Authors: Margaret Duffy
âHave you spoken to him at all? Do you know anything about him that might give us a clue as to where he's gone?'
âI was asked that. No, I don't come face-to-face with the man to be able to say anything to him â not even good morning. He does have that friend, Cooper, who I'm sure you know about. I could hear them, or at least someone, having dreadful rows occasionally and I fear drink was involved.'
âHe's not at Cooper's place,' Carrick said. The identity of the murder victim had still not been released.
âI fancy he's not a person to come to a good end, if you see what I mean,' said Miss Braithewaite tentatively.
âYou once told me that you could pick out the children who might go wrong,' Carrick recollected.
âI said that when we were doing the play? When you were playing Wimsey?'
âThat's right, and the boy you cast as the arch-villain went on to become one in real life.'
âOh, no, did he? I sincerely hope he didn't hear me and I gave him the idea.'
âNot a chance.'
Frowning, Miss Braithewaite said, âYou know, there's a place where Mallory
might
have gone but you simply mustn't go rushing off there as I'm sure I'm quite wrong. That music that he's really enthusiastic about was written by Karl Humpleschlacht. I absolutely hate it but can remember listening to a programme once on Radio Three about him and other so-called progressive or fringe composers. I didn't listen for very long, I have to confess. Apparently he was living in London â this was in the fifties, you understand â went mad and in the end threw himself off a bridge into the Thames. Hammersmith, I
think.
But he knew he was going mad and used to spend more and more time away from his composing in what he regarded as his sanctuary. If Mallory's following in his hero's footsteps â¦' She took a breath â more a disapproving sniff, really. âIt can't have done him much good, though, can it?'
âI've never heard of private asylums,' James said a little later.
âThink of it as an exclusive clinic,' I suggested. âAsylum isn't a word that's used in connection with mental illness these days.'
We had left the car at the rear of North Terrace for a short while and hunted out a café that had wi-fi to enable me to ask my smart phone about Buckington Hall, Surrey. As the name suggested it had once been a stately home and had belonged to the Heaton family. After the place had to be sold to cover death duties it had variously been a girls' boarding school, a hospital during the First World War, a military command centre during the Second and lastly, a treatment centre, no doubt vastly expensive, for the titled and wealthy who had drink, drug and/or mental problems. Some really disturbed, and deemed to be dangerous, clients had been permanent residents. There was no further information following its closure in 1961.
âSomething tells me I shouldn't ask Surrey Police to make enquiries,' Carrick said. âIt's just too flimsy.'
I made no further comments concerning professional pride, saying instead, âIf we call at the nick you can listen to the radio while I email them through official channels and ask them to contact me on my mobile.'
Information was forthcoming and I received a call amazingly quickly. I was told that the hall and grounds were now derelict after several attempts by the local historical society to save the property, a venture complicated by lead being stolen from the roof and marble fireplaces, carved panelling and even a staircase ripped out from within. Since then vandals had started fires on several occasions. Efforts were being made to trace the present owner, an eccentric nonagenarian who lived in the United States, with a view to the place being sold to a developer. It was most unlikely that anyone could be in the house, the police spokesman continued as, since the attacks by vandals, it had been surrounded by security fencing topped by razor wire.
I reminded him that the man in question was regarded as desperate and the main suspect in a murder investigation, and finished by asking if someone could check. Apologies followed that nothing could be done in the very near future as they had what he described as a âmajor incident' on their hands.
âThe canteen coffee machine just blew up. And it's raining,' Carrick commented dourly.
I looked at my watch. âIt'll be almost dark by the time we get there.'
My companion registered horror. âHen, you're not going to set off and go looking for that maniac in a derelict building at
night
!'
No, perhaps not.
âTomorrow,' James said decidedly.
He was quite right; it was flimsy and I was grateful to him for being willing to accompany me. Joanna, I knew, would have relished such a venture but in the present circumstances for her to come with me would have been most unwise and I would not have allowed her to. If she was injured ⦠To her credit, she seemed not to mind her husband setting off with me early the next morning on what I was beginning to think was a fool's errand, a woman clutching at anything to keep herself busy when she ought to be concentrating on writing a novel that had already been far too long in the creating.
âIf he's there, or we think he is, we call out the local cops,' Carrick said as he got in the Range Rover. âNot only that, the place is almost certainly going to be hellishly secured.'
âI do have bolt-cutters,' I said.
âWhy didn't I know you would?' he muttered.
âThere's a Smith and Wesson in the safe by your right knee should you want to carry it.'
âLook, I'm not nervous!' he protested, his Scottish accent a little more pronounced than usual.
âI know you're not, I'm just telling you it's there,' I assured him. He was, a purely temporary state of affairs due to having recently been savagely beaten up.
âPatrick has the Glock?'
âPlus his knife. He always has his knife.'
And is more dangerous with that than most men armed with a meat cleaver.
âI sincerely hope he's not going to try to take this Raptor character and his retinue single-handed.'
âThe idea's only to locate him, hopefully somewhere where he's likely to stay for long enough to enable Patrick to call in and get the Met to arrest him.'
He gave me a âI've-heard-that-one-before' kind of look and then said, âI felt I should tell Lynn what we were doing.'
âI'm glad you did.'
âThen they'll know exactly where to look for us, or rather where our decomposing bodies will be â under tons of fallen masonry,' he gloomily added.
âJames, did you sleep last night?'
âNo, I couldn't get off for some reason.'
âThen for heaven's sake have a snooze now!'
He did, sleeping as if dead. I got some breakfast inside him too when we stopped for fuel on the motorway, something else that had not quite happened.
Buckington Hall was situated near Virginia Water and set among trees, most of which were in Windsor Great Park. It proved to be quite hard to find, even with the satnav, and after bouncing down sundry tracks and unmade roads â yes, it was raining â we ended up in a lane that appeared to be the service road to a golf club. And, suddenly, there it was, the huge gates chained up, warning notices about alarms and guard dogs everywhere and, as we already knew, razor wire.
âI think I watched one of those ghost hunting programmes that was filmed here,' Carrick said, gazing at what was before us. âThey said it was a nightmare â it looks like one.'
I could not blame lack of food and sleep this time because he happened to be right.
Quickly, James went on to add, âIt's Joanna who likes watching them â but I have to sit and hold her hand.'
Even though the drive was overgrown the house was visible, little more than a blackened ruin with vegetation growing on the chimneys and what remained of the roof. The windows were just rectangular holes and like sightless eyes but still, somehow, looking at us.
T
here was no question of entering through the main gates â it was too well secured. I pulled off the lane and parked in a nearby clearing, just off a forest track. Another car was there already, but it wasn't Mallory's. We had seen several people either jogging or walking dogs so I was content that our presence was not conspicuous.
We set off, walking along the lane, following the boundary wall of the house and one-time gardens until we reached its extremity in that direction and underwent a right-angled turn. There we discovered a narrow winding path that branched off the lane, running roughly parallel with the new direction of the wall, well-worn as though the route was regularly used by walkers or deer. Unfortunately, from the point of view of climbing over it, the wall appeared to be in very good condition and in places was swathed in ivy and brambles trying to gain access and other climbers growing on the inside endeavouring to escape. After about ten minutes we came to a door set in it. It was almost invisible due to the vegetation and, I thought, had been intended for the use of garden and estate workers for maintenance purposes. It proved to be well and truly locked and probably bolted as well, so we carried on walking.
âSupposing he's here,' Carrick said. âWhere has he parked his car?'
âThere must be at least one other entrance to a place like this,' I replied. âAnd for all we know he may have been here before, in the footsteps of his hero kind of thing, and be familiar with the layout.'
âNot a bad day for a walk anyway, now the rain's eased off a bit.'
âI know you don't think he's here.'
âDo you?'
âNo, not for one minute. I'm just telling myself we're eliminating it from enquiries.'
âYou're learning all the jargon.'
âIf you were fully fit I'd hit you.'
We carried on. But for the cooing of pigeons and the occasional sudden burst of birdsong â wrens, I thought â it was quiet, the drone of the endless procession of airliners heading to and leaving Heathrow muffled by the leaf canopy. The path began to curve to the right, away from the wall and, after pausing for a short discussion, we carried on in as straight a line as possible, picking our way through the ferns and long grass. Small fallen branches lying hidden in the leaf litter were a trip hazard but at least there was no obvious reason for us to progress in silent, stealthy fashion.
After another ten minutes or so we arrived at a second doorway, identical to the first, traces of the original green paint still adhering to it. It was equally well-secured, the thick ivy growing across it as good as several added padlocks. Without comment, we walked on.
Finally we arrived at the limit of this side of the wall, which predictably turned ninety degrees to the left. After further progress, slower as the trees were farther apart here, the grass much coarser and growing in tall tussocks, we came to another entrance. Through the wrought-iron gates, smaller and less ornate than the ones at the front, the view was of little more than an English jungle, the traces of what must have been a gravelled carriage drive just discernible for a short distance before disappearing into the greenery. On our side of the gates the drive merged with another lane, which, judging by the sound of traffic, then joined a road not far away. A group of cars was parked nearby.
âThat's Mallory's,' I said as we approached. âThe black hatchback.'
âBravo, Miss Braithewaite,' said Carrick.
âThere are now good grounds for calling out the local force,' I observed.
âOr SOCA and Avon and Somerset Police could decide not to trouble them due to their doubtless ongoing major incident.'
âSure?'
âSure.'
We high-fived and then turned our attention to the gates. These were as well secured as just about everything else with, if anything, even more razor wire, so we decided to carry on walking around the boundary wall with a view to climbing over it, somehow, when out of view of the lane and anyone who might return to their cars. This proved to be a good idea as, after passing another of the small side doors, we came to an oak tree growing fairly close to the wall, its branches having grown right over the top.
âI'm not that good in trees,' I said.
âAnd I'm thinking I'm not that good right
now
,' Carrick muttered.
âYou shouldn't climb it with dodgy ribs,' I told him.
âPerhaps not, but then again I want Mallory, badly.' He flexed his shoulders and, going to one side of the tree, went up it like a monkey until he was level with the lowest branch. âThere are all kinds of holes and bumps you can use as steps,' he called down.
I scrambled up, trying not to think about the coming down bit. James moved across and a little higher to a branch that stretched over the wall where he waited for me, holding on to the branch above. Not being all that thick, the one taking his weight swayed and dipped under him and I decided not to add mine to it as well.
âNo, you're all right,' Carrick said after I had voiced my caution. âWe could do with it being a bit lower.'
âIt might break,' I fretted.
âNo, oak won't. It'll only come to rest on the top of the wall.'
Which it did, surprisingly gently, as I edged along it and we both carefully sat down, feet hanging, to survey the ground about eight feet below us. This appeared to be roughly the same as on the side of the wall we had just come from, long grass and ferns with a gone wild fruit tree of some kind, perhaps a pear, growing against the wall itself.
âI suggest we both drop off simultaneously,' Carrick said. âOtherwise the branch will flip up and possibly unseat who's still on it.'
OK, they sometimes failed to sleep or have breakfast but sometimes men can be really, really useful.
We dropped off and I landed in a heap in a flurry of leaves and bits of twig.
âAre you all right?' I enquired urgently, noticing that James looked a bit white.