Read The Lazarus Prophecy Online
Authors: F. G. Cottam
They had software that would identify Chadwick if he'd been to any of the scenes. She had emailed the Chadwick picture to the programmer already from her office desk.
She was briefing the DC on the most recent developments 30 minutes later when she got a call on his extension from the incident room.
âBingo, Ma'am.'
âGood, when?'
âTuesday afternoon, he went to every single site.'
âNot before?' Tuesday afternoon was after her press conference, at which the killings had become public knowledge.
âNot before.'
That was a pity. And Finsbury Park was a long way from Lambeth. But they still had enough to act upon.
âWhat now, Ma'am?'
âWe bring him in,' she said.
The cardinal could barely begin to examine the things sent to him from San Sebastian to his retreat at Bayonne. He had loved James Cantrell with the love men generally lavish upon a favourite son. There had been nothing sexual about it and nothing covetous either. It had been a selfless expression of devotion to someone with a promise far greater than his abundant human faults.
He had tried to comfort himself with the familiar platitude about God working in mysterious ways. He believed more profoundly than most men that our time in this world is but a brief preparation for the reward our lives here earn in the next. But he was human and prey to human feelings and already he missed the bright energy of the young priest's presence in his company. The cardinal mourned James, feeling a deep and bitter sense of loss.
James had been born in a district of New York called Queens to which the cardinal had never been. He had been of Irish extraction and his family had been large and poor. He was the
sixth of seven sons. His father drank too heavily to maintain a proper job and what scant wages he hustled were spent in the tavern or the bookies.
His vocation had come calling for the boy when he was 13 years old, doing well at school, a rising star of track and field. He had pictures of Wayne Gretzky and Michael Jordan taped to the wall next to the bed in the room he shared with two of his brothers. He liked the novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald and was sufficiently gifted at languages to have read Camus in the original French.
Now the cardinal was looking at the relics of him. The impact of the fatal crash had cracked the crystal of the diver's watch he'd worn. His iPhone was still bloodied in smears on the brushed metal. His bag had contained neatly folded items of clothing and a wash bag and a prayer book. And something else: an old handwritten journal with a marbled cover and pages edged in gold leaf he must have brought away with him from his mission to the Pyrenean priory built to serve the heretical needs of The Most Holy Order of the Gospel of St. John.
The cardinal felt even less well disposed towards the order than he had before the death of his protégé. It was irrational to think it, but he couldn't help thinking that if he had not been sent to ensure their mischief had stopped, James would still be living. He'd been 34. It was no age at all. The athlete he'd almost become would only be considering retirement after years at the pinnacle of his sport. As a priest, he had nowhere near reached his prime.
A handful of delinquent, desiccated fools had needed to be dealt with. Their morbid practices had needed to be curtailed. Their secrecy had needed to be not just maintained but guaranteed. It had been vital work, hadn't it? But in the life of James they had paid a terrible price for its completion. And he didn't even know for absolute certain that the mischief in the priory had really ended. It would have taken James, alive, here now to be debriefed, to properly convince him of that.
He picked up the volume he supposed the brothers had encouraged James to take away with him. He could not imagine that they would have been disposed to offer him a gift and he did not think James sufficiently enamored of their order to want to bring back with him any sort of souvenir. It was curious, really.
He opened the volume. He looked at the frontispiece. He flicked cursorily through the pages. The writer had written in English and in a very fine hand. Time had turned what he assumed had once been black ink to bronze. The pages were unsullied and crisp at their edges, suggesting the contents had rarely if ever been read.
The name Daniel Barry was vaguely familiar to him. He had heard of the man in some connection years earlier but had forgotten the context. He thought it might come back to him. He had an excellent memory. Of course it might be a different Daniel Barry altogether he was reminded of. The name was not particularly uncommon. The location of the story penned by this Daniel Barry was London. The name, though, sounded Irish.
Daniel Barry of Dublin
. There, he'd remembered that much. The rest would surely follow eventually into his conscious mind.
He dropped the book back onto the table bearing James Cantrell's possessions with a dusty thump. He was not minded to read an account of events in England's capital compiled over 130 years ago. There were far more urgent and important matters to occupy his time.
He needed to write to the boy's mother. His father had drunk his liver into extinction and died years earlier but he knew James had been in the habit of writing to his mother every week. She had been enormously proud of his vocation and the status his cleverness and dynamism had earned him in Rome. She was over 80 and the cardinal had no doubt that the death of the son on whom she doted would kill her too.
Before that, though, he had another duty to attend to. There was a firm of investigators the Vatican found it expedient to keep on retainer. They were based in Paris. They were exceptionally efficient and discreet and they had offices in every major capital in Europe.
The cardinal called them. He was Italian, born originally in a fishing village in Sardinia, but he had come a long way from his humble roots over the 68 years he had so far lived and he spoke French as flawlessly as he spoke English and German.
He explained about what had happened. He told them he would forward them the report from the Spanish police just as soon as they kept their promise to forward him a copy. He said that the driver of the Ferrari had admitted being at fault but that since there was no speed limit on the road and he'd been sober at the wheel, a criminal prosecution was unlikely.
The cardinal was neutral on the subject of casinos. He had no particular axe to grind with the indulged playboy sons of casino owners. He thought the boy's mea culpa probably sincerely meant. But he had not risen to the office of a Prince of the Church on gullibility. He didn't really believe in accidents. Certainly he didn't believe in them when they were as ill-timed and emphatic as this one had been. It would be costly to establish the truth. But the Church had deep pockets and it was the least James Cantrell deserved.
âI have an alibi for Monday night.'
âYou were pretty busy on Tuesday afternoon.'
âWhat can I tell you, Detective Chief Inspector? I've a prurient nature.'
âLike those people who slow down on the motorway to take photos of crash scenes on their smartphones?'
âThat's me all over.'
âI don't believe you.'
âThat's your privilege, of course. But I still have an alibi for Monday night.'
âWhen you were doing what?'
âHelping out at a youth club that's not really a youth club.'
âPriests and children, they're as indivisible as rain and water.'
âThat's an unworthy generalization that's also gratuitous and insulting.'
âIt's the first thing I've said that's made an impression on you Mr. Chadwick.'
âSelf-possession isn't a criminal offence.'
âMost people are nervous, interviewed under caution in a police station.'
âThat's probably because they've done something wrong.'
âTell me about the youth club.'
âIt's for violent young offenders, part of a programme they commit to if they want to stay out of penal institutions.'
âYou condone violence?'
âDon't be silly.'
âYou don't think violent young men should be punished?'
âI think we have to find a way to break the cycle.'
âMy problem is this, Mr. Chadwick. That kind of socially responsible idealism doesn't square with murder scene tourism. There's a cultural clash. If your alibi checks out, it leaves me with a real conundrum, unless you just tell me why you visited the crime scenes.'
âCan I leave now?'
âI'd prefer you wait until we validate your claim concerning Monday evening. Such a waste of petrol and manpower if we discover you're lying and have to drag you back in.'
Chadwick turned from where he was sitting and looked into the mirror on the wall to his left. Jane knew that all he could see there was the room and his own reflection, but he winked and waved anyway. She thought of the scenarios he'd likely have been involved in back in the Parachute Regiment in Bosnia and Iraq. This was a walk in the park for him. His Monday nights among the volatile youth of North London were probably more stressful. He was telling the truth about that. It didn't solve the mystery of his ghoulish Tuesday afternoon tour.
Behind the glass, Jacob Prior watched and listened. He didn't think Jane Sullivan's tactic with this particular subject was going to work. Neither could he think of any other approach that might. The man was hiding something, but had committed no criminal offence. Jacob didn't think you could make a charge of obstruction or wasting police time stick. Visiting the places where their Scholar had killed was pretty creepy, but it wasn't against the law.
Inside the interview room, the phone on the desk between inquisitor and subject rang. Jane picked up the receiver and listened without speaking. After an interval of a few seconds she replaced it and said, âYou can go, Mr. Chadwick. Thank you for your cooperation.'
Chadwick stood. He was tall and powerfully built and he moved lithely. In his shabby suit and frayed and faded raincoat, his expression and deportment made him look to Jacob like a man wearing an unconvincing disguise. He'd fool no one, would he?
âIs there anything you'd like to add before you leave?'
âYeah, I'll leave you with a quote to mull over, Detective Chief Inspector Sullivan. Winston Churchill once said the only thing that history teaches us is that history teaches us nothing.'
âSo?'
âHe was wrong. Good luck, by the way, with your Scholar investigation.'
She shared a sandwich lunch with Jacob on a bench in Green Park. The good weather was holding. It was another sunny day Julie Longmuir had not lived to see. Instead she had been butchered and her organs arranged in a display the Scholar had intended to be public. The audience had been limited to the half dozen or so professionals attending the crime scene, but it had been a deliberate and cruel indignity.
âI don't really buy into your theory that he doesn't hate women.'
âI meant he doesn't have a specific grudge. He holds people in contempt by definition if he kills without remorse.'
âDoes he?'
âIf it tortured his conscience, he wouldn't keep on doing it. He's put himself not just apart but above morality. I think the messages make that pretty plain.'
âWhat did you make of Peter Chadwick?'
âEither he knows or suspects something. He isn't the killer. But he might have strong suspicions of his own about the Scholar's identity.'
âThat's my reading too. I'm tempted to carry out surveillance on him.'
âDoes your budget run to that?'
âMy reservations aren't budgetary. It's more that the surveillance would have to be bloody good or he'd spot it. I was half expecting a whisky priest.'
âHe's sober, serious and up to something,' Jacob said.
Jane smiled at him. âYou wouldn't make a bad copper, you know. How old are you? There's still time.'
âCouldn't cope with it, Jane, having to salute you all the time and call you ma'am.'
âYou go through a phase, early in the training, where you think every civilian you see is behaving suspiciously and probably planning a crime or at the very least, a misdemeanor.'
âIs that what I'm doing with Peter Chadwick?'
âNo. It isn't. You're right about Chadwick; he is up to something. It might not be criminal, but until I can square away his contradictions, he's worth keeping an eye on.'
After saying goodbye to Jacob in the park, Jane worked for the rest of the afternoon on routine stuff, unable to concentrate on much but the prospect of visiting Julie Longmuir's apartment in the company of Charlotte Reynard early that evening. She wasn't looking forward to it. Whether it was productive or it wasn't, it would be an ordeal for the woman. Charlotte thought she had escaped the Scholar, but even if that was true, he was still influencing what she thought about and did.
She walked from Bermondsey to Jane Sullivan's home in Kennington. The specialist who'd examined her ankle had told her that walking was more good than bad, provided she used the metal stick they had given her and restricted the range of movement. Exercise promoted blood flow, which prevented toxins from building up around the injured tissue and encouraged the healing process. She'd known that, but it was good to have it confirmed.
There'd been no problem concerning Nick and Molly. The time-conscious nanny had become much more amenable over the couple of days since their hasty evacuation from Pimlico. Her boyfriend ran a coffee shop neighbouring Borough Market so she knew and liked the area and it was a locality in which she wanted to be. Charlotte had told her she'd be back by the latest at 9pm but the girl hadn't seemed remotely deadline conscious.
âWhenever, Mrs. Reynard,' she'd gaily replied.
Charlotte hadn't told anyone where she was going. She had friends she considered faithful and loyal. One of them had lately lent her his house at zero notice. But it wasn't the sort of thing you discussed, was it? If you sometimes just knew stuff there was no rational reason for you to know, if it just arrived in your mind with the dense weight of certainty, who would you tell? It wasn't as if the information was always welcome. Mostly it wasn't. The insights gatecrashed her mind rudely. Nine times out of ten she thought afterwards that ignorance would have been bliss.