Part 33 (2/2)

Kathy rang off, feeling worried.

'Okay, Kathy?' Brock was looking at her.

'Not sure,' she said, and told him.

'Probably nothing to worry about. But why don't you check the crime reports?'

'Yes, I will.' She went to her computer and logged in. She worked through the accident and crime incidents from the previous night in the districts he would have walked through on his way back to the hotel, but none of the victims resembled him, and his name didn't crop up anywhere. Then, feeling a little foolish, she requested a check on pa.s.senger flights to North America. That too drew a blank. Well, she thought, of course he wouldn't have gone home without contacting her. She rang the caretaker of her block to see if he'd called in there, but again there was nothing. Then she decided she was being overanxious and got back to work on a pile of the doc.u.ments they'd taken from Mikhail's office at Chelsea Mansions.

Brock came over to her side and said, 'Did we find out any more about Toby Beaumont?'

'Yes, a little, about his father.' She searched through the papers on her desk and found what she was looking for. 'Well, not much. His name was Miles, so presumably he wrote that note on the back of the photo.'

'And probably took the picture too,' Brock said.

'Yes. Born 1910, Eton, Oxford, the army. He was sent over to France with the British Expeditionary Force in 1939 and evacuated from Dunkirk the following June. In September 1941 he joined the Special Operations Executive which had just been formed to carry out raids in occupied Europe. In 1942 he was parachuted into Greece as part of Operation Harling, which blew up the railway viaduct at Gorgopotamos and cut the railway line from Thessaloniki to Athens and Piraeus which was being used by the Germans to supply their army in North Africa. He subsequently returned to England, took part in D-Day and was awarded the Military Medal.'

'A distinguished record, then.'

'Very. Toby must have idolised him.'

'So what did Miles do next?'

'Nothing. At least nothing we can discover. There are no records of him after he quit the army in 1946 as a full colonel, until he committed suicide ten years later, in November 1956.'

'The time of Suez,' Brock said. 'The end of innocence-wasn't that what Toby called it? He was at Suez, wasn't he?'

'Yes.'

They said nothing for a moment, Brock deep in thought. 'So what was he up to?' he said finally. 'This hero of wartime special ops who vanishes from the record, and then plays host to an American diplomat and a senior Soviet party member at his home in London. What kind of larks was he up to?' Brock shook his head and got to his feet. 'I think we've been mesmerised, Kathy, by the Russians. Let's go and have another chat to Toby.'

As they made for the door they were called back by Zack, who had returned from taking the surveillance hard drives to the SERIS unit in South London.

'We've looked at that gap on the night of Sunday May the thirtieth,' Zack said, 'when Moszynski was killed. The system was checked at eighteen minutes past midnight, and it was discovered to have been switched off at nine-fifty-two p.m., just before Moszynski left the house.'

'That's what the security people said.'

'Yes, and that's what the copy that we took from the hard drive showed. But we've now had a closer look at the hard drive, and it seems that the system was actually switched off at six minutes past eleven. The previous hour and fourteen minutes had been recorded, but then erased.'

'Aha.' Brock leaned forward. 'Wayne Everett. But is it possible to retrieve the missing time?'

'If you go to the computer suite I'll show you what we've got so far,' Zack said.

They hurried there, where Zack typed on a keyboard and the screen in front of them buzzed into life, a crackle of white static at first, clearing to show the front steps of the Moszynski house and the street beyond. A car drove past, then a figure came out from beneath the camera and stood for a while at the top of the steps, the man's head and shoulders bathed in the porch light: Mikhail Moszynski. He looked to left and right up the street, then walked down the steps and across to the gate in the fence to the gardens on the far side, where the lower half of his body was visible as he fiddled with the lock, swung the gate open and disappeared off the top of the screen.

'Nothing happens for a couple of minutes,' Zack said, and there was a buzz of static as the recording was fast-forwarded. 'Now . . .'

The lower half of a figure emerged in the top left of the screen. It was wearing dark trousers, and against the background of dark foliage it was difficult to make out any detail. It walked quite slowly to the gate and went into the gardens.

'Another five minutes where nothing happens,' Zack fast-forwarded the film. 'Here we go.'

The dark trousers had reappeared at the gate, and retraced their route out of view.

'There's nothing more for another twenty minutes,' Zack said, 'until Wayne Everett comes out and goes across the road, just as he said. There's no sign of him carrying a knife.'

Brock was getting to his feet. 'Come on, Kathy.'

'You know who it is?' she said.

'Yes, so do you. Didn't you see the stick?'

There was a car standing at the kerb outside the hotel when they arrived, its engine running. As they went up the steps the front door opened and Toby emerged, one hand clutching his stick and a briefcase.

'h.e.l.lo, Toby,' Brock said. 'I'm glad we've caught you in.'

'Oh.' He glanced from Brock to Kathy and back. 'I'm afraid I'm in a bit of a rush, Chief Inspector. Let's make it another time.'

'Sorry, this won't wait.' Brock advanced on him so that he had to back through the door. Looking over her shoulder Kathy noticed the driver get out of the waiting car. It was the concierge, she saw, Garry, the silent one.

They moved into the hotel office. Filing cabinet drawers were open, papers strewn across the table, as if there had been a hurried search for something, and Toby's photographs were missing from the wall.

'Where are you off to?' Brock asked.

'Can you tell me what this is all about?' Toby said, a touch of annoyance in his voice. 'I really am in rather a hurry.'

'Sit down, Toby,' Brock said, and drew out a chair for himself.

They heard the front door slam shut and Garry came in and stood behind them in the office doorway.

'We've managed to decipher the CCTV footage shot by the camera on Mikhail Moszynski's porch on the night he died,' Brock said. 'It shows him going into the gardens, closely followed by yourself.'

Toby stood there and stared, inscrutable behind the tinted gla.s.ses. 'Really?'

'Yes. You stayed with Moszynski for about five minutes and then left. You were the only one in the gardens with him until the security guard went in there twenty minutes later and raised the alarm. Care to explain?'

'I think not.'

'Very well. Toby Beaumont, I am arresting you on suspicion of involvement in the murder of Mikhail Moszynski. You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned something you later rely on in court. Anything you do say may be given in evidence.'

Toby listened in silence to the caution, immobile as if on parade. Then he glanced at Garry and slowly sat down, facing Brock across the table.

'Very well. You want the truth, do you?'

'Yes.'

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