The Hanging in the Hotel (14 page)

BOOK: The Hanging in the Hotel
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He raised his eyebrows in what she knew to be false ignorance.

‘Because of Nigel Ackford’s death,’ she prompted. ‘Kerry asked me to come here, so she could tell me what her movements were on that particular night.’

‘Oh yes, that’s right.’ He spoke as if he were pulling the recollection from the deepest recesses of his memory.

‘Of course, it must have been very upsetting for you, Mr Hartson.’

‘How’s that?’

‘Well, you must have known Nigel Ackford well. He was your guest, after all, wasn’t he? At the dinner?’

‘That’s right. He was my guest, but he was more an acquaintance than a friend. I invited him along to the Pillars as a kind of favour to his boss who’s been a friend of mine
for a long time.’

‘Why didn’t Donald Chew take Nigel Ackford along as his own guest?’

Bob Hartson showed the tiniest of reactions to the fact she knew the name, then shook his head indulgently. ‘There’s protocol involved in being a Pillar of Sussex. I could explain it
to you, but . . . how long have you got? Just take it from me, it wouldn’t have done for Donald to take along one of his own staff as a guest.’

Before Jude could ask for further elucidation, he went on, ‘Tragic business, I agree, young Nigel. I read in the paper recently that more young men than ever are committing suicide. Most
of them have probably got a better lifestyle than any previous generation, and yet they keep topping themselves. Never understand it . . .’

He moved across to the window, seeming to blot out a disproportionate amount of the view, and spoke more softly. ‘So many lovely things in the world, and yet some people just can’t
see it. Look out there. Sea – beautiful spring day – who’d want to give up on all that, eh?’ He laughed lightly. ‘Do you know, Jude, this is one of the few views in
West Sussex where you can’t see anything that belongs to me.’ Another little laugh. ‘Well, except for Geoff down there in the Jaguar. What I mean is that from here you can’t
see one of my developments, and that’s because all this flat looks out on is the sea. Of course, if you were out there in a boat, you could definitely see one of my developments.’

‘This block?’

‘That’s right. Derelict when I bought the place. Bedsits. Totally run down. And look at it now. People say a lot of harsh things about developers. I like to think we do a lot to
bring new life to old buildings.’

Since she hadn’t accused him of anything, Jude was finding this self-justification rather odd. He went on, ‘Like most successful ventures, the development business is all about
timing and spotting potential. You have to be able to see what you can do with a site and be bold and imaginative. Look ahead. There are places that “informed opinion” says will never
get planning permission. Don’t believe them. Governments change. Policies change. Priorities change. Everything becomes possible sooner or later.’

Having delivered himself of this property developer’s credo while looking out over the sea, he turned. Backlit against the window, his expression was invisible to Jude, but she could hear
the new force in his voice. ‘Listen. I know you’re upset by what happened to that boy. We’re all upset – me, Kerry, the other Pillars – it’s the kind of thing
nobody wants to happen. But it was suicide. In spite of any details that might suggest an alternative scenario. Even that threatening letter Kerry found, I’m sure there’s an innocent
explanation for that.’ His voice became soothing, but did not lose its strength. ‘Jude, the police seem convinced it was suicide. I would imagine the coroner will think the same. So I
don’t really think it’s a good idea to go around stirring things up. I’m sure we all love the thought of playing detectives, of proving wrong-doing – all dramatic stuff. But
not in this case. Here, what you see is what you get. And what everyone sees, and I think you should see too, Jude, is the tragic case of a young man’s suicide.’

There was nothing equivocal about Bob Hartson’s manner. She was being warned off. And, for that very reason, she couldn’t let it rest there.

‘Mr Hartson, could you just confirm what Kerry told me about where she was that night?’

Even though she still couldn’t see his face, she observed the spasm of anger that passed through his body. But by the time he replied, he had regained control, and his voice was silky
smooth. ‘I don’t know what Kerry’s just told you. I can only give you my version of what happened, and if my daughter told you different, then she’s lying.’ Jude felt
a surge of excitement, which quickly dissipated as he went on, ‘After everyone left the bar, Kerry came up to my room with me and a friend. We all drank some whisky, then Kerry left us, my
friend and I had a final noggin and he went off to his room about two o’clock, I suppose.’

‘Thank you very much, Mr Hartson.’

He stepped away from the window and sat down, before looking smugly at his stepdaughter. ‘So what did Kerry tell you? I’ve no idea.’

‘I told her the same, Dad.’

‘The truth. Good girl.’ He turned back to focus the patronizing beam of his smile on Jude. ‘Anything else I can help you with?’

‘Yes, please.’

There was a twitch of annoyance at the corner of the developer’s mouth. ‘What?’

‘Who was the friend, the other Pillar of Sussex, who came back to drink with you in your room?’

‘His name,’ Bob Hartson replied with suppressed annoyance, ‘was Barry Stilwell.’

 
Chapter Seventeen

‘But that’s impossible,’ said Carole as they drove back through the bungaloid sprawl that separated Brighton from Fethering. ‘Barry doesn’t drink
whisky.’

‘Are you sure?’

‘He told me he never touched spirits. Doesn’t like the taste.’

‘He wasn’t just saying that? Maybe he tells his wife – the sainted Pom-Pom – that he doesn’t touch whisky, but when he’s back with the boys . . .?’

‘I don’t think so. He volunteered the information to me when we had lunch at Mario’s last week. Pomme wasn’t there. He had no reason to feel pressured about
it.’

‘True. That’s very interesting, Carole. I do hope you’ll be seeing Barry Stilwell again soon.’

‘Well . . .’ In spite of herself, Carole blushed. ‘I am supposed to be meeting him again for lunch tomorrow, but I’m not sure that I really should . . .’

‘Of course you should. It’s your duty, Carole. In the cause of truth.’

The spark in Jude’s eye sent up the pomposity of her announcement, but there was a core of seriousness in what she said. Carole knew she had no choice but to continue betraying her
sisterhood with Pomme.

‘I wondered what your verdict was,’ asked Stephen.

‘What?’ Carole couldn’t imagine what her son was talking about. She was still getting over the surprise of his ringing on a Sunday evening. Their relationship was not on a
relaxed enough footing to take that kind of event in its stride.

‘Your verdict on the hotel. You said you were going to have a look at Hopwicke Country House Hotel for us.’

‘Oh yes, of course.’ So caught up had she been in what Jude would have described as ‘the murder investigation’ she had completely forgotten the real purpose of her
visit.

‘Well, the hotel’s delightful. Lovely position, very nice rooms, wonderful menus. Of course, it is pretty pricey.’

‘How much?’

‘A lot. But if you stay two nights including a Saturday, there is a special deal for—’

‘Gaby and I can only stay for the one night. How much would that cost?’

Carole told him the prices Suzy had quoted her.

‘That’s fine,’ he said, without a moment’s reflection. ‘We’ll go for that four-poster room.’ Carole couldn’t get used to the image of her son as a
big spender. Maybe he’d always had it in him. Or was it just the influence – and income – of Gaby that had moved him up to another level of expenditure? Carole felt the familiar
guilt at how little she really knew Stephen.

‘Do you have the number there to hand, Mother? Save me the cost of a call to directory enquiries.’ So down at the bottom end of the financial scale he was still capable of
penny-pinching.

‘Oh, by the way . . . did you ask about availability for the weekend? I don’t want to waste a call if they’re fully booked.’ Once again the instinct for parsimony
asserted itself.

‘They certainly had rooms free when I was there. And I didn’t get the impression they were expecting a sudden rush of bookings.’

‘Fine. OK. Gaby and I will see you there for lunch on Sunday. Arrive twelve-thirty.’

And thus Carole was dismissed. As she put the phone down, she realized she should have said something about being very excited at the prospect of meeting Gaby. But the moment had passed.

Slightly mischievously, she wondered how her son would react to the news that tomorrow his mother would be having an illicit lunch with a married would-be lover.

‘This is very soon after our last meeting,’ Carole pointed out, after Mario had oozed them into their seats. This time he’d put them at a table for two in a
little alcove at the back of the restaurant. Was this maybe the table where he always put couples who shouldn’t be together? Indeed, had he put Barry here before with other female companions?
The concept did not upset Carole; rather, it amused her. To imagine Barry Stilwell as a serial Lothario was so incongruous.

What was it with men? she reflected. Some of them seemed to be armoured in a self-esteem absolutely impermeable to logic, common sense or experience. Barry Stilwell’s previous encounters
with her should have made it clear that, not only did she not have any mildly romantic feelings towards him, she did not even wish to spend time with him. She found his company irksome. And yet
here he was, surreptitiously squiring her at Mario’s, apparently in the belief they would end up having an affair. Carole found herself baffled.

But his obtuseness did give her a kind of comfort. She would have felt bad stringing along someone less thick-skinned. Barry Stilwell, though, was fair game.

She indulged these thoughts while he went through his ordering and wine-tasting routines, and had to actually drag herself out of abstraction to concentrate on what he was saying.

Barry was talking about the success of his firm. Clearly things had been busy on the soliciting front. A booming housing market had meant an increase in people requiring conveyancing services;
the cold snaps of the winter had satisfyingly decimated the geriatric population of the Worthing area, leading to more probate work; and of course the rise in the divorce rate could always be
relied upon. It was, as ever, a good time to be working as a lawyer in a system devised by lawyers.

So good was business Carole gathered when she focused on Barry’s words, that he was about to set up a second office along the coast in Shoreham. There were some empty premises he was going
to inspect that very afternoon. Maybe Carole would like to come and cast her expert eye over them?

‘In what way do I have an expert eye?’

‘Well, you spent all those years working for the Home Office.’

‘What’s that got to do with anything?’ Carole knew she should be more conciliatory, soften Barry up to extract information from him, but he got on her nerves so much she
couldn’t help the occasional sharp retort.

‘You must have seen a good few offices in your time.’

‘Yes,’ she conceded.

‘So you do have an expert eye when it comes to the business of selecting an office.’ At this triumph of logic the thin lips curled into a smile.

‘But, Barry, I have no particular expertise in solicitor’s offices. You’d have a much better idea of what you need.’

‘Yes.’ he said cajolingly. ‘But it’s always good to have a second opinion, isn’t it?’

‘Surely it’d be better to get a second opinion from Pomme rather than from me?’

This had been the wrong thing to say. The thin lips straightened. ‘Pomme’s not a lawyer.’

‘Nor am I. That’s the point I was making.’

He moved off the subject of his new offices. ‘So what’s happening in your life, Carole?’

She didn’t want to talk about her life. What she really wanted to do was to get Barry’s conversation back to the night of Nigel Ackford’s death. But certain civilities had to
be maintained. He had asked her a straight question. It was her duty to come up with an answer. She tried to think what, if anything, had been happening in her life.

‘Well, I’m meeting my son for lunch on Sunday.’

‘I’d forgotten you had a son.’

‘Yes. He’s going to introduce me to his fiancée.’

‘And I find it very hard to believe you have a son old enough to be contemplating marriage.’

She gave this arch automatic compliment a minimal smile, and moved on. She’d seen a useful way of redirecting the conversation.

‘In fact, they’re going to be staying at the Hopwicke Country House Hotel. I’m going to have lunch with them there.’

‘I’m sure you’ll enjoy it. Excellent food.’

‘Oh yes.’ She behaved as if a completely new idea had just come to her. ‘Of course you were there for that Pillars of Sussex dinner, weren’t you? We talked about it last
time we met.’

‘That’s right.’

He didn’t sound suspicious yet, so she pressed on. ‘I get the impression those dinners are quite riotous occasions.’

‘Well . . . I like to think decorum is always maintained.’

‘Yes, but quite a lot of drinking goes on, doesn’t it?’

Barry Stilwell smiled a bit-of-a-lad smile, and went into the elaborate circumlocution with which his type of man usually speaks about alcohol. ‘Well, the occasional libation is certainly
consumed. The odd noggin or tincture might pass the lips, yes.’

‘More than “occasional” or “odd”, from what I’ve heard. Drinks before dinner, copious wine during, sessions in the bar afterwards.’

The solicitor shrugged magnanimously, as if he were being complimented. ‘A certain amount of that goes on, I suppose, yes. But,’ he continued piously, ‘everyone stays overnight
at the venue, so there’s no danger of drink-driving.’

‘I wasn’t suggesting that. I gather, though, with some of the Pillars, the drinking doesn’t stop in the bar. It goes on up in their rooms.’

This prompted an indulgent smile of masculine complicity. ‘I dare say that happens with some of the chaps.’

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