“Sean?” I said. “Come on, talk to me!”
But he was already outside and halfway across the forecourt towards the coach house. I caught him up again as he was unlocking the door.
“Why did Clare say she accepted a lift with Slick Grannell in the first place?” he asked then.
“Because,” I said slowly, as it dawned on me what line he was taking, “she said the Ducati wouldn’t start.”
I glanced past him to where Clare’s beautiful scarlet 851 Strada sat on its paddock stand, looking like a refugee from a racetrack. Clare loved that bike and Jacob maintained it regardless of expense. Without another word I took the keys out of Sean’s hand and stuck one into the ignition, twisting it to run and turning on the fuel tap. I pulled the choke out a notch, flicking my eyes to Sean’s. He was watching me without expression. I hit the starter button.
The Ducati fired on the first spin and revved up without any hesitation. The exhaust note reverberated gruff and loud inside the old stone building.
I let it run for a moment or two, then cut the motor and pulled the key out again. I handed it back to him with a deep frown.
“You might want to look at it this way instead,” Sean said. “How the hell is Clare going to explain this one to
you
?”
***
An hour later, completely unexpectedly, the police turned up. Superintendent MacMillan in his usual unmarked Rover, plus two pairs of uniforms in a couple of full-dress squad cars.
Sean and I were back in the study, trying to make some sense out of the disorder and clearing up after Isobel’s destructive intervention.
We heard the drive alarm go off three times in quick succession. The first thought that went through both our minds was that Eamonn was back and he’d brought reinforcements. After that, MacMillan’s arrival came almost as a relief.
We met them on the forecourt just as they were getting out of their cars. MacMillan nodded gravely to me, then he and Sean locked gazes like a pair of rutting stags.
The two of them had run up against each other before and the collision had caused more sparks than a foundry. MacMillan had wanted Sean for murder and it had taken some fast talking to persuade the policeman to let us go after the real killer. The fact that we’d achieved our purpose had done little to inspire friendly feelings on either side.
“We’d like to do a search of these premises, Charlie, if you have no objections,” he said coolly, not breaking eye contact with Sean while he spoke.
“Do you have a warrant?” Sean asked.
“Do I need one?”
“Not necessarily,” I said carefully, moving between them and passing Sean a warning glance. “Not if you tell me what you’re looking for.”
MacMillan turned and rested his gaze on me, murky like canal water and just as difficult to see the bottom of. “A motorbike,” he said at last.
“Well, considering Jacob deals in the things, it won’t come as any surprise to you to find lots of those here,” I said acidly. “Try being more specific.”
MacMillan stilled for a moment, the only outward sign of his disapproval at my attitude. I was struck then by the similarities between the policeman and my father. And both of them made me nervous.
“Oh, we’re looking for something very specific,” he said then, moving over to join us. “We’re after a customised machine based, so I’m told, on Suzuki mechanicals and, I believe, a Harris frame,” he went on. He raised an eyebrow as he spoke, as though he was trying out words from a foreign language and was surprised that they were understood.
“A streetfighter,” I said blankly. “You’re looking for Slick’s bike. Why? I thought you already had it.”
“We did,” he said, emphasising the past tense.
“Careless.” Sean was back to the gently mocking tone he’d used on me earlier. The Superintendent didn’t appear to like it any more than I had.
“What happened?” I said quickly, as much to distract MacMillan as anything else.
He paused, as though reluctant to admit to any mistakes in front of an outsider. And particularly not in front of an outsider like Sean.
“The wreckage was transported to a nearby garage to await collection by our accident investigation lads,” he said at last. “When they came to pick it up today, it had already gone.”
“And what makes you think I might have had anything to do with that?” I asked softly.
“Someone was making off with Grannell’s bike at just about the same time you were sitting in my office this morning, thus providing you with a fairly unassailable alibi,” he said with a fraction of a smile. “Which could, naturally, be taken as a coincidence but I’ve never liked them much. Besides,” he added crisply, “even you must admit that you do have a bit of a reputation for taking matters into your own hands, Charlie.” His eyes went to Sean again. “And you could have had help.”
“Well, since I know I didn’t – search away,” I said, reckless. “Just tell them to wipe their feet and don’t break anything.”
We sat in the sun by the front door and watched them poke their way through every nook and cranny for the best part of the next hour, MacMillan supervising proceedings without actually getting his hands dirty. I wondered how I was going to explain to Jacob that I’d let the cops search his place. Still, on top of everything else it seemed a minor additional transgression.
Just as the searchers began to lose their initial fervour in the face of disappointment, one of the uniforms sidled up to announce that they couldn’t get into the locked coach house.
MacMillan looked at me enquiringly. I stood up but it was Sean who said, “I’ll do it,” and put his glass of iced water down, getting to his feet and heading for the front door.
MacMillan moved beside me and watched him go. “I can’t pretend I’m happy to see you renewing your association with Meyer,” he said quietly.
“That’s my business,” I snapped, my own earlier doubts making my voice sharper than I’d intended. I shoved my hands into the pockets of my leather jeans. “I know what I’m doing.”
“I’m sure you believe that to be so,” he murmured, solemn. “Just be careful, Charlie.”
Sean reappeared with Clare’s keys and dutifully unlocked the coach house before rejoining us. Two policemen disappeared eagerly inside, only to return a few minutes later, shaking their heads, disappointed.
“Nothing, sir,” one of them reported. He jerked a thumb back towards the coach house door. “He’s got a lovely old Laverda Jota in there, though. Looks like new. I wouldn’t mind making him a bid at that.”
“That’s Jacob’s own bike,” I said, my voice cool. “He’d bite his own leg off rather than part with it.”
MacMillan glanced at me. “Everyone has their price,” he said, cryptic. He nodded to his men again and they made for their cars, then he inclined his head to me. “Thank you for your co-operation, Charlie. No doubt we’ll be in touch again soon.”
And with that slightly ominous promise, the police climbed back into their vehicles and departed up the dusty driveway. I turned and found Sean at my shoulder.
“So, if
we
haven’t nicked Slick’s bike,” I said lightly, “who has?”
“His friends?” Sean suggested. “Or his enemies?”
“I’m not sure who his enemies are,” I said, “but I do know how to get hold of one of his friends.”
I dug the number William had given me out of my jacket pocket, together with my mobile phone and dialled one into the other. William’s phone clicked straight onto voice mail and I didn’t think it was worth leaving him a message. I ended the call, muttering curses under my breath.
“Annoying, isn’t it?” Sean said, his voice suddenly cheerful. “When someone doesn’t leave their mobile phone switched on.”
***
The only person I could think of who might know something about Slick’s enemies was Clare. The only person I knew where to find, at any rate. I didn’t believe the remains of his bike had disappeared without good reason. Was it to protect Slick, or to hide the evidence of whatever had hit him? The only trouble was, I was increasingly unsure how much Clare would be prepared to tell us.
I wavered over calling the hospital first, to check it was OK to visit her again, but decided against it. Ask permission and you stand a chance of being refused – especially if the same nurse who’d chucked us out this morning was the one who answered the phone.
Sean offered to drive me into town and the prospect of being able to get out of my bike leathers in this weather was tempting enough to make me say yes.
I went upstairs and changed into the shirt and jeans I’d packed at the cottage. The skin round my knee was already starting to yellow where Eamonn had clouted it and a painful lump had come up on the outside of the joint. I prodded at it experimentally and was thankful I hadn’t taken the blow completely unprotected.
Sean was already in the Shogun with the motor running when I came downstairs and locked the front door. I hopped up into the passenger seat and we headed out along the drive.
Sean drove the same way he did everything, self-contained, with a relaxed casual competence. I found myself watching the way the definition formed and shifted in the muscles of his left forearm as he changed gear. Then I remembered those same muscles clenched around Eamonn’s neck, starving his brain. I looked away.
I sat in silence as we turned out onto the main road and travelled towards town. Even on a Monday a couple of big bikes passed us, heading in the opposite direction. The Shogun had air conditioning, which made the plush interior cool and bearable in the summer heat but I was aware of being one-step removed from the road and the conditions. Removed from the facts of what had brought Slick down.
The prospect of interrogating my friend as she lay helpless and injured in her hospital bed was not a pleasant one. That she’d lied to me and I knew it, only made it worse. Elderly Ducatis could be temperamental, but I couldn’t believe her bike had completely failed to start one day, and fired up first time the next. So what was she really doing out with Slick?
We pulled up at the traffic lights leading onto the motorway junction. There must have been another ferry into the port at Heysham from the Isle of Man or Belfast because a rake of bikes were waiting for the lights to change in their favour. Sports bikes rather than cruisers, but piled high with luggage like racehorses wearing donkey panniers.
“How do I handle this?” I asked suddenly. Sean hadn’t been privy to my thoughts but he seemed to know instantly what I meant, even so.
“It depends what you want to get out of it.”
I thought for a moment. “The truth?” I said. It should have been a decisive statement but it came out a lot more uncertain than that.
“About what, exactly?” The lights went green for the bikers and they flowed across the front of us like running deer. I watched them go, feeling the tug of not being on my Suzuki.
“About what Clare was really doing on the back of Slick’s bike,” I said, turning back to him. “About what really brought them off and why she won’t tell me what it was. And about what she was doing with ten grand in cash.”
“Come on, Charlie,” Sean said, mildly reproving as we moved forwards again. “You don’t know if she can remember the accident or not – anaesthetics can take you that way. And as for the ten thousand, we don’t know what’s happened to that. Not yet, anyway. The real question,” he went on, “is what are you prepared to sacrifice to find these things out?”
“Sacrifice?”
He smiled, although his voice remained cool and neutral. “Every victory is a compromise of gains and loses. You need to think about what you might lose in order to win the battle. What you can afford to lose.”
Why do I get the feeling you’re talking about me and you as much as about Clare, Sean? And what will
I
lose?
When I didn’t speak right away he added, “If you come right out with an accusation you might irrevocably harm or even lose your friendship with Clare. Is that a sacrifice you’re prepared to make?”
My mind gave a stark and immediate, “No!” But my mouth was contrary. “She lied to me,” I muttered, aware of the pain that fact caused me. “After everything . . .”
I fell silent as we rolled up through the centre of Lancaster, past Dalton Square with its immense green-tinged statue of Queen Victoria.
What could I say? Clare and I had been through a lot together, had come close to dying because of each other. Enough that I had thought she would trust me completely with any dark secret. I wasn’t just upset that she evidently did not but, I also recognised with a touch of shame, that my pride was wounded. It was an admission that made me feel rather small.
A few minutes later Sean braked to a halt in the hospital car park again. He unclipped his seatbelt and twisted to face me.
“Well?” he said.
“No.” I shook my head, took a breath. “I’m not prepared to lose Clare as a friend. If that means finding out what’s going on another way, well—” I broke off with a shrug.
“OK,” he said evenly. “Then that’s how you handle it.”