Read The Blue Last Online

Authors: Martha Grimes

The Blue Last (3 page)

“Kitty Riordin took advantage of the bombing and told whoever made any inquiries her own baby was killed in that bombing and she'd had the Tynedale child with her.”
Mickey nodded, rubbed his hands through his hair. “That's what I'm saying.”
“You haven't enough to go on here. What about your forensics report?”
“Couldn't confirm because the bones were just too small. I need a forensic anthropologist. I'm sure I'm right.”
Shaking his head, Jury sat back and was silent. They were both silent while the longcase clock ticked and the gray day grew a darker gray. Jury said, “This is fascinating, Mickey, but why me? Why did you want to tell it to me? Did you want something from us, I mean the Yard?”
“Yes. I want you to prove it. “
Jury's laugh was abrupt, less a laugh than a sound of disbelief. “Me? Are you kidding? Even if it could be proven, you're as good a cop as I am, better probably.”
Mickey's smile was thin. “Maybe, but I'm a dead cop. Will be in a couple of months, anyway.”
Jury felt as if he'd taken a hard blow to the stomach. “What? Jesus, what's wrong?”
“Leukemia. Specifically, chronic myelogenous leukemia, or in its cozier abbreviation, CML. It's not all that common, but it hits people my age—another version of the midlife crisis, perhaps? Unfortunately, there are no symptoms early on; I found out when it was already pretty much too late. It's very aggressive, very.”
Jury's mouth was too dry for him to speak, as if words were liquid, a balm denied him at the moment.
“I've done the chemo crap, but not the bone marrow transplant, assuming even if I could find a donor. The evidence, shall we say, does not stand up to intense scrutiny. Survival rate is almost nil. Two or three months, the doctors give me, which means around one or two, since they always lie. The thing is, Richie, even if I could find the answer to this in a few weeks, I'm just too bloody tired to do it and my other work as well.”
Irrationally, as people will out of a sense of hopelessness get angry with the person who is making them feel that way, Jury got angry. “Why in hell aren't you taking the time off? Spend it with Liza and the kids?”
Mickey looked a little disappointed with Jury. “Because I don't want all that spare time to think about it, that's why.” He leaned forward across his desk, earnest. “Listen, will you do this? Will you try to find out? It means a lot to me; it sure as hell would to my dad if he were still here.”
Jury tapped the pictures together. “Yes. You don't want to see the Crofts and Tynedales swindled. May I keep these for a while?” Jury held up the pictures. Mickey nodded and Jury said, “On the other hand”—he paused, wondering if his taking some high moral tone would sound as priggish as he already had—“this woman Maisie, or Erin, has been part of the family for so long and thought to be the man's granddaughter—”
“You mean wouldn't it be better to let sleeping dogs lie?”
“Something like that. Imagine finding out Maisie isn't Maisie after over a half century.” Jury paused. “Anyway, I'll do what I can.” He stuffed the pictures into an inside coat pocket and rose and so did Mickey. Jury walked around the desk and embraced him. “Anything, any time, Mickey, day or night. I mean it.”
“Thanks, Rich.” Tears stood in Mickey's eyes. “It means a lot.”
 
 
 
Mickey dying. Mickey dead.
Jury studied the paving stones at his feet as he walked up Ludgate Hill. He walked slowly, almost hesitatingly, thinking it must be like the unsure gait of an aging man. He was too young for this, still, to start thinking of himself as aging, for God's sakes.
No one occupied these buildings on the weekend except for the City's caretakers—police, fire brigade, hospital—and the emptiness was partly responsible for this mood.
Then he realized what it reminded him of: a no-man's-land. Though he had no firsthand knowledge of that area in battle of neutral territory which marked neither advance nor retreat and was claimed by neither side. His father had known, though; his father had talked about it. No, it had been his mother's account, such a vivid account it seemed to have been his father's.
I thought it was the work of my own memory.
Mickey had said that.
Near St. Paul's Churchyard he looked for Blackfriars Lane and the construction site. He came upon it almost by chance, given the convolutions of the narrow streets. Material hadn't been thrown up yet to shroud it, and the cranes and bulldozers and other equipment sat about in the cratered ground like prehistoric Tinkertoys.
He felt he wanted to gather his few memories about him like a coat or a blanket. He wondered how reliable his memory was, or anyone's memory, come to that.
You could never get what dying was like across to someone else, no matter how intimate the relationship or how sensitive the couple—no matter how able, how willing, how articulate—the sick person is the only one who could possibly know, who could take the measure of it, limn the page, see the borderland.
Maybe it was like walking a beat at two A.M. in a depopulated City. Maybe it was like this and maybe it wasn't. How would he know? The only one who knew was Mickey himself. No wonder the man looked ill.
And what was the admission to this museum of ravaged portraiture? Nothing. Until dying yourself, you couldn't get in. Nothing, nada, nil.
He looked down at the place where the Blue Last had once stood and tried to reconstruct it as he did with any crime scene. The customers in the pub, the extra pints bolstering them, Dutch courage, camaraderie.
Jury had no trouble envisioning a building collapsing around him; what he couldn't imagine is how it had missed him and yet buried his mother. Yet it happened all the time.
And the girl Kitty, stumbling past the matchstick remains of buildings. Half a house sheared off here, another one there, so that you could see in the odd still-standing other half, doorless rooms, a staircase open to view as if it were a dollhouse. But also, at any corner turning, there would be a building left untouched, undamaged as if for pure spite. This would lend the girl hope that the pub had been lucky and had also escaped.
Only it hadn't, and Kitty set about making her own luck.
Three
O
n Ludgate Hill, Jury stopped in front of a restaurant that advertised its cappuccino bar. He stood outside dumbly looking in, thinking about Mickey. Would finding out what had happened and to whom, whether the Tynedale granddaughter was who she claimed to be, make Mickey feel connected to earth again?
He walked into the restaurant, deserted except for the help and one woman with dark hair and cold eyes sitting at a table by the window. Jury took a seat at the counter—or bar, he supposed, depending on what you'd come in for. In front of the huge mirror were glass shelves with as good an assortment of liquor as he'd find at any pub.
A pretty waitress with large, dark, soulful-looking eyes came to where he was sitting and took his order for coffee, plain and black. Who did she remind him of? Someone, some actress? Who? She brought the coffee and he sipped it, strong as lye and black as sin, and thought about the morning again. Had it been anyone but Mickey—no. If it had been asked of him in different circumstances by Mickey or anyone else he would have said no. He did not want to dwell on the war again.
“Coffee too strong?” asked the soulful waitress, as if it were all her fault.
“A little, yes.” He broke out a smile to replace what must have been his black-coffee expression.
“It hasn't been sitting. I mean, it's fresh, just made.” She shrugged slightly. “Our coffee, it's just that way.” She gazed at the miscreant cup.
“I could put in some hot water.” Her expression picked up a smidgen of hope.
“No. I'll tell you what, though. Get me a shot of that.” He pointed to a shelf holding the liquor bottles. “That Glen Grant.”
She took the bottle from the shelf and pulled a shot glass from beneath the bar and poured. “That should liven it up,” she said, pushing the shot glass toward him.
Jury poured it in the cup, sipped, and declared it much improved. Then he asked, “Is it always as empty as this at the weekends?” The only other customer was the icy-eyed brunette. She was smoking what Jury fancied to be the last cigarette in the world.
“Yes, it's because people don't live around here, you know. I mean, except for Docklands, but that's not really the City.”
“If it isn't, it's becoming so. All those new condos.”
The brunette made a sign and the waitress moved off toward her table.
Jury took the envelope out of his pocket and spread the pictures, one by one, on the bar. He positioned them as nearly as he could in chronological order: the pub, the au pair, Kitty Riordin, the young woman Alex. He smiled.
That
was who the waitress reminded him of! He looked at Alexandra Herrick with her baby, Maisie, then at the fighter plane and the sun-blinded young pilot. He stopped, thinking about his father. He had also been RAF, could have piloted that Spitfire, could have been a friend of Ralph Herrick. The faces themselves meant nothing; Jury could not recall his father's face—how old had he been? But the plane, he could always see the plane spinning toward earth. He had not actually seen it, of course; but in his mind he saw it thus, and there was no one or nothing to correct this vision.
After his mother died, there was the Social, always eager to swoop down and claim another kid. It must have claimed him some time for there was that period in the orphanage. Good Hope, it was called. Funny he'd remember that detail and have lost so many others. First, a kindly uncle had taken him in. He had died and then came Good Hope. Somehow, he had got in his head he was there for five or six years, but now when he tried to call up that period, he wasn't at all sure—five or six months, it could have been. He saw a row of single beds, the sheets so taut a kid could bounce on them. But he wasn't bouncing, only sitting on his own bed in a corner. He tried to remember if his feet had reached to the floor; that might have told him how old he was. How long had he been there?
He thought of his cousin in Newcastle, the daughter of the pleasant aunt and uncle, a girl who hadn't liked him coming into the household. Could his cousin, a bitter woman now, a bitter child then, have put the six years in his head? He could call her and ask; he could even go to Newcastle to try to get some information from her. The husband, a Tyne-and-Wear man, had fallen victim to the North's unspeakable unemployment rate (the “joke shop” is what they called the employment office), and his cousin had for some obscure reason thought it was in part Jury's fault, he being a superintendent at New Scotland Yard. Why should Richard be successful and her Bert not?
He signed to the waitress by making a circle over the shot glass with his finger, then over the coffee cup. The coffee was surprisingly good with a jigger of whiskey, but then what wasn't?
His cousin had four kids, a toddler and the others teenagers by now, he guessed; it had been years since he'd seen her. The last time, that had been Christmas, too. He had not wanted to see her, and not because she herself would heap her troubles on his shoulders, but because she was the last relation he had on earth and he hated being reminded of that fact. He envied Wiggins his sister in Manchester.
The waitress came along the bar with fresh coffee and fresh whiskey. She seemed pleased that Jury was stopping here, that her ministrations had succeeded in some small way. Jury smiled at her, wanting her to think so. When actually the whiskey, as whiskey usually does, merely opened him up to sadder ruminations, to cold little scenes of childhood.
He saw himself seated at a large dinner table with eight or ten other children and the old lady from Oxfordshire (or was it Devon?) at its head, admonishing all of them to eat like little ladies and gentlemen. She had just said grace and while hearing it, Jury had stared down at a plate of pale sausage and sauerkraut which made the bile rise in his throat as it always did when he looked at this once-a-week meal. He would be sick if he ate it.
“Richard's not eating, Richard's not eating, missus—”
Who was taunting him?
“Not eating, not eating,”
the voice went on fluting, and then the whole table picked it up—
“Richard's not eating, not eating.”
And a violent rapping of spoons grew in volume before the old lady brought her hand down to silence them (and it had taken her a long time to do it) and she herself commanded him to eat. Who was she? Not the aunt, who with his uncle had taken him in after his mother was killed when their block was bombed. . . . No . . . Jury's head and shoulders had barely cleared the table at the old lady's. So he must have been very young.
His eye fell on the middle snapshot of the evacuation. All of those children. He saw his child's face there, looking over the shoulder of an unknown woman, carting him away.
It was he and two or three other boys and a girl—he recalled her vivid hair—she was older than the others, nine or ten perhaps, and she seemed to be the leader. They were trooping across a field. He could not read the signs posted all around but the skull and crossbones on one of them told him the place was dangerous. The girl had told them all the signs were danger signs, DANGER was what they said. The field was full of unexploded bombs, she said.
“We're going to the sea!”
she said.
It was there, in the distance, the grim gray sea and low cliffs. So it couldn't have been Oxfordshire, it must have been the West Country—Devon or Dorset, Cornwall maybe. He hung back, stopped on the inside of a listing fence made of wire and wood, fallen down in one long section. It was meant to keep people out of this danger zone, but they had walked right over it. He stood there, small and stocky as they yelled back:
“Richard's a scaredy cat!”

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