Read Death of a Salesperson Online
Authors: Robert Barnard
âDon't be daft. A smile is a smile.'
âNo, it's not. Most people have many different ways of smiling. Not her, though. First time I noticed it I saw her smile at some old newspaper-seller who'd sold her the
Evening News.
Who'd bother to smile at some smelly old git like that? Then I'd take her to some Stock Exchange function, and she'd smile when I introduced her to my boss.'
âWell?'
âIn exactly the same way.'
âWell, why not? Shows she was friendly.'
âFriendly! . . . Then I'd catch her at the window there, looking at the sunset, and the silly bitch would have the same smile, exactly the same smile, on her face. Who the hell smiles at sunset on the Thames Valley?'
âShe just liked sunsets, I suppose.'
âBut what really got me,
really
got me, was when I realized that when I came down to breakfast in the morning, or when I got home at night, she'd smile at meâ
me
âin exactly the same way.'
âWhat did you expect?'
âSomething different! Something special! Something to show that I was
the
person in her life. Special. Was she my girl, or was she not? I didn't take up with her to be treated exactly the same as a bloody setting sun!'
âYou could have told her. Talked it over with her.'
âI wouldn't stoop so low.'
âShe looks awfully young. If you'd told her what was niggling you, you could have made her understand.'
âIt would have come to an argument. I couldn't have had that. I never argue with people. If she didn't understand
naturally
what I had a right to expect, she'd never understand at all.'
âI think you're a pig. I suppose you got rid of her.'
âThat is pre
cise
ly what I did.'
âJust threw her over.'
âNot exactly, though it's an idea. Let's just say that I stopped her smiles altogether.'
Deborah had been getting restless for some minutes. That last remark of Miles, said with a cat-like smile on his handsome face, made her sit in silence for some moments. Then she reached for her tights and bra.
âWhat did you mean, about stopping her smiles altogether?' she asked, in a voice that came out small and tight.
âJust what I said. I made sure she never smiled at me or anyone else like that again. Ever.'
âYou don't mean you . . .
did
something to her?'
âI should be so stupid! I'd have been the first one they came for, wouldn't I? Still, something had to be done, that was for sure. I couldn't have her talking about me to other men . . . laughing at me . . .'
Deborah had her skirt on now, and was reaching for her blouse.
âWhat did you do?'
âI've got friends . . . I was at a gala concert at the Festival Hall that night. Then at the reception afterwards . . . But they're good friends. I'd do the same for them . . . For quite a small consideration they did what had to be done. There was nothing to connect them with her, you see. They'd never met her . . . It all went off very smoothly.'
âI don't believe this. This isn't happening.'
But she had got her handbag, and was turning to the chair where she had slung her coat. Miles shrugged, still with the same self-absorbed smile on his face.
âAs you like,' he said.
âYou wouldn't . . . have someone
killed . . .
just because they didn't give you the . . .
devotion
you wanted.'
âI can't think of a more terrible failure, in someone
I
had chosen.'
She was at the door. Bravely she turned and said:
âYou'd have to be a
monster.'
âPerhaps there is just a little element of the monster in me. But a frightfully handsome monster, don't you think? Why don't you come back, just for a while?'
Negligently, beautifully, he started up from the sofa. Deborah turned on her heels, wrenched open the door and fled, her high heels making a clap-clapping sound as she trundled herself down the stairs.
â¢Â â¢Â â¢
Miles lay back on the sofa, still smiling in self-contentment. An English degree at Oxford had been no sort of preparation for a career on the Stock Exchange, but he never regretted having been forced to read âMy Last Duchess'. It had been invaluable in getting rid of girlfriends who had started becoming proprietorial.
Lazily, still smiling, he leant round and turned the snapshot of his sister and himself, taken at Henley, face down on the side table.
He'd never liked his sister's silly smile.
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
Death and the Chaste Apprentice
At Death's Door
The Skeleton in the Grass
The Cherry Blossom Corpse
Bodies
Political Suicide
Fête Fatale
Out of the Blackout
Corpse in a Gilded Cage
School for Murder
The Case of the Missing Brontë
A Little Local Murder
Death and the Princess
Death by Sheer Torture
Death in a Cold Climate
Death of a Perfect Mother
Death of a Literary Widow
Death of a Mystery Writer
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Copyright © 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989 by Robert Barnard
First American Edition, 1989
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Publisher.
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Barnard, Robert.
Death of a salesperson/Robert Barnard.â1st
American ed.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-684-19088-5
ISBN: 978-1-4767-3731-7 (eBook)
I. Title.
PR6052.A665D455Â Â Â 1989Â Â Â 89-6264Â Â Â CIP
823'.914âdc20