Back in the living room, with two mugs of coffee, wisps of smoke from Jay's newly lit pipe escaped to explore the room as the main stream was drawn to the chimney.
âSo are you going to tell me what that's got to do with now? Vinko?' she prompted, to stop him from closing off.
He looked round and his expression lit up as if pleasantly surprised she was in the room with him.
âI wanted you to know why he matters to me. Ivan saved my life. Seriously. Though at the time I hated him for it. Also seriously. And he was killed before I could make it up to him. Soâ¦Vinko's his son and my chance.'
He told her about his meeting with Vinko, their visit to the PranjiÄs. She bit her lip but hoped she was keeping her expression impassive as Jay talked, confirming the extent of their involvement with people she'd only heard of as murder victims.
âSo this money you're talking about â that was Zora's?'
âYou got it. Remember I told you she'd got someone to bring it away? That was me.'
âYou said it was someone else.'
âI'm sorry. I had to make it sound unreal, had to distance myself. Though it feels
like it
was
someone else. But it happened, more or less like I said. I couldn't believe she'd trust me with something like that, but she did. I'd got so's I couldn't handle it. Everything I'd got myself involved in. It all felt so wrong. Things we did.
I
did. I couldn't go on.' He ran a hand though his hair. âBut deserting them would have been even worse. Zora knew how I was feeling â she always knew â and gave me a job to do, an excuse to leave. At great risk to herself, as I've learned recently. And so I did leave. I don't know much about finance, I was scared of the contacts she gave me and I daresay someone else could've done it better, but in the end I had a tidy amount in an account over here. It's also true that she told me if anything happened to her, and ifâ¦if Ivan died too, I was to keep it. And they
were
killed, and here I was, out of the way, safe⦠On my own. Feeling like I couldn't do anything for the blood on my hands.'
He held a hand up and stared at it as if expecting to see real dried-on blood clogging the lines in his skin. He drew on his pipe like an anaesthetic.
âSoâ¦I had this money and no one to give it back to. As I've told you before, I eventually borrowed it, put it down on the house I'd been renting since I got back to England. Zora had given me a letter. A kind of will. But I always intended to pay it off â the money and everything else â and I did. A bit at a time. Literally, and, when I'd failed once too many times to hold down a decent job, with this penance of a lifestyle.'
Her face must have betrayed her surprise; he laughed.
âYou think it's romantic, don't you? Happy-go-lucky, raggle-taggle gypsies and all that. I won't deny it has its good points. Butâ¦' He shrugged. âAnyway. A few years ago I finally satisfied myself I'd got it all paid back from the rents and whatever else, with what any impartial observer might call reasonable interest. And it sat there burning a hole in the bank account. The only person who could possibly be entitled to it, apart from me and I couldn't accept that, was Anja, Ivan's mum. Zora had said she wasn't to see a penny of it â there was enough hatred in
that
family to fuel a war, all right â but I spent ages trying and failing to think of alternatives and in the end, after a ton of soul-searching, rightly or wrongly, off I went to see Anja and Boris. Wrongly, as it turned out. A few months later â last weekend, in fact â I discovered that Ivan had a son.'
âYou didn't know?'
âWhen I came back to this country I was in a right state. My best friend despised me. I hated myself, too. I drank him, all of them, out of mind. I don't remember much about that time so I guess it worked. I met some surprisingly kind people who one way or another stopped me from going too far down the road to self-destruction. I should have gone back, to find Ivan, or to make my peace with my father and sister, but I couldn't. I was scared of facing them, and I hated myself for that, too. I'm not proud of any of it. It was a couple of years at least before I got my act together enough to do anything sensible. I did go back to Croatia, after the war had ended. Didn't stay. Hardly anyone I knew was still around. There'd been an attack on Zora's place; she died soon after and Ivan was killed in action towards the end of the war. That was all I needed or wanted to know. I couldn't believe my friend was dead. Dead without me having a chance to make my peace with him.'
He turned from the fire to look at her, his face half lit by the warm glow of the flames.
âBut I was supposed to be talking about Vinko, wasn't I? I didn't know about him until last week. And I gave his inheritance away.' He shook his head. âAnd then, like an idiot, I went and told him I'd done so.'
âHe must be pretty upset about it.'
Marilyn felt strangely detached, piecing it together as if it had nothing to do with her, or even Jay.
âI'm sure he is, though he doesn't show it. I think he trusts me. I suppose I should take comfort from that. God knows why he does, though â I can't pretend I know how to help him. I'm trying, but in truth I haven't a clue what to do next. Especially not now. I was going to meet him this coming weekend, go back to see his family, apologise and beg them to take him in. But now⦠They're dead. Murdered? Tell me I was dreaming when you told me that; hallucinating, anything?'
âI wish I could.'
âOh, to hell with it all!' He stood abruptly, walked through to the kitchen, came back with a whisky bottle and two glasses.
âJayâ¦'
âOK, so I just told you about boozing myself to destruction. Don't fret â that was years of it; this is a couple of drinks.'
He poured two glasses and handed her one. He downed half of his in one gulp.
âI knew he was in trouble â he told me â but this makes it ten times worse! And I haven't a fucking clue what to do about it!' He downed the rest of his whisky. She watched him in silence, fingers tightening around her own glass. âI'm sorry, Polly,' he said more calmly. âNone of this is your fault. I shouldn't be shouting. I'm not shouting
at
you, love.'
âIt's all right,' she said. She found his sudden apology reassuring despite herself. Dreading the reply, she asked, âWhat trouble?'
He poured himself another whisky, took a more measured sip.
âWhere to start? At first I just wanted to help him get his money, help him get his life together. That's where we went, to Winchester, to pick up Zora's papers, some kind of proof. But then I found out he's got no legal identity. His mother was a refugee at Zora's, that's how she met Ivan; after the war she left the country for Germany with nothing. She never even registered his birth because she was afraid they'd take him away, terrified of losing him. Can you imagine? That poor girl. I can't imagine the life she must have led, not only what she went through herself, but having to bring a little kid up like that, the only chance of medical care some backstreet quack, getting dragged down into a mire of prostitution and drugs⦠Anyway. Vinko seemsâ¦accepting. But what else can he do? What can I, what can anyone do? She's dead now. Gone. It's one more tragedy. Soâ¦' he sighed. âSo there I am, thinking we can go and find an immigration lawyer or whatever, but he won't. He's terrified. I eventually managed to coax out why.
âThere's this guy, Novak; Vinko calls him his uncle. He's never explained how he's related, but there was a limit to the number of questions I could ask and there were more important ones. Novak found them, too late for his mother, as Vinko puts it. Offered to bring them away, but she was seriously ill â terminally ill, as it turned out â and Vinko had a job. So they stayed put. It turns out this “job” was with some kind of forger, and shortly after his mother died, the place got busted. Vinko was lucky he wasn't in work at the time, but it left him high and dry â and scared. He got back in touch with Novak who smuggled him over here. Not an ideal situation to be taking to the immigration authorities.
âSo he's got a crappy bedsit and a no-questions-asked sweatshop job. Oh, and a paper round to add to the fun. No surprise, then, that he wants to put the past behind him and make something of himself. He's artistic, too â got talent as far as I can see. You'll relate to that. Well, it seems this Novak disappeared for a while, but he's back on the scene now. Vinko was getting messages while I was there. He's being dragged into something he doesn't want to do. Some deal, he says. He wouldn't tell me what but he swears he's told Novak to get stuffed. I just hope⦠Polly, why did you say the police had linked him with Anja and Boris?'
âThe fingerprints â presumably from your visit. And he turned up at their old house looking for them.'
âNothing more?'
She shook her head. âNot at this stage.'
âThank goodness. He says he'd decided to go and find them on impulse â I swear I believe him â after hearing me play. Makes sense â I learned some of those tunes from Zora and I daresay his mother would have done the same. You know, the day youâ¦saw him.'
He looked at her warily. All he'd said made her deeply uneasy, but she remembered Vinko's brief smile and found she could empathise.
âI can see now why you were defensive earlier,' she said. âThere I was joking about getting his life story. I didn't know I was about to. I hope we can find a way to help him.'
âWe?'
âWhy not?'
He smiled, for what felt like the first time that evening.
âSo what are you going to tell them?' she asked.
âWho?'
âThe police wanted you to get in touch, remember.'
âOh no. No chance. All I'd have to tell them is that I didn't even notice the guy you described in the crowd. And that I've never heard of Anja or Boris PranjiÄ.'
âWon't they trace you to them anyway?' She tried to keep the exasperation from her voice. âIf you gave them the money?'
He looked at her steadily. âNo,' he said quietly. âI'm confident they won't.'
âBut you can't lie! It's a serious case.'
âIf I don't speak to them I won't lie.'
âAnd what am
I
supposed to say?'
âAll right, I'll leave for a while. Disappear. Till it's over. You haven't seen me. They can solve the sodding case without me or Vinko because I swear neither of us has anything to do with it.'
âBut you've only just got back. You can't leave!'
He got up and shoved the poker into the fire, sending up a shower of sparks, before adding another log.
âWhat I can't do,' he told the flames, âis go to the police. There's no way I could just rake up all that I've told you toâ¦to
strangers
. And I'd lose Vinko. He'd never trust me again.'
He remained crouched before the hearth, head hanging. His back was like a wall. She moved to kneel beside him and put an arm round his shoulder. He collapsed into her embrace, burying his head on her shoulder. âCan you understand that?'
âOf course,' she murmured. âSo what
are
you going to do?'
There was a long silence. He heaved a sigh. When it came there was a catch in his voice.
âI don't know. I just don't know.'
There is victory in the air as they hurry towards the rendezvous point by the barn. Shots fired into the air. Whooping and shouting. He feels on the outside. Lek's vengeful violence has left him cold. Ivan, walking ahead of him, turns and beckons through the slowly clearing smoke. He nods; increases his pace only slightly. A shot whines dangerously close to his head. Then another. Driven by terror, he is crouched tense and alert by a pile of rubble before he even realises. It shouldn't be happening. This village is won, isn't it? Through unnaturally clear air he sees an injured man across the street, lying almost motionless in a darkening pool of blood. Lost in his agony; there is no wayâ¦and he has no gun. Å ojka looks up. Backing into the shadows behind the slumped figure, trainers stained by the man's blood, is a boy he recognises. The one he spared, sent running to safety, only a few moments ago. Nothing is fair.
The weapon looks too big for the boy and he seems scared of it. Probably not; they grow up with hunting rifles round here. His own gun ready but not raised, he holds the boy's gaze, unsure if he recognises him.
âSjeÄaÅ¡ li se me?'
The words come out wrong, but it's the contact that matters. The gun in the boy's grasp wavers. Or is it an echo of his own previous gesture? Escape while you can.
He stands slowly and takes a hesitant step forward.
âGive me that. I take you to find your family.' Understand me. Please understand me.
âYou killed my father.'
The boy gestures with his head towards the small square.