Read The Lucifer Network Online
Authors: Geoffrey Archer
âOh, Steph! Under normal circumstances I'd take huge pleasure in knocking you around the court, but unfortunately I can't. Something's come up.'
âSomething to your taste? In a skirt?'
âSadly not. Family problems.'
âOh. Sorry.'
âDon't be. It's probably nothing. But I need to make sure.'
âSounds intriguing.' She was canny enough not to press for details.
âBut later in the week perhaps?' Sam checked. âOr maybe a lunch?'
âYou're joking! Don't get time for a sandwich these
days. But I could face a curry one evening. Midweek, say?'
âYou mean Gerry'll give you time off?'
âI told you. He's away.' The flatness in her voice made him wonder for a moment if âaway' meant her new man had walked out on her.
âA curry would be great,' he told her. âGive you a ring in a couple of days?'
âI'll look forward to it. Might even challenge you to a vindaloo.'
âNo chance,' he growled. âYou know my preferences. A flaming arsehole cramps my style with the boys.'
Stephanie laughed. âYou're so disgusting, you could be a copper. See you later in the week.'
âBye.'
He knew that in many ways Stephanie was precisely the sort of woman he ought to pick as a partner. She was clever, witty and level-headed. Their minds sparred beautifully, but they'd never clicked physically. For a woman she was on the stocky side and he liked them more girlish. Gerry, her new man and an Armed Response Team officer, was the right size for her. Six foot two with the build of a bouncer.
Sam grabbed his mobile phone and his wallet. He went through the routine of monitoring the security camera, then let himself out of the flat. Down in the underground garage he noticed some of the light bulbs had failed, casting dark shadows amongst the line-up of German-made cars. He made a mental note to get the caretaker to fix them, then drove up the ramp and over Kew Bridge, heading for the M3 motorway.
He had no clear plan for the day, apart from the need to visit his sister. Beryl, married to a naval scientist and well settled in an estate outside Portsmouth, was the custodian of all their father's paperwork. It would be
an uncomfortable meeting, the first since their mother's funeral five years ago.
The traffic was heavy heading for the coast, families making the most of one of the few sunny weekends of that bleak, wet summer. He turned off the motorway and took the Meon valley road through the Hampshire countryside, passing rain-flattened wheat fields and the lush green parks of old mansions.
His father had been serving on a diesel boat in the year of his birth, a Porpoise class submarine based in Gosport. Away at sea for months at a time, he'd missed his son's coming into the world, an absence his wife had never forgiven him for.
Fareham where they'd lived was an overspill town for Portsmouth. Sam found his way easily at first, driving through the housing estates as if on autopilot. But when he entered his old road it all looked different. The houses had been upgraded with B&Q doors and coach-lamp porch lights. To identify his old home he had to check the house numbers. It was odd seeing it again. Everything looked smaller than he'd remembered. Staring up at the window of his one-time bedroom, he shivered as he remembered the chill there'd been in that house when his father wasn't there.
He wasn't sure what he'd expected to find. Today's residents of the estate were not from his time. They all looked so young. Not much more than teenagers but with small children snapping at their heels. His own mother, one of the last of her generation to move, had left ten years ago for her sister's in Southsea. There was nothing to see here, and what there was, he didn't want to look at.
He switched on again and drove down the road, then took the A32 north for a few miles before turning onto the high down that overlooked Portsmouth. His sister's
husband worked in a windswept Admiralty research centre perched on the ridge. Sam had met him a few times. The quiet type. Beryl liked her men docile.
Four years older than Sam, Beryl lived with Jim and their two girls in a modern house of dark brick. He found his way to their village and through the estate, passing homes with tricycles and speedboats in their drives. Outside number 12 Magnolia Close a teenager's bike lay on the lawn and a trug full of weeds blocked the path. The front door was open. Sam switched off and got out. As he stepped over the basket a figure emerged from the house wearing gardening gloves.
âWell, bless my soul!'
Thinning fair hair brushed back, metal-framed glasses and a long thin nose, Beryl's husband was shorter than Sam. He wore old cords and a blue check shirt.
âHello, Jim.'
âNice to see you, Sam.' Jim Butterworth pulled off a glove and reached out his hand. His voice had a touch of Hampshire about it. âWhat a surprise!'
âBeryl didn't mention I rang?'
âNo. Must've slipped her mind,' Jim said charitably.
âWell, I was in the area so I thought I'd try my luck. High time and all that . . .'
âAbsolutely. How are you?'
âFine. Just fine. And you?'
âOh, you know. Rubbing along. Come on in.'
Sam's sister emerged from the hall. She'd put on weight but it had done little to soften the pinched, disapproving expression she'd inherited from her mother. She wore green shorts, revealing pasty legs that had lost their once decent shape.
âWell . . .' she grunted. âSo there you are.'
They made no attempt to embrace and went into the kitchen. The children were summoned to say hello to
this uncle they'd seldom seen. Two girls, aged twelve and fourteen, both quite pretty, studied him with idle curiosity.
âStill no wife in tow?' Beryl enquired, peering theatrically towards the door. âYou
would
have invited us to the wedding . . .'
âI imagine I might have done. No. I'm not married.'
Sam didn't want them probing into his life. He'd come here for one reason only.
âSo . . . to what do we owe this pleasure?' Beryl asked, perching her hands on her ample hips. She had the same wiry hair as Sam, but it had been cut short in a style like a teacosy.
âAs I said, I was just in the area,' Sam explained uncomfortably. He couldn't broach the subject in front of the girls.
âOh no you weren't.' She turned to the sink to fill a kettle. âDropping in isn't your style. You're after something. I take it you'd like some coffee now you're here?'
âThat'd be nice. Thanks.'
The girls took it as their cue to go back to whatever they were doing. Sam gave them a smile.
âSo? How's things?' Beryl asked when she'd plugged in the kettle.
âNot bad. Not bad.'
âYour work still all hush-hush?' She tried to make it sound inconsequential, but he knew that she was rather in awe of what he did.
âThat's right.'
âTravel a lot, do you?' Jim chipped in.
âNow and then.'
âNice for you.'
Beryl put custard creams on the kitchen table and they all sat round it. There was silence for a few moments.
âCome on Sam. Spit it out,' Beryl told him. They watched him expectantly.
âIt's to do with our father.'
Beryl blanched. âOur
father
? But he's been dead nearly thirty years.'
Sam stood up and crossed to the kitchen door, checking that the girls weren't in earshot. Then he closed it.
âSomething odd's come up,' he told them, sitting down again and keeping his voice low. âBit of a bombshell. And it's highly confidential. Not the sort of thing to be talked about with children or friends.'
âSam! Don't be so mysterious. What's happened?'
âWell . . . the Russians are claiming he spied for them.'
Jim and Beryl's mouths sagged and their eyes became saucers. Neither of them spoke.
âA former Soviet military intelligence officer who's defected to the United States has handed over a list of people they recruited back in the 1970s,' Sam explained. âAnd Dad's name was on it.'
Beryl covered her mouth. Jim was the first to speak.
âLordy . . .'
âNo,' Beryl reasoned, shaking her head. âThat can't be right.'
âThat's what I said,' Sam told her. âIt's a mistake. Has to be.'
âWhatever our father was, he wasn't a spy,' she went on heavily. âHe lived for the Navy. Put it above everything else. Particularly his own damned family,' she stressed, her voice rising in pitch. âHe went to sea, came home, patted his beloved little boy on the head, ignored his wife and daughter, bedded a handful of women he wasn't married to, then went to sea again.'
Sam closed his eyes at this familiar litany of complaint. âYou've only got our mother's word for the other women,' he told her defensively.
âAnd when did she ever lie?'
Sam groaned inwardly. His conversations with Beryl always went this way.
âWell . . . whatever he did in his spare time, he wasn't a spy and I intend to prove it,' he told her, determined not to be sidetracked.
âQuite right too,' said Jim, his brow furrowing. âBut how?'
âI don't know yet.'
Beryl's complexion was turning a blotchy red and her eyes had become dark dots of anger. âI simply don't believe it,' she hissed.
âNo. Nor do I,' said Sam.
âNo!' she squealed. âYou, Sam, you! That's what I don't believe. I do not understand how you can sit there and say we only have mother's word for his womanising.'
Jim rolled his eyes and passed a hand across his face.
âYou're missing the point Beryl,' Sam soothed.
âOh no I'm not. The man was a lecher. And after all these years you're still defending him.
That's
the point.'
â
Lecher
is a bit over the top, Beryl. Anyway the charge is spying. And at this particular moment nothing else matters.'
âOh yes it does. The trouble with you is that you're just like him,' she countered. âOne woman in your life has never been enough for you, has it?'
âBee . . .' Jim's pained expression said he'd heard far too many of these outbursts.
âLook, forget about women,' Sam growled. âI came here to warn you.' He wanted to be gone from here. âThe press may get on to you. If they do, say nothing about my work, understand? If anyone wants to know what it is I do, say it's import-export.'
âWe understand, Sam,' Jim assured him. âDon't worry. We know the rules.'
Sam took in a deep breath. âThere is one other reason I came here.'
âAh. I knew it,' Beryl snorted.
âYou've got some things of his. A tin box with old passports, service documents, driving licences and so on.'
âWent years ago,' Beryl snapped, her face scarlet.
Her husband turned to her. âIsn't it in the . . .?'
âI said it's gone,' she yelled. âChucked out. Mother kept it under her bed when she moved in with her sister. God knows why she hung on to it when she hated him so much.'
âAnd after she died all those oddments came to you,' Sam reminded her. âWhen did you throw them out, Beryl?' He was losing patience.
âI really don't remember,' she said vapidly. âWe have clear-outs from time to time. Most
families
do.'
She stressed the word to emphasise the abnormality of his single state.
âThat box was all that was left of him,' Sam snapped.
Jim half stood. âYou know, I do have a feeling that . . .'
Beryl cut him off with a slicing movement of her arm, but her husband persisted.
âI am pretty sure that tin box is in the loft,' he declared.
âWell
you
must have put it there,' Beryl charged. âBecause
I
certainly didn't.'
âQuite possibly,' Jim mumbled.
Her pinprick eyes fixed Sam with loathing. âYou are so disgustingly like him, you know. Particularly with that beard which doesn't suit you
at
all. How long have you had that . . . that dreadful fuzz?'
âA couple of years.' Odd how he'd forgotten that his
father had been bearded once. He'd been clean shaven in the wedding photo.
âAnd this is typical, of course,' Beryl added, her voice rising to a yell. âYour turning up like this. It's only because you want something. Not to see us. Not because you're interested in how your nieces are doing.
Exactly
like Dad. He really was a prize shit, you know.'
Her husband sighed. âLeave it out, Bee, for God's sake.'
Sam held back, startled by his sister's virulence. She was displaying signs of mental instability. Upstairs he heard a door slam and guessed it was the children shutting out a noise they'd come to hate.
As tears filled her eyes, Jim put an arm round her shoulders and rocked her gently, grimacing an apology to Sam. âBee . . .' he cooed.
âOh, give him his damned tin box for heaven's sake and then he can go,' Beryl gulped.
Jim stood up and beckoned Sam to follow him upstairs. On the upper landing he opened an airing cupboard and brought out a boat-hook which he used to pull down a ladder concealed above the hatch to the loft.
âShan't be a mo,' he said, handing Sam the hook. âHold this, would you?'
He shinned up the ladder and reached up to the rafters, fumbling for a light switch. Then he hoisted himself into the roof space, emerging half a minute later with a black metal deed box. He turned it over to show the initials on the lid. T.P.P. â Trevor Patrick Packer.
Sam took it from him. There was a key in the lock, but it wouldn't turn.
âI'll drench that in WD40,' Jim told him, gingerly descending. He patted his hands to shake off the dust, then pushed the sliding ladder back into the cavity. âIt's in the garage.'