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Authors: Henry Porter

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BOOK: The Dying Light
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The bare facts were these. Born in South Africa to an engineer of Russian Jewish extraction and an English mother, White changed his name from Riazanov soon after leaving South Africa and finding work for a Bombay-based trading company in Kenya. He rose quickly to a position of trust, which he used to lease planes on behalf of the company. On the outward or return journey, the plane always carried White’s own shipments - anything from arms to rare metals such as indium and tantalum. He made a tidy fortune, particularly as he seemed to be able to tap in to supplies that were not available to other companies. This period came to an abrupt end when one of the planes was discovered with twenty crates of small arms on the way to the Congo. Plane and cargo were impounded. White skipped Nairobi. Aged twenty-four he entered Lausanne Business School using a forged degree certificate and a reference from the Faculty of Commerce at the University of Cape Town, also forged. Two years later he turned up in Las Vegas with an MBA working for Saul Carron, the casino and entertainment magnate. White never stayed long in any job. He learned fast, took what he could and moved on. By thirty he had bought his first business, a supermarket chain in the Midwest, then he moved quickly into systems, after realising the importance of customer databases. At this time he became known as The Grinder for his remorseless and punitive business methods. There were periods when he seemed to be consciously softening his image by following Saul Carron’s example and making large charitable donations as well as ingratiating himself with legislators by financing their pet projects. But it didn’t work for him on the Raussig deal. Calverts and their attack dogs threw up enough dirt to panic the government into finding another buyer, which even Kate admitted was no better qualified than Eden White.
Perhaps aware that she hadn’t been listening, White leaned forward and touched her arm. ‘We can work together I believe, Miss Lockhart. I have come to love this country - to see a lot of good and some great people who’ve got much to contribute. Let’s be in touch.’ He got up, buttoned his jacket and left with a bleak little grin. This caught Mermagen by surprise. By the time he struggled out of his chair White had left.
‘He likes you,’ he whispered. ‘It’s those foxy oriental looks of yours, Kate.’
‘Oh that’s great news. Do me a favour, Oliver, and tell
Mister
White that I’m a dyke.’
‘I’m serious, Kate. Someone with your brains could go a long way with White. He owns so much and he’s the influential person in the private sector in the UK at the moment. It’s just the sort of change you’re looking for. I’ll keep you posted.’
‘Don’t, Oliver: I am not interested.’ She put down the drink she had resorted to while White spoke and got up. ‘I’m going to bed.’
 
At any other time she might have blamed Ella, the Romanian maid, who cleaned her floor and in the evening was responsible for turning down the bed, switching on the bedside light, placing a scented candle on the dresser and chocolate mints on the pillows. More than once she had contrived to allow a mint to slip between the pillows, and Kate had found it in the morning, warm and compressed in its gold foil. The candle was lit but the mints had been put on the bedside table behind the phone, one on top of the other. Ella might have left them there, but it was also possible that someone had removed them to search the bed and forgotten to return them to the little depressions in the pillows.
Charlie used to say she ordered her possessions to withstand military inspection at any hour of the day, which was almost true, and it was why she now looked around the room, alert to a disturbance that could be described as no more than a change in the barometric pressure. If the room had been searched, it had been done by experts. Except for the mints there was no other sign. She went to the desk and looked down at the small laptop. She knew the battery was still out of juice because she’d failed to leave it on charge. So no one could have found anything on that unless they had plugged it in. She checked the lead in the computer case, but it was bunched and held together by a wire tie that she wound in a particular way. The big red folder containing information on the hotel had been moved, again possibly by Ella, and the usual effects of the drawers in a hotel room - the hair dryer, bible, notepaper and pen - might have been rearranged but she couldn’t be sure. She opened the doors of the wardrobe, causing the unused hangers to knock into each other and emit the sound of a wind chime, rifled through the trousers, cardigans and sweater and the three jackets, all of the same chic, utilitarian business cut. There was only one mistake: the herringbone she’d worn to the funeral was on the left instead of the right of the rail and a little of the dark-grey lining protruded like the tip of a tongue from the right-hand pocket. The room had been searched but nothing important had been found because the will and Eyam’s note were in her handbag.
She pulled out her cell phone, switched it on and dialled the handwritten number on Darsh Darshan’s card. A female voice asked her to leave a message for Darsh. Without giving her name, she said, ‘I’m calling on Tuesday evening in response to your note. You remember where we first met? Can you be there at noon on Thursday or Friday? Indicate which by text. Don’t call.’
9
Dove Cottage
 
 
 
 
They left High Castle and followed the river road to the west. The brief panorama across the Marches of Wales with all its fairytale promise was soon lost to them as they plunged into a landscape of modest hills and rounded valleys delineated by ancient hedgerows, coppiced stands of hazel, woods of alder, beech and ash. The mild beauty gave no hint that the land was dotted with sites of unspeakable violence and treachery, pointed out by Hugh Russell, who turned out to be an expert on the Wars of the Roses and went into the bloody detail of a skirmish at a bridge they crossed. He drove sporting a small bandage at the back of his head and a bruise on his cheekbone and once or twice assured her that despite the advice of the hospital he was quite well enough to show off his new silver Audi estate.
She kept an eye on the road behind them but nothing showed in the mirror as they approached Watling Street, the old road that once served the western border posts of the Roman Empire, and took a turning north. This led them to a narrow lane, which was cut through steep wooded banks and rose to a summit where there was a gate that announced Dove Cottage. The way was blocked by a herd of cattle being driven along the track by a young man on a quad bike, who did not acknowledge them.
‘Bugger,’ said Russell. ‘I’ve been caught behind this lot a few times before. We’ll just have to wait.’
She began gently. ‘David didn’t go straight to Cartagena: did he tell you where he was going before?’
He shook his head.
‘But he must have mentioned it to you. I mean, when he was drawing up the will you would surely have seen him?’
‘Yes, once or twice, but always for lunch at the pub. This was some time before he left in December. But he said nothing about his plans.’
‘Do you know who his doctor was?’
He shook his head vehemently. ‘No.’
The car crept fifty yards down the track to the point where the cattle had reached. The sun lit a bank of moss and flowers to their right.
‘I haven’t seen primroses for years.’ She paused and turned to him. ‘Hugh, I know you saw some of the material that was taken.’
He stared at the cows for a long time before answering. ‘Has it occurred to you that if they wanted it so badly it’s a damned good thing they’ve got it? You shouldn’t mess with these people.’
‘What would you have done if you hadn’t found me? What were your instructions?’
‘To send the documents anonymously to the newspapers - a liberal newspaper.’
‘And you would have done that?’
‘Probably, yes. If . . .’
‘If you hadn’t seen any of it?’
He shook his head. ‘I’m not saying that.’
‘Technically those documents are mine and now they’ve been taken you probably have a duty to tell me what was in them.’
‘I can’t.’
‘There are good reasons for telling me, which you may not appreciate.’
‘Maybe, but that’s not my judgement.’
‘Think about it,’ she said.
‘I have a duty to legality as well as to my client, and in this case I feel I must favour the first.’ Russell had reverted to the stuffy provincial solicitor.
She leaned forward so that she could look him in the eye. ‘Was it legal to walk into your offices and bludgeon you to the ground and steal the contents of your safe? That’s very serious criminality, Hugh.’
‘Yes, but one offence cannot be used to justify another. You see what’s happened to the others.’
‘The others?’
He was silent.
‘You’re talking about the group? I heard a few people were having trouble, all of them connected with Eyam in some way. Sounds all a bit hysterical to me.’
He was drumming the steering wheel: he felt trapped. ‘Yes. My partner, Paul Spring, acts for three of them. They’re all being put through the wringer in one way or another.’
‘Which ones?’
‘A couple of web designers, Andy Sessions and Rick Jeffreys, and a young woman called Alice Scudamore.’
‘Look, Hugh, I need to know what I’ve inherited along with Dove Cottage. I didn’t choose to be David’s heir. What am I getting myself into? I must know in order to defend myself.’
‘Your best defence is to know nothing,’ he snapped. A beat later he smiled regretfully. ‘I wish I was in the same position.’
One of the cows had turned and was making for the car. Russell got out and flapped his arms at the animal until it wheeled round to join the rest of the herd.
‘You told me you didn’t come out here to see David, yet a few minutes ago you said you’d been caught behind these cows several times before. So clearly you did come here.’
‘You’re right, I did, but after he vanished in the winter. Something was going on. Nock, the man who looks after the place, rang to say that the house had been searched. You’ll meet Sean Nock at some stage. I kept him on after David’s death to make sure the place was safe.’
‘Searched by whom?’
‘He didn’t know, but there were about six of them. He got the impression it was all official.’
‘Do you know the exact date?’
‘It was the week beginning January 28th or Feb 4th, I am not sure. But I have a note of it at the office.’
‘So, that was after David had been killed. Was anything missing?’
‘How were we to know? Everything looked all right to Nock. Nothing obvious seemed to have been disturbed.’
The cows were being coaxed through a gateway to their left. Russell edged past the remaining heifer. The track rose and then plummeted to a short gravel driveway and a house that was almost hidden behind trees. They parked next to a Bristol saloon, which was half-covered by a green tarpaulin.
‘May I offer some advice?’ he said before getting out. ‘David has left you something that was dear to him. It’s very special. Enjoy it and forget this other business. It’s got nothing to do with you now. David is dead. It can only bring you trouble. Let it go.’ His eyes pleaded with her. ‘I mean it, Kate.’
She looked up at the end of the long, slender building of dark brick and timber. ‘OK. Why don’t you show me around?’
‘What you’re looking at now is the original cottage. The dogtooth pattern of the bricks dates to about 1604 - the year that Shakespeare wrote Othello. We have all the documentation on the house since it was built, which is quite rare. Needless to say, David organised it all in a binder, which is somewhere inside.’
He led her round to the front by a gravel path. The cottage was surprisingly large with a run of eight small windows along the front and a two-storey extension, added to the far end during the nineteenth century. She peered inside but couldn’t see much. Russell touched her on the elbow and showed her the view over the bowl of the Dove Valley. ‘It’s one of the most perfect spots in England. I’ve lived in this area all my life but I never knew of it until David came here.’
She glanced at an old green table and thought of Eyam writing his weird note to her, then walked to the end of the garden and looked across the valley. Dove Farm lay below like a child’s drawing. Sounds of geese and sheep were borne to her on the updraft that rattled the bare branches of trees around the garden. To her right at the head of the valley was a large wood that was showing the first pale washes of spring. Before that an orchard of apple and pear trees about the size of a tennis court. Little moved. Apart from the abandoned farm equipment scattered over a remarkably wide area, there were few signs of modern life. No telegraph poles or phone masts. She shivered at the ancient stillness of the place. ‘Jesus, what the hell does someone do here alone in winter?’
‘It has its charms,’ Russell said.
‘They’re not immediately obvious.’
Inside, the cottage had the familiar feel of all Eyam’s homes. She recognised several pieces of furniture - a Queen Anne chest of drawers, a large sofa piled with old tapestry cushions, four original prints by the photographer James Ravilious, a black and white portrait of the pianist Glenn Gould hanging over his collection of Gould’s recordings, drawings by Henry Lamb and Paul Nash, a high-backed armchair beside which was a footstool with several books piled on it. His library occupied two walls of the large sitting room and an airy passageway to the kitchen. The run of titles were organised as they had been in his London flat, by subject then alphabetically. Along one end of the sitting room books were stacked neatly in half a dozen piles.
BOOK: The Dying Light
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