The Colony Part 13

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'And Jane Chambers,' Carrick said. 'She's not exactly been backward in coming forward over recent years, Lucy.'

Marsden said, 'How do we land Degrelle, at three days' notice?'

'We contact his superiors in the Catholic Church hierarchy,' McIntyre said. 'I offer to make a substantial donation to the charitable cause of their choice. Theirs is a vast organisation with a constant and pressing need for funds for establis.h.i.+ng missions and repairing buildings and remunerating lay staff.'

'Not to mention paying compensations to child s.e.x-abuse victims,' Lucy said.

'James is right,' McIntyre said. 'The expedition needs an exorcist. And so we buy one.'



When the testosterone took over, Lucy tended to let the men get on with it. She found the chest beating a bit tedious. She'd noted Carrick's apparent hostility towards Jane Chambers. But she didn't think it would be anything to worry about on the trip.

She let her mind drift off, on to the subject of Alice Lang, the psychiatrist and psychic she was scheduled to interview that afternoon. Alice had the lowest public profile of any of the experts going to New Hope. That would remain the case, even if Degrelle could be persuaded to join them. He was controversial, even notorious in agnostic circles. She by contrast was barely known to the public at all.

But despite her lack of celebrity status, Lucy thought Alice Lang potentially the most interesting of all the people going to New Hope. She used her powers, more accurately her gift, only with the greatest reluctance. The time spent on the island would either be a waste of time for her, or it would be a traumatic ordeal. She wasn't hungry for fame and she didn't profit from her psychic sensitivity. It begged the question, why was she going there at all?

It was the last of the interviews. Technically it was second to last, because she had the La.s.siter side-bar to write. But that was only a 500 word phoner and would concentrate on the police work he'd done in the past with the help of the psychic.

Detectives were dull men generally. They were methodical types who spoke in that weird constricted phraseology the Met seemed to indoctrinate them all with at the Police Training College at Hendon. La.s.siter would have no quirks or individuality. He was interesting only by a.s.sociation because he'd worked with Alice Lang.

Conference was breaking up. The need to orchestrate Degrelle's involvement was urgent and Marsden would not delegate the task. It occurred to her that Carrick must have been dwelling on the expedition at home for the priestly omission to have occurred to him. And it occurred to her for the first time that her department head might not actually be overjoyed at the idea of being flown to a remote Scottish island for the duration.

He had a young family, didn't he? He had a wife and two daughters under the age of ten. Perhaps he had been dwelling on the trip at home because it was something he was not so much looking forward to, as dreading. It was okay for her, a young woman, professional and unattached. For a family man, it would seem like nothing short of a brutal exile from all the things he valued in life.

His barb about Jane Chambers had reminded her of the trouble Jane was having with her daughter. Or more accurately, the trouble Jane's daughter was having when she dreamed. She dreamed of a man who had served aboard Seamus Ballantyne's slave s.h.i.+p. It was odd. More than that, it was ominous. Jane had been so worried that she'd felt the need to confide in her about it.

Lucy still felt flattered by that. She couldn't have written anything for the Chronicle about Edith's dreams concerning Jacob Parr. Child protection legislation would have prevented the paper from printing it. And it would have been self-defeating because it would have alienated Jane and the expedition would have lost the nation's best-known virologist. But she still felt flattered.

Jane was not the serene and glamorous celebrity scientist people a.s.sumed she was. She was a complicated and in some ways quite vulnerable woman. She was a caring mother who competed at the sharp end of the medical profession. She seemed a bit lonely. Lucy liked her and admired her and thought they were on the way to establis.h.i.+ng a friends.h.i.+p that would flourish in exile, on the island. She decided that she would call Jane.

First, out of nothing more than a reporter's instinct she switched on her desktop and looked at the cuttings from the period of Jane Chambers' brief affair with Karl Cooper.

They'd met on a judging panel. There was a still shot of the four member panel and they'd been seated side by side at its centre. In the picture, he was saying something to her out of the side of his mouth and she was smiling at whatever it was and they were leaning in collusively. The body language suggested a strong and easy mutual attraction. The panel had been judging student inventions over a six week season and so there had been plenty of opportunity for the relations.h.i.+p to flourish.

And flourish it had. There was another picture of them, attending the Chelsea Flower Show together, this time hand in hand. The smiles were broad and, terrible pun that it was, Jane was blooming in the suns.h.i.+ne in a pale silk dress and a broad brimmed hat. In his linen suit and sungla.s.ses, with his hair dishevelled by the summer breeze, the nation's favourite cosmologist looked more like a movie star.

Then it all went wrong. There was a picture of a papped Cooper, picking up his morning paper from the mat, unshaven and surly. There was a flash shot of Jane, pale and drawn in sungla.s.ses at the wheel of her car at night. And there was the usual guff about conflicting schedules, professional commitments and the inevitability of growing apart whist sharing a deep and enduring respect and affection for one another. Yeah, right, Lucy thought. She brought up Jane's number on her cell phone and made the call.

'Jane Chambers.'

'How do you avoid catching all the horrible diseases you research? Are you just inoculated against everything?'

'Lucy! I've been meaning to call you.'

'I'm the one who should have called. You're fully occupied with a grown-up job.'

'You're a very good writer.'

'And I haven't lost the hope of one day writing something very good. In the meantime, I do this. How's that daughter of yours?'

'The dreams have stopped.'

'Is that good, or bad?'

'It's good. Edith sounds relieved. I don't think she was telling me the whole truth about Jacob Parr. I don't think he was quite as wholesome as she made him out to be to me.'

'She didn't want to worry you.'

'Anyway he's gone. And it doesn't sound as though he's coming back.'

'Are you all packed and ready for the trip?'

'I very nearly pulled out. I think you're aware of that. The Hebrides seems an awfully long way from Surrey, when your daughter's sleep is disturbed in such a sinister way. And it was sinister.'

'There's no other word,' Lucy said. 'But it's stopped. And you're going. Think you'll rub up alright against Karl Cooper?'

Jane was silent for so long that Lucy thought the connection severed. Then her voice came on the line. She coughed to clear her throat and said, 'I'll have as little to do with him as I possibly can.'

'I asked him about you.'

Again, the silence. Then Jane said, 'You didn't include anything about me in the piece you wrote about him. I didn't read it, but a colleague would have mentioned it if you had. What did he say about the affair?'

'He came out with some self-serving c.r.a.p about how the press had distorted the facts to make him look like the villain of the piece and you the victim of a broken heart. He said it was a distortion of the truth.'

'He hit me.'

Lucy was stunned. She thought she must have misheard. 'He did what?'

'He hit me twice. I mean he hit me on two occasions. I should have left after the first time he did it. I didn't. I am very ashamed of that, of just how badly I let myself down.'

'Christ.'

'This is between us.'

'Of course it is.'

'I'll see you at Heathrow. Keep the seat next to yours vacant for me, if you board before I do. I'm a nervous flier.'

'I'm not great myself.'

'Then we can be terrified together. Sheer good luck, by the way.'

'What?'

'In avoiding diseases, Lucy. I've just been lucky.'

La.s.siter strongly suspected that his encounter with the ghost of Elizabeth Burrows was an experience familiar personally to Professor Fortescue. He knew that the museum's Keeper of Artefacts had once inventoried the contents of Ballantyne's sea chest because Fortescue had admitted doing so. Further, he had said it was not an ordeal he would be willing to repeat. And he had warned La.s.siter that the period immediately following his visit to the museum's bas.e.m.e.nt would be time most sensibly spent in company.

The ex-detective in him wanted to know what it was that had driven the woman whose spectre he had seen to self-murder. He had not felt suicidal after examining the contents of the chest. Fortescue was still alive. Shanks had been a suicide though, if what Alice saw in her mind after touching the film can was to be believed.

La.s.siter did believe it. He had every faith in the powers Alice possessed. He was not falling in love with her; he had already done that. But she had demonstrated her psychic talent to him before his feelings for her had really had time to develop. He believed in her not out of infatuation, but because when he'd still been drawing a Met Police salary, he'd seen the proof of what she could accomplish.

Shanks had stolen something from the chest. Doing so had triggered a run of ill-fortune that had dogged him and persuaded him eventually to return the stolen object. His luck didn't change though and eventually, he despaired to the point where he threw himself off a cliff.

Elizabeth had hanged herself in her college room in one of the halls of residence at Liverpool University. She hadn't left a note. She had left behind an unfinished thesis on the proto-feminism of Rebecca Browning, the woman who had married and then abandoned Seamus Ballantyne after his conversion to his self-elected ministry.

The chest was the connection between Shanks and Elizabeth and the obvious conclusion was that Elizabeth had stolen something, just as Shanks had, and had paid the price for doing so with her life.

The disparity was that Shanks had waited years to do it. Elizabeth had been driven to take her life in a period of less than two months. And she had been a woman with far more than the itinerant Shanks to live for. She'd been young and quite strikingly beautiful. She'd possessed brains and a pa.s.sionate ideological commitment. She'd not had the time to grow disillusioned with life and for a lifetime's drinking to undermine her physical health, as he had.

Looked at another way, she'd been much more vulnerable than he had been. Shanks had been a naturally courageous man, further steeled by his experiences as an infantry officer on the Western Front in the Great War. He'd been totally self-sufficient; a man able to survive as a crofter on a remote and otherwise uninhabited island. Perhaps most significantly, he had dabbled willingly in magic.

He'd been an acolyte of the black arts. It was what had got him excluded from the bohemian Cornish commune to which he'd belonged back in the 1950s. If there had been something of George Orwell about David Shanks, there had been something of Aleister Crowley, too.

If he had stolen something malevolent from the chest, its magic might not have surprised him too greatly. If Elizabeth had stolen something with similar powers, it would have shocked and dismayed her and undermined her belief system. She would have doubted her sanity. Logic would suggest to her that it wasn't the object at all. Reason would insist she was losing her mind.

A brilliant and fiercely independent woman, threatened with what she thought was the onset of madness, might be driven to kill herself. She might see no viable alternative to the degradation of being sectioned under the Mental Health Act. La.s.siter just couldn't picture the poised woman he had seen in that dockside pub, buckled into leather restraints in a lunatic asylum's padded cell.

This was all speculation on La.s.siter's part. In looking for a causal link, he had created one. But he didn't think the supposition all that far fetched. He'd seen what he'd seen in Liverpool. He'd felt what he had felt. And before he left for the Hebrides, he wanted as many answers as his training and talent for detection could provide him with. For the first time, he began to suspect that the object Shanks had taken from the chest, had been something other than the slave captain's pocket watch.

Again, this was only a hunch. But it was a suspicion growing in strength. If Shanks had stolen an object that valuable, he would have done so for financial gain. He would have found a way to sell it. He'd been resourceful, he'd had a cool nerve and he'd been without scruple. You didn't need to go through an auction house to profit from an object as rare as that. There were private collectors, all over Europe and throughout America. Shanks had been a relentless traveller. He would have found a discrete buyer somewhere for Ballantyne's Breguet.

Elizabeth Burrows had lived in a hall of residence in Bootle. She'd killed herself in the autumn of 1971. There would have been a post-mortem. Drugs had been ubiquitous at that time among students, even more so then that they were now. They had possessed a cache then; they were a rebellious lifestyle statement, taking them a pre-requisite if you were a part of the counter-culture and hostile to the status quo and the Establishment.

The college authorities and presumably her parents would have wanted to know whether she took her life under the influence of LSD or cannabis or amphetamines. Her body would have been tested for drugs and her room would have been searched and the contents duly listed. Even 40 years ago, the Merseyside force would have been diligent and professional in dealing with the violent death of a young woman.

La.s.siter paced the carpet of Alice Lang's sitting room. They had been more or less living under her roof since that lunchtime kiss she had requested and got. Personally, he had never felt happier. It was like living in the exhilaration of a waking dream. He hadn't felt like a drink since she had taken him to her bed for the first time on that dappled afternoon of sunlight and pasta salad and Ellie Goulding in her garden.

Professionally, though, he had misgivings about the New Hope Island expedition so deep that they almost felt like dread. And they departed in three days.

Not quite on a whim, he walked into her study and switched on Alice's computer and tapped in the pa.s.sword she had shared with him. The Sygma photographer whose job it had been to take pictures of the items in the chest way back in 1957 had been a northern stringer from Manchester by the name of Albert Struthers.

Struthers had stayed with the photo agency after that commission. He had not deliberately walked into the path of a Deansgate tram, or been found one cold and lonely morning hanging from the iron girders supporting the end of Southport Pier the subject of an excellent black and white photo essay he'd done for the town council earlier in that monochromatic decade. He had not just been a still-life man, but a highly competent all-rounder able to get interesting results from pointing his lens at virtually any subject.

He had stayed with the agency, but he had s.h.i.+fted hemispheres. The first Struthers commission completed after the Ballantyne chest contents was a piece done for Picture Post on the Sydney Harbour Yacht Race. In 1960, he covered an Australian election campaign and in 1961 he was responsible for a charming set of portraits of the more ill.u.s.trious inmates of the Zoo at Perth.

Struthers died of heart failure in his sleep at his home in a Melbourne suburb one night in August of 1976. That was a full 19 years after the museum commission. There was no evidence to suggest he had married and he had left no children in whom he might have confided uneasy secrets. 'You didn't deliberately end your life,' La.s.siter said to himself, 'but I'll bet you took fright and ran away from something. You ran all the way to the other side of the world.' He closed the pages he'd been looking at and switched off Alice's computer and returned to the sitting room and resumed his pacing across the floor.

Who did he know on the Merseyside Force? He didn't know anyone. But he did have a Scouse ex-colleague based at Fulham who would. Jimmy Daley was a D.I. who had transferred from Liverpool to the Met after meeting and marrying a girl from Kingston-upon-Thames. He had been a Detective-Sergeant back then and he and La.s.siter had become mates. They were both on the up back in the late '90s, rivals in crime solving and drinking buddies before La.s.siter's drinking had really got out of hand.

La.s.siter still had Jimmy Daley's mobile number. He rang it. Daley answered. They chewed over old times for about ten minutes and then La.s.siter told Daley what it was he was after. Daley said it might take a day or so to source the information required.

'It's funny you should call, Patsy. I was only thinking of you this morning,' Daley said.

'Spooky.'

'Not really. I read about you in this morning's paper. You're going on that New Hope Island thing with Alice Lang.'

'Guilty as charged.'

'She's very easy on the eye, if the picture in the Chronicle's anything to go on.'

'Yes, Jim. She's certainly a beautiful woman.'

'A bit too complicated for my tastes. I don't mind the trick cycling part. But the second-sight thing would completely freak me out.'

'I can see your point,' La.s.siter said, which he could.

'I'll call you back on the Bootle business. Expect it can wait till tomorrow?'

'It's waited since November of 1971,' La.s.siter said. 'It can wait another day, Jim.'

In the event, Detective Inspector Daley called him back later the same afternoon. La.s.siter was running in Regent's Park, when his mobile rang. He had tucked it down his sock. McIntyre did not pay him to be out of reach at any time. Taking his phone when he went running was a necessary precaution, working for such a capricious and demanding boss.

'She had a bit of cannabis resin, what they used to call Lebanese, back in prehistoric times,' Daley said. 'Enough to get busted for in those days, but there was nothing in her system. No drugs, no alcohol.'

'Anything else?'

'A bottle of absinthe. That was illegal too back then. The seal wasn't broken. She'd brought it back from somewhere as a souvenir, by the look. France or Corsica would be my best guess.'

'France. She had a thing for this French revolutionary martyr, Charlotte Corday.'

'There you go, then. France.'

'And that's it, Jim?'

'Not quite. She had a bracelet, an ethnic item. It didn't look like she wore it. Maybe Indian or possibly African in origin, it's described as a fine antique silver chain strung with about 30 human teeth.'

The sun shone above him from a blue afternoon sky. He'd been sweating with exertion. Now, he felt suddenly cold and a s.h.i.+ver ran through his panting frame. 'Cheers, Jim,' he said. His voice had become hoa.r.s.e.

'You alright, mate?'

'Yeah,' La.s.siter said, not feeling alright at all, not feeling remotely all right, in fact. 'I owe you one.'

Alexander McIntyre went personally to see Father Degrelle at the seminary in Highgate where the veteran exorcist resided in a modest cell. Raised a Catholic, the media magnate had allowed his faith to lapse over the years of his success and enterprise. But conscience, or possibly nostalgia for his more innocent youth, had influenced his charitable activities. He had given sufficiently generously to Catholic causes to have the ear of the Cardinal.

'Vanity,' the Cardinal told him over the phone, 'is Degrelle's great weakness. He goes on your expedition with my blessing. But he can be a contrary man. At three days notice, he will know he had been at best, an afterthought. I hope you can persuade him, Alex. I would suggest flattery is the key to doing so.'

'Shall I woo him personally, Your Eminence?'

'Always wise, I think, with a man like Degrelle. He has a very high opinion of himself. But then his strength and will make him enormously formidable at the ritual. And there is his faith, of course, which is unflinching and unwavering. He is the best at what he does. The problem is that he knows it. He will watch for your arrival through his window. I suggest the Bentley. You still own the Bentley, Alex?'

'I do.'

'Excellent. And have your chauffeur wear his full livery. And have him salute you when you exit the car. Father Degrelle appreciates status. And he loves ceremony.'

They walked together through the seminary's ornamental gardens so that Degrelle could smoke. This was something McIntyre observed he did ceaselessly. Physically, he was imposing, both tall and heavily built. He had the wary tread and club fists of an ageing pugilist. He's G.o.d's prize-fighter, McIntyre thought, smiling to himself. He'd go the champions.h.i.+p distance with Satan himself. He's perfect material for the expedition and in the hands of the gifted Lucy Church would make riveting copy on reputation and appearance alone.

Was he quotable, though? And there was the more immediate question of whether he would even agree to go.

The Colony Part 13

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The Colony Part 13 summary

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