they'd be the very latest models.'
His Lordship seated himself with a grunt. Was his leg hurting? He wasn't going to complain about it, though. âHe had one of those dinky little notebooks, small enough to stick in his coat pocket, but we can't find it. We assume it went home with him.' His Lordship probably had the very latest gear himself, and he might have been as fast with it as any professional, until his fingers began to gnarl up with arthritis.
Bea turned her attention to the rest of the room. There was an old-fashioned metal filing cabinet behind the desk. She put a hand on it and looked her question at the men.
Lord Murchison shook his head. âNothing helpful in it. They checked.'
The chair behind the desk was a giant swivel upholstered in black leather, and there were two other smaller chairs for visitors. A hatstand stood by the window, bare of the normal clutter of overcoats and umbrellas. A large bookcase completed the furniture. There was an old-style Venetian blind at the window and a Turkish-style carpet on the floor, which left about a foot of gleaming wooden floorboards all around it. The pendant light fitment was brass, solid and heavy. The shade was of etched glass. The light looked as if it had been installed when electricity was introduced to replace earlier gas mantels.
Mr Cambridge closed the door upon hearing the noise of a vacuum cleaner, which had started up somewhere nearby, and took a seat by the door.
His Lordship said, âThe major went through every single book in the bookcase, and every drawer in the desk and filing cabinet. Nothing. Afterwards, Zander took all the outstanding paperwork through to his office and dealt with it. No bank statements.'
Bea tried moving the bookcase, but it was too heavy to shift and flush against the wall. It had probably been built into the building a hundred years ago and redecorating had been done around it.
She ran a fingertip across the top of the bookcase. Clean.
She checked the Venetian blind. The cords still worked. The slats were clean, too. âYour cleaning company is doing a reasonably good job.' She could hear a second vacuum cleaner whining away upstairs.
âThere's nothing you can think of . . .?'
She sat in Denzil's big chair behind the desk, and gave it a twirl. âOh yes. It's obvious where he put them. Easy to retrieve. My mother used to press flowers that way. Was he right-handed?'
âI imagine so. Yes, I believe he was.'
âIn that case, he'd have put them on this side.' She went to the corner of the carpet on the right-hand side of the desk and flipped it up and over. It was a heavy carpet, hardly worn despite its great age. Up came the underlay, a soft brown felt. Between that and the floorboards were several large sheets of brown paper. She lifted up the top sheet and there, neatly laid out in rows, were a number of bank statements.
Lord Murchison tried to stand up, but even helping himself with his stick, he tottered and would have fallen if Mr Cambridge and Bea had not sprung to his rescue.
They restored the old man to his seat.
Bea patted his arm. âLet me. I'm still able to touch the floor with my fingertips.' Click. She could feel both men accessing the date of her birth in their memory banks, and she realized they'd done their homework on her background. So they knew how old she was. So what?
She got down on her hands and knees, and picked up the statements one by one. âA joint current account, covering the past year only.' She scanned the sheets quickly.
âAllow me,' said Mr Cambridge, removing them from her hands and taking them over to Lord Murchison. âAh. Fifteen thousand pounds in here . . . Another twenty the previous month . . . Ten thousand five hundred here andâ'
Lord Murchison snatched them. âSome months the totals are much bigger than others. Look at this. Fifty thousand in March.'
Mr Cambridge took the last statement from Bea. âMost of it goes out straight away, paid by cheque. The statement gives us the cheque numbers but no indication of who he paid the money to.'
Bea sat back on her heels, ignoring a twinge in her back. She was not going to let the men see that her position was causing her distress. âYou're forgetting something. It was a joint account, which I suppose has now been frozen pending probate. Either he or she could have taken money out. Money deposited means they were being paid for something, and we can guess what, but bank statements don't tell us who paid it in, and we need his chequebook to find out who he paid money out to.'
She inched her way to the other side of the desk and bent the carpet back again. More bank statements; this time for the previous year. She picked them up and slapped them down on to the desk top. Mr Cambridge took them straight over to His Lordship.
Bea grimaced. Her knees were beginning to play up. Couldn't Mr Cambridge join in the fun and investigate the other two corners of the carpet? Apparently not.
She pulled herself upright by hanging on to the desk and straightened the kinks out of her knees and lower back. Perhaps she could lift up the other corners without getting down on her hands and knees? She threw Mr Cambridge a dark look, which he ignored. She bent over to lift more corners. This time she drew blanks. âThat's it.'
His Lordship was disappointed. âIt's not enough. Unless we can prove that the monies concerned came in the form of kickbacks, we're stymied.'
âSo where's his chequebook?' said Mr Cambridge.
âBriefcase?'
The men looked at one another. Lord Murchison said, âYes, where is his briefcase? He had one, of course. Initialled. My old friend gave it him for his twenty-first, and he always carried it with him. I suppose Zander sent it back to Honoria when he and the major cleared the room.'
Bea shook her head. âNo, no briefcase. Zander's an honest man. He said he hadn't seen it, and he wouldn't lie. Honoria seems to think it's still here. Where did he keep it? By the side of his desk?'
âYes. Always. On his right.'
Bea thought about it. âHow old did you say it was? Twenty-odd years, perhaps? Did he look after his things properly, or was he one of those whose belongings are always getting scratched and torn?'
Mr Cambridge looked bewildered, but Lord Murchison replied, âSomewhat battered, I seem to recall.'
Bea sighed. Couldn't they see what was under their noses? She went out into the hall and looked around her. Someone was vacuuming upstairs, but the door to Reception was open, and someone was vacuuming away in there, too.
The heavy-set cleaner â what was her name? â looked up as Bea tapped on the door. âYes?' Not particularly friendly.
âSo sorry to interrupt,' said Bea. âParticularly since I think you're doing a really good job here. These old houses are a lot of work, aren't they? I'm in the domestic agency business myself, and I know a good job when I see it.'
âWe do our best. No one can't say otherwise.' Folded lips, brass-bright hair, wedding ring sunk into a fleshy finger.
âThe thing is, you know one of the directors died recently? Well, his widow's going spare, trying to find his wretched old briefcase. Fit for nothing but the dustbin, I know, but there were some papers in it which she needs. I hoped you might have come across it?'
âOh, that old thing.' There was a flicker of intelligence in her eyes which Bea recognized. The woman knew what had happened to it, had probably taken it herself. âBroken strap. No good to man or beast. When we was cleaning the room, we asked Mr Trimmingham what to do about it, him poking around like he does . . .'
âMr Trimmingham was in Mr Denzil's room?'
A nod. âPoking around. “What's this, who's that, what are you going to do with that?” Sir Cecil, too. And then he gets a mite too close to Ruby and, well, you know. Nasty habits some gents have, don't they?'
âThey do,' said Bea, remembering the hand on her thigh at lunch. âSo he told you to give it to him?'
The woman bridled. âWe knew better than that, didn't we? It's not his to say what should be done with it. There were papers in it and all. So we said we'd lock it away safely till the widow could say what she wanted done with it.'
âQuite right, Violet. Absolutely on the ball,' said Lord Murchison, appearing in the doorway. âYour finding the briefcase quite rejuvenates me.'
She laughed, as he intended she should.
âPaperwork.' He shook his head. âWhen someone dies, the paperwork seems to multiply. And when one of our directors goes . . .' He sighed. âThe minutes of the last board meeting. We've looked everywhere. Do you think they could have been in his briefcase?'
Violet almost stepped on her own feet in her willingness to oblige. âI'll fetch it for you, my lord, and then you can see for yourself. Tell the truth, I'll be happier in my mind to get rid of it. I was hoping to see Lady Honoria myself, but she was just leaving when we arrived and couldn't spare the time to talk to me.'
Thank God for small mercies.
Violet disappeared to her cubbyhole across the hall, only to return minutes later carrying a battered-looking briefcase with Denzil's initials on it.
âThank you very much,' said Lord Murchison, taking the briefcase and pressing a twenty-pound note into her hand as he did so. âI'll ring Honoria tonight and tell her it's been found. Good work. Yes, very good work. Thank you, Violet.'
Talking still, he backed away and returned to Denzil's office.
âTrimmingham again,' said Mr Cambridge, who'd been listening, of course. âAnd Sir Cecil.'
âCecil's all right in his way, but Trimmingham is a nuisance,' said Lord Murchison, upending the contents of the briefcase on Denzil's desk. âTrimmingham can be circumvented, I think. Ah. One chequebook, hardly started. One chequebook, stubs only. Luckily he's filled out the stubs. I do hate it when people fail to do that. They think they'll remember what they've done, but they never do.'
Bea went through the rest of the papers in the briefcase as the two men compared cheque stubs with bank statements.
âThe writing on the stubs is all in his hand,' said Mr Cambridge, âso presumably this was his chequebook and she had another. None of these cheques tally with the amounts withdrawn from his account, and he didn't fill in the paying-in slips. Do you think he had a separate paying-in book that we haven't found? Either that, or someone else paid the money into the account direct.'
âThere are no cheques covering those amounts in this book, either,' said His Lordship. âIt follows that if he didn't withdraw those large amounts, then Honoria must have done so. I suppose she put them into another bank account which he had no access to, or perhaps she put the money into another bank or a building society. I think we've enough to make her back away from us.'
Mr Cambridge was frowning. âWe really need the bank statements from her own personal account before we can prove that.'
âWe've got enough to prove that he was receiving large sums of money from sources unknown.'
âHe or she. She might have a source of income that we don't know about.'
âThen let her prove it,' said His Lordship, collapsing into Denzil's chair. âMy leg's playing up again. Old age is no joke.'
âI wonder,' said Bea, in her most angelic voice, âif the income tax people know about these dodgy payments. I agree that you've probably got enough to make her back off, but if that fails, you could always mention the words “Inland Revenue” and see what happens.'
âMrs Abbot, I love you dearly,' said His Lordship. âWhy didn't I meet up with you when I was in my prime?'
She laughed. âI was happily married then. Were you?'
âAdequately so,' he said. âIs there anything else of interest in that pile of papers?'
She shuffled them together. âNo minutes of meetings, surprise, surprise. A memo pad with lists of things to do. Photocopies of correspondence with Corcorans which you might like to look through. I don't know enough to say what's important and what's not.'
âPut it all back in the briefcase. I'll lock it up in my office now and ring Honoria, tell her not to bother to come in tomorrow and ask her to return her husband's keys as soon as possible. And then I'll run you both home.'
Mr Cambridge helped His Lordship to his feet, looking worried. âYou ought to see the quack again, you know.'
âWhat good does he do? No, I'm as worn out as that old briefcase, but I'll see this through, God willing. After that, who knows?'
Monday evening
She answered the phone, to hear Tommy killing all her plans for the future. The bank statements showing Corcoran's payments into the joint account had turned up at the office. Tommy had said that, unless she could prove these payments had been legitimately made, he must sorrowfully, and in some distress, assume, etcetera. He said it would be best if she didn't go into the office tomorrow. Someone would return Denzil's briefcase and anything else that belonged to her in the next few days, and collect his keys.
With apologies for having broken into her evening.
She set the phone down with care.
No way was she going to accept this turn of events quietly. Rage took hold of her, making her tremble.
The Chocolate Boy! That's who must have found the briefcase and taken it to the old man. She could just see him gloating over her downfall.
Well, two could play at that game, and she'd have his hide for this.
She booted up Denzil's mini-notebook. The staff addresses? Ah, here they were. Now, where did the Chocolate Boy live? Got it! Now, how should she go about getting even with him?