Authors: S. T. Haymon
Sergeant Ellers said cheerio, got into his car and went off to quizz his fellow-foreigners at the Virgin. Jurnet drove home.
Nothing had changed since the morning, save that the frost had yielded to a greasy thaw. The bags of rubbish were still there waiting for Godot. The lean black cat who haunted the premises sat on the low wall which divided the forecourt from the street, and watched unblinkingly as the detective locked the car, got out his doorkey, and went inside.
Suddenly, hunger overwhelmed him, making even the familiar
bouquet
of slow-simmered underwear which pervaded the stairwell smell appetizing. There must be, he thought, willing it to be so, a can of beans left in the cupboard to stave off the pangs and give him strength to make it to the Chinese takeaway or the chippie. Unless, of course, Miriam was back, in which case he would take her out for a slap-up meal. Mario's, the Nelson, that new place in Shire Street where everybody said the food was out of this world â Jurnet was still reviewing the mouth-watering choices when he arrived at his front door, and collided with Miriam coming out of it.
Which would have been no great matter, if only she hadn't been carrying her suitcase.
Miriam said, âAfter the way you lit out of here this morning, I knew you had to be in on it. But I phoned Headquarters and spoke to the duty sergeant, just to make sure.'
For what it was worth, Jurnet asked, âMake sure of what?'
She did not condescend to explain further. The beautiful eyes were shadowed. She's been crying, Jurnet thought â as much, that is, as he could think of anything for the hunger that was consuming his vitals.
It did not seem a good moment for asking if there were any beans in the cupboard.
âI'm a bit tired,' he pleaded. âCan't we talk about it inside?'
âNothing to talk about. I phoned for a cab.' She pulled her white coat about her. âWhen I told you last time I couldn't stand it one more time, I meant it.' She picked up her case and would have moved towards the stairhead if he had not barred her way. âPlease! The man will be here in a minute!'
âAre you saying you don't want Loy Tanner's murderer apprehended?'
âApprehended! What a police word!'
âWhy not? I'm a policeman, and that's what policemen do to murderers when they get the chance. Or would you rather whoever did for Tanner got off scot-free?'
âDon't be silly!' Miriam cried. âOnly why do you have to be the one to do it?'
âBecause it's my job.' Too tired for argument, he said, âI love you.'
âYou don't, you know!' She burst out in tearful anger. âOr not half so much as you love death. Someone you wouldn't spare the time of day for when he's alive, dead, you're obsessed! He's never out of your thoughts for a second, day or night. You come to bed and there's this corpse with his skull bashed in or his stomach hanging out or whatever, lying there between us.'
âSorry about that.' Jurnet mumbled something about justice.
The other picked up the word as if she had been proffered an insult.
âWho are you to put the world straight?'
Up the stairs, trailing a delicate aroma of gin-and-it and Yardley's Lavender to mingle with the simmering underwear, came Mrs Petherton, the widow lady who lived across the landing, home from her Happy Hour at the Hacienda Wine Bar. For the duration of the Happy Hour all drinks at the bar were 25p off: which, as Mrs Petherton often assured Jurnet with a widow's anxious regard for economy, meant that the more you spent the more you saved.
She had, it seemed, making the landing with a surprised pleasure to find it actually under her trim but uncertain little feet, been economizing even more strictly than was her wont. Drowning her grief.
âThat lovely Loy,' she mourned, and sang a few bars in her gentle, gin-hazed voice. â
ââI am my beloved's, and my beloved is mine''.
Taking a holiday?' she went on without pause, catching sight of the suitcase. âThat's nice.'
Jurnet and Miriam watched as she fumbled in the depths of a large tapestry handbag and, unearthing her doorkey, made an ineffectual pass with it in the general direction of her door. The key clattered on to the lino.
Jurnet picked it up and unlocked the door for her.
Mrs Petherton thanked him prettily. She was a daintily made little woman who must once have done everything prettily. Even with her blue eyes faded, her ash-blonde hair dull as dead leaves, she still retained something of the air of a Dresden shepherdess, if one long past the days of wine and roses â the tip of a tiny pointed slipper missing, a couple of fingers glued amateurishly back in place, a rosebud mouth that had outlived kisses.
Mrs Petherton took the key and let it fall again. This time Jurnet picked it up and dropped it into the tapestry bag.
âThe cussedness of illaminate objects,' Mrs Petherton said brightly. She went into her flat and closed the door, only to reopen it a moment later, poking her head out perkily.
âIllaminate objects! What could I have been thinking of? What I meant, of course was enamelate. Why I said illaminate I can't imagine.'
Jurnet carried Miriam's suitcase down the stairs for her. It was heavy, signifying no token departure. A removal, back to her own flat in a chic conversion of one of the old warehouses down by the river.
On the first floor landing where, to judge by the smell, Miss Whistler, the late-blooming spinster, was cooking fish fingers with gin-seng and rhino horn, he put the case down, as if to gather strength for the final flight.
Miriam said in a diminished voice, âYou know what the trouble is, Ben? I'm not good enough for you.' Putting up a hand to ward off interruption: âYou know it's true. I lack all sense of public service. I know somebody has to catch murderers. I just can't stand it being you. I'm selfish and unkind â'
âYou know me â' Jurnet wondered if it were as much of a joke as his lightness of tone intended to suggest â âa masochist. Made to be a doormat. And you're another. You should have found yourself a lovely young chartered accountant years ago â numbers don't bleed â before ever you took up with the likes of me.'
âAll I do is make you unhappy. You just like me in bed.'
âIn bed and out. I'll write you out a list, if you like, beginning with your courage which sustains me, your honesty which delights me, your beauty which â' He broke off, the passion in his voice taking even himself by surprise. He put a foot on the topmost stair. âI'll go down and tell that cabbie to bugger off.'
âNo!'
She picked up the case herself and ran downstairs and out of the front door. The cabbie, ill-pleased at having been kept waiting, took it from her and rearranged his face when he saw what a smasher he'd drawn as a fare. Miriam's presence brought the forecourt alive, her white coat richly shadowed, her magnificent hair blazing beneath the orange street light. The woman clothed with the sun.
It was cold again, getting colder. The two, moving their feet a little to keep warm, said nothing while the cabbie stowed the case in the boot: did not kiss, nor touch. When the man came back to the front of his vehicle, Miriam got into the rear, gave him the address with an exaggerated articulation, as if it were a direction to foreign parts, as indeed it was.
The cabbie swung the cab round in a circle that cleared the low brick wall with an inch to spare. The black cat, still perched there, did not move so much as a whisker, its eyes shining green in the cab's headlamps. Jurnet did not move either.
When the cab had gone, he turned back to his home, past the rubbish bags whose number seemed to have increased with the dark. To his surprise, when he reached the entrance to the block of flats, the cat was there before him.
There were no baked beans in the kitchen cupboard; only a tin of sardines whose escaping fragrance, as Jurnet turned the key to open it, filled the hungry detective with a desire that was almost sexual. Quickly, before he could weaken, he turned the compacted mass into a bowl, and set it on the floor for the cat to polish off with a speed and elegance that, but for the evidence of the discarded tin and the residual perfume tormenting Jurnet's starving senses, would have made the detective wonder whether it had ever been there at all.
Seeking the only comfort available, Jurnet put out a hand to stroke the cat. Dead to all sense of gratitude, the creature moved away before he could make contact with the black fur still diamonded with frost and dew. Like Loy Tanner, the detective thought dismally: hating to be touched.
Unable to face the thought of the long evening and the longer night alone, he went early to bed in hope of thereby shortening them; leaving the window open so that the cat could push off whenever it had a mind to, and taking a self-pitying satisfaction in the piercing chill which tumbled over the sill as he pushed open the casement and fastened the latch on the second hole.
The bed at least, he had hoped, would provide some kind of solace, the bedclothes retaining for a little some intimate essence of his lost love. But no: with unaccustomed housewifeliness Miriam had changed the pillow cases, the sheet and the duvet cover. Only the cold from the open window was there to greet him with a dank embrace.
The cold and Loy Tanner, the latest body between.
Jurnet moved well over to his own side of the bed to leave that invisible, omnipresent bedfellow plenty of room. Anything rather than frighten it away altogether. Even a cadaver under the duvet was better than nothing, nobody.
In the freezing dark the detective found it hard to put two consecutive thoughts together. The wound in his arm, which he had left bandaged, itched like mad. See Queenie King's pa, he made a mental memo. Just as well Miriam had moved out. That white coat of hers wouldn't have stayed white for long in that place. Had he in fact, as he had promised the Portuguese chambermaid, spoken to the manager at the Virgin about the shattered mirror? Remember to let Rabbi Schnellman know the lessons would have to be called off for the time being.
Would he, Benjamin Jurnet, ever make it to becoming a Jew, whatever that might be? Sometimes it seemed to him Jews themselves weren't over-sure.
Jurnet tossed on his bed, and said aloud to the God of Moses, âStop mucking me about, for Christ's sake.'
It was twenty past two by the awful digital clock when Dave Batterby rang, going on for so long about the unreliability of British Rail that Jurnet knew without being told he'd balled it up: hadn't got in London what he'd gone there for.
Out of a fellow-feeling for losers Jurnet allowed him to put off the moment of truth by inquiring what the other had done to fill his evening; and was presently rewarded â if that was the word â by hearing the old note of self-congratulation seep back into the man's voice like olive oil into French dressing.
âHad dinner with a couple of chaps from the Yard â surprising how much you can learn from people at the heart of things ⦠Wonderful little restaurant â need an introduction before they'll book you a table, but if ever you're interested, let me know and I'll put a word in, in the right quarter â¦' Only when the colleague launched himself into a course by course description of the menu did Jurnet feel it was time to call a halt.
âSo how did it go?'
By now, bolstered in his self-esteem, Dave Batterby did not seem to think it had gone as badly as all that. Not his fault some old crone old enough to be his great-grandmother had been prepared to lie her head off for Lenny Bale. âThey're like that,' he expanded, for Jurnet's benefit. âQueers. If it's got to be a woman, it has to be somebody who reminds them of Mummy.'
âAnd Lenny Bale keeps one of them on hand in his office?'
âOne! A coven! Address in Savile Row, very nice entrance, you think you're going to find someone on reception with legs and a bit of class. And instead there's this collection of old bags with faces like billy goats, knitting.'
âKnitting?'
âThat's right.' The voice moved up half an octave. âSquares. Blankets for starving Dinkas, king-size because they're all at least eight feet tall and any smaller won't cover their you-know-whats. Needed so urgently, the one who said she was the telephone operator told me, she hadn't had time to keep the phone log up to date.'
âDid she at least remember the call from Heathrow?'
âToo well. It was what first put me on my guard. A Mr Brown from California. With an American accent, surprise, surprise. But as to the gentleman's address, she couldn't help me.'
âDid she say if Bale was in the office Wednesday?'
âIn and out, she said. In a tearing hurry because he wanted to get back to Angleby for the concert. Lies, every last word,' Dave Batterby pronounced confidently. âI could swear to it, so long as it wasn't in court. Proof's another matter.'
âYou think she'll stick to her story?'
âThey all will. Lenny's their golden boy. They think the sun shines out of his arse.'
Jurnet's naked arm, holding the receiver, had begun to feel numb with cold. âNever mind,' he said. âIt was worth a try. And Savile Row, eh? You could have treated yourself to a tie, at least.'
âMatter of fact, I did,' Batterby admitted. He prided himself on being a sharp dresser. âRaw silk with a thin red line. Quite something.'
âThen it's not all loss.'
Whilst he was still debating with himself whether to get out of bed and shut the window, Jurnet fell asleep: uneasily, for the outside cold had possessed the room, and the duvet â another of Miriam's bloody innovations â was, in the detective's opinion, no substitute for blankets and still more blankets, topped by a quilt and, for good measure, one's winter overcoat to keep the whole glorious edifice from sliding to the floor. Foolishly, too, he hadn't bothered with pyjamas, never used them with Miriam there, couldn't remember whether he still owned any. Between sleeping and waking, he made a mental note to get himself a couple of thermal nightshirts proper to his years, now that he had no lovely lover to warm his bed.