Authors: Lesley Cookman
‘Bruce still has his phone off,’ she said, switching off. ‘Wonder where he’s got to?’
‘Gone off with the Italian businessman?’ said Fran. ‘I do hope not, if it’s who we think it is.’
‘It could be perfectly innocent, you know, Fran,’ said Libby. ‘Maybe it is just a businessman who reneged on a deal. And Bruce finally managed to buttonhole him.’
Fran sighed. ‘And we’ve built it up into something it isn’t – again. I’d still like to know where he is, though.’
When she passed Coastguard Cottage and carried on walking, Libby turned and looked at her. ‘Where are we going?’ she said.
‘There’s a new boat,’ said Fran. ‘The other side of the hard.’ She led the way across the hard in front of The Sloop, past the
Dolphin
and the
Sparkler
rocking gently at their moorings, and sure enough, tied up on the other side, a sleek dark launch skulked in the shadows.
‘How did you know?’ whispered Libby.
Fran gave her a look, even as she was dialling Ian’s number. For once she got straight through.
‘It’s called the
Ladana
,’ said Fran. ‘Is that enough to check on?’
Ian obviously asked a few more questions and Fran switched off.
‘Is this it, then?’ asked Libby, as they began to walk slowly back to the cars.
‘I’m sure that’s the boat Andrei was killed on,’ said Fran. ‘As we left The Swan it just came into my head. If we can check who it belongs to – well, we’ll be a step nearer.’
Fran’s phone rang.
‘Yes, Ian?’ she said. A minute later she switched off and relayed the information to Libby.
‘He’d actually checked up on the marina or whatever it is at St Katherine’s Dock and got a list of boats moored there around about the time when Andrei died. When I gave him the name of the
Ladana
, he looked, and there it was. And –’ she paused for effect ‘– owned by Massimo Berini.’
‘Who?’ Libby wrinkled her brow. ‘Do we know him?’
‘No, idiot! Berini! Get it?’
Libby shook her head. ‘No.’
‘Berini is one of the so-called great reformers of Italian politics,’ said Fran.
‘Is he? How do you know about him, then?’ asked Libby innocently.
‘Oh, come on, Lib. Don’t you ever follow the news?’
‘Not often,’ said Libby. ‘Except the local stuff.’
‘Berini’s famous, take my word for it. I can’t remember if his name is Massimo, but I bet it’s the same family.’
‘It sounds as though it’s quite a common name, though,’ said Libby dubiously. ‘Are we doing another of our well-known leaps of faith – otherwise known as jumping to conclusions?’
‘I’m sure not,’ said Fran, sounding quite excited. Libby was surprised.
‘So where does old Pietro come into this?’
‘Where does Terry come into this?’ countered Fran. ‘If Massimo has brought the boat down here it must be for a reason.’
‘Terry’s in hospital,’ reasoned Libby. ‘It can’t be for him.’
‘Why not? They could get him out.’
‘He’s got a police guard.’
‘Come to think of it,’ said Fran, ignoring Libby and retracing her steps towards the hard, ‘it was very risky to bring a boat registered in the family’s name down here, wasn’t it?’
‘But they don’t know about all the connections that have been made. They don’t know Andrei has been identified, or that Rosa had told Jane the whole story. Why should they worry?’
‘I want to know why it’s here now,’ said Fran, coming to a halt above the
Ladana.
‘There’s been someone around apart from Terry for weeks, now, but they haven’t needed the boat.’
‘Do you really think it’s Terry?’ said Libby. ‘I don’t want to believe it.’
‘Neither do I,’ said Fran with a sigh. ‘But there’s still someone else around.’
‘Yes, signora,’ said a voice behind them, ‘and he’s right here.’
Before either of them could scream or turn round a hand clamped over both of their mouths. Libby felt her hands being roughly pulled behind her and tied. Through a haze of fear she realised there must be two people, men, because the hand was still over her mouth. Then, to her horror, she was blindfolded.
‘Now down the ladder, ladies,’ said a different, more heavily accented voice. ‘We will guide you.’
She was unceremoniously turned round and felt a hand grab her ankle. Instinctively, she kicked out and was brought to her knees as she was dealt a ringing blow to the head. She heard scuffling, and then realised she was being dragged over the side of hard, lifted and then almost flung into what she hoped was the
Ladana
. She heard a heavy thud and a yelp and realised Fran had joined her. For a while she lay there, listening to almost perfect silence. Her brain, for the last ten minutes a confused jumble of sensations rather than coherent thought, began to settle down.
Who knew where they were, first. Well, Ben knew she was in Nethergate. Guy knew they were going to The Swan. Mike knew they’d been
in
The Swan. But nobody knew about the
Ladana
. Her heart lurched. Except Ian.
She tried to move and finally succeeded in locating what she hoped was a part of Fran. A muffled squeak assured her it was.
‘Fran!’ she whispered.
‘Yes?’
‘Is anyone else on here with us?’
‘I don’t know – I can’t see.’
‘Ian knows about the boat – do you think he’ll investigate –’
‘Ladies, ladies!’ The heavily accented voice called down. ‘No conversation, or we might have to gag you, too.’
‘Bugger,’ whispered Libby. ‘But hey, Fran. It can’t be Terry.’
‘No.’ Fran’s answer was a mere breath.
The unmistakeable sound of boots on metal rungs indicated the arrival of one of their captors.
‘Now,’ said the more English of the two voices, ‘we’re going to have to take you for a little ride. You need to be out of the way for a while, and we have no wish to kill two such nice ladies, so just keep quiet and you’ll come to no harm.’
Libby was so full of fear she couldn’t speak. She heard, and felt, the engine starting and bit down hard on her lip.
Suddenly light flared across her blindfolded eyes and someone shouted. The boat lurched and crashed against the hard. Libby was flung sideways and ended up almost on top of Fran.
More shouting. Someone landed heavily on the deck and then a voice, a voice Libby recognised.
‘They’re here!’ called Constable Maiden. And then, blessed relief, the blindfold was ripped off and through blurred eyes Libby saw him doing the same to Fran. She wriggled upright as he started on her hands and looked up.
And there, held firmly by two policemen, stood Mike Charteris.
Chapter Thirty-five
‘WHAT I WANT TO know,’ said Harry, pouring champagne into flutes, in what had become a traditional post-case celebration, although Ben preferred to call it post-chaos, ‘what I want to know is, was her name really Rosa?’
Jane, tucked into a corner of The Pink Geranium’s big sofa with her Terry, nodded.
‘Oh, yes. Rosa Berini. And Mike is her brother.’
‘And what exactly did he plan to do with you two?’ asked Guy, who was holding on to Fran’s arm as though he was afraid if he let go she would float up to the ceiling.
‘As far as Ian can make out,’ said Libby, holding on to Ben in much the same manner, ‘they were going to take us somewhere and dump us while they ransacked Peel House. We were blindfolded so we couldn’t see it was Mike. And he’d disguised his voice.’
‘Who was the other guy – I mean, bloke?’ asked Terry, with an apologetic nod to Guy.
‘Not Pietro,’ laughed Fran. ‘We really did run ahead of ourselves there. It was the chap who owned the flat in Lansdowne Square. He’s a Berini cousin.’
‘Hang on,’ said Harry, ‘who’s Pietro?’
Libby and Fran explained.
‘And he was being paid by Mike – or Massimo, as I suppose we should call him,’ said Jane. ‘But only to employ Rosa to get close to me.’
‘And the reason behind this miscellany of misunderstandings?’ asked Peter.
‘Get him,’ said Libby, reaching across to poke his arm.
‘The reason,’ said Fran, ‘was some documents allegedly concealed somewhere in Peel House by Jane’s Aunt Jessica’s lover, Simon Madderling. They revealed, as we have now found out, from the Italian communists after the story was covered in Italy, that Giacomo Berini was a supporter of Mussolini and subsequently Hitler throughout the war and responsible for some of the nastier war crimes. All the time being seen to be holier-thanthou.’
‘Which his family have continued to be.’ Jane took up the story. ‘Any revelations would mean the Berinis would lose all power, and great grandfather Giacomo, now 92, would go on trial. They also have a healthy underground organisation aiding illegal immigrants from the non-European states.’
‘Lena and Andrei?’ said Libby.
‘Yes.’
‘So was Mike the vanishing Italian businessman?’ asked Ben.
‘Yes. He was investigating where Lena had worked, which was near Bruce’s firm, so came up with a cover story which was easy with all his family’s connections.’ Fran sighed. ‘And poor old Bruce was found unconscious in the car park by the police. He’d approached Mike – Massimo – and accused him of reneging on the deal with his company, and Mike realised his persona was at risk of being exposed. It’s a wonder he didn’t kill Bruce.’
‘That would have been another reason to get us out of the way,’ said Libby. ‘Once he’d been into Peel House and got away, it wouldn’t have mattered if Bruce had reported to us. We still wouldn’t have connected his Italian to Mike.’
‘But if he’d come round and reported to the police –’ interrupted Ben.
‘He was hit at least as hard as Terry was,’ said Fran, ‘and didn’t come round in hospital for ages. Chrissie was there by then. Blaming me, of course.’
‘So Mike would have been long gone by that time,’ said Guy. ‘He was a real chancer, wasn’t he?’
Fran nodded. ‘He had luck on his side a lot of the way.’
‘And he saw the ad I persuaded Jane to put in the paper,’ groaned Libby.
‘And met Terry, who he realised was a real threat,’ said Fran. Terry tried to look modest.
‘So was it Mike who attacked Terry?’ asked Guy. ‘I don’t see how.’
‘The first time, he hit Terry as he was coming in, took his keys to search his flat, then heard Mrs Finch taking her bin out. So he waited until she’d gone back in, dragged Terry on to the step, and pretended to discover him there,’ explained Libby. ‘Apparently.’
‘And the second time?’ asked Harry.
‘He had been to The Swan and the Carlton, as he said, but then left and realising we were both out, took the opportunity to search my flat. He turned out the lights and hit Terry when he went up the stairs, then rushed down past me,’ said Fran with a shudder, ‘then arranged himself neatly on the lower landing as though he’d been there a long time.’
‘But how did he fool the ambulance people if he hadn’t really been knocked out?’ asked Peter.
‘He deliberately banged his head on the bannisters,’ said Fran. ‘It didn’t knock him out, but gave him a convincing bump.’
‘Blimey,’ said Harry. ‘There’s dedication to the cause.’
‘He’d already killed, remember, or the family had at least,’ said Libby. ‘The body on the island which started it all.’
‘Hang on again,’ said Harry, topping up with champagne. ‘You’ve lost me re the body.’
‘Andrei,’ said Jane, Libby and Fran together.
‘I know who he was, but why did they kill him and why did they put him on the island?’
‘They killed him because he knew too much,’ said Fran.
‘And they put him on the island as a warning to anyone in their organisation who didn’t toe the line,’ said Jane. ‘Not to warn me.’
‘How would people from their organisation know what it meant?’ asked Guy.
‘Most of the migrant workers would recognise one of their own, even if they didn’t know him personally,’ said Libby. ‘It was a general warning. And of course, none of the migrant workers would have volunteered any information, so they were safe.’
‘It was even their organisation that supplied the evil Budgen farmer,’ said Fran, ‘so all my strange floating visions linked up in the end.’
‘Except Terry,’ said Jane with a grin.
‘He wasn’t a vision,’ said Libby. ‘He was just bad adding up.’
The others looked at her in perplexity. She sighed. ‘Putting two and two together?’ she said.
‘And making five. I see,’ said Harry. ‘More bubbles anyone?’
‘And what about Rosa?’ asked Libby later, when the last refried beans had been scraped off a plate.
‘I don’t know,’ said Jane. ‘I hope she’s all right. She was a good person at heart.’
‘Not like the rest of her family,’ said Terry.